The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services Dec. 11 announced the launch of the Make America Healthy Again: Enhancing Lifestyle and Evaluating Value-based Approaches Through Evidence Model, a voluntary payment model that will fund up to 30 chronic disease prevention and health promotion proposals. The proposals must include evidence-based functional or lifestyle medicine interventions not covered by Original Medicare. Under the MAHA ELEVATE Model, CMS said it will evaluate necessary data on the cost and quality of such interventions to inform future decisions on the feasibility of including them in Original Medicare. The agency will release a funding notice in early 2026 for the first cohort, which will begin Sept. 1, 2026. The second cohort will begin one year later. 

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The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services March 20 released a memorandum reinforcing hospital nutrition service obligations for hospitals. The memo…
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The Department of Health and Human Services and Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services announced members of the Healthcare Advisory Committee March 26.…
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An American Heart Association study published March 25 found that children born to mothers with premature placental separation could be at higher risk of heart…
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Recent analyses of national health spending have again placed hospitals at the center of the affordability debate. A recent Kaiser Family Foundation brief…
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A JAMA study published March 18 found that women who experience premature menopause have a 40% higher lifetime risk of coronary heart disease. Approximately 15…