Plus, Colorado’s success on ED volumes
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Wednesday, November 19, 2025

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Rich Daly, Senior Editor

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Rich Daly, Senior Editor

ACA subsidy vote planned as government reopens

Senate leaders have committed to a vote by mid-December on extra ACA marketplace subsidies as part of the deal to re-open the federal government.

 

A Senate Finance Committee hearing today is expected to feature discussion of a GOP proposal to fund health accounts instead of providing premium subsidies for the ACA marketplace.

 

The deal to fund government operations through Jan. 30 included:

  • Funding Medicare coverage of telehealth
  • Funding hospital-at-home services
  • Delaying a $24 billion cut to Medicaid disproportionate share hospital payments
  • Paying for low-volume and Medicare-dependent hospitals
READ ANALYSIS

Colorado reverses ED volume trend

Colorado hospitals saw their ED volumes decrease in 2024 — their first reduction since 2020.

 

Emergency department volumes at Colorado hospitals increased 31% from 2020 to 2023 before decreasing 1% in 2024. New data indicate that volume cut was helped by steadily decreasing ED visits by the uninsured since the middle of 2024.

 

Tom Rennell, a senior vice president for the Colorado Hospital Association (CHA), credited the decrease in uninsured visits, specifically, to Medicaid redeterminations ending mid-2024 and the ability of some residents who lost coverage to regain either Medicaid or other state coverage.

 

Nationwide, emergency department visits per calendar day are 6% higher this year than they were year-to-date in 2022 and 2% higher year over year compared to 2024, according to the latest Kaufman Hall National Hospital Flash Report, which uses data from Strata Decision Technology.

 

Hospitals face a “dual bottleneck” of critically ill patients waiting too long for inpatient beds, while low-acuity patients lacking access to primary or urgent care flood the ED for conditions that could be addressed elsewhere, according to one analysis.

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Source: Colorado Hospital Association, Q2 2025 Financial and Utilization Trend, Oct. 28, 2025.

READ ANALYSIS

Where low commercial pay hits rural hospitals

The most-rural and independent hospitals, as well as government-run rural hospitals, face the worst commercial payment rates among all hospitals, according to a new analysis.

 

Findings of an analysis of price transparency data from more than 5,000 U.S. hospitals by Dan Snow, a researcher and data scientist at Turquoise Health, included:

  • Median commercial rate at a rural hospital is 232% of Medicare, versus a 253% rate at urban hospitals
  • Most-rural hospitals reimbursed 33 percentage points less than urban hospitals
  • Most-rural hospitals paid 23 percentage points less than rural hospitals closer to urban areas

The rural-urban hospital commercial rate gap extended to most service lines.

 

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Source: Price Points blog, Rural hospitals are paid less than urban hospitals, Nov. 6, 2025.

 

READ ANALYSIS

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TRUMP TRACKER

Explore a timeline of key federal healthcare actions since mid-January along with news reporting from HFMA.

READ TIMELINE

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NUMBER TO KNOW

Increase in the conversion factor for Medicare physician payments in 2026 when they are in an advanced alternative payment model vs. 3.26% for those who are not. It’s the first increase in six years for physicians.  LEARN MORE.

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Crucial Date

REGULATORY

Jan. 1: Launch of 340B Discount Drug Program rebate model

 

Jan. 1: Launch of Transforming Episode Accountability Model (TEAM)

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