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Calling all faith community nurses!

What is happening in your part of the world? Who are you serving and what are you doing to provide "intentional care of the spirit" in your practice setting? We want to know! Because you are modest and seldom "toot your own horn," watch for next week's announcement about how you can share your ministry and allow us to acknowledge the wonderful work you do.
Final Rule Requires National Reporting of
Standardized Medicaid and CHIP Quality

The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) released a final rule to require reporting of standardized quality measures in Medicaid and the Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP). The data on these quality measures will help CMS identify opportunities to improve the provision of high-quality, person-centered health care and reduce health disparities among the millions of people enrolled in Medicaid and CHIP.

This rule finalizes requirements for mandatory annual state reporting of three different quality measure sets starting in federal fiscal year 2024:

  • Core Set of Children’s Health Care Quality Measures for Medicaid and CHIP;
  • Behavioral health measures on the Core Set of Adult Health Care Quality Measures for Medicaid; and
  • Core Sets of Health Home Quality Measures for Medicaid.

The purpose of the Child and Adult Core Sets is to measure the overall national quality of care for beneficiaries, monitor performance at the state level, and improve the quality of health care. The purpose of the Health Home Core Sets is to measure the overall national quality of health home care for Medicaid beneficiaries, monitor the impact of this optional state plan benefit, monitor performance of this benefit at the state and program levels, and improve the quality of health care. States will be required to report stratified data for an increasing number of measures over time, with potential stratification factors including geography and race/ethnicity.

For more information, or to review the rule in its entirety, visit the Federal Register.
HHS Selects the First Drugs for Medicare Drug Price Negotiation

For the first time, Medicare will be able to negotiate prices directly with drug companies, lowering prices on some of the costliest prescription drugs.

For the first time, thanks to President Biden’s Inflation Reduction Act – the historic law lowering health care costs – Medicare is able to negotiate the prices of prescription drugs. Today, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), through the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), announced the first 10 drugs covered under Medicare Part D selected for negotiation. The negotiations with participating drug companies will occur in 2023 and 2024, and any negotiated prices will become effective beginning in 2026. Medicare enrollees taking the 10 drugs covered under Part D selected for negotiation paid a total of $3.4 billion in out-of-pocket costs in 2022 for these drugs.

The Biden-Harris Administration has made lowering prescription drug costs and improving access to innovative therapies a key priority. Alongside other provisions in the new law that increase the affordability of health care and prescription drugs, allowing Medicare to negotiate prescription drug prices will strengthen the program’s ability to serve people with Medicare now and for generations to come. The negotiation process will consider the selected drug’s clinical benefit, the extent to which it fulfills an unmet medical need, and its impact on people who rely on Medicare, among other considerations, such as costs associated with research and development as well as production and distribution for selected drugs. As a result of negotiations, people with Medicare will have access to innovative, life-saving treatments at lower costs to Medicare.

The selected drug list for the first round of negotiation is:

  • Eliquis
  • Jardiance
  • Xarelto
  • Januvia
  • Farxiga
  • Entresto
  • Enbrel
  • Imbruvica
  • Stelara
  • Fiasp; Fiasp FlexTouch; Fiasp PenFill; NovoLog; NovoLog FlexPen; NovoLog PenFill

These selected drugs accounted for $50.5 billion in total Part D gross covered prescription drug costs, or about 20%, of total Part D gross covered prescription drug costs between June 1, 2022 and May 31, 2023, which is the time period used to determine which drugs were eligible for negotiation. CMS will publish any agreed-upon negotiated prices for the selected drugs by September 1, 2024; those prices will come into effect starting January 1, 2026. In future years, CMS will select for negotiation up to 15 more drugs covered under Part D for 2027, up to 15 more drugs for 2028 (including drugs covered under Part B and Part D), and up to 20 more drugs for each year after that, as outlined in the Inflation Reduction Act.

View a fact sheet from the Office of the Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation (ASPE) at: https://aspe.hhs.gov/reports/aspe-ira-drug-negotiation-fact-sheet.

View a CMS fact sheet on the drugs selected for the Medicare Drug Price Negotiation Program at: https://www.cms.gov/files/document/fact-sheet-medicare-selected-drug-negotiation-list-ipay-2026.pdf.

More information on the Medicare Drug Price Negotiation Program is available at https://www.cms.gov/inflation-reduction-act-and-medicare/medicare-drug-price-negotiation.
Did you know that there are transitional care, hospice care, and nursing research interest groups available for you to join on the Westberg Knowledge Sharing Community Platform? If you are already a member of this free online closed community, login and click on the Groups tab. If you have not yet joined the Westberg Knowledge Sharing Community Platform, go to www.westberginstitute.org, click on the Community tab at the top, click on the Join Us tab on the right side underneath the picture. Once you click submit, you will receive a welcome letter. If you did not find this welcome letter in your inbox, check your spam folder.
Important Contact Information: 
For the Knowledge Sharing Platform: community.westberginstitute.org 
For information about teaching the Foundations of Faith Community Nursing Curriculum: https://westberginstitute.org/for-educators/ 
To find a Foundations of Faith Community Nursing Course: 
To contact Dr. Sharon T. Hinton, Director, Westberg Institute and SCA Nursing Division: sharon@westberginstitute.org or SHinton@spiritualcareassociation.org 
For general assistance, contact admin@westberginstitute.org 
The Westberg Institute for Faith Community Nursing has provided education, resources, and fellowship for nurses since 1986. Our Foundations of Faith Community Nursing Practice curriculum is based on best-practice standards and is taught by educational partners across the United States and around the world. For more information visit our website www.westberginstitute.org, our Facebook page www.facebook.com/westberginstitute and enjoy our videos on the Westberg Institute YouTube channel.