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Morning Briefing

Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations

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Monday, Apr 20 2015

Full Issue

House, Senate Negotiators Focus On Hammering Out A GOP Budget Blueprint

As negotiators reconcile Senate- and House-passed budgets, health programs like Medicare and Medicaid are expected to be at the top of the agenda. Republicans are also debating whether to use the fast-track budget process to try to repeal the health law.

The Associated Press: Talks To Begin On Capitol Hill Budget Measure

Cuts to Medicare and the health care law and almost $40 billion in unrequested money for overseas war-fighting operations top the agenda as congressional negotiators meet to begin ironing out a Republican budget blueprint for next year and beyond. Separate House- and Senate-passed budget plans have plenty in common. Both chambers want to use the fast-track budget process to send a measure repealing the health care law to President Barack Obama. And both call for padding war spending — it's exempt from budget limits — on new weapons and training of American forces. (4/20)

The Wall Street Journal: Congress Is Tiptoeing Away From Spending Curbs

Exhibit two: Lawmakers last week overwhelmingly passed a bipartisan deal to set new formulas to calculate the way physicians and other providers are paid when they treat patients on Medicare, the federal health program for the elderly and disabled. The change ends more than a decade of legislative patches for a system that had repeatedly threatened to cut doctors’ payments. The votes faced little opposition even though the deal adds $140 billion to the deficit over 10 years. Just eight of 100 senators voted no, along with 37 of 435 House members. The measure does include a provision to shift some costs onto higher-income Medicare beneficiaries, which Republican leaders say made the deal an initial step toward a broader overhaul of entitlement programs. (Timiraos, 4/19)

The Associated Press: Bipartisanship Breaks Out On Capitol Hill -- At Least For Now

Suddenly, bipartisanship has broken out on Capitol Hill. On Iran, Medicare, education and trade, Republicans and Democrats have come together to make deals, and that’s something rarely seen lately. “It’s great,” Republican Sen. John Cornyn of Texas said after the Senate followed the House’s lead this past week in overwhelmingly passing a bill overhauling the Medicare payment system for doctors. “There’s just a huge pent-up demand to actually get something done, on both sides.” (Werner, 4/20)

This is part of the Morning Briefing, a summary of health policy coverage from major news organizations. Sign up for an email subscription.
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