"We're pleased the moratorium has expired," says Jim Grant, ASHA president and COO of National Surgical Hospitals. "We've made progress as an industry but there's still work to be done This is a great day for patients in this country. The questions have been asked and specialty hospitals have answered them. Congress should now allow us to move forward, providing patients expanded choices in surgical care."
Three governmental agencies have studied specialty hospitals since 2003 and have determined that specialty hospitals do not cause harm to community hospitals. The most recent report, and the most favorable for specialty hospitals, was released on
CMS joined the Medicare Payment Advisory Commission in supporting changes to the diagnosis related group (DRG) payment system; ASHA says it has publicly supported DRG reform for all hospitals.
"The CMS report substantiates what we've been saying all along," Grant says. "Specialty hospitals provide better quality of care in terms of mortality rates, our net community benefit exceeds the uncompensated care provided by the non-profit community hospitals and specialty hospitals do not 'cherry pick' the most profitable patients. Congress is finally receiving independent analysis that says specialty hospitals aren't a threat."
ASHA says it understands that expiration of the moratorium will not stop opponents of specialty hospitals. The organization says it will now continue to educate elected officials in
ASHA reports that it is asking Congress to ignore calls for a permanent moratorium on the development of specialty hospitals and focus on larger healthcare issues such as DRG reform, as referred to in the latest CMS report.
Source: ASHA