Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

National

Byrne and Sewell lead a bipartisan letter supporting rural hospitals

hand clicking healthcare button on a touch screen interface

Thursday, Representatives Bradley Byrne (R-Montrose), Phil Roe (R-Tenness), Terri A. Sewell (D-Selma), Brad Wenstrup, D.P.M (R-Ohio), Jodey Arrington (R-Texas), and Jason Smith (R-Missouri) led 90 colleagues in a letter to Secretary Alex Azar of the Department of Health & Human Services and Administrator Seema Verma of the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services in support of finalizing their efforts to reform the Medicare Area Wage Index.

“For thirty years, Medicare dollars that should have gone to Alabama have instead been going to large, urban areas of the country because of the Wage Index,” Congressman Byrne said. “This unjustified disparity in payments has contributed to budgetary shortfalls and hospital closures in Alabama. This is a real crisis. When the Trump Administration came into office, I asked them to take immediate steps to correct this issue, and this letter shows strong, bipartisan support for finalizing the important reforms the Trump Administration has proposed. Rural Americans deserve access to a hospital, and I will continue working with this Administration to advocate for them in Congress.”

“Alabama hospitals have received less than their fair share of Medicare reimbursement dollars for too long,” Congresswoman Terri Sewell said. “I have been working with my colleagues for years to fix the Medicare Wage Index to help struggling Alabama hospitals keep their doors open, especially in rural parts of our state. It is critical that CMS finalizes its proposal, and I will continue to push until our rural hospitals see relief.”

“For too long, rural hospitals have been on an unequal playing field because of the Medicare area wage index, a figure that greatly distorts Medicare payments,” Congressman Roe said. “States like Tennessee have such a low area wage index that it has forced hospital closure and consolidation in some of our most vulnerable communities. There are hospitals in California that get paid over 2.5 times what hospitals in Johnson City and Kingsport receive for the exact same procedure. There is no justification for such a distortion. That’s why the Trump administration’s proposed reform to raise some of the lowest Medicare area wage indexes is critically important to East Tennessee. This change will also help our region recruit and retain quality physicians for our region. I am proud to work with Reps. Byrne, Sewell and others to strongly support this proposal, which has the potential to save rural health care.”

“Communities across Ohio’s Second District and across America rely on rural hospitals for their healthcare needs,” Congressman Wenstrup said. “These hospitals provide the same care as their urban counterparts, yet they are being compensated at lower rates due to the Medicare Area Wage Index. The continually decreasing reimbursements make it harder for rural hospitals to keep their doors open to continue caring for their communities. I strongly support efforts to reform the Wage Index to protect rural hospitals.”

“I applaud the Trump Administration for working to correct the imbalance of health care payments that for far too long have unfairly rewarded wealthy cities and penalized rural areas like southern Missouri,” said Congressman Smith. I urge the Administration to quickly finalize their proposal to help improve rural access to quality health care.”

For decades, hospitals in Alabama have been paid less for the same services as other hospitals by Medicare because government economists have estimated that labor is cheaper here, particularly in rural areas of the state. Advocates for rural healthcare want to see this changed.

Advertisement. Scroll to continue reading.

To read the letter that the Congress members sent the administration:

https://byrne.house.gov/sites/byrne.house.gov/files/Medicare%20Wage%20Index%20MEMBER%20COMMENT%20LETTER.pdf

Alabama Congress members Robert Aderholt (R-Haleyville), Mo Brooks (R-Huntsville), Gary Palmer (R-Hoover), Mike Rogers (R-Saks), and Martha Roby (R-Montgomery) also signed the letter.

Congressman Bradley Byrne represents Alabama’s First Congressional District and is a candidate for the U.S. Senate seat currently held by Doug Jones.

Congresswoman Terri Sewell represents Alabama’s Seventh Congressional District.

Brandon Moseley is a former reporter at the Alabama Political Reporter.

More from APR

Congress

The House-passed government funding package includes $9.8 million that Sewell secured for 11 community projects.

Congress

Here in Alabama, 1 in 8 households pay half or more of their income on housing.

Congress

The Alabama Crimson Tide will take on the Michigan Wolverines on Monday, Jan. 1.

Local news

Montgomery is set to transition from Blue Cross Blue Shield of Alabama to AMWINS for its Medicare-eligible retirees' insurance.