For future public health emergencies, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services should improve how it sets Medicare rates for clinical diagnostic laboratory tests under the Clinical Laboratory Fee Schedule and communicates with stakeholders involved in setting the rates, the Department of Health and Human Services’ Office of Inspector General advised last week. When CMS was working to increase testing capacity during the COVID-19 PHE, CMS’s standard rate setting procedures did not allow Medicare Administrative Contractors to set rates that were adequate to cover the cost of conducting COVID-19 viral tests for all laboratories, OIG said. In addition, OIG said CMS may have missed opportunities to obtain important information from laboratory associations and MAC pricing coordinators when it made decisions about the new CDLT rates.

Related News Articles

Blog
Black women in the U.S. experience maternal mortality rates at nearly three times that of white women, regardless of income or education level. This…
Blog
Exploring and developing a better understanding of the social determinants of health is becoming standard in medical education and training. Social isolation…
Headline
Hospitals and health systems have until The deadline is Wednesday, May 15, to participate in the 2024 DEI Benchmark Survey. AHA’s Institute for Diversity and…
Headline
The RAND Corporation May 13 released its latest hospital pricing report, which focuses on prices paid for care at the hospital and service-line level. In…
Headline
AHA wrapped up its 2024 Accelerating Health Equity Conference May 9 with a detailed advocacy update of the latest from Washington, D.C. The update, given by…
Headline
The convening of 1,000 leaders from hospitals, health systems, and community and public health organizations continued for a full-day schedule at the AHA…