AHA today urged the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services to create or adapt compensation exceptions to the Stark Law to enable hospitals and physicians to coordinate care and improve patient outcomes. 鈥淭o reach the full potential of a value-based health system, the Stark compensation regulations must be reframed to meet the objectives of the new system, through the creation of a new exception designed specifically for value-based payment methodologies,鈥 AHA wrote, responding to a CMS request for information on reducing the law鈥檚 regulatory burdens. The letter highlights the obstacles hospitals and physicians face navigating compensation regulations built for a fee-for-service model and also recommends additional specific changes to achieve a patient-centered and value-based health system. 鈥淲e urge that no changes be made to the regulations implementing the Stark Law鈥檚 ownership ban,鈥 AHA said. 鈥淭hat ban is a carefully developed policy that is working as Congress intended.鈥

Related News Articles

Headline
The American Society for Health Care Engineering July 28 announced the recipients of its annual member awards during the 2025 Health Care Facilities Innovation鈥
Chairperson's File
Public
The recently enacted One Big Beautiful Bill Act will bring big changes to health care. AHA President and CEO Rick Pollack joined me for a Leadership Dialogue鈥
Chairperson's File
Public
This month Congress enacted the One Big Beautiful Bill Act 鈥 a sweeping package that contained many of President Trump鈥檚 legislative priorities on taxes,鈥
Headline
The AHA July 2 expressed support for the Resident Physician Shortage Reduction Act (H.R. 3890), bipartisan legislation that would add 14,000 Medicare-funded鈥
Headline
The House July 3 voted 218-214 to pass the final version of the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (H.R. 1), which enacts many of President Trump鈥檚 legislative鈥
Headline
The American Society for Health Care Engineering July 1 announced 87 health care facilities as winners of the 2025 Energy to Care Sustainability Champions鈥