The usual expression is "giving with one hand and taking with the other," but the Massachusetts Legislature and Governor sometimes act as though the version in the title of this post is the way to go, at least when it comes to the state's hospitals. First, there are proposals in the health care reform legislation to impose new taxes on the hospitals. Then, the various versions of the state budget take more away, to the tune of about $40 million.
The Senate, the last of the three branches to propose a budget, does not address any of the unjustified
MassHealth (i.e., Medicaid) rate reductions the Governor initially recommended. These include doubling a penalty for "preventable" readmissions -- this notwithstanding that the measures used to track
readmissions have been rejected by both the state's expert panel and the National
Quality Forum. There is also an outpatient policy that permits MassHealth to not pay for certain
outpatient services if they are followed by an inpatient visit within three days,
even if the visits are completely unrelated. There are other technical changes, too, that are too abstruse to summarize here.
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