Title 42 › Chapter 7— SOCIAL SECURITY › Subchapter XI— GENERAL PROVISIONS, PEER REVIEW, AND ADMINISTRATIVE SIMPLIFICATION › Part A— General Provisions › § 1315a
Creates a Center for Medicare & Medicaid Innovation inside the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services to test new ways to pay for and deliver care. The goal is to lower spending under Medicare and Medicaid while keeping or improving quality. The Secretary must have the Center working by January 1, 2011. The Center must get advice from other agencies, medical and health care experts, and the public. It can focus tests on certain places. “Applicable individuals” are people on Medicare Part A or B, people eligible for Medicaid, or people who qualify for both. The Center will pick models that have some evidence they help groups with poor care or avoidable costs and that aim to save program money without hurting quality. The law lists 27 example models, such as reforms in primary care, new payment contracts with provider groups, care for people with multiple chronic problems, telehealth in underserved areas, electronic health records for behavioral health, help for small practices, State tests for integrating care for people in both programs, and others. The Secretary does not have to make a model budget neutral at the start. After testing begins, the Secretary and the Chief Actuary must certify that a model is expected to either improve quality without increasing spending, lower spending without hurting quality, or do both; otherwise the model must be changed or stopped. Every tested model must be evaluated for quality and spending, and results must be shared publicly. If evaluations and the Chief Actuary’s certification show a model meets the goals, the Secretary can expand it, even nationwide, as long as expansion does not cut or limit benefits. Some legal rules can be waived for testing, and choices about which models, sites, or expansions to use cannot be reviewed in court or in administrative appeals. The Center may also run similar activities for CHIP. Funding provided is $5,000,000 for fiscal year 2010; $10,000,000,000 for fiscal years 2011 through 2019; and the same $10,000,000,000 amount for each subsequent 10-year period starting with fiscal year 2020. At least $25,000,000 each year from those funds must be used to design, run, and evaluate models. Starting in 2012 and at least every two years after, the Secretary must report to Congress on the models, the number of Medicare and Medicaid participants, payments made, any expansions, evaluation results, and any recommended laws.
Full Legal Text
The Public Health and Welfare — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
42 U.S.C. § 1315a
Title 42 — The Public Health and Welfare
Last Updated
Apr 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60