Medicare punishes nearly 2,500 hospitals for high patient readmission rates
The federal governments effort to penalize hospitals for excessive patient readmissions is ending its first decade with Medicare cutting payments to nearly half the nations hospitals. In its 10th annual round of penalties, Medicare is reducing its payments to 2,499 hospitals, or 47% of all facilities. The average penalty is a 0.64% reduction in payment for each Medicare patient stay from the start of this month through September 2022.
The fines can be heavy, averaging $217,000 for a hospital in 2018, according to Congress Medicare Payment Advisory Commission, or MedPAC. Medicare estimates the penalties over the next fiscal year will save the government $521 million. Thirty-nine hospitals received the maximum 3% reduction, and 547 hospitals had so few returning patients that they escaped any penalty.
An additional 2,216 hospitals are exempt from the program because they specialize in children, psychiatric patients or veterans. Rehabilitation and long-term care hospitals are also excluded from the program, as are critical access hospitals, which are treated differently because they are the only inpatient facility in an area.
The Hospital Readmissions Reduction Program, or HRRP, was created by the 2010 Affordable Care Act and began in October 2012 as an effort to make hospitals pay more attention to patients after they leave. Readmissions occurred with regularity for instance, nearly a quarter of Medicare heart failure patients ended up back in the hospital within 30 days in 2008 and policymakers wanted to counteract the financial incentives hospitals had in getting more business from these boomerang visits.
https://www.pennlive.com/nation-world/2021/10/medicare-punishes-nearly-2500-hospitals-for-high-patient-readmission-rates.html