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Eased hardship exception looms for meaningful use program

Providers will get relief from meaningful use penalties in 2017 if a bill that passed Congress late last week gains President Barack Obama's signature.
 
The bill (S.2425) would give all ambulatory care providers the option to apply for a meaningful use hardship exception by March 15, 2016, to avoid cuts to Medicare payments in 2017. The potential cuts -- up to 2% -- reflect the 2015 meaningful use reporting period, for which most providers were reporting stage 1 or stage 2 meaningful use.
 
Recently CMS announced that providers could file a hardship exception -- and avoid penalties -- if they encountered various technical or operational difficulties during the 2015 reporting period, such as a change in their technology vendor.
 
The new legislation would open up the hardship-exception application to any physician practice. Recently, CMS had taken steps to ease the burden on physicians, but many in the physician community nevertheless objected to the program.
 
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