The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services’ proposed guidance for hospital co-location with other hospitals or health care facilities “represents an important update to existing CMS policy,” AHA said today, and urged the agency to consider a series of revisions to enable successful implementation of the policy and promote safer, higher-quality care.
 
“For hospitals, the option and ultimate decision to co-locate is only as meaningful as the benefits both patients and the providers who treat them receive as part of a more streamlined and coordinated process,” AHA wrote. “Failure to provide critical flexibility for these co-located entities significantly hampers the benefits of such arrangements, diminishing the value of co-location, and likely leading to far less utilization of the option to co-locate. For these reasons, we recommend the agency consider a series of revisions and clarification to key components of the guidance. Specifically, we ask CMS to revise provisions related to distinct and shared space, staffing contracts and emergency services. In addition, we request that the agency address a number of co-location possibilities not directly discussed in its draft guidance.”
 
The guidance seeks to clarify how CMS and state surveyors will evaluate space-sharing arrangements for compliance with the Medicare conditions of participation. Prior sub-regulatory interpretations prohibited co-location of hospitals with other health care entities.

Related News Articles

Headline
Rep. Brett Guthrie, R-Ky., today addressed attendees of AHA’s 2024 Annual Membership Meeting and touched on many of the biggest issues in health care:…
Headline
The Change Healthcare cyberattack was a significant event that caught many off guard, said the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services Administrator…
Headline
The voluntary Episode Quality Improvement Program for specialist physicians saved Medicare $20 million in its first year, the Maryland Health Services Cost…
Headline
Commenting April 12 on a proposed rule to strengthen oversight of accrediting organizations, AHA told the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services it…
Blog
Since 2018, Black Maternal Health Week has been a national observance from April 11–17. This annual observance was created by the Black Mamas Matter Alliance…
Headline
For future public health emergencies, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services should improve how it sets Medicare rates for clinical diagnostic…