The Alliance for Quality
Nursing Home Care said a new BDO Seidman study of the nation's
Medicaid program released today draws much needed attention to a chronic
and worsening problem: Medicare's cross-subsidization of increasingly
inadequate Medicaid payments for nursing home care.
Noting that the influential Medicare Payment Advisory Commission
(MedPAC) is meeting in Washington this week to consider a number of
Medicare funding matters, Alan Rosenbloom, President of the Alliance, urged
the agency to consider more carefully the substantial Medicaid losses
nursing homes face in formulating recommendations to Congress. He also
urged Congress to evaluate the relationship between government payment
programs -- which together pay for roughly 80% of nursing home patients --
in making decisions regarding Medicare payments to nursing homes.
"When assessing the adequacy of Medicare funding for the nation's
nursing homes, and making subsequent recommendations to Congress, MedPAC
should consider not only payments under Medicare, but also the substantial
Medicaid losses in determining the financial health of nursing homes,"
Rosenbloom said. "By ignoring enormous Medicaid losses and focusing solely
on Medicare expenditures, MedPAC's recommendations offer little practical
guidance to Congress concerning the impact Medicare policy will have on the
quality of care America's nursing home patients receive," continued
Rosenbloom.
The BDO Seidman study, released by the American Health Care Association
(AHCA), estimates that Medicaid pays some $4.4 billion less than the actual
cost of nursing home care for the nation's seniors. This translates into
$13.15 per patient per day less than the cost of care, an amount which has
increased 45% since 1999.
"When it comes to making important public policy recommendations that
truly impact the lives and well being of our nation's most vulnerable
seniors, we believe MedPAC is obliged to evaluate the real and growing
interdependence between Medicare and Medicaid -- and to base its
recommendations to Congress not merely on the impact policy changes will
have on Medicare expenditures, but also the impact those changes will have
on all seniors who require nursing home care," Rosenbloom continued.
The Alliance President said the study underscores the importance of
Congress taking a broader, more accurate view of patient needs by rejecting
MedPAC's recommendation that nursing homes should not receive a 3.3%
inflation payment update for FY 2008. "MedPAC's recommendation fails to
consider that such substantial Medicaid losses offset Medicare gains. The
result is that overall operating margins for America's nursing homes hover
close to 3% -- far less than those of any other group of health care
providers," Rosenbloom explained. "Congress must consider the overall long
term care funding picture to ensure America's seniors receive the high
quality nursing home care and services they deserve, and we urge Congress
to reject the MedPAC recommendation," he concluded.
The Alliance for Quality Nursing Home Care (aqnhc) is a
coalition of 16 of the nation's largest skilled nursing providers who
deliver care to hundreds of thousands of patients on a daily basis.
Alliance for Quality Nursing Home Care
aqnhc