Senate HELP Committee passes Kennedy bill; providers worry about companion House plan
As
fallout from the House healthcare reform plan continued to rain down
Wednesday, the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee
passed its own reform proposal.
The
13-10 HELP vote to approve the measure was split along party lines.
The Edward Kennedy (D-MA)-sponsored bill received much initial
criticism after a Congressional Budget Office report showed it could
cost more than $1 trillion. Unaccounted for provisions, including a
public insurance option, however, subsequently dropped the price tag
to a $600 billion cost estimate. One key provision of the HELP plan
would establish a national long-term care and disability insurance
program that would help pay for rehab and skilled nursing services in
the event of a disability.
Meanwhile,
scrutiny of the recently announced House plan continued, with at
least one senior-care advocacy group appearing worried. “We are
concerned about Medicare provisions for skilled nursing facilities,”
said the American Association of Homes and Services for the Aging,
“especially the loss of the payment update for three quarters of
2010.” The providers association also criticized a provision that
would cut Medicare reimbursements for hospice providers by 3.2%
annually.