ACCCBuzz

ACCC Advocacy Update

Posted in ACCC News, Advocacy, Cancer Care, In and Around Washington, DC by ACCCBuzz on January 5, 2016

By Leah Ralph, Director, Health Policy, ACCC

U.S. Capitol Congress closed out 2015 with a bang, passing a number of large, end-of-year spending bills to keep the government funded through 2016 and several provisions that will impact ACCC members.

The omnibus appropriations bill (H.R. 2029) boosted NIH funding by 6.6 percent to $32.1 billion, the largest increase NIH has seen in 12 years. A separate package of Medicare provisions, the Patient Access and Medicare Protection Act (S. 2425) passed just before Congress adjourned for the year. This legislation created a blanket hardship exemption for meaningful use penalties in 2015, making it easier for the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) to review and process hardship exemption requests. (To apply for an exemption, physicians must apply by March 15, 2016, and hospitals by April 1, 2016.)

The Medicare bill also froze payment rates to freestanding radiation therapy centers at 2016 levels for two years, CY2017 and CY2018. It is important to note that the Medicare bill ultimately did not include a provision that would have exempted “under construction” off-campus outpatient facilities from an earlier law (the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2015) that reduced Medicare payments to newly built or acquired hospital outpatient departments.

Before year-end President Obama signed both H.R. 2029 and S. 2425 into law.

As attention shifts toward elections in 2016, with divergent views on the future course of the nation’s healthcare policies, we are sure to see even more movement on policies that will impact the provision of quality cancer care. Make your New Year’s resolution today to join us for ACCC Capitol Hill Day March 2, 2016. Learn more and register here.