New rule limits outpatient Medicaid

Published: Nov. 8, 2008 at 12:37 AM

WASHINGTON, Nov. 8 (UPI) -- Medicaid would not cover hospital outpatient procedures that could have been done in a doctor's office, a rule published Friday by the Bush administration said.

Federal officials said the regulation simply clarifies what Medicaid -- the federal-state program to provide healthcare for those with low income -- will pay for, The New York Times reported. But hospital and state officials said that the change is another financial blow.

"This is a disaster for safety-net institutions like ours," said John W. Bluford III, president of Truman Medical Centers in Kansas City, Mo. "The change in the outpatient rule will mean a $5 million hit to us. Medicaid accounts for about 55 percent of our business."

The administration is expected to issue many similar rule changes before President George W. Bush leaves office in January. In May, officials said they wanted to avoid the kind of "midnight regulations" issued by previous administrations.

© 2008 United Press International, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Order reprints




Additional News Stories
Doc Holliday named Marshall football coach (4 min)
Octopus tool-using behavior seen (34 min)
Fake rifle brings all-out police response (50 min)
Poll: Christmas loneliest time for singles (56 min)
Hitchhiking frogs possible disease threat (58 min)
Invasive species threaten Great Lakes
Man charged in sword attack
fark
Cat chewing is draining Yemen's water supply
ACLU cancels Christmas, kids devastated
Today's "Mugshot Roundup"? Watta buncha maroons
Man uses cows to defraud banks. Cops heard about it, had a beef with him and branded him a criminal....
Lingerie Football League gets it's panties in a bunch, files briefs threatening to bustier players...
Photoshop this colorful trio