CMS proposes policies to improve patient safety and promote health equity

April 12, 2023
Proposed rule would reward hospitals that deliver high-quality care to underserved populations.

The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) issued a proposed rule for inpatient and long-term care hospitals to advance health equity and support underserved communities. As required by statute, the fiscal year (FY) 2024 inpatient prospective payment system (IPPS) and long-term care hospital prospective payment system (LTCH PPS) rule updates Medicare payments and policies for hospitals.

The rule would also adopt hospital quality measures to foster safety, equity, and reduce preventable harm in the hospital setting. CMS is proposing to recognize homelessness as an indicator of increased resource utilization in the acute inpatient hospital setting, which may result in higher payment for certain hospital stays.

For acute care hospitals paid under the IPPS that successfully participate in the Hospital Inpatient Quality Reporting program and are meaningful electronic health record users, the proposed increase in operating payment rates for FY 2024 is projected to be 2.8%. This reflects an FY 2024 projected hospital market basket update of 3.0%, reduced by a projected 0.2 percentage point productivity adjustment. For FY 2024, CMS expects the proposed increase in operating and capital IPPS payment rates would generally increase hospital payments by $3.3 billion. For LTCHs, CMS proposes to increase the LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate by 2.9%. Overall, CMS expects LTCH payments under the dual-rate payment system to decrease by 0.9%, or $24 million, primarily due to a projected decrease in high-cost outlier payments in FY 2024 compared to FY 2023. 

CMS is proposing to make health equity adjustments in the Hospital Value-Based Purchasing Program by providing incentives to hospitals to perform well on existing measures and to those who care for high proportions of underserved individuals, as defined by dual eligibility status. CMS also proposes to recognize the higher costs that hospitals incur when treating people experiencing homelessness, when hospitals report social determinants of health codes on claims. In addition, CMS is requesting comment on how to further support safety-net hospitals.

CMS is also proposing that rural emergency hospitals could be designated as graduate medical education training sites.

CMS release