The Department of Health and Human Services as of July 1 has reduced by nearly 20% its backlog of Medicare appeals at the Administrative Law Judge level, according to a status report the agency recently provided to a federal court.
 
The reduction, which puts the agency ahead of schedule for reducing the backlog, responds to a federal court ruling last year in favor of the AHA and its member hospital plaintiffs that established annual deadline-based targets for reducing the backlog of Medicare appeals at the ALJ level.
 
HHS this month reported that 鈥淸f]rom November 1, 2018 through the end of the second quarter of FY 2019, there has been a net reduction of 82,936 appeals pending at OMHA with a total of 343,658 appeals pending at OMHA by the end of the second quarter, which is a 19.4% reduction from the starting number of appeals identified in the Court鈥檚 November 1 Order (426,594 appeals).鈥
 
Last year鈥檚 order required that HHS achieve the following reductions from its own currently projected fiscal year 2018 backlog of 426,594 appeals: a 19% reduction by the end of FY 2019; a 49% reduction by the end of FY 2020; a 75% reduction by the end of FY 2021; and elimination of the backlog by the end of FY 2022.

Related News Articles

Headline
The Supreme Court April 29 ruled 7-2 in favor of the Department of Health and Human Services in a case that challenged how HHS applied Congress鈥 formula for鈥
Perspective
Public
One year ago, a nurse at Children鈥檚 Hospital Colorado went above and beyond in a way that a very young patient and her family will never forget. Kayla鈥
Headline
Achieving operational and survey readiness on day one is an issue that many health care facilities professionals continue to grapple with, according to鈥
News
The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services April 7 released finalized payment rates for calendar year 2026 Medicare Advantage and Part D plans. Payments鈥
Headline
The AHA today urged the Medicare Payment Advisory Commission to take specific actions on physician fee schedule payments following recommendations the鈥
Headline
The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services April 4 finalized changes to the Medicare Advantage and prescription drug programs for contract year 2026. The鈥