Safety-net hospitals and others will lose a significant portion of their Medicaid disproportionate share (Medicaid DSH) payments on November 22 unless Congress delays implementation of the cut in those payments that was mandated by the Affordable Care Act.
And hospitals that receive these payments are now preparing for the worst.

Four times Congress has voted to delay the Medicaid DSH cut because so many people remained uninsured. Now, however, the most recent delay in implementation of the cut, via a provision in the continuing resolution currently funding the federal government, expires on November 21, and hospitals – many of them already with razor-thin margins – are preparing for the worst: a major reduction of their federal Medicaid DSH money.
NASH has asked Congress to delay the implementation of Medicaid DSH cuts on numerous occasions, citing their potential impact on the ability of private-safety-net hospitals to serve their communities. NASH most recently made this request in September, urging members of Congress to support the continuing bipartisan effort to delay the cut.
Learn more about the prospect of a major Medicaid DSH cut later this month, how it might affect safety-net hospitals – including the kinds of private safety-net hospitals represented by NASH – and what some hospitals are doing to prepare for the possibility in the Stateline article “Rural and Safety Net Hospitals Prepare for Cut in Federal Support.”

