Menu
2025 Session

Budget Amendments - HB1600 (Member Request)

View Budget Item
View Budget Item amendments

Chief Patron: Sickles
Mitigate Nursing Facility Payment Reductions from New Payment Methodology (language only)

Item 288 #19h

Item 288 #19h

Health and Human Resources
Department of Medical Assistance Services

Language

Page 392, line 44, after “October 1, 2025.” insert:

“In implementing this methodology change, the department shall limit provider-specific rate reductions attributable solely to this change to no more than 5 percent; this same limitation shall be applied for the first scheduled rebasing subsequent to the implementation of this methodology change."



Explanation

(This amendment modifies language in the introduced budget that directs the Department of Medical Assistance Services to modify the nursing facility reimbursement methodology to use the Patient-Driven Payment Model (PDPM) instead of Resource Utilization Groups (RUG). This change will modify the way case severity is measured. Language in the introduced budget requires the reimbursement methodology change to be implemented in a budget neutral manner no later than October 1, 2025, when the RUG methodology will no longer be supported by the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid. Language is modified to mitigate the effect of implementation in a budget neutral manner. Based on the experience of other states who have already transitioned to PDPM or who are further along in the transition, it is clear statewide budget neutrality may mask significant rate variation at the individual facility level. Dramatic reductions in payment rates with no changes in patient mix – just a methodology change – will have a significant impact on facilities’ ability to remain viable. This limitation to the magnitude of those reductions will mitigate those concerns. Because the next scheduled rebasing will utilize data from a period prior to this change, the same effect will occur just as suddenly. By continuing the downside protection for the first rebasing, providers will have the opportunity to properly adjust to the new methodology.)