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Healthcare Preview for the Week of: March 3, 2025 [Podcast]
Monday, March 3, 2025

Attention Turns to Government Funding


Last week, after some drama on the floor, the House passed its version of a budget resolution in a 217 – 215 vote, a week after the Senate passed its “skinny” resolution. For the reconciliation process to move forward, the chambers must work together to agree on an aligned resolution, which is likely to include Medicaid reforms.

Reconciliation will move to the background for these next two weeks as Congress shifts its focus to government funding. The continuing resolution (CR) passed in late December 2024 funded the government through March 14, 2025. The CR also included healthcare extenders, such as Medicare telehealth flexibilities, disproportionate share hospital payments, and the hospital at home waiver, but they have an expiration date of March 31 (read more on the full list of extenders here). Republican lawmakers are debating the length and scope of the next government funding package, which could be a “clean” CR to fund the government through the remainder of fiscal year 2025. If public statements are accurate, spending cuts related to Department of Government Efficiency efforts may not be pursued in this immediate government funding package. House Republicans will likely need votes from Democrats to pass a CR, so all eyes are on the outline of this package.

In his first congressional address since returning to the White House, President Trump will head to Congress on Tuesday night to deliver an address to a joint session of Congress. Like a state of the union, the address will likely focus on Trump’s agenda for his next four years, including actions on immigration, tariffs, extending tax cuts, and reducing the government’s footprint. While healthcare is not anticipated as a feature of the speech, Trump could discuss his executive orders on healthcare price transparency, Make America Healthy Again, and gender-affirming care for youth, and could lay out additional healthcare agenda priorities. Sen. Elissa Slotkin (D-MI) will provide the Democratic response.

The Senate will continue with nomination hearings this week. The Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions (HELP) Committee will hold back-to-back hearings for National Institutes of Health (NIH) director nominee Jay Bhattacharya, MD, on Wednesday and US Food and Drug Administration commissioner nominee Martin Makary, MD, on Thursday. Sen. Warren (D-MA), although not on the HELP Committee, sent both nominees letters requesting confirmation that they would not lobby for the industries they would regulate for four years after leaving office. Similar topics are likely to be brought up during the hearings. Bhattacharya’s hearing will also likely focus on the recent NIH guidance capping indirect costs for research grants and his views on research transparency and NIH structure reform. Later this week, the Medicare Payment Advisory Commission will meet and discuss various topics, including draft recommendations to reform the physician fee schedule and reduce cost-sharing for outpatient services at critical access hospitals.

Today’s Podcast


In this week’s Healthcare Preview, Debbie Curtis and Rodney Whitlock join Julia Grabo to discuss the state of the government funding package ahead of the March 14 deadline.

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