The House Ways and Means Health Subcommittee yesterday held a  on modernizing the Stark Law to facilitate value-based care. Enacted in 1989, the law generally prohibits physicians from referring certain Medicare patients to an entity in which they or an immediate family member have a financial interest. 
 
鈥淏ut, what made sense for the health care system in the 1980s does not necessarily translate to the modern health care system,鈥 Health and Human Services Deputy Secretary Eric Hargan told the subcommittee. In a health care system moving to value-based payments, the law 鈥渕ay unduly limit ways that physicians and health care providers can coordinate patient care,鈥 he said, calling the department 鈥渙pen-minded about the types of changes that may be needed to make the Stark Law more compatible with the push toward integrated care and alternative payment models.鈥
 
Also testifying at the hearing, Advocate Aurora Health Chief Integration Officer Michael Lappin said the law 鈥渉as turned into an outdated set of legal requirements that is now inhibiting innovation and blocking ability to realize the benefits of value-based care. 鈥 Even with regulatory exceptions and guidance, the law has an extremely broad prohibition on physician referrals that prevents us from considering many types of value-based arrangements because we would not want to run the risk of facing enormous penalties.鈥
 
In a statement submitted to the subcommittee, AHA recommended legislative and administrative actions to facilitate value-based care under the Stark Law. Specifically, AHA urged Congress to remove the compensation provisions under Stark, which 鈥渄o not support a value-based system,鈥 and create a safe harbor under the Anti-Kickback Statute for clinical integration arrangements. It also urged the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services to create an innovative payment exception for value-based payment arrangements, and clarify critical requirements of the Stark law and exceptions to the law.
 
CMS last month released a request for information on how it can reduce regulatory burdens and obstacles to care coordination associated with the Stark Law. Comments are due Aug. 24.

Related News Articles

Perspective
Public
Congressional lawmakers are heading home for a two-week district work period after both the Senate and House passed a revised budget resolution for fiscal year鈥
Headline
Story Updated April 5 at 8:30 a.m. ETThe Senate by a vote of 51 to 48 passed its revised budget resolution for fiscal year 2025 with Sens. Rand鈥
Headline
The AHA and dozens of other organizations yesterday urged House and Senate sponsors of the Conrad State 30 and Physician Access Reauthorization Act to鈥
Headline
The AHA March 27 voiced opposition to the Physician Led and Rural Access to Quality Care Act (H.R. 2191), a bill that would lift the ban on the establishment鈥
Headline
The AHA March 11 shared ways Congress could better support patient access to post-acute care in comments for a hearing held by the House Committee on Ways and鈥
Headline
The House of Representatives March 11 voted 217-213 to pass a continuing resolution to fund the federal government through Sept. 30. The bill also extends鈥