hospitals
Change Healthcare meltdown provided hospitals ammo
The Change Healthcare fiasco has had widespread ramifications for hospitals and physicians across the country in recent weeks, but it’s also had an unexpected upside — providing leverage for hospital trade groups to argue that the crisis has caused their members financial distress on Capitol Hill.
Several industry lobbyists told me that the crisis was another talking point that the hospital industry used to argue that now wasn’t the time to pass policies the industry didn’t like, including equalizing payments between hospital outpatient departments and physician offices, known as site-neutral payments. The overall push was successful, as Congress couldn’t come to agreement on a larger health care package, and punted the issue to December.
That being said, there were definitely other factors that led to the demise of the package — but when lawmakers are hearing panic from major employers in their districts, it doesn’t create an ideal environment for a successful site-neutral policy push.
white house
Becerra sets sights back home
President Biden is likely to be searching for a new HHS secretary if he’s reelected this fall. Xavier Becerra is reportedly throwing his hat into the ring to replace California Gov. Gavin Newsom in 2026, and according to Politico has already set aside funds for the crowded race.
While the former California attorney general had a rocky start in his Cabinet role and occasionally strained relationship with the White House, he also traversed the country touting Biden’s efforts to lower drug prices, boost care and defend reproductive rights. Insiders saw his relationship with the White House warming, but none are too surprised that he wouldn’t stick around the Humphrey building, my co-author Sarah Owermohle reports.
However his departure could leave a host of Biden health priorities in limbo. The president is looking to cement the cancer moonshot program, continue slashing drug costs and solidify an ambitious 2025 budget — ideally before the lame-duck session.
Asked by STAT this December whether he’d stick around for a second Biden term, Becerra said: “We all serve at the pleasure of the president. This president has really demonstrated that he has a grasp of what the health care needs are in this country, and how to solve them.”