Trump administration extends deadline by 3 years to meet Medicaid’s standards of care: 4 insights

The Trump administration said states have until 2022 to adhere to Medicaid’s standards of care, according to Kaiser Health News.

Advertisement

Here are four insights:

1. The extension gives states more time to launch plans to help elderly and disabled people receive Medicaid services without requiring them to go into nursing homes.

2. The Obama administration set the standards in 2014. The initial deadline was 2019 until CMS’ most recent decision.

3. Various states have faced challenges improving care for the disabled due to insufficient funding and political difficulties that correlated with providers.

4. Gary Blumenthal, CEO of the Association of Developmental Disabilities Providers, supported the delay, telling KHN the rule was “a victory for the status quo and for states reluctant to embrace the [new standards].”

More articles on coding and billing:
Aetna completely withdraws from ACA exchanges — 5 takeaways
Judge rules Cigna can walk away from Anthem merger — 3 insights
8 trends in MACRA reporting for physician practices

Advertisement

Next Up in ASC Coding, Billing & Collections

Advertisement

Comments are closed.