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Republicans Propose Band-Aid For Hospitals Hurt By Their Medicaid Cuts

Rather than reduce the severity of the Medicaid cuts, Republicans are considering a "stabilization fund" for rural hospitals.

President Donald Trump’s “beautiful” tax and spending cuts legislation could strangle rural hospitals, which provide critical care for Americans in many red states. So now Republicans are scrambling to draft a fix before a self-imposed July 4 deadline.

The bill would cut hundreds of billions of dollars for Medicaid, including by limiting the use of so-called provider taxes, which help state governments cover the cost of health care alongside federal assistance. A group of Senate Republicans has complained that the provider tax change would unfairly burden rural hospitals in their states.

To win their votes, Senate GOP leaders have proposed including a $15 billion fund for rural hospitals. Some Republican senators want a much larger sum — up to $100 billion. That group includes senators up for reelection next year like Susan Collins of Maine and Thom Tillis of North Carolina, who are already facing Democratic attack ads about cutting health care for the poor. Sen. Josh Hawley (R-Mo.) has complained Medicaid cuts would betray Trump’s voters and also wants more support for rural hospitals, but he declined to name a specific number.

Hawley said Wednesday his support for the bill would come down to the amount of money in the hospital fund.

“I wouldn’t do any of this … it does not make a lot of sense,” he told HuffPost. “What they’re proposing to do is just not going to work. So we can get a rural hospital fund now, maybe, but sooner or later … we’re going to have to fix it.”

Republican leaders will need to craft a compromise on this issue — as well as other outstanding ones — that satisfies at least 50 GOP senators before the bill can proceed under a special fast-track process known as budget reconciliation.

Health care experts, however, sounded skeptical that a stabilization fund would really fix the problem. The National Rural Health Association warned this week that the bill would cause rural hospitals to close their doors.

“The reductions in federal health spending total over $1 trillion over a decade. A $15 billion stabilization fund for rural hospitals won’t fill a big part of that hole,” wrote Larry Levitt, executive vice president for health policy at the nonprofit Kaiser Health Foundation.

“If we’re going to continue to provide access to health care services in rural America, a very thoughtful approach to reform needs to occur. It can’t occur as patchwork, because it really won’t solve the problem,” Craig Thompson, CEO at Golden Valley Memorial Healthcare, a rural hospital in Clinton, Missouri, said during a call with reporters on Tuesday.

A fundamental problem with the hospital fund idea is that if Republicans were to make sure rural hospitals were held harmless by the so-called Big Beautiful Bill’s health care changes, then there would be significantly less savings from the legislation. And every dollar of savings Republicans subtract makes it harder to win votes from fiscal hawks like Sen. Ron Johnson (R-Wis.), who said he would vote against the bill in its current form ― not to mention House hard-liners who are already mad about other changes sought by their Senate colleagues.

 

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