Pentagon-Agent: Epimetheus <3D35839A-7722-4740-B93D-51157F7D5E70>
5.6 KiB
| type | title | author | url | date | domain | secondary_domains | format | status | priority | tags | processed_by | processed_date | enrichments_applied | extraction_model | ||||||||
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| source | RSC Pushes Second Reconciliation Bill January 2026 — More Medicaid Cuts and Site-Neutral Payments | Georgetown Center for Children and Families | https://ccf.georgetown.edu/2026/01/22/house-republican-study-committee-pushes-for-second-budget-reconciliation-bill-and-more-damaging-medicaid-cuts/ | 2026-01-22 | health | policy analysis | enrichment | medium |
|
vida | 2026-03-20 |
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anthropic/claude-sonnet-4.5 |
Content
The House Republican Study Committee (RSC) unveiled a framework for a second budget reconciliation bill in January 2026, following the OBBBA enacted July 4, 2025.
Key healthcare proposals in the second bill:
Medicaid coverage restrictions:
- Eliminate Medicaid and CHIP eligibility for lawfully present immigrants (refugees, asylees, trafficking victims, domestic violence victims, humanitarian parolees)
- Would take effect October 1, 2026
Payment reform:
- Site-neutral hospital payments — would require Medicare and potentially Medicaid to pay the same rate for services regardless of where they're provided (hospital outpatient vs. physician office vs. FQHC)
- This specifically threatens FQHCs, which receive enhanced per-visit payment rates under current law
- FQHC payment rates are what fund CHW programs and integrated social services in community health centers
Senate Byrd Rule constraints:
- For Senate passage, provisions must have direct and more-than-incidental budgetary impact
- Drug pricing reforms, PBM policies, Medicaid payment changes are most likely to survive Byrd Rule
- Site-neutral payments are a significant budgetary provision and would likely survive
Context:
- This is IN ADDITION TO OBBBA, not instead of it
- The political trajectory is escalating cuts, not stabilizing
- RSC represents the most conservative House Republican faction — this is the direction the party is pushing
Agent Notes
Why this matters: The second reconciliation bill adds a specific mechanism that directly threatens CHW programs: site-neutral payments. FQHCs are the primary institutional home for CHW programs in the US, receiving ~$300/visit vs. ~$100/visit in physician offices. Site-neutral would collapse this differential. The March 18 session identified FQHCs as critical to CHW scaling (43% of FQHC revenue comes from Medicaid). Site-neutral + OBBBA Medicaid cuts creates a compound threat to the only institutional channel that has scaled CHW programs.
What surprised me: The second bill is being pushed without waiting to see the implementation results of OBBBA. The policy acceleration suggests the healthcare cuts are ideological/fiscal, not evidence-based. The RSC framework doesn't engage with any of the health outcomes literature (Annals study: 16,000 preventable deaths) — the cuts are proceeding regardless.
What I expected but didn't find: Any VBC or prevention-oriented provisions in the RSC framework. There is nothing in the second bill that creates positive health incentives. It's entirely about cutting coverage and payments.
KB connections:
- Extends the OBBBA coverage loss story — the second bill adds site-neutral FQHC threat on top of Medicaid enrollment loss
- Directly threatens the CHW infrastructure that the March 18 session identified as most RCT-validated non-clinical intervention
- Connects to healthcare is a complex adaptive system requiring simple enabling rules — the opposite of what these cuts are doing
Extraction hints: The site-neutral FQHC threat is the specific extractable claim. Something like: "Republican site-neutral payment proposals would eliminate FQHCs' enhanced per-visit payment differential, removing the funding mechanism that makes community health worker programs economically viable within the institution that hosts most of them."
Curator Notes
PRIMARY CONNECTION: SDOH interventions show strong ROI but adoption stalls because Z-code documentation remains below 3 percent and no operational infrastructure connects screening to action WHY ARCHIVED: The second reconciliation bill adds a SECOND threat to SDOH/CHW infrastructure on top of OBBBA. Site-neutral payments specifically target FQHCs, which are the primary institutional channel for CHW programs. Together with provider tax freeze (OBBBA), this creates a compound threat to the payment infrastructure that CHW scaling requires. EXTRACTION HINT: Extract as a compound claim: OBBBA (provider tax freeze) + second bill (site-neutral) = two-vector attack on CHW infrastructure. The extractor should show how these two mechanisms interact, not treat them as independent.
Key Facts
- House Republican Study Committee unveiled framework for second budget reconciliation bill in January 2026
- Second bill proposes eliminating Medicaid and CHIP eligibility for lawfully present immigrants effective October 1, 2026
- Site-neutral payment provisions would require Medicare and potentially Medicaid to pay same rate regardless of service delivery setting
- FQHCs currently receive approximately $300 per visit vs ~$100 in physician offices
- 43% of FQHC revenue comes from Medicaid
- RSC represents most conservative House Republican faction
- Site-neutral payments likely to survive Senate Byrd Rule as significant budgetary provision