Hospitals, Nurses Group Lash Out At Debt Deal

As provider groups dig into the details of the struck over the weekend, some aren鈥檛 too happy.

Photo by Karl Eisenhower/KHN

鈥淲e could not be for this legislation, because it as an arbitrary, automatic reduction … that is for fiscal reasons that have nothing to do with health policy. And we can鈥檛 support that,鈥, president and chief executive officer of the , said in an interview.

Among its provisions, the deal聽would protect Medicare from cuts greater than聽2 percent if a bipartisan commission created in the legislation fails to produce a $1.5 聽package of spending cuts or if Congress fails to enact聽them. In addition, those cuts would have to come from provider reimbursements and not enrollees’ coverage.

Limiting any automatic spending cuts in Medicare to 2 percent won鈥檛 help, says Kahn. 鈥淔rom our view, there鈥檚 no separation between these kinds of provider cuts and something that will affect beneficiaries. It will affect the way providers operate and at some point this artificial separation between things that affect beneficiaries and provider cuts has got to be identified for what it is 鈥 an artificial break. If it affects providers, it affects beneficiaries.鈥

In a statement, Rich Umbdenstock, the president and chief executive, said cutting hospitals will聽mean聽decreased access for seniors. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 why the 聽total Medicare program 鈥 including caregivers 鈥 should be exempt鈥 from cuts that he said could overload emergency rooms, shut trauma units and reduce patient access to the latest treatments.

The 170,000 member is urging Congress to vote against the deal, which 鈥渒icks the can further down the road on real solutions that are needed to promise genuine recovery,鈥 says Rose Ann DeMoro, the group鈥檚 executive director.

More from 杨贵妃传媒視頻 Health News