Health Law Is A Family Affair For CMS’ Tavenner
Marilyn Tavenner, the president’s聽nominee to head the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services,聽was already hoarse when she began her speech聽at the Care Innovation Summit in Washington D.C. today. However, that did not聽stop Tavenner,聽the agency’s acting administrator, from聽delivering a laundry list of the 2010 health law’s benefits and achievements, including a particularly personal one.

An estimated 2.5 million young adults have through the law鈥檚 under-26 provision, and 鈥渙ne of those happens to be my daughter,鈥 a type-1 diabetic, Tavenner said. 鈥淚 have personally benefited from this provision.鈥
Tavenner will likely make some of the same聽arguments for the law and CMS initiatives when – or if – she encounters a grilling at her聽yet-to-be scheduled Senate confirmation hearing. She after previous chief Donald Berwick,聽a recess appointee whose nomination never went through聽the confirmation process,聽stepped down in December. Tavenner made a point to pause and give Berwick credit for his work at CMS.
Among the other health law highlights that made Tavenner鈥檚 list聽were the funds provided to聽close聽Medicare鈥檚 ;鈥 the expanded coverage of preventive services for Medicare beneficiaries; and the creation of state-run, high-risk insurance pools, which she described as 鈥渙ne of the things I鈥檓 most proud of.鈥
She also encouraged the more than 1,000 attendees at Thursday’s summit to look ahead. Many health law provisions go live in 2014, and “24 months is not a lot of time to get a lot of things done,” Tavenner said. “That is where the Innovation Center becomes so important.”
Two of CMS’s three top priorities will be aided by the Innovation Center: developing public/private partnerships and implementing delivery system reforms. The latter category includes聽efforts to find a permanent fix to Medicare’s sustainable growth rate聽formula — the “doc fix” — which “seems so elusive many times,” Tavenner said.
Richard Gilfillan, the center’s director, announced the release of a describing their work thus far.
鈥淲e鈥檝e had a very busy first year,鈥 Gilfillan said, listing initiatives like , bundled payment projects聽and the ” program.