Burgess, Engel, Brady, Rangel, Introduce Legislation to Ensure Multi-Campus Hospitals Receive Health IT Incentives
Washington,
July 12, 2011
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Whitney Thompson
(202-225-7772)
Washington, D.C. – Today, Congressman Michael C. Burgess, M.D. (R-TX-26), Congressman Eliot Engel (D-NY-17), Congressman Kevin Brady (R-TX-08), and Congressman Charlie Rangel (D-NY-15), introduced The Equal Access and Parity for Multi-Campus Hospitals (HITECH) Act, HR 2500. The legislation would ensure that multi-campus hospitals that adopt and use health IT systems that meet appropriate standards are treated fairly under federal rules receiving incentive payments that take into account their higher costs of implementation. The legislation was introduced with over fifty bi-partisan co-sponsors.
Burgess, Engel, Brady, Rangel, Introduce Legislation to Ensure Washington, D.C. – Today, Congressman Michael C. Burgess, M.D. (R-TX-26), Congressman Eliot Engel (D-NY-17), Congressman Kevin Brady (R-TX-08), and Congressman Charlie Rangel (D-NY-15), introduced The Equal Access and Parity for Multi-Campus Hospitals (HITECH) Act, HR 2500. The legislation would ensure that multi-campus hospitals that adopt and use health IT systems that meet appropriate standards are treated fairly under federal rules receiving incentive payments that take into account their higher costs of implementation. The legislation was introduced with over fifty bi-partisan co-sponsors. “As Washington encourages health care providers to improve their IT systems, we want to ensure equal funding treatment for hospitals with multiple campuses. This will accelerate state-of-the-art technology and coordination, and will fulfill the intention of Congress,” said Rep. Brady. "This bill clarifies Congressional intent to provide a common sense, fair approach for multi-campus health systems. We need widespread adoption of electronic health records and incentive payments to provide increased quality of care for the American people. I am proud to be part of this bi-partisan bill and will work to see its quick passage," said Rep. Rangel. Multi-campus hospital systems have incremental acquisition, training, and implementation costs when adopting health IT systems. The legislation clarifies that the health IT incentives in the Recovery Act should address these costs and offers choices for how the campuses receive these incentive payments, reflecting differences between large and small multi-campus hospital systems. Heath care organizations have commended the legislation. ### |
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