Accelerating Kids’ Access to Care Act of 2025
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Bill details
Summary
Introduced in House
Accelerating Kids’ Access to Care Act of 2025 This bill requires states to establish a process through which qualifying out-of-state providers may temporarily treat children under Medicaid and the Children's Health Insurance Program (CHIP) without undergoing additional screening requirements. Specifically, states must establish a process through which qualifying out-of-state providers may enroll for five years as participating providers to treat individuals under the age of 21 without undergoing additional screening requirements. A qualifying out-of-state provider (1) must not have been excluded or terminated from participating in a federal health care program or state Medicaid program; and (2) must have been successfully enrolled in Medicare or a state Medicaid program based on a determination that the provider posed a limited risk of fraud, waste, or abuse. The bill’s changes take effect three years after enactment.
District impact notes
The Accelerating Kids’ Access to Care Act of 2025 allows states to let out-of-state providers treat children under Medicaid and CHIP without extra screening. • This could increase the number of health care providers available for pediatric care in the district. • Local health care facilities may see changes in patient flow or collaboration with out-of-state providers. • There may be questions about how states will implement the enrollment process and ensure quality care from out-of-state providers. AI-generated from official bill summary and plain-English note; verify with official text.
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