Baucus, Rockefeller Applaud House Vote to Block Medicaid Regulations

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Baucus, Rockefeller Applaud House Vote to Block Medicaid Regulations

The following press release was published by the United States Committee on Finance Ranking Member’s News on April 23, 2008. It is reproduced in full below.

Washington, DC - Senate Finance Committee Chairman Max Baucus (D-Mont.) and Health Care Subcommittee Chairman Jay Rockefeller (D-W. Va.) today applauded House action to stop seven Medicaid regulations issued by the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS). According to the Congressional Budget Office, these regulations would cut $20 billion from Medicaid, the federal program that helps low-income Americans get the health care they need. Legislation voted on in the House today would prevent these policies from taking effect before April 2009.

“It’s important that House members of both parties came together to block cuts to health care services for the most vulnerable Americans," Baucus said. “Today’s strong House vote echoes the Senate’s action in March, when we adopted my amendment opposing these harmful cuts and unfair cost-shifting to states. I intend to work with my colleagues here in the Senate on strategies to stop harmful Medicaid regulations as well."

“I applaud today’s overwhelming passage of the House companion to the Economic Recovery in Health Care Act," Rockefeller said. “Today’s vote sends a clear bipartisan message to the President that his misguided attacks on health care for the poor will not be tolerated during his remaining time in office. The Senate needs to act quickly, not only on the House-passed bill, but also to address the August 17 CHIP directive."

The bill passed by the House today would delay implementation of regulations that limit services for Medicaid beneficiaries including rehabilitation services for people with both chronic and temporary disabilities, targeted case management services that coordinate support services for atrisk children and adults, school-based services that help parents with Medicaid enrollment and provide limited transportation services to children with disabilities, and hospital outpatient services that provide vital care in clinics and other facilities outside of hospitals. The House also voted to stop a rule to lower state taxes on providers, which are used to pay for Medicaid expenses; to block a rule that would limit Medicaid funding for graduate medical education; and to prevent implementation of limits on Medicaid payments to essential safety net institutions, like public hospitals and nursing homes, which provide critical care to beneficiaries.

Source: Ranking Member’s News

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