Theo Francis’s article in the WSJ called “Medicare offers overhaul of hospital reimbursing” contains a number of statements that reflect what side of the carrot/stick equation Medicare’s “solutions” for provider quality will fall.

Medicare proposed sweeping changes to the way it reimburses hospitals, outlining a plan that would essentially redistribute cash by reducing payments across the board and then giving providers a chance to “earn back” money by meeting quality-of-care thresholds.

Its not surprising to see individual providers opting away from Medicare patients with reimbursement not tracking to inflation, and with a 10% punitive Medicare reimbursement cut hanging over their heads, and noise about further requirements for installation of EMRs making their economics look even worse.

Unfortunately for hospitals, demographics dictate that a large portion of their patient population and revenue is tied to Medicare, where these unilateral decisions can be made. (Medicine and Economics blog has a great post on government’s difference from corporations and charity being the ability to use force, Covert rationing blog has a great post on how Medicare/insurance contracting is non-negotiable, and therefore monopolistic and potentially illegal)

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