Sequestration cuts will target Medicare

Sen. Lindsay Graham
Sen. Lindsay Graham
The good news about sequestration cuts slated to start in January: They will not touch Medicaid. The bad news: Medicare funding will trimmed by 2% — or $11 billion — in the next year alone.

For long-term care operators, that will mean $782 million in reimbursement reductions, according to an industry assessment paid for by the Alliance for Quality Nursing Home Care.

Three Senators — John McCain (R-AZ), Lindsey Graham (R-SC) and Kelly Ayotte (R-NH) — are saying the GOP never should have let sequestration happen. “We share the blame for this, but at the end of the day we have to fix it,” Graham said.

President Obama signed a bill in August requiring the White House to report to Congress within 30 days on how it plans to implement the pending cuts. They were triggered when the Congressional supercommittee failed to reach a compromise late last year.
close

Next Article in News

More in News

Research organizations team up for large-scale senior fall prevention study

Research organizations team up for large-scale senior fall ...

Two research organizations are teaming up for a major study to reduce the number of fall-related injuries among seniors. Provider input is requested.

Analgesics account for most nursing home medication errors, researchers find

Most nursing home medication errors involve analgesics and sedatives, and these drugs are likely to account for errors regardless of how frequently they are administered, according to recently published research.

AHCA praises House committee for considering broad Medicare reforms ...

Prompted by a hearing of the House Ways & Means Committee, the American Health Care Association/National Center for Assisted Living has reiterated a call for bipartisan action to reform Medicare without further steep reimbursement cuts.