Having trouble viewing this email? View it as a Web page. You are subscribed to DHHS Press Releases for Maine Department of Health & Human Services. This information has recently been updated, and is now available. $90 Million Investment in Evidence-Based MaineCare Payment System Would Maintain or Increase Payments to Every Medical Center in Maine & Improve Care for Maine People AUGUSTA? Today, the Maine Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS) and the Maine Hospital Association announced an agreement to reform hospital reimbursement rates to improve the health of Maine people. Under the proposal, which will be included in the forthcoming supplemental budget proposal, every medical center in the state is estimated to receive roughly the same or higher reimbursement, based on information available in the fall of 2023. This proposal applies to all hospitals except for four psychiatric hospitals that are categorized differently under Medicaid. Hospitals would become the latest major service area to undergo MaineCare?s award-winning process to ensure payment methodologies are data-driven, fair, consistent, informed by the public, and sufficient to promote access to quality care. The MaineCare rate reforms support high-quality health care for more than 400,000 Maine people and fair and sustainable reimbursement to Maine's health and social services providers, including hospitals. Under the agreement announced today, hospitals would see improved reimbursement because the payments will better align with Medicare ? a more consistent and fair approach to paying for outlier costs that relate to patient need ? improved outpatient rates to encourage more community-based care when possible, and improved transparency and uniformity for similar hospitals across the reimbursement system as a whole. The agreement maximizes the available funding under federal payment limits and is subject to approval by the U.S. Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services.
Specifically, the set of initiatives in the supplemental budget:
As part of rate reform, the plan would repeal both the tax on and supplemental payment to critical access hospitals effective December 31, 2024 while adjusting cost reimbursement from 109 to 104.5 percent starting on July 1, 2024. Additionally, the budget proposal would direct that net hospital tax revenue be directed to the ?Medical Care ? Payments to Providers? program in the Department of Health and Human Services to be used for MaineCare hospital payments. The agreement builds on MaineCare payment improvements to behavioral health providers,?Federally-qualified health centers, and for inpatient psychiatric and substance use care, which was implemented in July 2023 with a similar transition payment to Northern Maine Medical Center. The Department?s sweeping and unprecedented plan to transform MaineCare (Maine?s Medicaid program) rate setting from a fragmented, often outdated and arbitrary approach into a coherent, streamlined and data-driven system is well under way. The plan is a culmination of Governor Mills? directive to DHHS on her first day in office to expand MaineCare and develop a plan to make the health coverage program for low-income people more accessible, affordable, and sustainable.
|