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Tuesday, Sep 5 2023

Full Issue

Most Nursing Homes Would Have To Hire More Staff Under Proposed Rule

An estimated three-quarters of nursing homes in the U.S. would be required to hire more workers under new rules proposed Friday by the Biden administration, the greatest change to federal nursing home regulations in three decades.

The Biden administration released a proposed rule Friday morning that would mandate minimum staffing in nursing homes, but it fell short of what advocates had long been pushing for. The long-awaited proposed rule would mandate each resident receive at least three hours of direct care per day, with 33 minutes of that care coming from registered nurses. That standard falls below what the average nursing home already provides, according to experts. But the government said Friday 75 percent of nursing homes would have to increase staffing to comply with the proposed standard. (Hellmann, 9/1)

麻豆女优 Health News: Biden Administration Proposes New Standards To Boost Nursing Home Staffing

The proposal, by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, would require all facilities to increase staff up to certain minimum levels, but it included no money for nursing homes to pay for the new hires. CMS estimated that three-quarters of the nation鈥檚 15,000 homes would need to add staff members. But the increases at many of those facilities would be minor, as the average nursing home already employs nurses and aides at, or very close to, the proposed levels. (Rau, 9/1)

The Biden administration's new proposed nursing home staffing minimums may be friendlier to industry than providers' loud protests suggest. The first-ever national staffing standard for nursing homes, issued just before Labor Day weekend, came in on the lower end of what federal officials previously analyzed, and it stops short of what patient advocates pushed for. (Goldman, 9/5)

Humana sues over Medicare clawbacks 鈥

Humana sued the federal government Friday, arguing that this year鈥檚 new rule to claw back overpayments from it and other Medicare Advantage insurers violates federal law due to its 鈥渟hifting justifications and erroneous legal reasoning.鈥 (Herman, 9/1)

On Medicare drug pricing 鈥

Swiss drugmaker Novartis on Friday said it had sued the U.S. government in an attempt to halt the Medicare drug-price negotiation program, which includes its top-selling heart-failure medicine Entresto. The lawsuit, filed in federal court in New Jersey, is the first since the Biden administration on Tuesday released its list of 10 prescription medicines that will be subject to price negotiations by the Medicare health program, which covers 66 million people. (Wingrove, 9/1)

Drugmakers are poised to change their lawsuits and bring new ones against the Biden administration now that the list of the first 10 drugs subject to Medicare price negotiations is out. (Lopez and Phengsitthy, 9/5)

White House domestic policy adviser Neera Tanden said Sunday that she鈥檚 convinced that the Inflation Reduction Act鈥檚 Medicare drug price negotiation program will be upheld in court. Speaking on 鈥淭he Katie Phang Show鈥 on MSNBC, Tanden said, 鈥淭here is nothing in the Constitution that stops Medicare from negotiating drug prices. We really, we feel very strongly about our ability to win these lawsuits because this is just a basic principle.鈥 (Cohen, 9/3)

This is part of the Morning Briefing, a summary of health policy coverage from major news organizations. Sign up for an email subscription.
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