Federal
Healthcare Reform
The United States is grappling with increasing healthcare costs and a
growing number of Americans who are without insurance. Congress is now
working to tackle these issues with comprehensive changes to the current
health insurance and delivery systems.
Hospital
Preparedness
MHA continues to actively represent hospitals in evolving emergency
preparedness issues and related legislation.
State
Budget
State revenues affects hospitals' Medicaid and Medicare reimbursements,
as well as a wide variety of public health initatives in which
hospitals and other providers' particiapte.
Regulatory
Compliance
Massachusetts hospitals and other providers must meet
many state and federal regulations to participate in the latest and
most comprehensive care efforts. Initatives range from "green"
environmental standards to billing regulations and credentialling
requirements for physicians and other healthcare workers.
Last July, the Massachusetts Special Commission on the Healthcare Payment System issued broad and wide-ranging recommendations on how to improve the way healthcare is provided and paid for in the Commonwealth. The Massachusetts Hospital Association (MHA) is taking a leading role in the state's healthcare payment reform and cost containment efforts with a six-part report series and white papers outlining a number of key issues that must be addressed before plunging in to implementing reforms.

On Friday, October 9, the association released "Massachusetts Payment Reform: An Overview of Critical Foundational Issues" and an executive summary providing an overview of the main issues the in-depth MHA reports will cover: ACOs, the transfer of risk to providers, benefit design, oversight requirements, and how a new payment system will affect societal needs, such as medical education, uncompensated care and behavioral health.

On Friday, November 20, 2009 MHA released "Creating Accountable Care Organizations in Massachusetts: Key Issues for the Commonwealth to Address" and an executive summary which outlines goals and recommends strategies the state can adopt to facilitate successful formation and operation of ACOs.
MHA’s strategic recommendations for ACOs include:

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On Thursday, February 4, 2010, MHA released the third paper "Support for Societal needs: A Critical issue to Address in payment Reform" and an executive summary which examines five societal needs that hospitals and health systems fulfill and the importance of these efforts to the community and economy, and the potential impact of a global payment system on hospitals' ability to continue to meet the needs. The paper also contains appendices that delve in depth into hospital financial issues relating to the Safety Net, Bad Debt and more, as well as a thorough discussion of Graduate Medical Education
MHA identified the following five societal needs:

On Friday, March 12, 2010, MHA released the fourth
white paper “Benefit Design and Beyond: Consumer Choice
and the Role of Employers in Payment Reform” and
an executive summary stating that the goals of
improving affordability, efficiency and quality of care in the
Commonwealth cannot be achieved without careful consideration of health
insurance products and the benefit designs employers select, along with
active consumer (patient) engagement. The report also makes specific
recommenda¬tions to help guide employer decisions on health benefit
design.
MHA calls upon employers and insurers to:

In April, 2010, MHA released a white paper "Hospital Costs in Context: A Transparent View of
the Cost of Care" describing the cost of Massachusetts
Acute Care Hospitals (FY 2004-2008) from the perspective of the
resources hospitals need to provide the high quality care that the
people of the Commonwealth expect and depend on. The focus of this paper
is on “cost” as experienced by hospitals because this is a
part of the cost equation that is little understood and needs to be
examined closely along with other factors such as benefit design,
administrative simplification, addressing societal needs such as a
health care safety net for successful and sustainable reform of the
healthcare system.
This paper is intended to inform policy development and advance transparency as all stakeholders in the Massachusetts healthcare system work together to achieve sustainable balance between cost and value over the long-term.

In July, 2010, MHA released an update to the hospital costs in context report entitled "Bending the Curve: Hospital Cost Cutting Efforts Begin to Pay Off" that shows substantial lowering of hospital cost increases during 2009 and continuing into this year. At the same time, payments to hospitals for services in those two years have been over $2.4 billion lower than they would have been had the FY 2004 – FY 2008 trend continued.
“As the FY 2009 figures show, Massachusetts hospitals have responded to the call for cost reduction by health plans, government, and employers,” said Lynn Nicholas, President & CEO of MHA. “Some of these changes were sparked by the economic downturn, but all the changes were driven by hospital initiative, and hospitals will strive to sustain this progress as part of our contribution to lasting reform and bending the cost curve. With real healthcare reform, the future will not replicate the past.