Title 42 › Chapter CHAPTER 7— - SOCIAL SECURITY › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER XI— - GENERAL PROVISIONS, PEER REVIEW, AND ADMINISTRATIVE SIMPLIFICATION › Part Part A— - General Provisions › § 1315a
Creates a Center for Medicare and Medicaid Innovation (CMI) inside the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services to test new ways of paying for and delivering health care. The goal is to lower program costs while keeping or improving care. The Secretary must have the CMI up and running by January 1, 2011. The CMI must ask federal agencies, medical and management experts, and the public for advice and may test ideas in just some places. Applicable individual — a person on Medicare, on Medicaid, or both. Applicable subchapter — Medicare (parts A or B), Medicaid, or both. The Secretary will pick model ideas that target groups with poor outcomes or avoidable costs and that are likely to save money without hurting quality. Examples include changes to primary care payment, provider risk- or salary-based payments, care coordination for people with multiple chronic conditions, telehealth, home and post-acute care improvements, medication management, community care teams, decision-support tools, state tests for dual-eligible people and all-payer reforms, incentives for electronic health records, and projects for small practices and behavioral health. The Secretary does not have to make a test budget-neutral at the start. After testing begins, the Secretary and the Chief Actuary must certify that a model either improves quality without raising spending, reduces spending without reducing quality, or does both; otherwise the model must be changed or stopped. Each model must be evaluated for quality and spending, results must be shared publicly, and successful models can be expanded nationwide by rule if they meet the same tests and won’t cut benefits. The Secretary may waive some Medicare and Medicaid rules needed to run tests. Decisions about which models, sites, designs, or expansions to use are not subject to administrative or court review. Money is set aside to run the Center: $5,000,000 for fiscal year 2010; $10,000,000,000 for fiscal years 2011 through 2019; and $10,000,000,000 for each 10-year period after that beginning with fiscal year 2020. At least $25,000,000 must be used each fiscal year to design, run, and evaluate tests. Starting in 2012 and at least every other year after that, the Secretary must report to Congress on the models tested, how many Medicare and Medicaid people took part, payments made, any models chosen for expansion, evaluation results, and recommended laws to help spread successful models.
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The Public Health and Welfare — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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42 U.S.C. § 1315a
Title 42 — The Public Health and Welfare
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73