Addressing the AHA Annual Membership Meeting today, Eric Hargan, deputy secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services, focused on the importance of regulatory reform and innovation to advancing valued-based care. 鈥淚 believe there has never been an administration more focused on reducing regulatory burden than this one,鈥 he said, noting that the agency has saved more than 53 million hours of paperwork for physicians alone. He said most people responding last year to the agency鈥檚 request for information on potential reforms to the Stark Law and Anti-Kickback statute 鈥渂elieved that changes are needed to support the move to value-based payments,鈥 including AHA comments that highlighted how new flexibilities would help patients. He said the agency is focused on how it can improve the laws through incremental innovation, fundamental reform of definitions, and new flexibilities.

Related News Articles

Perspective
Public
We look forward to welcoming hospital and health system leaders to our 2025 AHA Annual Membership Meeting in Washington, D.C., in less than two months.While鈥
Headline
Early-bird registration for the 2025 Annual Membership Meeting remains available until March 3. The event will be held May 4-6 in Washington, D.C., where鈥
Perspective
Stand up. Speak out. Be heard. The stakes for the future of health care are too high to do anything less. That was a key message for the approximately 1,鈥
Headline
Challenging prior authorization policy requirements were addressed in an AHA Annual Membership Meeting panel discussion moderated by Marilyn Werber Serafini,鈥
Headline
It's always important to bring the issue back to the patient, said Sarah Lechner, senior vice president and chief of external affairs for Hackensack Meridian鈥
Headline
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Director Mandy Cohen, M.D., April 16 shared with attendees of AHA鈥檚 2024 Annual Membership Meeting how her team is鈥