oz

Logo

January 29, 2025

Kennedy Has Subpar Performance Before Committee While Health and Human Services (HHS) nominee Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., did not mortally wound himself before the Senate Finance Committee today at a confirmation hearing, he certainly did himself no favors, either. Kennedy was unable to articulate views on healthcare policy and reform or speak articulately on the Medicare and Medicaid programs. In fact, he confused the two programs at points and perhaps thought Medicaid looked more like the state children’s healthcare or Exchange programs. He even stated that Medicare Advantage (MA) is more expensive than the traditional one. The American public often confuses various healthcare programs, but you do not expect that from the future HHS leader. Just troubling. The hearing likely means he gets no Democratic votes. What is more worrisome for the Trump team is that some Republicans are now worried about Kennedy’s capabilities. Betting odds are that Kennedy still

Read More »
Logo

January 28, 2025

Trump Spending Freeze Order Creates Chaos A federal judge has stayed a decision by President Trump’s Office of Management and Budget (OMB) to essentially freeze billions in federal grants and disbursements. It capped a whirlwind day of confusion and vitriol. Democrats cried that the executive branch was usurping congressional authority and the lawmakers and a coalition of non-profit groups won the stay until early next week. The administration argued it had the duty to look at outlays after years of runaway spending. Objectively, what happened appeared to be the first major misstep of the administration. Whatever one’s views on the action, it was clearly not well telegraphed or rolled out. The White House had to refine what was indeed stalled at several points today, finally landing on the fact that direct aid to individuals, such as welfare, Medicaid, and Medicare, was not being impacted. But other healthcare grants that do

Read More »
Logo

January 27, 2025

KFF Finds Major Claims Denials In Exchanges The Kaiser Family Foundation (KFF) finds in a new study that health insurers selling Marketplace plans in states that use the federal Exchange rejected 19% of in-network claims on average in 2023. That is up from 16% in 2022. The rate has been steady over time, ranging from a 14% low in 2018 to a 19% high in 2015 and 2023. Insurers denied 37% of out-of-network claims in 2023. There is a huge range in denial rates among plans, from 1% to 54%. For high volume insurers, the range was 13% to 35%. “Other reasons” represented the largest category of denials (34%), with 16% tagged as excluded services, 9% as lack of prior authorization or referral, and 6% as lack of medical necessity. Other common reasons for denials included administrative issues (18%) and exceeding benefit limits (12%). While I think health plans do

Read More »

Lawsuits Against CMS On Stars Show The System Is Breaking

An otherwise responsible agency has an alarming arrogance in its Star oversight and processes For the past two years we have seen major lawsuits against the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) on how they conduct the Stars program in Medicare Advantage (MA). The Stars program is not only important for grading the quality of outcomes in private managed care, but also is the lifeblood of supplemental benefits and other enhancements to fill in the holes in traditional Medicare fee-for-service (FFS). Without a well-functioning equitable, and reliable Star quality bonus system, we cannot really gauge quality or ensure consistent benefit additions in the MA program. Brief history of 2024 Star lawsuits Lawsuits against CMS on the 2024 Star ratings largely revolved around the implementation of the Tukey outlier adjustment implemented for that year’s ratings. The methodology removes so-called outlier performance at both the top and bottom of performers. Outliers

Read More »
Logo

January 24, 2025

Change Healthcare Updates Number Of Those Impacted By Cyberattack The Change Healthcare cyberattack brought much of healthcare to a halt in 2024 for many months. UnitedHealth Group, Change’s parent, earlier said that 100 million people were impacted. It now has updated that number to 190 million or about 57% of the nation’s population. The cyberattack posed a significant financial cost to UnitedHealth Group, with the company projecting that it would take a $2.9 billion hit. More important, it had huge costs for providers, health plans, pharmacies, and other healthcare entities. All of these entities relied on Change’s vast service and processing systems. The attackers used stolen credentials and breached a server that did not have two-factor authentication – a rookie mistake in security. The attackers were paid a ransom yet still took information from the servers. United says it is not aware of a misuse of data, but that is

Read More »
Logo

January 23, 2025

Elevance Health Reports Q4 and 2024 Financial News After some rocky news from UnitedHealth Group earlier, Elevance Health reported some mixed financial news as well. Elevance said it would grow 7% to 9% in Medicare Advantage (MA). The company did say it is attacking growth prudently given rate concerns and utilization trends. Elevance also says that while MA rates are moving in the right direction, rates for 2026 will be inadequate based on the Advance Notice recently released. But like United, year-over-year margins decreased even though Elevance beat Wall Street. Its services unit, Carelon, showed robust revenue growth. On Medicaid, Elevance said Medicaid rate pressures could ease in 2H 2025 and that it is encouraged by some rate hikes it is seeing from states. As has been seen with other insurers, Elevance’s all lines of business medical loss ratio (MLR) rose considerably to 92.4% in the fourth quarter, up from

Read More »

The Latest Edition Of The Stars Roadmap

Published in partnership with Lilac Software: https://lilacsoftware.com Figuring out exactly what will happen in the Star measure program over time is no small feat. The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) certainly does not make it easy to create a Stars roadmap so you are ready for a new measure maturing to Stars.  CMS will use a variety of means to telegraph what might occur. These include annual Medicare Advantage (MA) and Part D rules, the so-called Advanced and Final Notices/Announcement annually, and other CMS communications. Even then, pulling it all together is tough. Things can change from proposed rules to finalized rules. CMS may give direction on a change in one year only to backtrack the next. You can never be 100% sure until the Advance Notice is finalized for the coming year. This usually drops in April of a given year. Sometimes, as they did with Star

Read More »
Logo

January 22, 2025

CMS Appealing UnitedHealthcare’s 2025 Stars Win In very odd timing, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) has said it will appeal a federal judge’s order to recalculate UnitedHealthcare’s Medicare Advantage (MA) Star ratings. CMS did not state the grounds for its appeal.  Coming out of a federal judge’s decision siding with United in its suit, CMS did revise UnitedHealthcare’s and Centene’s star rating scores for 2025. UnitedHealthcare received higher ratings in 12 contracts and Centene in seven contracts. Centene’s suit closely mirrored United’s. Additional article: https://www.modernhealthcare.com/legal/cms-unitedhealth-medicare-advantage-star-ratings-appeal (Some articles may require a subscription.) #cms #stars #medicareadvantage https://www.fiercehealthcare.com/payers/cms-will-appeal-unitedhealthcares-ma-star-ratings-court-win Hospitals Had More Downgrades Than Upgrades in 2024 Credit downgrades for nonprofit hospitals outpaced upgrades in 2024, despite generally better financial performance in the industry overall. Moody’s, S&P, and Fitch collectively issued 95 downgrades and 37 upgrades in 2024, as opposed to 116 and 33 in 2023. Healthcare providers plan on another

Read More »
Logo

January 21, 2025

Some Trump Executive Orders Impact Healthcare As expected, re-minted President Donald Trump issued sweeping executive orders on day one of Trump 47 impacting almost all aspects of government. By and large, healthcare was less impacted. But here are some highlights: In other news, the brand drug industry will ask Trump to pause the second round of Medicare drug price negotiations in part due to ongoing litigation. Proponents urge Trump to continue and argue there is no basis for any pause. Last, advocates are asking Trump to avoid drastic Medicaid cuts and restructuring and targeting key moderates in the Senate in a public relations and advocacy campaign. Additional articles: https://www.healthcaredive.com/news/trump-reverses-biden-healthcare-executive-orders-withdraws-world-health-organization/737838/ and https://www.modernhealthcare.com/politics-policy/trump-medicare-drug-price-negotiations and https://www.modernhealthcare.com/politics-policy/donald-trump-joe-biden-ai-executive-order-repeal and https://www.modernhealthcare.com/politics-policy/donald-trump-world-health-organization-us-exit-reconsider and https://thehill.com/policy/healthcare/5097280-trump-who-executive-order/ and https://www.fiercehealthcare.com/regulatory/trump-pulls-us-out-who-condemned-public-health-experts and https://thehill.com/policy/healthcare/5098715-trump-executive-order-biden-prescription-drug-costs/ and https://insidehealthpolicy.com/daily-news/advocates-defend-medicaid-appeal-trump-massive-ad-campaign and https://www.statnews.com/2025/01/20/trump-executive-orders-health-care-drug-pricing-aca-covid-gender-discrimination/ (Some articles may require a subscription.) #trump #healthcare #first100days #medicaid #medicare #drugpricing #aca #obamacare #regulations #ai #who https://www.fiercehealthcare.com/regulatory/what-trumps-first-day-orders-mean-healthcare-ditched-drug-models-pauses-rules-and-hiring More On DOJ Suit Against Walgreens More

Read More »

The Torch Is Passed On This Inauguration Day: A Republican’s Reflection On Biden And Healthcare

Biden deserves credit for some key healthcare accomplishments Today is Inauguration Day and the torch is being passed from President Biden to President-elect Donald Trump. Many have argued that Joe Biden’s presidency will be remembered as less than stellar, but I wanted to take this chance today as a Republican to reflect on some of Joe Biden’s healthcare accomplishments as he leaves office. My views on healthcare are somewhat unique as a Republican I am a Republican, but I always tell you that I am a maverick one on healthcare. Part of my college discipline was in economics. As such I studied how the market works, consumer behavior, and micro and macro trends. I was also in politics before making my leap to healthcare. As a state budget director, I was known as a fiscal disciplinarian, who always sought low taxes and a balanced budget. At the state level, we

Read More »

Available Now

$30.00