TOP TAKEAWAYS FROM AHA — Some of the country’s top health care policymakers spoke on the final day of the American Hospital Association’s annual membership meeting in Washington on Tuesday. Some major issues discussed included: Cybersecurity: After the Change Healthcare ransomware attack disrupted payment processing, boosting preparedness was top of mind. House Energy and Commerce Health Subcommittee Chair Brett Guthrie (R-Ky.) said he opposes a “top-down” mandate in health care cybersecurity. “[There are] very sophisticated hackers,” Guthrie said. “To have some top-down mandate on hospitals that requires you to spend an enormous amount of money without us figuring this out together — we don’t want that to happen.” That contrasted with Senate Finance Chair Ron Wyden (D-Ore.), who called for federal cyber mandates at the conference a day earlier. HHS Deputy Secretary Andrea Palm acknowledged that, in the wake of the Change attack, she’s “sure there are things that happened … that we hadn’t thought of,” — though she didn’t delve into specifics. She added that the agency seeks additional industry feedback. “We will be more prepared for the next one than we were for this one,” Palm said. Telehealth: Medicare’s eased virtual care rules adopted during the height of the pandemic expire at the end of 2024. Guthrie said that “there will be some extension” and “you're going to like it more than you don't like it.” Senate Minority Whip John Thune (R-S.D.) is optimistic about a telehealth extension but said, “We have to figure out how to pay for it.” Avian flu: CDC Director Mandy Cohen said the threat of the avian flu “keeps me up at night” but added that the country is “really prepared.” She also acknowledged that the CDC likely won’t get new resources or authority from Congress this year. Other congressional priorities: Guthrie expects that the Support Act tackling the opioid epidemic will be reauthorized at some point this year after expiring last year. Thune hopes to get 340B reforms in an end-of-year spending package. SPENDING UNDER SCRUTINY — Medicare Advantage spending for durable medical equipment — which can be pricey — rose 59 percent between 2020 and 2023, according to watchdog testimony before a House Energy and Commerce subcommittee Tuesday. HHS Inspector General Christi Grimm said in written testimony before the Oversight Subcommittee that “increases of this magnitude signal a need for heightened scrutiny” to ensure that the rise isn’t due to fraud. Durable medical equipment like wheelchairs is often a target for fraudsters in federal health care programs. Susan Reilly, spokesperson for the Better Medicare Alliance, which represents MA insurers, pointed to the substantial growth in Medicare Advantage enrollment in recent years and the pandemic as likely reasons for the growth.
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