Legislature tackles Salem Medicaid dispute

Wednesday March 6, 2013 8:00 PM

By JONATHAN J. COOPER

The Associated Press

SALEM, Ore. (AP) — The Oregon Legislature is stepping into a conflict between Salem Hospital and the local coordinated care organization in charge of providing health coverage for low-income patients on Medicaid.

The state Senate on Wednesday unanimously approved a measure creating a mediation process to help resolve the Salem dispute and any other conflicts that may arise between CCOs and health-care providers.

Salem Hospital and its affiliate in Dallas have a minority ownership stake in the CCO for Marion and Polk counties, Willamette Valley Community Health. They sued the CCO in October over reimbursement rates paid to the hospital. The suit is pending in Marion County Circuit Court.

Gov. John Kitzhaber's Medicaid overhaul created coordinated care organizations intended to get hospitals, independent physicians, mental health providers and others in the health-care industry to work together. Many were previously competitors, but they're now supposed to coordinate care and create new payment models that tie their income to patient health, not the number of visits or procedures they perform.

In addition to the mediation process, the measure approved Monday would extend a state law requiring smaller payments for health-care providers that don't participate in the CCO. The law was set to expire in January but will now continue for two more years.

Sen. Alan Bates, D-Ashland, said Salem Hospital has been reluctant to get on board with the health care reforms and the legislation would help encourage them to do so.

"It makes it more likely that Salem Hospital will realize it needs to come to the table and work with the CCO," said Sen. Alan Bates, D-Ashland. He said the hospital

Sherryll Hoar, a spokeswoman for Salem Health, the hospital's parent company, said the organization is committed to the health care overhaul efforts.

"We are absolutely on board with where the rest of the state's going, and it needs to happen," Hoar said.

The measure, Senate Bill 568, next goes to the House. It's part of a package of bills that also includes the extension of a tax on hospitals used to pay for Medicaid services.

A separate measure introduced in the House would go further, allowing the coordinated care organization to petition the state to kick out the hospital and punish it with severely lower reimbursement rates.

Republican Rep. Kevin Cameron of Salem, one of two lawmakers sponsoring the legislation, said he hopes it will encourage Salem Hospital and the CCO to resolve their dispute. The measure, House Bill 3309, does not have a committee hearing scheduled.

©2013 by The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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