The AHA Oct. 23 recommended changes to the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services’ Wasteful and Inappropriate Services Reduction model to address multiple concerns. The model is designed to use technology-enabled prior authorization to decrease services that CMS considers having little to no clinical benefit for some patients. The AHA expressed concerns about the WISeR model’s payment structure for participating vendors, appeal rights, oversight on the use of AI, oversight of vendors used by Medicare Advantage plans, expansion of the model’s scope and its implementation timeline, among other details. The model, scheduled to begin Jan. 1, will be conducted in six states: Arizona, New Jersey, Ohio, Oklahoma, Texas and Washington. The AHA urged CMS to delay its implementation by at least six months.

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The Joint Economic Committee March 10 released a report that found Medicare Part B premiums rose last year due to Medicare Advantage overpayments. The…
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Gratia Pitcher, M.D., chief medical officer and patient experience dyad leader with Essentia Health, and Larissa Africa, vice president of health care…
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In a letter to the editor published March 3 by KFF Health News, Jim Prister, president and CEO of RML Specialty Hospital and chair of the AHA Post-Acute…
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The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services Feb. 23 announced the development of its Medicare App Library. As part of the agency’s Health Technology…
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The AHA responded to a request for information today from the Department of Health and Human Services on the adoption and use of artificial intelligence in…
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Jean Sumner, M.D., dean of Mercer University School of Medicine, and Marc Welsh, vice president of child advocacy at Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta, share…