New Economic Impact Study
AHCA, Alliance Warn Sizable Job Losses in Key Economic Sector Undermines Obama Administration’s Economic Stimulus Objectives, Contrary to Broader Health Reform Goals
The economic impact analysis finds the Administration’s proposed one-year
The following schedule illustrates the direct, indirect, and induced impact of the proposed Medicare cut on the U.S. economy for FY 2010:
Economic Impact of Medicare Nursing Facility Payment Cutback for Fiscal Year 2010
Direct Indirect Induced Total
Business Activity
Impacts ($)1,050,000,000 457,958,967 1,030,615,974 2,538,574,941
Income Impacts ($)640,413,737 139,085,410 322,634,472 1,102,133,619
Employment Impacts
(Jobs) 20,219 2,842 7,262 30,323
Direct Effect represents the impact (e.g., change in employment or revenues) for the expenditures and/or production values specified as direct final demand changes.
Indirect Effect represents the impact (e.g., change in employment) caused by the iteration of industries purchasing from industries resulting from direct final demand changes.
Induced Effect represents the impacts on all local industries caused by the expenditures of new household income generated by the direct and indirect effects of direct final demand changes.
Total Impact is the sum of the direct, indirect, and induced effects.
Labor Income is the sum of employee compensation and proprietary income.
Economic Impact Analysis: Impact Analysis For Planning (IMPLAN) software, Minnesota IMPLAN Group, Inc., 2007 data.
Prepared by Research Department of American Health Care Association using IMPLAN software, 2007 claims data, and components of proposed SNF PPS rule for fiscal year 2010.
"While we are and will remain strong allies in the effort to help create good-paying jobs, stimulate badly-needed economic activity and reform health care, the Administration, Congress, and the public-at-large needs to know implementation of this Bush-era Medicare regulation will, in fact, cut good health jobs, undermine economic stimulus initiatives, and derail badly-needed delivery system reforms already benefiting beneficiaries and taxpayers," said
Yarwood and Rosenbloom said that as the nature of America’s nursing home patient population continues to evolve, all stakeholders should embrace efforts to facilitate the ability of nursing homes to care for higher-acuity, post-acute Medicare beneficiaries. SNFs, the long term care leaders point out, have invested heavily in recent years to increase capabilities to admit, treat and return to home a growing number of patients requiring intensive rehabilitative care, and care for patients with multiple chronic illnesses. In addition to cutting jobs and damaging already fragile local economies, implementing the rule would inhibit continued investments in cost effective care — again, contrary to the Obama Administration’s stated health policy objectives.
SOURCE American Health Care Association
