Reforms of regulatory requirements to save health care providers
Friday, May 16, 2014
(0 Comments)
Posted by: Shannon Glaittli
Reforms
to Medicare regulations identified as unnecessary, obsolete, or excessively
burdensome on hospitals and other health care providers will save nearly $660
million annually, and $3.2 billion over five years, through a rule issued today
by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid services (CMS).
Together
with another rule finalized in 2012, this rule is estimated to save heath care
providers more than $8 billion over the next five years. This final rule
supports President Obama’s unprecedented regulatory retrospective review—or
“regulatory lookback”— initiative, where federal agencies are modifying,
streamlining or eliminating excessively burdensome and unnecessary regulations
on business.
“By
eliminating stumbling blocks and red tape we can assure that the health care
that reaches patients is more timely, that it’s the right treatment for the
right patient, and greater efficiency improves patient care across the board,”
said CMS Administrator Marilyn Tavenner.
This
rule helps health care providers to operate more efficiently by getting rid of
regulations that are out of date or no longer needed. Many of the rule’s
provisions streamline health and safety standards health care providers must
meet in order to participate in Medicare and Medicaid.
For
example, a key provision reduces the burden on very small critical access
hospitals, as well as rural health clinics and federally qualified health
centers, by eliminating the requirement that a physician be held to a
prescriptive schedule for being onsite. This provision seeks to address the
geographic barriers and remoteness of many rural facilities, and recognizes
telemedicine improvements and expansions that allow physicians to provide many
types of care at lower costs, while maintaining high-quality care.
The
rule will also save hospitals resources by permitting registered dietitians and
qualified nutritionists to order patient diets directly, which they are trained
to do, without requiring the preapproval of a physician or other practitioner.
This frees up time for physicians and other practitioners to care for patients.
Major
provisions of the rule are:
• Eliminates unnecessary
requirements that ambulatory surgical centers must meet in order to provide
radiological services that are an integral part of their surgical procedures,
permitting them greater flexibility for physician supervision requirements.
• Permits trained nuclear medicine
technicians in hospitals to prepare radiopharmaceuticals for nuclear medicine
without the supervising physician or pharmacist constantly being present, which
will help speed services to patients, particularly during off hours.
• Eliminates a redundant data
submission requirement and an unnecessary survey process for transplant centers
while maintaining strong federal oversight.
As
part of the President’s regulatory lookback initiative, CMS issued a final rule
in May, 2012, that also reduces burdensome or unnecessary regulations for hospitals
and additional health care providers. Those rules are saving nearly $1.1
billion across the health care system in the first year and more than $5
billion over five years.
To
view the final rule, please visit www.ofr.gov/inspection.aspx
.
|