Senate
delays vote on Medicare payment fix for two weeks
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[March 27, 2015]
By David Lawder
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Senate will wait
more than two weeks before acting on a bill to permanently fix the
flawed formula for reimbursing Medicare physicians, after an April 1
deadline to start a 21 percent cut in payment rates.
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Senate Republican and Democratic leaders said early on Friday that
they would take the bill up when they return on April 13 from an
Easter/Passover break.
The measure, a rare bipartisan achievement in a deeply divided
Congress, was overwhelmingly approved on Thursday by the House of
Representatives.
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said he has been reassured
that the delay would not cause doctors to see lower Medicare
payments due to the lag time in the normal processing of payments
from the health care program for seniors.
"They can handle a two week gap here," McConnell said after a
marathon session to pass a budget. "We'll turn to it very quickly
when we get back. I think there's every reason to believe it's going
to pass the Senate by a very large majority."
The measure drafted and driven forward by Republican House Speaker
John Boehner and Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi would fix a
long-standing problem with how Medicare pays doctors.
A 1997 budget-cutting bill reduced the payment rates based on a
flawed formula linking doctor pay to economic growth, but Congress
has routinely passed temporary fixes to forestall cuts that have
proven costly.
The measure approved 392-37 by the House would create a new payment
formula focused on the quality of care. To help pay for these higher
rates, the bill would also impose higher premiums on wealthier
Medicare beneficiaries.
However, the proposal would still add $141 billion to U.S. deficits
over 10 years, according to congressional forecasters, sparking
opposition from some fiscal conservatives.
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While the measure has strong support in the Senate, the delay could
give opponents time to sway senators against the plan.
One of the government's largest social safety net programs, Medicare
is health insurance that serves 54 million elderly and disabled
people.
Under the plan, a Medicare recipient with annual income of between
$133,000 and $160,000 would see their Medicare premium share
increase from 50 to 65 percent, and a recipient with annual income
between $160,000 and $214,000 would pay 75 percent rather than 65
percent.
(Reporting by David Lawder and Susan Cornwell; Editing by Tom
Heneghan)
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