HomeLatest NewsFederal NewsCMS Proposed Rules Round-Up: SNF, Inpatient Psychiatric Facilities, Hospice

CMS Proposed Rules Round-Up: SNF, Inpatient Psychiatric Facilities, Hospice

CMS proposes 4.1% payment update for SNFs and revise nursing home enforcement authority in FY 2025

The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services March 28 issued a proposed rule for fiscal year 2025 for the skilled nursing facility prospective payment system, which would increase aggregate Medicare spending by 4.1% or $1.3 billion compared with FY 2024. This reflects a proposed 2.8% market basket update, a 1.7 percentage-point increase to counter the agency’s market basket error in FY 2023, and a 0.4 percentage-point productivity decrease.

CMS proposes to revise regulations regarding its nursing home enforcement authority to allow the agency to impose additional financial penalties on facilities where health and safety deficiencies are identified.

While CMS does not propose to adopt or remove any quality measures from the SNF Quality Reporting Program, the agency proposes to adopt and modify certain patient assessment items related to health-related social needs; SNFs would be required to collect and report specific data elements related to living situation, food and utilities beginning with the FY 2027 SNF QRP. CMS also proposes to adopt a data validation process for the SNF QRP beginning the same year.

CMS proposes a number of operational updates to the SNF Value-based Purchasing program, including policies regarding measure removal and review and corrections. The agency also proposes an update to the case mix methodology used to calculate the Total Nurse Staffing measure.

CMS will accept public comments on the proposed rule through May 28.

Inpatient psychiatric facilities rule would increase payments 2.6%, clarify all-inclusive cost reporting
CMS issued a proposed rule for the inpatient psychiatric facility prospective payment system for fiscal year 2025.

CMS proposes to increase IPF payments by a net 2.6%, equivalent to $70 million, in FY 2025. The payment update is a reflection of a 2.7% increase based on a proposed 2021-based market-basket update of 3.1% minus a productivity adjustment of 0.42 percentage points; CMS also proposes to update the outlier threshold so that estimated outlier payments remain at 2.0% of total payments, resulting in a 0.1% decrease to aggregate payments. In this rule, CMS clarifies the eligibility criteria for filing all-inclusive cost reports and makes operational changes such that, beginning Oct. 1, 2024, only government or tribally-owned IPFs can file this type of cost report. The agency also solicits comments on future revisions to PPS facility-level adjustment factors as well as the development of an IPF patient assessment instrument.

For the IPF Quality Reporting Program, CMS proposes to adopt one new quality measure on all-cause emergency department visits following IPF discharge. The agency also proposes to require IPFs to submit patient-level quality data on a quarterly basis, as opposed to the current annual requirement.

For more details, see the CMS fact sheet. CMS will accept comments on this rule through May 28.

CMS proposes payment increase for hospices in FY 2025
CMS proposes a 2.6% ($705 million) net increase to payments compared with FY 2024. This includes a 3.0% market basket update, a 0.4 percentage point cut for productivity, and an annual payment cap per patient of $34,364.85. CMS also proposes to adopt the most recent Office of Management and Budget statistical area delineations, which would affect the geographic wage index. In addition, the rule proposes to adopt and implement a patient-level data collection tool to replace the existing Hospice Item Set and to add two new process measures beginning in FY 2028.
CMS will accept comments on the rule through May 28.

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