| From: Extensive Media Enterprises Welcome back to Diagnosis, a vertical that focuses on the crossroads of health care policy and politics. ___ Florida TaxWatch has released a new report showing the state ranks among the Top 10 nationally in delivering hospice services, according to the latest data from the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. The watchdog group credits Florida's hospice Certificate of Need (CON) program, which regulates expansion to ensure quality and sustainability. Florida ranked sixth nationwide in the Hospice and Palliative Care Composite Process Measure (95.9%) and tied for second in the Hospice Care Index Overall Score (9.7). Dominic Calabro, Florida TaxWatch president and CEO, said palliative care "can be implemented earlier in the disease management process, helping improve quality of life and reduce costs for patients and taxpayers alike."  Florida TaxWatch's Dominic Calabro and Jeff Kottkamp report that Florida is a leader in hospice. Executive Vice President Jeff Kottkamp added that while Florida's programs improve outcomes, "sufficient levels of palliative care are unavailable in more than one-half of Florida counties," urging lawmakers to preserve the CON program. The report, "Hospice and Palliative Care: Florida is a National Leader Among the States Looked to for Best Practices in Compassionate Care," notes that Florida is witnessing a shift toward community and home-based palliative care, which boosts patient satisfaction and lowers costs. It calls for a stronger regulatory framework to define palliative care services, set standards, and establish payment sources. TaxWatch also recommends expanding the role of advanced practice registered nurses, funding Medicaid pilot projects to transition patients into hospice earlier and retaining the CON program to maintain high-quality care while preventing fraud. The group warns that repealing CON could lead to a surge of low-quality providers, citing the instances of fraud and instability seen in states without such oversight. |
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