Healthcare in the Lame Duck
Lawmakers have returned to Washington for what many observers predict will be a subdued lame duck session. With former President Donald Trump set to return to the White House in January 2025 and Republicans poised to control both chambers of Congress in the new session, the current Democratic-led Congress faces tough decisions about which healthcare priorities can realistically advance before the year ends. Given these shifting dynamics and a continuing resolution set to expire on December 20th, many healthcare stakeholders are closely watching to see if a handful of critical policies—ranging from Medicare telehealth extensions to community health center funding—will receive even short-term relief.
Multiple programs tied to patient access and affordability are slated to expire on December 31, 2024. These include expanded Medicare telehealth flexibilities, community health center (CHC) funding, and measures preventing Medicaid Disproportionate Share Hospital (DSH) payment reductions. Efforts to stabilize Medicare physician payments, address pharmacy benefit manager (PBM) practices, and implement site-neutral payment reforms are also on the table. However, the political uncertainty, combined with constrained legislative days and an incoming administration that may set different healthcare priorities, create a complex landscape for deciding which items are addressed before the new year.
The Broader Political Context
The upcoming change in leadership is already influencing legislative calculations. Republicans, who will soon have unified control in 2025, may choose to defer major reforms or costly extensions until they can shape policy more extensively under the incoming Trump Administration. Analysts suggest that lawmakers will likely focus on minimal, must-pass measures to keep essential programs afloat while leaving more sweeping changes to the next Congress.
Several sources point to a “lamer-than-usual” lame duck session, with meaningful healthcare legislation potentially limited to urgent deadlines. The December 20th government funding cutoff provides a possible vehicle for limited healthcare fixes. Short-term extensions—buying mere months, rather than years—are a likely reality. During this time, people living with chronic conditions, those receiving services at safety-net providers, and people living in rural areas risk seeing uncertainty in care continuity if Congress cannot secure even interim solutions.
The incoming administration’s planned appointments to health agencies and global health leadership changes could realign federal priorities. While the previous administration’s approach emphasized a strong response to public health emergencies, the incoming leadership has signaled greater skepticism toward traditional vaccine policies and may focus less on infectious disease prevention, shifting attention toward other areas of healthcare. As a result, the current Congress may feel pressure to secure patient protections now, anticipating policy moves in 2025 that could reduce certain resources or alter public health strategies.
Must-Pass Healthcare Extensions: Preserving Patient Access Before 2025
Medicare Telehealth Flexibilities
One of the most urgent healthcare priorities involves extending Medicare telehealth flexibilities set to expire on December 31st. Initially expanded during the COVID-19 public health emergency, these provisions have allowed Medicare beneficiaries—including those in rural and underserved communities—to receive certain types of care without the geographic and site restrictions that once applied. The expansion has played a significant role in maintaining continuity of care, especially for behavioral health and chronic disease management services. A House Energy & Commerce Committee proposal would extend these provisions for two years, enabling policymakers to gather more data on telehealth’s cost and quality impact.
A permanent expansion faces a cost barrier. While telehealth enjoys bipartisan support, the price tag remains a challenge to achieving a long-term fix. Thus, a short-term extension appears the most likely outcome. If Congress allows the telehealth provisions to lapse, people who have integrated virtual visits into their healthcare routines—particularly for managing conditions such as HIV—might lose access to services they have come to rely on. This would create new hurdles for maintaining adherence to treatment regimens and managing ongoing care.
Medicare Physician Payment Stabilization
Another pressing issue involves Medicare physician payment rates. Under the current trajectory, doctors face a 2.83% pay cut in 2025—a continuation of multiple consecutive years of reimbursement reductions. Physician groups and bipartisan coalitions in Congress support a Medicare payment stabilization bill that would offset these reductions. Yet cost considerations and the search for budgetary offsets loom large.
Some policymakers view site-neutral payment reforms—discussed later—as a potential “pay-for” to fund these physician payment patches. The prospect of linking physician payment relief with spending cuts elsewhere may shape what Congress accomplishes now. Without a temporary fix, physicians in rural and lower-resource areas might limit the number of Medicare beneficiaries they see, potentially shrinking access to care just as winter months and other public health challenges approach.
Community Health Centers and Safety-Net Providers
CHCs, serving roughly 31 million people, face potential disruptions if their funding authorization expires at year’s end. According to George Washington University research, CHCs often operate on thin margins and rely heavily on federal support. Any gap in funding could mean reduced primary care services, delayed hiring or retention of medical staff, and less capacity to serve people who rely on these centers as their primary healthcare access point.
Medicaid DSH payments, which help hospitals serving people with lower incomes and those living in poverty, also face cuts. Without legislative action, an $8 billion reduction in DSH payments could take effect. Advocacy groups and hospital associations warn that this could erode crucial parts of the healthcare safety net, limiting services at facilities that care for populations disproportionately affected by chronic conditions and economic instability.
The lame duck session provides a narrow window to secure short-term extensions, preserving CHC and Medicaid DSH programs into early 2025. Lawmakers must balance competing priorities, including the need for cost offsets, making it uncertain whether robust, multi-year reauthorizations are possible. With Republicans waiting to implement their policy vision next year, the likely outcome may be modest stopgaps rather than a long-term solution.
Uncertainty for Other Key Programs: Ryan White and PEPFAR
Beyond the well-known year-end deadlines, advocates are also paying attention to larger federal programs that were previously reauthorized but now continue largely through appropriations. The Ryan White HIV/AIDS Program and the President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR) have historically enjoyed bipartisan support, delivering life-saving care, treatment, and prevention services for people living with HIV in the U.S. and abroad. However, as the next Congress and Administration look to reduce spending, longstanding programs that rely on continued federal investment but lack recent formal reauthorization could come under scrutiny.
Advocates fear that with a new majority eager to trim budgets and revisit healthcare spending priorities, both Ryan White and PEPFAR could face more critical examination. While no immediate action on these programs is expected in the lame duck session, their future stability may depend on how the incoming leadership chooses to address them in the months ahead. This uncertainty raises concerns in public health communities that rely on these programs to maintain progress in HIV prevention, treatment retention, and global health collaborations.
PBM Reform and Drug Pricing: A Fleeting Opportunity?
Pharmacy Benefit Managers have drawn increasing scrutiny from Congress for pricing practices that, according to some analyses, drive up medication costs and limit access to necessary prescriptions. There has been a rare display of bipartisan interest in addressing PBM transparency. The House-passed Lower Costs, More Transparency Act—referenced by Mercer—offers a framework for imposing new reporting requirements on PBMs and prohibiting certain practices like spread pricing in Medicaid.
Recent Federal Trade Commission (FTC) actions against the largest PBMs underscore these concerns. The FTC’s administrative complaint alleges that PBM rebating structures inflate medication costs, impairing access to more affordable alternatives. Policymakers, patient advocates, and public health officials have pointed out that PBM practices may particularly affect people living with HIV and other chronic conditions, who depend on stable access to medications. Restrictions like mandatory mail-order pharmacy rules can disrupt continuity of care, especially for those who require regular medication management.
Still, significant PBM reforms may not pass during the lame duck session. Republicans may prefer to tackle drug pricing and PBM oversight under their upcoming majority, potentially shaping legislation more to their liking. If any PBM-related measures pass now, they will likely serve as incremental changes or as offsets for other healthcare priorities rather than representing the comprehensive reform that some lawmakers and patient advocates seek.
Site-Neutral Payment Reforms: A Budgetary Lever
One of the most closely watched and potentially transformative policy changes up for discussion involves site-neutral payment reforms. Current Medicare regulations often allow higher reimbursements for services delivered at off-campus hospital outpatient departments compared to physician offices or ambulatory surgical centers. Hospitals justify these higher rates based on overhead and regulatory requirements, but policymakers, backed by advisors like the Medicare Payment Advisory Commission (MedPAC), have increasingly called for aligning payments across settings to reduce unnecessary spending.
According to Modern Healthcare reporting, robust site-neutral legislation could save over $100 billion over ten years. This makes the policy attractive as a funding mechanism—lawmakers can use those savings to pay for other priorities like extending telehealth, stabilizing Medicare physician payments, or preserving safety-net funding.
In previous Congresses, only modest site-neutral measures advanced. However, the political environment has changed. Analysts note that with a unified Republican government in 2025, policymakers may be more inclined to pass significant site-neutral reforms to secure long-term savings. During the lame duck session, a narrow measure included in the bipartisan Lower Costs, More Transparency Act—requiring site-neutral payments for certain drug administration services—could move forward as a pay-for. This smaller step might pave the way for broader reforms next year.
Hospitals, supported by the American Hospital Association, strongly oppose site-neutral policies, arguing these cuts would limit their ability to provide comprehensive services. Some advocates worry that reducing hospital outpatient department payments could disproportionately affect rural and underserved areas, threatening access to care if hospitals respond by consolidating or reducing less profitable services. Congress must weigh these concerns against the promise of substantial cost savings. Whether any notable site-neutral measures pass now or wait until next year remains uncertain.
The Upcoming Administration: Implications for Public Health Priorities
By early 2025, incoming administration appointees will shape federal healthcare priorities. As PBS NewsHour reports, the Administration’s picks signal possible skepticism toward established vaccine policies and a shift in public health approach, potentially reducing the emphasis on infectious disease prevention that guided previous eras. Meanwhile, experts warn that changes could weaken U.S. influence on global health initiatives.
This shifting focus could impact ongoing campaigns to address HIV and other chronic or communicable conditions. Without consistent federal direction and robust support, gains made under established programs may not be sustained. Advocates hope that at least some lame duck extensions can preserve the foundation of existing programs—like telehealth and CHCs—helping insulate vulnerable communities from policy swings that may come with new leadership.
Programs like Ryan White and PEPFAR, which have maintained strong bipartisan support in the past, could face new scrutiny in an environment where budget discipline and re-examining unreauthorized programs take center stage, potentially embroiling these critical pillars of HIV care and prevention in broader spending debates.
Navigating Short-Term Extensions and Long-Term Implications
Analysts predict a restrained legislative approach during the lame duck, with lawmakers likely settling for short-term solutions to avert immediate disruptions rather than enacting comprehensive reforms. This approach may feel unsatisfying to those seeking lasting certainty, but it can prevent sudden gaps in coverage and services while buying time to reassess priorities in 2025.
For example, a brief funding extension for CHCs or a short-term continuation of telehealth flexibilities could prevent abrupt care disruptions. Telehealth has already proven critical for expanding access to behavioral health services, and federal agencies have now taken further steps to preserve this access. The U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) and U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) recently extended telemedicine flexibilities for prescribing Schedule II-V controlled substances through the end of 2025. This marks the third extension of pandemic-era policies that allow practitioners to prescribe controlled medications—such as suboxone (used in opioid use disorder treatment)—via telemedicine without an in-person evaluation. Retaining these flexibilities, even if temporary, helps sustain harm reduction efforts and essential treatment access for those managing substance use disorders.
A modest Medicare physician payment patch could also preserve provider participation while deeper structural reforms are debated. On the revenue side, modest site-neutral tweaks may generate savings to fund these stopgaps without forcing lawmakers to finalize wide-ranging changes immediately.
Meanwhile, Democrats have floated extending Affordable Care Act subsidies in a potential year-end health deal that also includes telehealth extensions and incremental improvements in physician reimbursements. Such proposals face uncertainty as Republicans prepare to take full control in 2025, but even short-term deals could maintain coverage gains and service expansions that benefit people managing chronic conditions and those relying on affordable insurance options.
Given the incoming administration’s focus on spending and efficiency, it may be prudent for stakeholders to identify areas where reducing waste, redundancy, or abuse is possible—particularly within large, long-standing programs. Offering proactive solutions aligned with fiscal priorities, while demonstrating that essential services remain intact, could help preserve support for programs like Ryan White. This approach allows advocates to show policymakers that sustained funding can go hand-in-hand with accountability and cost-effectiveness, paving the way for more secure, long-term access to critical healthcare services.
Actions for Advocates and Public Health Officials
Engage Legislators Before December 20th:
With deadlines looming, advocates can communicate the importance of even short-term extensions for telehealth, CHC funding, and Medicare physician payment stabilization. Stressing the immediate impact of allowing these programs to expire can help secure stopgap measures.
Highlight Evidence and Outcomes:
Data-driven arguments can persuade legislators that certain policies merit continued investment. For example, demonstrating that telehealth has improved access in rural areas or that CHCs reduce costly emergency department visits can make a compelling case for sustained support.
Prepare for 2025 Debates:
The new Congress will likely reassess programs ranging from telehealth expansions to broader HIV initiatives like Ryan White and PEPFAR. Advocates should cultivate coalitions and gather patient stories now, ensuring they can respond effectively to future proposals that may challenge established healthcare priorities. By proactively preparing data and first-person accounts, stakeholders can better influence upcoming debates.
Monitor Agency Leadership and Policy Shifts:
Staying informed about new federal health agency leaders and their public statements helps anticipate changes in priorities. Understanding where the Administration might diverge from past practice can help advocates and providers design strategies to maintain access and care quality—even if federal emphasis shifts away from certain public health initiatives.
Conclusion
December 2024 places the U.S. healthcare landscape at a turning point. The lame duck session unfolds under a cloud of political transition, with an incoming administration and unified Republican control set to reshape policy debates. Lawmakers face a stacked agenda of expiring programs and urgent healthcare needs but may opt only for minimal extensions that maintain the status quo for now.
Decisions made in these final weeks of 2024—from temporary telehealth fixes to short-term CHC funding—will determine how seamlessly care continues into the new year. As Congress weighs sites of service, physician reimbursements, PBM practices, and the future of critical programs like Ryan White and PEPFAR, advocates must remain engaged. The approaching shift in power and priorities adds urgency to even the smallest policy wins now, as they may offer a critical foundation to protect patient access and maintain progress on significant public health initiatives in a potentially more challenging political climate.
Bipartisan Hepatitis C Elimination Plan Presents Critical Lame Duck Opportunity
The presidential election results have created an urgent six-week window for advancing the National Hepatitis C (HCV) Elimination plan. With significant changes to federal healthcare policy likely under the incoming administration, Senators Bill Cassidy (R-LA) and Chris Van Hollen (D-MD) see the lame duck session as a critical opportunity to secure this public health initiative. The legislation's prospects benefit from Senator Cassidy's likely chairmanship of the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions (HELP) Committee in the next Congress, providing potential continuity for implementation oversight despite the broader administrative transition.
The Congressional Budget Office's analysis provides compelling economic justification for swift action. Current estimates indicate between 2.5 and 3.0 million people in the United States are living with HCV, yet only one in three people diagnosed receive treatment within 12 months. This treatment gap resulted in over 14,000 deaths from HCV-related complications in 2020 alone - deaths that could have been prevented with existing curative treatments that demonstrate 95% effectiveness.
The scope of this crisis demands federal intervention. State-level efforts, while demonstrating potential, have proven insufficient for achieving elimination goals. The Cassidy-Van Hollen legislation addresses fundamental barriers beyond medication costs, including provider education, treatment infrastructure, and implementation support. These comprehensive elements, combined with projected long-term savings, position this bill as a rare opportunity for bipartisan achievement in public health policy during a period of political transition.
Economic Analysis Reveals Complex Implementation Challenges
The Congressional Budget Office's June 2024 analysis examines two treatment expansion scenarios among Medicaid enrollees, revealing both significant savings potential and implementation complexities. Under a conservative 10% peak increase in treatment rates, averted healthcare spending would reach $0.7 billion over ten years against $0.5 billion in testing and treatment costs. A more aggressive 100% peak increase could generate $7 billion in averted costs against $4 billion in treatment expenses.
These projections, however, exclude critical implementation costs that could significantly impact program effectiveness. The CBO notes successful expansion requires substantial investment in outreach activities, provider education, and infrastructure development. As treatment rates increase, identifying and engaging people who need treatment becomes progressively more complex and costly - a challenge demonstrated by state-level experiments with subscription models.
Louisiana's program illustrates both the potential and limitations of cost-focused approaches. While reducing projected costs from $760 million to $35 million annually and treating over 1,600 people since 2019, treatment rates have steadily declined. Washington state's experience proves more concerning - treatment rates fell below pre-subscription levels, dropping from 6,649 prescriptions in 2017 to 2,409 in 2021.
The CBO's analysis particularly focuses on Medicaid enrollees, noting this population includes many people at elevated risk for HCV, including people who inject drugs and people who have been involved with the criminal justice system. This targeted approach allows for more precise cost projections while addressing a key demographic in HCV elimination efforts. Notably, the standard 10-year budget window may undervalue long-term benefits, as many health complications from untreated HCV develop over decades.
State experiences reveal important lessons for federal policy design. Washington's planned initiatives - including emergency room screening programs, mobile testing units, and expanded clinic access - remained largely unrealized due to budget constraints. Louisiana's model, despite demonstrating viable cost-control mechanisms, approaches expiration without renewal funding. These outcomes emphasize the need for sustained federal support rather than relying on state-level innovation.
Carceral Settings Reveal Critical Implementation Lessons
Treatment access in prisons provides critical insight into healthcare system readiness for HCV elimination. Despite controlled environments ideal for treatment delivery, systematic failures in carceral settings expose fundamental weaknesses in current approaches. Between 2014-2019, 1,013 people died from HCV-related complications while incarcerated, with the prison death rate reaching 10.0 per 100,000 people by 2019 - more than double the 4.3 per 100,000 rate in the general population.
State-level data reveals how policy choices, rather than medical constraints, drive treatment disparities. Florida reported 7,000 untreated cases in 2021 despite court-ordered treatment expansion. Texas provided treatment to only half of its known HCV-positive population of 11,301-15,563 people. Oklahoma's statistics prove particularly alarming - its prison death rate of 71.9 per 100,000 exceeds its general population rate by more than five times, despite the corrections department requesting nearly $100 million for increased treatment.
Recent investigations have catalyzed improvements in several states' treatment protocols. The FDA's 2024 approval of point-of-care testing technology enables rapid diagnosis and treatment initiation in carceral settings. However, implementation remains inconsistent across state systems, with many maintaining restrictive eligibility criteria that delay treatment until people develop severe liver damage. Texas, for example, still lacks universal screening protocols at intake facilities, leaving countless cases unidentified and untreated.
Legal challenges have prompted some progress. Florida, under court order, treated over 3,000 people between 2018 and 2021. Texas agreed to treat at least 1,200 people annually following a 2020 settlement. However, these court-mandated improvements highlight both the potential for rapid treatment expansion and the need for comprehensive federal policy to ensure consistent care delivery.
These systemic failures in controlled environments underscore broader implementation challenges. If consistent HCV treatment proves difficult in settings with stable populations and established healthcare infrastructure, addressing treatment gaps in the general population requires even more robust support systems and sustained funding commitments.
Implementation Barriers Demand Federal Solutions
Provider engagement represents a critical barrier beyond cost reduction. Despite HCV treatment's relative simplicity compared to managing diabetes, primary care providers often hesitate to initiate treatment. A recent study found that while 94% of specialists prescribe HCV treatment, only 23% of primary care providers do so. Insurance authorization processes exacerbate this reluctance - a single prior authorization request consumes 35 minutes of staff time responding to questions often designed to find denial justifications rather than facilitate treatment.
Geographic barriers particularly impact rural communities. In Louisiana, people in certain parishes travel 50-70 miles to reach HCV treatment providers. This distance barrier disproportionately affects people receiving Medicaid who often lack reliable transportation. Rural provider shortages compound these access issues - many rural clinics lack staff trained in HCV care, while others face chronic understaffing that limits capacity for managing complex prior authorization requirements.
Louisiana's experience highlights how workforce challenges undermine treatment expansion even when medication costs are controlled. The state's STI, HIV, and Hepatitis Program struggles with chronic understaffing due to uncompetitive wages and complex contracting arrangements. These staffing limitations directly impact program effectiveness - outreach activities decrease, patient engagement suffers, and treatment initiation rates decline despite medication availability.
The proposed federal legislation addresses these systemic barriers through targeted investments in:
Provider education and ongoing support programs
Infrastructure development for treatment expansion
Resources for patient engagement and retention
Support for innovative delivery models including mobile clinics
Integration with existing healthcare systems and substance use treatment programs
Workforce development and training initiatives
Early state experiences demonstrate that successful implementation requires simultaneous investment across these domains. Washington's inability to realize planned initiatives - including emergency room screening programs and mobile testing units - despite cost controls highlights the need for comprehensive federal support beyond medication access.
Political Window Demands Swift Advocacy Action
The lame duck session presents a rare confluence of political factors favoring HCV elimination policy. Senator Cassidy's likely ascension to HELP Committee chair in the next Congress, combined with his partnership with Senator Van Hollen, bridges current and future implementation efforts. The CBO's projection that a national elimination program could prevent 24,000 deaths and save $18.1 billion in healthcare costs provides compelling economic justification for swift action.
Recent developments strengthen the case for immediate passage. The FDA's approval of point-of-care testing technology enables rapid diagnosis and treatment initiation, particularly in high-impact settings. Louisiana's subscription model expiration creates urgency for federal intervention to sustain successful state initiatives. These factors, combined with potential changes to federal healthcare policy under the incoming administration, make the current legislative window critical for securing comprehensive HCV elimination policy.
The evidence from state experiences demonstrates both the promise and limitations of isolated initiatives. Federal legislation can build on these lessons, providing comprehensive support for implementation while ensuring sustained political commitment through bipartisan leadership. With only weeks remaining in the current congressional session, advocates must emphasize the unique opportunity this moment presents for achieving significant public health progress.
Conclusion
The opportunity for action is narrow, but the potential impact is immense. The bipartisan momentum behind the National Hepatitis C Elimination plan is a chance to advance public health policy at a time when it is desperately needed. The barriers are clear: implementation challenges, provider hesitancy, and geographic and economic obstacles. Yet the solutions are within reach, and the economic and human benefits are undeniable. Federal intervention can address the systemic gaps that state efforts alone cannot fill, providing comprehensive support to save lives and reduce costs.
However, uncertainty looms over the future of public health funding and support under a second Trump Administration, which looks to bring significant changes to federal healthcare priorities. This adds urgency to the current push for bipartisan action.
As advocates, the time to push is now. The lame duck session represents a rapidly closing window to secure funding, address legislative gaps, and ensure continuity into the next Congress. Swift passage of this legislation would not only demonstrate the power of bipartisan collaboration but also offer a meaningful legacy—one that saves thousands of lives and sets a precedent for effective, equitable public health initiatives in the United States. We cannot afford to let this window close without taking action.