Navigating the Storm - A Medical Practice Leader's Strategic Guide to a US Government Shutdown - UPDATED

 

 

 

 

Click above for a 5-minute updated video. More detailed information is provided below.

 

Strategic Briefing: Navigating the 2025 Federal Government Shutdown and Its Evolving Impact on Medical Practice Viability

I. Executive Summary: An Updated Strategic Assessment for Medical Practice Leaders in the 2025 Shutdown

This report provides a comprehensive analysis of the ongoing October 2025 U.S. federal government shutdown, assessing its direct and indirect impacts on medical practices. The foundational strategic advice outlined in the Revele blog post of September 29, 2025—focusing on financial fortification, proactive communication, and compliance vigilance—remains fundamentally sound and relevant.1 However, the shutdown has evolved, and the operating environment for medical practices has been altered by new developments that have emerged since the shutdown began.

This analysis confirms that medical practice leadership must now contend with three critical and immediate factors that were not fully apparent at the outset of the funding lapse:

  1. The "Extender Cliff" and Operational Crisis: The shutdown has coincided with the mass expiration of crucial healthcare legislative provisions, most notably the pandemic-era Medicare telehealth flexibilities and key physician payment supports. This has created an immediate operational challenge that transcends the mere delay of payments, forcing practices to abruptly re-engineer clinical workflows and manage a sudden disruption in care continuity for a significant patient population.
  2. Escalating and Defined Financial Threats: The abstract risk to the revenue cycle has materialized into a specific, tiered timeline of financial peril. The initial phase, a temporary 10-business-day hold on Medicare claims, is already underway. This will escalate to a potential complete cessation of Medicare Fee-for-Service (FFS) payments if the shutdown surpasses the 30-day mark and Medicare Administrative Contractors (MACs) exhaust their operational funding.
  3. Shift Toward Permanent Workforce Reductions: This shutdown is distinguished from prior events by the implementation of permanent workforce reductions, known as Reductions in Force (RIFs), in addition to temporary furloughs. This approach could lead to long-term changes in federal agency structure and capacity, potentially affecting administrative support and regulatory functions after the shutdown concludes.

In light of these developments, the strategic posture for medical practices must shift. The current situation demands active operational and financial crisis management to navigate the immediate clinical disruptions and mitigate the profound long-term risks to revenue and compliance.

II. The Current Impasse: Legislative Context and Projections for Medical Leadership

The federal government shutdown commenced at 12:01 a.m. EDT on October 1, 2025, after Congress failed to pass appropriations legislation for fiscal year 2026.2 As of late October, the shutdown has entered its fourth week, making it one of the longest in modern U.S. history with no clear resolution in sight.2 Understanding the legislative dynamics of the impasse is crucial for practice leaders to realistically forecast the shutdown's duration and anticipate its long-term consequences.

Analysis of the Legislative Deadlock

 

The current impasse stems from differing approaches to healthcare policy. Key points of disagreement include the extension of enhanced Affordable Care Act (ACA) premium tax credits and provisions related to Medicaid funding enacted in the "One Big Beautiful Bill Act" of July 2025.4

This disagreement has resulted in a legislative stalemate. Multiple attempts to pass a continuing resolution (CR) to temporarily fund the government have failed in the Senate, unable to achieve the 60 votes necessary to overcome a filibuster.2 With the House of Representatives in recess and operating on a "48-hour notice" to return, substantive negotiations appear to have stalled.2

Projections and Timeline

 

Given the policy disagreements and the lack of progress in negotiations, medical practice leadership must prepare for a prolonged disruption. Senior lawmakers have acknowledged the possibility that the shutdown could extend through Thanksgiving, more than a month away.8 This timeline aligns with the escalating financial pressures detailed later in this report, particularly the 30-day threshold at which Medicare claims processing could be halted. A strategic plan based on the assumption of a brief, weeks-long shutdown is no longer prudent. Planning must now account for a disruption lasting 30 to 60 days or longer.

III. Core Strategies Revisited: Validating the Framework in an Evolving Crisis

 

The three core strategies for medical practice leadership identified in the initial Revele analysis—Financial Fortification, Proactive Communication, and Compliance Vigilance—remain the essential pillars of a sound response to the shutdown.1 The events of the past several weeks have not invalidated this framework; rather, they have dramatically amplified the urgency and intensity with which each pillar must be executed.

  • Financial Fortification: The initial recommendation to stress-test cash flow and secure lines of credit has transitioned from a precautionary measure to an immediate survival imperative. The materialization of a 10-day claims hold and the looming 30-day cliff for all Medicare FFS payments make robust cash reserves and accessible lines of credit more critical than ever before.
  • Proactive Communication: The abrupt termination of widely used telehealth flexibilities and the potential for significant payment delays have created widespread confusion and anxiety among both patients and staff. A clear, transparent, and continuous communication strategy is essential to manage expectations, explain changes in care delivery, and maintain the trust that is foundational to the provider-patient relationship.
  • Compliance Vigilance: The temporary pause in routine audits, which might appear to be a reprieve, is a deceptive calm before a potential storm. This lull, coupled with the long-term impact of a reduced federal workforce post-shutdown, could increase the danger of chaotic and error-prone enforcement in the future. The need for rigorous internal compliance and pristine documentation has never been greater to mitigate exposure in what could be a turbulent post-shutdown regulatory environment.

While these pillars are correct, the strategic landscape has fundamentally changed. The initial advice was predicated on weathering a temporary administrative disruption. The current reality is a multi-front crisis involving operational, financial, and long-term systemic risks. The following sections detail these new developments and provide the updated, actionable intelligence required to implement these core strategies effectively in the current, more hazardous environment.

 

IV. Critical Update: Navigating the Unfunded Cliff of Lapsed Healthcare Extenders

 

The most significant and impactful development for medical practices since the shutdown began is the mass expiration of critical healthcare provisions, commonly known as "extenders," which were tied to the government funding bill. As of October 1, 2025, these provisions have lapsed, creating an immediate policy and operational crisis that fundamentally alters the nature of the shutdown's challenge. This is no longer simply an administrative delay; it is an abrupt and disruptive reversion of established care delivery models and payment structures.

 

The Telehealth Reset

 

The pandemic-era Medicare telehealth flexibilities, which had become deeply integrated into clinical practice, have expired.14 This policy cliff has immediate and far-reaching consequences:

  • Geographic & Originating Site Restrictions Return: The broad authority for patients to receive telehealth services in their homes has ended. Medicare FFS reimbursement for telehealth is once again restricted to patients located in designated rural or Health Professional Shortage Areas (HPSAs) who must present at an eligible originating site, such as a clinic or hospital.14 Key exceptions remain for mental and behavioral health services, which can still be provided to patients in their homes, and for providers participating in certain Medicare Shared Savings Program Accountable Care Organizations (ACOs).14
  • Audio-Only Services End: Reimbursement for most audio-only telehealth visits, a critical lifeline for patients with limited technology access, has ceased.15 This disproportionately affects elderly and low-income populations.
  • Provider Eligibility Narrows: The list of eligible telehealth providers has contracted. Therapists, including occupational therapists (OTs), physical therapists (PTs), and speech-language pathologists (SLPs), are no longer recognized as eligible to bill Medicare for telehealth services.16

 

Reimbursement at Risk: The GPCI Floor

 

The 1.0 floor for the work Geographic Practice Cost Index (GPCI) expired on October 1, 2025.14 This provision, which Congress has routinely extended, adjusts physician payments to account for regional cost differences and has served to protect many physicians, particularly those in rural and lower-cost areas, from significant reimbursement reductions. Its lapse threatens direct and immediate payment cuts for all services provided by affected clinicians, further compounding the financial pressures of the shutdown.14

 

Ecosystem Disruption: Lapsed Program Funding

 

Funding has expired for several programs that are essential to the healthcare workforce pipeline and the care of vulnerable populations. These include Community Health Centers (CHCs), the National Health Service Corps (NHSC), and Teaching Health Center Graduate Medical Education (THCGME) programs.14 The disruption to these programs jeopardizes care for underserved communities and threatens the training of the next generation of primary care physicians.15

 

Program Termination: Acute Hospital Care at Home (AHCAH)

 

The innovative Acute Hospital Care at Home (AHCAH) waiver program, which allowed Medicare beneficiaries to receive acute-level care in their residences, has been terminated. As of September 30, all participating hospitals were required to either discharge their AHCAH patients or transfer them back to a brick-and-mortar hospital setting, abruptly ending a promising model of care delivery.16

The "extender cliff" has fundamentally shifted the primary challenge of the shutdown. What was initially framed as a financial and administrative problem—characterized by delayed payments and reduced federal support—has now become an acute clinical and operational crisis. Practices have spent years building workflows, training staff, and educating patients around the availability of telehealth. This sudden policy reversion forces an immediate and chaotic pivot in care delivery. It necessitates the physical relocation of patients, the complex re-engineering of scheduling systems, and, in some cases, the potential denial of care to patients who are unable to travel or access an eligible originating site. The most urgent task for a practice leader is no longer just managing cash flow, but redesigning the core clinical operating model to comply with a regulatory framework that has regressed by several years overnight. This is a far more complex and disruptive challenge than merely waiting for a delayed payment.

The following table summarizes the status of these key provisions to provide a clear, at-a-glance reference for strategic planning.

 

Program / Provision

Status Prior to Oct. 1, 2025

Current Status (During Shutdown)

Impact on Medical Practice

Medicare Telehealth: Originating Site

Patient's home was an eligible originating site for most services.

Expired. Patient's home is no longer an eligible site (except for mental health services and some ACOs). Patient must be at an eligible facility in a designated rural/HPSA area.14

Immediate need to reschedule patients for in-person visits. Drastic reduction in telehealth volume and associated revenue. Significant disruption to patient access and care continuity.

Medicare Telehealth: Audio-Only Services

Reimbursable for many services.

Expired. No longer reimbursed for most services (limited exceptions for mental/behavioral health).15

Loss of a key care modality for patients with technology barriers. Further reduction in billable services.

Medicare Telehealth: Eligible Providers

Included physical therapists, occupational therapists, and speech-language pathologists.

Expired. OTs, PTs, and SLPs are no longer eligible Medicare telehealth providers.16

Therapy practices face a complete halt to telehealth-based revenue from Medicare. Referral patterns may be disrupted.

Acute Hospital Care at Home (AHCAH)

Active waiver program allowing acute-level care at home for Medicare beneficiaries.

Expired. Program terminated. All patients were required to be discharged or transferred back to the hospital by Sept. 30.19

Practices collaborating with AHCAH programs face disruption. Loss of a care setting option for acutely ill patients.

Work Geographic Practice Cost Index (GPCI) Floor

A 1.0 floor was in place, preventing work RVU values from dropping below the national average.

Expired. The 1.0 floor is no longer in effect as of Oct. 1.14

Potential for direct reimbursement cuts for all Medicare Part B services for physicians in affected geographic areas.

Community Health Center (CHC) Funding

Received significant federal funding through the CHC Fund.

Expired. Funding lapsed, jeopardizing operations for CHCs nationwide.15

Practices may see an influx of displaced patients. Increased strain on the healthcare safety net.

Teaching Health Center GME (THCGME) Program

Federally funded to support primary care residency programs in community settings.

Expired. Funding lapsed, threatening the viability of these training programs.14

Long-term negative impact on the primary care physician pipeline, particularly for underserved areas.

 

V. Deconstructing the Shutdown's Impact on Practice Operations and Revenue Cycle

 

While the extender cliff presents an immediate operational challenge, the shutdown is simultaneously creating a deepening financial crisis through direct impacts on the revenue cycle and the degradation of essential federal administrative functions.

 

Medicare & Medicaid Payment Flow: A Tiered Threat

 

The flow of payments from federal payers is now subject to a clear and escalating series of threats that require careful monitoring and proactive financial management.

  • Core Payments Continue (For Now): It is critical to note that Medicare and Medicaid are mandatory spending programs, meaning the legal authority to pay benefits is not interrupted by a lapse in annual appropriations. CMS has confirmed that Medicare program payments will continue and that it has sufficient advance appropriations to fund the federal share of Medicaid and the Children's Health Insurance Program (CHIP) through the first quarter of fiscal year 2026.14 Practices should continue to see patients and submit claims for these populations.
  • Tier 1 Threat (Active): The 10-Day Claims Hold. In a new development, CMS has instructed all Medicare Administrative Contractors (MACs) to implement a temporary hold on claims with dates of service of October 1, 2025, or later.18 This hold can last for up to 10 business days. While CMS and professional associations suggest this will have a "minimal impact" due to the statutory 14-day payment floor for electronic claims, it represents a deliberate and tangible delay in cash flow at a time when financial pressures are already mounting.14
  • Tier 2 Threat (Looming): The 30-Day MAC Cliff. The most significant financial risk of a prolonged shutdown lies with the MACs themselves. These contractors, which process and pay all Medicare FFS claims, operate on discretionary funding. Should the shutdown extend beyond 30 days, there is a high probability that at least some MACs will exhaust their operational funds.19 If this occurs, the processing and payment of Medicare FFS claims would halt entirely, effectively turning off the revenue spigot for a huge portion of a practice's income stream. This transforms the shutdown from a minor cash flow inconvenience into a potential liquidity crisis.

The combination of these factors creates a "cash flow perfect storm." The 10-day hold immediately slows the velocity of incoming payments that are considered certain. The telehealth reset creates widespread uncertainty about which services are even billable, forcing practices to either hold claims or risk denials, further constricting cash flow. Finally, the 30-day MAC cliff threatens to stop the entire Medicare FFS revenue stream altogether. These are not sequential events; they are concurrent pressures. A practice's financial team is therefore not solving one problem, but three intertwined ones simultaneously. This requires a much more sophisticated financial response than simply drawing on a line of credit; it necessitates re-forecasting revenue based on new billing realities while simultaneously stress-testing for a complete payment halt.

 

The Regulatory Standstill and Post-Shutdown Flood

 

As anticipated, routine federal oversight activities have been suspended. This includes most health facility survey and certification activities (except for investigations of immediate jeopardy complaints), policy development, rulemaking, routine contractor oversight, and beneficiary casework.10

This temporary lull in enforcement, what the Revele blog termed the "compliance paradox," is deceptive and dangerous.1 When funding is eventually restored, federal agencies will face pressure to clear a massive backlog of audits, surveys, and reviews. This surge of pent-up regulatory activity, combined with the potential for a less experienced workforce due to RIFs, may lead to a higher volume of enforcement actions that could be inconsistent or error-prone in the post-shutdown period. Practices that relax their internal compliance vigilance during the shutdown do so at their own peril.

 

Agency Paralysis and the Support Vacuum

 

The furlough of a substantial portion of the federal workforce has created an administrative vacuum, crippling essential support functions for medical practices.

  • HHS/CMS: With an estimated 41% to 47% of staff furloughed, support functions are severely degraded.10 Practices will experience significant delays or complete unresponsiveness when attempting to resolve complex billing issues, process new provider enrollment applications, or make any inquiry that requires manual intervention from agency staff.
  • NIH/CDC: The impact on the public health and research ecosystem is severe. The National Institutes of Health (NIH) has halted the admission of new patients to its Clinical Center (unless medically necessary), stopped the issuance of all new grant awards and the peer review process, and paused most intramural research.25 This effectively severs practices and academic medical centers from critical research funding pipelines. Similarly, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has suspended its analysis of surveillance data, the issuance of guidance to state and local health departments, and most public health communications.11 This deprives practices of the vital public health intelligence needed to inform clinical decision-making.

 

VI. Strategic Recommendations and Action Plan for the Next 30-60 Days

 

Given the escalating and multi-faceted nature of the crisis, medical practice leadership must immediately implement an aggressive and proactive action plan. The following recommendations are designed to enhance resilience and mitigate risk over the next 30 to 60 days.

 

 

Financial Resilience: Advanced Strategy

 

  • Tiered Cash Flow Modeling: Standard financial projections are now obsolete. Leadership must immediately direct the finance team to develop and maintain three distinct cash flow models:
  1. Scenario 1 (Current State): Model operations based on the current 10-day Medicare payment lag and a realistic reduction in revenue due to the loss of telehealth services.
  2. Scenario 2 (45-Day Shutdown): Model a scenario where all Medicare FFS payments cease after day 30 of the shutdown, continuing for at least 15 days.
  3. Scenario 3 (90-Day Worst Case): Model a prolonged crisis with a 60-day cessation of Medicare FFS payments.
  • Strategic Claims Management: Do not halt the submission of all claims. Continue to submit all valid claims for in-person services and telehealth services that remain covered (e.g., mental health). For telehealth services provided under the now-expired flexibilities, follow CMS guidance: consider providing patients with an Advance Beneficiary Notice of Noncoverage (ABN) and holding these specific claims pending potential retroactive legislative action by Congress.18 This segregates at-risk revenue from certain revenue streams.
  • Credit and Capital: If not already accomplished, immediately secure or expand lines of credit. Use the tiered financial models developed above to engage with banking partners, demonstrating a clear, data-driven understanding of the escalating risk and the practice's capital needs under each scenario.

 

Operational Pivot: The Telehealth Response Plan

 

  • Patient Triage and Rescheduling: The loss of telehealth flexibilities requires an immediate operational pivot.
  1. Audit Appointments: Immediately audit all scheduled telehealth appointments for Medicare FFS beneficiaries to identify those who no longer qualify based on their location or the type of service scheduled.
  2. Develop Communication Protocols: Create clear, empathetic communication scripts for scheduling staff to use when contacting affected patients. Explain the policy change, apologize for the inconvenience, and offer to reschedule for an in-person visit or provide information on alternative care options.20
  • Workflow Redesign: Re-engineer clinical and administrative workflows to accommodate a higher volume of in-person visits. This includes adjusting scheduling templates, reallocating staff resources, and ensuring physical plant capacity can handle the increased traffic. Immediately conduct mandatory retraining for all scheduling and clinical staff on the pre-pandemic telehealth rules to ensure compliance.20
  • Payer Policy Verification: Do not assume that commercial and Medicare Advantage plans have reverted their telehealth policies. These payers are not bound by Medicare FFS rules. Actively contact provider relations representatives for each major commercial and MA payer to obtain written confirmation of their current telehealth reimbursement policies.15

 

Compliance and Risk Mitigation: Preparing for the Flood

 

  • Internal Audit Initiative: Use the current pause in external audits to strengthen internal defenses. Launch a rigorous internal audit of billing, coding, and documentation practices. Focus on high-volume or historically problematic services to identify and correct vulnerabilities before the post-shutdown enforcement surge begins.
  • Documentation Hardening: Reinforce documentation best practices with all clinical staff. Emphasize clarity, completeness, and the explicit justification of medical necessity. The post-shutdown regulatory environment will likely have little tolerance for ambiguity, and pristine documentation is the best defense against audits.
  • Monitor Professional Associations: Closely monitor all communications from the American Medical Association (AMA), the American Academy of Family Physicians (AAFP), and relevant specialty societies. These organizations are actively engaged with federal agencies and Congress and often provide the earliest warnings of new CMS guidance or emerging payment issues.14 Notably, the AMA has specifically requested that physicians and practice staff report any Medicare payment delays or related obstacles directly to its advocacy staff, creating a valuable channel for both reporting and receiving intelligence.14

 

VII. Conclusion

 

The October 2025 federal government shutdown has evolved from a predictable administrative disruption into a multi-front crisis for the nation's medical practices. While the foundational advice of financial preparedness and clear communication remains valid, it is no longer sufficient. The confluence of a prolonged legislative impasse, the implementation of permanent federal workforce reductions, an abrupt operational crisis triggered by the lapse of telehealth flexibilities, and a tiered, escalating threat to the Medicare revenue cycle has created a uniquely hazardous environment.

Medical practice leaders must recognize that this is not a storm to be weathered passively. It is a fundamental shift in the operating landscape that demands an active, agile, and aggressive management response. Survival and success will depend on the ability to simultaneously re-engineer clinical operations, execute sophisticated financial contingency plans, and fortify compliance defenses in anticipation of future turbulence. The actions taken in the coming weeks will be critical in determining a practice's ability to navigate the immediate crisis and position itself for stability in the uncertain environment that will follow.

 

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Works cited

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  2. 2025 United States federal government shutdown - Wikipedia, accessed October 21, 2025, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2025_United_States_federal_government_shutdown
  3. Federal Update: Government Shutdown Drags On - League of Minnesota Cities, accessed October 21, 2025, https://www.lmc.org/news-publications/news/all/federal-update-government-shutdown-drags-on/
  4. Government shutdown 2025: What to know - USAFacts, accessed October 21, 2025, https://usafacts.org/articles/government-shutdown-2025-what-to-know/
  5. Analysis: 2025 Government Shutdown's Impact | U.S. Bank, accessed October 21, 2025, https://www.usbank.com/investing/financial-perspectives/market-news/federal-budget-impasse-and-potential-government-shutdown.html
  6. Why this shutdown is different — and shows signs of lasting, accessed October 21, 2025, https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2025/10/16/shutdown-history-republicans-democrats/
  7. Explainer: Why government shutdowns keep happening in the United States, accessed October 21, 2025, https://www.hks.harvard.edu/faculty-research/policy-topics/democracy-governance/explainer-why-government-shutdowns-keep
  8. US Senate vote to end government shutdown fails for 10th time, accessed October 21, 2025, https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/oct/16/government-shutdown-aoc-bernie-sanders-republicans
  9. WLEN: Federal government shutdown continues as negotiations stall | Congressman Tim Walberg - House.gov, accessed October 21, 2025, https://walberg.house.gov/media/in-the-news/wlen-federal-government-shutdown-continues-negotiations-stall
  10. HHS Releases Contingency Staffing Plan - ACOFP, accessed October 21, 2025, https://www.acofp.org/news-and-publications/news/full-news-article/2025/10/03/hhs-releases-contingency-staffing-plan
  11. Federal Government Shutdown Update: Contingency Plans Released - ASTHO, accessed October 21, 2025, https://www.astho.org/advocacy/federal-government-affairs/leg-alerts/2025/federal-government-shutdown-update-contingency-plans-released/
  12. Trump and budget chief Vought are making this a government shutdown unlike any other, accessed October 21, 2025, https://apnews.com/article/trump-government-shutdown-russ-vought-project-2025-bf3ecd1f7cd765c9e125d7d7179c8b39
  13. Who Is Missing Paychecks in the 2025 Shutdown—When and Where? | Bipartisan Policy Center, accessed October 21, 2025, https://bipartisanpolicy.org/explainer/who-is-missing-paychecks-in-the-2025-shutdown-when-and-where/
  14. Oct. 3, 2025: Advocacy Update spotlight on the government shutdown, accessed October 21, 2025, https://www.ama-assn.org/health-care-advocacy/advocacy-update/oct-3-2025-advocacy-update-spotlight-government-shutdown
  15. Federal government shutdown: What family physicians need to ..., accessed October 21, 2025, https://www.aafp.org/news/government-medicine/health-extenders-shutdown.html
  16. How the 2025 Government Shutdown Affects Your End-of-Life Care, accessed October 21, 2025, https://compassionandchoices.org/blog/how-the-2025-government-shutdown-affects-your-end-of-life-care/
  17. Effects of a Government Shutdown on HHS Operations and Key Medicare/Medicaid Policies - AAMC, accessed October 21, 2025, https://www.aamc.org/media/86356/download
  18. MLN Connects Newsletter for October 15, 2025 - CMS, accessed October 21, 2025, https://www.cms.gov/training-education/medicare-learning-network/newsletter/mln-connects-newsletter-october-15-2025
  19. A government shutdown is upon us: What this means for healthcare programs - McDermott+, accessed October 21, 2025, https://www.mcdermottplus.com/blog/regs-eggs/a-government-shutdown-is-upon-us-what-this-means-for-healthcare-programs/
  20. The Telehealth Policy Cliff: Preparing for October 1, 2025, accessed October 21, 2025, https://telehealthresourcecenter.org/resources/the-telehealth-policy-cliff-preparing-for-october-1-2025/
  21. Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services | HHS.gov, accessed October 21, 2025, https://www.hhs.gov/about/budget/fy-2026-cms-contingency-staffing-plan/index.html
  22. QSO- 26-01-ALL DATE: TO: October 1, 2025 State Survey Agency Directors FROM - CMS, accessed October 21, 2025, https://www.cms.gov/files/document/qso-26-01-all.pdf
  23. FY 2025 HHS Contingency Staffing Plan, accessed October 21, 2025, https://www.hhs.gov/about/budget/fy-2025-hhs-contingency-staffing-plan/index.html
  24. FY 2026 HHS Contingency Staffing Plan | HHS.gov, accessed October 21, 2025, https://www.hhs.gov/about/budget/fy-2026-hhs-contingency-staffing-plan/index.html
  25. HHS government shutdown contingency plans: What to know - IDSA, accessed October 21, 2025, https://www.idsociety.org/news--publications-new/articles/2025/hhs-government-shutdown-contingency-plans-what-to-know/
  26. Oct. 10, 2025: Advocacy Update spotlight on the government shutdown continues, accessed October 21, 2025, https://www.ama-assn.org/health-care-advocacy/advocacy-update/oct-10-2025-advocacy-update-spotlight-government-shutdown

 

 

ORIGINAL POST BEFORE SHUTDOWN

Executive Summary

A U.S. government shutdown presents a significant and multifaceted business risk to medical practices that extends far beyond the closures of federal agencies. This guide provides a strategic framework for C-suite executives, physicians, and operational leaders to understand, prepare for, and mitigate the impacts of a funding lapse on their organizations. While core revenue streams from Medicare and Medicaid are secure in the short term due to their status as mandatory spending, a shutdown introduces critical operational and financial challenges that require proactive leadership.

The primary risks are twofold. First, practices will face immediate operational friction due to the furlough of substantial portions of the workforce at key agencies, including the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), and the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA). This leads to a standstill in regulatory rulemaking, a halt to new provider enrollment, the suspension of routine audits, and a general reduction in administrative support. Second, a prolonged shutdown of more than 30 days creates a material risk of a liquidity crisis. The administrative contractors that process Medicare Fee-for-Service (FFS) claims operate on discretionary funding, which may be exhausted in an extended impasse, leading to significant delays in provider reimbursement.

These direct impacts are compounded by disruptions to the broader public health infrastructure, including the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and the National Institutes of Health (NIH), and by the economic strain placed on patients and staff who are federal employees or have family in federal service.

Effective preparation hinges on three core strategies:

  1. Financial Fortification: Stress-test cash flow scenarios based on a potential 30- to 90-day delay in Medicare FFS receipts, build adequate cash reserves, and secure lines of credit well in advance of a potential shutdown.
  2. Proactive Communication: Implement a crisis communication plan with pre-scripted, reassuring messages for both staff and patients to maintain trust and ensure continuity of care.
  3. Compliance Vigilance: Use the pause in external enforcement to strengthen internal compliance programs and prepare for the inevitable backlog of regulatory activity that will follow the restoration of government funding.

By adopting a proactive posture, medical practice leadership can navigate the uncertainty of a government shutdown, protect their revenue cycle, ensure operational continuity, and reinforce the financial resilience of their organization.

 

Introduction: Beyond the Headlines – Why a Government Shutdown is a Critical Business Risk for Your Practice

 

The prospect of a U.S. government shutdown is often framed as a political issue confined to Washington, D.C. For medical practice executives, physicians, and operational leaders, however, this view is an incomplete perspective. A shutdown is not a distant political event; it is a direct and measurable business risk with the potential to disrupt revenue cycles, inject uncertainty into regulatory compliance, destabilize the healthcare workforce, and impact patient care. When the federal government ceases non-essential operations, the ripple effects extend far beyond federal agencies, creating a complex and challenging environment for healthcare organizations nationwide.

The frequency of these funding impasses has transformed them from rare occurrences into a recurring feature of the American political landscape, making preparedness an essential component of modern practice management. Leadership teams can no longer afford to react to shutdown news as it breaks. Instead, they must adopt a proactive posture, understanding the specific mechanisms of a shutdown and implementing strategic contingency plans to mitigate its impact.

This report moves beyond reactive anxiety to provide a proactive, strategic framework for risk mitigation and operational continuity. It serves as an executive-level playbook, offering a clear-eyed analysis of the multifaceted threats a shutdown poses to medical practices and delivering actionable intelligence for C-suite leaders and their management teams. The goal is to empower healthcare organizations to navigate the impending storm with foresight, resilience, and control, transforming a period of uncertainty into an opportunity to strengthen financial and operational foundations.

 

I. Understanding the Landscape: A Primer on U.S. Government Shutdowns

To effectively prepare for a government shutdown, leaders must first understand the legal, procedural, and historical context that defines these events. A shutdown is not a random failure, but a specific outcome of the U.S. budget process, governed by a century-old law and shaped by decades of political precedent.

What Constitutes a Shutdown? The Legal and Procedural Framework

A U.S. government shutdown occurs when Congress fails to pass the 12 annual appropriations bills required to fund federal agencies for the upcoming fiscal year, which begins on October 1.1 In the absence of an approved budget or a temporary funding measure, a critical law known as the Antideficiency Act comes into effect.3 Originally passed in 1884 and amended over the years, this Act prohibits federal agencies from spending or obligating funds that have not been appropriated by Congress.3

This legal prohibition requires agencies to initiate a formal process of ceasing all functions that are not deemed "essential" or "excepted."2 The distinction between these categories is paramount:

  • Essential or Excepted Activities: These are functions legally authorized to continue during a funding lapse. They primarily include activities necessary for the safety of human life, the protection of property, and national security.8 Employees performing these duties—such as air traffic controllers, active-duty military personnel, federal law enforcement, and those providing in-hospital medical care—are required to report to work but will not receive pay until the shutdown ends.2
  • Non-Essential Activities: All other government functions are considered non-essential and must be halted. Federal employees in these roles are placed on a mandatory, unpaid leave of absence known as a "furlough".2 Furloughed employees are legally barred from performing any work-related duties, including checking email, until funding is restored.8

The modern, disruptive nature of government shutdowns is a relatively recent phenomenon. Prior to the 1980s, federal agencies often continued to operate during funding gaps with the expectation that Congress would retroactively approve their funding.7 This changed dramatically following a series of legal opinions issued in 1980 and 1981 by then-Attorney General Benjamin Civiletti. These opinions reinterpreted the Antideficiency Act to strictly require the cessation of non-essential government operations during any funding gap.8 This legal reinterpretation fundamentally altered the appropriations process, transforming budgetary disagreements into high-stakes events with the power to affect significant portions of the federal government.

To avert a full shutdown, Congress often passes short-term funding bills known as Continuing Resolutions (CRs). These measures typically extend government funding at current levels for a limited period, buying more time for lawmakers to negotiate a full-year budget.1 However, disagreements over the terms of a CR itself can also trigger a shutdown, making these temporary fixes an unreliable safeguard.

Historical Precedents and Key Lessons for Healthcare Leaders

Examining past shutdowns provides critical context for understanding their potential duration, severity, and the nature of their economic impact. The impetus for these events is often rooted in significant disagreements over policy and spending, and the resulting economic impact can be substantial, underscoring the unpredictable nature of the risk that practices must prepare for.1 This history demonstrates that shutdowns are a recurring risk that can span from several days to over a month, requiring leaders to model contingency plans for various scenarios.

 

Table 1: A Historical Snapshot of Major U.S. Government Shutdowns

     

Dates

Duration (Days)

Administration

Primary Cause/Conflict

Dec. 16, 1995 – Jan. 6, 1996

21

Bill Clinton

Disagreements over spending cuts, including proposed changes to Medicare and Medicaid funding 3

Oct. 1 – Oct. 17, 2013

16

Barack Obama

Dispute over funding and implementation of the Affordable Care Act (ACA) 2

Dec. 22, 2018 – Jan. 25, 2019

34

Donald Trump

Impasse over funding for a wall on the U.S.-Mexico border 5

Key events and their lessons include:

  • 1995-1996 (Clinton Administration): This 21-day shutdown, at the time the longest in history, was rooted in a conflict over major spending cuts and became a stark example of how healthcare policy can become a central point of contention. An estimated 800,000 federal employees were furloughed.11 Critically for the healthcare sector, this shutdown resulted in more than 10,000 Medicare applicants being turned away each day, a direct disruption of patient access to benefits.2
  • 2013 (Obama Administration): Lasting 16 days, this shutdown was explicitly triggered by a dispute over the Affordable Care Act (ACA). It demonstrated how a shutdown could be leveraged to target major healthcare legislation. The economic consequences were severe, with an estimated 850,000 employees furloughed and a cost to the U.S. economy of approximately $24 billion, shaving at least 0.6% off annualized fourth-quarter GDP growth.6
  • 2018-2019 (Trump Administration): The longest shutdown in U.S. history spanned 34 full days and was a "partial" shutdown, as some appropriations bills had already been passed.5 It directly impacted 800,000 federal workers, with 380,000 furloughed and another 420,000 working without pay.1 The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) estimated it cost the economy $11 billion, of which $3 billion was permanently lost, highlighting the lasting economic damage these events can cause.1

For healthcare leaders, the key takeaway from this history is twofold. First, shutdowns are not abstract economic events; they have tangible, direct consequences on healthcare operations and patient access. Second, their duration is dictated by political dynamics, not economic calculation, making them inherently unpredictable. This unpredictability necessitates robust, scenario-based financial and operational planning that can withstand a disruption lasting weeks, not just days.

II. The Ripple Effect: Analyzing the Shutdown's Impact on Medical Practice Operations

A government shutdown triggers a cascade of disruptions that affect nearly every aspect of a medical practice's environment, from its primary revenue streams and regulatory obligations to the stability of its workforce and the health of its patient population. Understanding these interconnected impacts is the first step toward developing an effective mitigation strategy.

The Financial Frontline: Medicare and Medicaid Reimbursement

The most immediate concern for any medical practice is the continuity of its revenue cycle. While the structure of federal spending provides a crucial buffer for Medicare and Medicaid payments, significant risks emerge, particularly in the event of a prolonged shutdown.

  • Core Stability (The Short-Term View): Medicare and Medicaid are classified as "mandatory spending" programs. Their funding is authorized by permanent law and is not subject to the annual appropriations process that funds federal agencies.2 Consequently, the U.S. Treasury can continue to issue payments for benefits and provider reimbursements even during a shutdown. For the first few weeks of a shutdown, practices should expect claims to be processed and payments to be made without significant interruption.9
  • The Hidden Risk (The 30-Day Cliff): The stability of the payment system is contingent on the operational capacity of the contractors that run it. While the Treasury provides the funds, the administrative infrastructure—including the Medicare Administrative Contractors (MACs) that process claims—is funded by discretionary appropriations. According to agency contingency plans and industry analysis, a shutdown lasting a month or less is unlikely to disrupt this process. However, a shutdown that extends beyond 30 days creates a substantial risk that some MACs could exhaust their operational funds. This would lead to significant delays in Medicare Fee-for-Service (FFS) payments, creating a potential liquidity crisis for practices heavily reliant on this revenue stream.14 It is important to note that payments to Medicare Advantage (MA) plans are made directly from the Treasury on a capitated basis and are not expected to be affected, regardless of the shutdown's length.14 This distinction means that a practice's financial risk during a prolonged shutdown is directly correlated with its specific payer mix.
  • Administrative Friction: Even if payments continue, the furlough of a large percentage of federal staff creates significant operational hurdles. The Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) contingency plans anticipate furloughing approximately 45% of its staff, while the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) plans for a 49% reduction in staff.13 This dramatic reduction in personnel will halt or slow numerous administrative functions critical to practice operations, including:
  • Suspension of new provider enrollment and certification activities.19
  • Cessation of routine services,  such as benefit verification for patients and the issuance of replacement Medicare cards.2
  • Increased wait times and reduced availability of support from CMS hotlines and personnel.13

The Regulatory Standstill: Navigating Agency Slowdowns

A shutdown brings most federal regulatory and compliance activities to a halt, creating both a temporary reprieve and a significant long-term risk for medical practices.

  • CMS and HHS: With nearly half their workforce furloughed, these agencies will cease all non-essential work. This directly impacts practices by:
  • Delaying Rulemaking: The drafting, review, and publication of crucial regulations, such as the annual Medicare Physician Fee Schedule or other payment rules, will be delayed if a shutdown coincides with these activities. This can leave practices in a state of uncertainty regarding future reimbursement rates and billing requirements.14
  • Pausing Approvals and Oversight: CMS will likely suspend the review and approval of state plan amendments and waivers, potentially delaying the implementation of state-level Medicaid programs that practices rely on.14 Routine survey, certification, and audit activities will also be postponed.20 This creates a "compliance paradox": while the threat of an immediate audit recedes, the underlying compliance obligations remain. Practices that relax their internal vigilance do so at their peril, as a post-shutdown period is likely to bring a surge of pent-up regulatory activity as agencies work to clear their backlogs.22
  • Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA): OSHA's operational capacity is drastically reduced, with contingency plans indicating that staffing levels will drop to a skeleton crew of approximately 372 employees from a normal level of 1,934.24
  • Enforcement Focus: The agency's activities will be strictly limited to responding to "emergencies involving the safety of human life or protection of property." This means OSHA will only investigate workplace fatalities, catastrophes, and situations of imminent danger.24
  • Suspended Activities: All routine activities, including planned or unannounced inspections and the investigation of whistleblower complaints, will be suspended for the duration of the shutdown. This suspension does not apply to the 26 states and territories that operate their own OSHA-approved state plans, which will continue to operate normally.24

Public Health Ecosystem Disruptions

Medical practices do not operate in a vacuum; they are part of a broader public health ecosystem supported by federal agencies. A shutdown degrades this vital infrastructure, with significant indirect consequences.

  • Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC): While core functions like immediate outbreak response and the 24/7 emergency operations center will continue, the CDC is forced to furlough a significant portion of its staff (recent contingency plans estimate between 59% and 69% of staff will be furloughed).16 This will suspend crucial support activities that practices and public health departments rely on, including technical assistance to state and local health partners, the analysis of non-urgent surveillance data, and most public health research.16
  • National Institutes of Health (NIH): The NIH Clinical Center will continue to provide care for its existing patients, but it will be prevented from admitting new patients into clinical trials unless deemed medically necessary by the director.2 Furthermore, the NIH will halt the processing of new research grant applications.2 This disrupts the pipeline of medical innovation and can have long-term effects on academic medical centers and research-focused practices that partner with the NIH.
  • Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA): A shutdown will delay the awarding of grants for numerous programs that support the healthcare safety net and workforce development. This includes funding for community health centers, maternal and child health block grants, and the National Health Service Corps.16 For Federally Qualified Health Centers (FQHCs) and other practices that depend on this funding, a shutdown can create immediate and severe financial strain.

 

Table 2: Federal Health Agency Operational Status During a Shutdown

     

Agency

Operational Status

% Staff Furloughed (Approx.)

Primary Impact on Medical Practices

CMS

Partially Furloughed

49%

Payments continue short-term; risk of FFS payment delay >30 days. Halt on new rules, provider enrollment, and routine audits. 13

HHS

Partially Furloughed

45%

Broad slowdown in regulatory and administrative functions; reduced support for grant-funded programs. 16

OSHA

Minimal Operations

~81%

No routine inspections or whistleblower investigations. Response only to fatalities and imminent danger. 24

CDC

Partially Furloughed

69%

Outbreak response continues. Halt on technical assistance, non-urgent surveillance, and public health research. 16

NIH

Minimal Operations

~78%

Existing patient care continues. Halt on new clinical trials and processing of new research grants. 16

HRSA

Partially Furloughed

48%

Delays in awarding grants for community health centers, workforce development, and maternal/child health programs. 16

 

The Human Element: Workforce and Patient Stability

The economic shock of a shutdown directly affects both the healthcare workforce and the patient population, creating a two-front challenge for medical practices.

  • Workforce Impact: A shutdown creates an immediate liquidity crisis for the hundreds of thousands of federal employees and active-duty military personnel who are either furloughed or forced to work without pay.29 While a 2019 law guarantees they will receive back pay once the shutdown ends, this does not alleviate the short-term financial strain of meeting mortgage payments, bills, and daily expenses.5 For a medical practice, this means that any staff members who are military spouses or have family members in federal employment will be under significant financial and emotional stress. This can lead to decreased productivity, increased absenteeism, and a general decline in morale, impacting the entire practice environment 29
  • Patient Population Impact: The financial stability and health of a practice's patient base can be directly eroded by a shutdown.
  • Financial Strain: Patients who are federal workers, military members, or government contractors will face immediate cash flow challenges, which may lead to delays in paying co-pays, deductibles, and outstanding medical bills.
  • Insurance and Access: While the ACA Marketplace enrollment platform (healthcare.gov) continues to function using user fee carryover funds, shutdowns often become entangled with legislative debates over healthcare policy, such as the extension of ACA premium subsidies. This creates uncertainty and anxiety for patients relying on these programs for affordable coverage.19
  • Social Determinants of Health: A shutdown can severely disrupt critical safety-net programs that impact patient health. Funding for the Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children (WIC) can be exhausted almost immediately, cutting off nutritional support for vulnerable families.1 The Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) typically has a 30-day funding buffer, but a prolonged shutdown would threaten food security for millions.2 For practices serving these populations, the result can be a worsening of chronic conditions and an increased demand for acute care services.

III. Proactive Leadership: A Strategic Playbook for Shutdown Preparedness

Facing the multifaceted risks of a government shutdown requires more than a reactive, wait-and-see approach. Effective leadership involves proactive planning across financial, operational, and communications domains. The following playbook provides a strategic framework for medical practices to build resilience and maintain control in an uncertain environment.

Fortifying Your Financial Position: Cash Flow Management

The primary defense against the financial disruption of a shutdown is a robust and liquid balance sheet. The goal is to create a financial cushion that can absorb potential revenue delays without compromising core operations.

  • Stress-Test and Build Cash Reserves: The most critical preparatory step is to model the financial impact of a prolonged shutdown. Analyze your payer mix to determine the percentage of your revenue derived from Medicare Fee-for-Service (FFS). Based on this analysis, create financial forecasts for a 30, 60, and 90-day delay in these specific receipts. This stress test will reveal your practice's vulnerability and quantify the amount of cash reserves needed to cover essential operating expenses (payroll, rent, critical supplies) during such a period.38
  • Secure Lines of Credit: Do not wait until a shutdown is imminent to secure financing. Proactively establish or expand a business line of credit with your financial institution. Lenders are more likely to offer favorable terms when the economic outlook is stable. A pre-approved line of credit provides a vital backstop, ensuring access to capital if a shutdown extends beyond your cash reserves.38
  • Optimize Revenue Cycle: In the weeks leading up to a potential shutdown, intensify efforts to accelerate your existing revenue cycle. Focus on collecting outstanding balances from commercial payers and private-pay patients. Consider implementing or promoting online payment portals to expedite patient payments. Automating invoicing and follow-up processes can also improve efficiency and reduce delays in your non-federal revenue streams.38
  • Manage Payables Strategically: Open lines of communication with your key vendors and landlords. Inform them that you are engaging in contingency planning and inquire about the possibility of flexible payment terms in the event of a federally induced revenue delay. Differentiate between critical and non-critical payables, and develop a prioritized payment plan to conserve cash for essential obligations in the event of a prolonged shutdown.

Developing a Crisis Communication Plan

During a period of uncertainty, clear, consistent, and proactive communication is crucial for maintaining the trust of both your staff and patients. A well-defined crisis communication plan prevents misinformation and reduces anxiety.

  • Establish the Framework: Designate a small, empowered crisis communication team, including a primary spokesperson (often the practice administrator or lead physician). Identify all key stakeholder groups, including providers, clinical staff, administrative staff, patients, vendors, and any affiliated hospital or health system partners.40
  • Internal Communications: Your employees' primary concerns will be the stability of the practice and the security of their paychecks. Your messaging must be confident and reassuring.
  • Pre-scripted Message for Staff: "Our leadership team is actively monitoring the potential federal government shutdown. We want to assure you that our practice has a robust contingency plan to ensure operational continuity. At this time, all practice operations, staff schedules, and payroll will continue as normal. We are financially prepared to manage potential disruptions. We will provide regular updates via [email/intranet]. To ensure we all provide consistent and accurate information, please direct any external questions to." (Derived from principles in 42).
  • Patient Communications: Patients will be concerned about whether their appointments are cancelled, if their insurance is still valid, and how billing will be handled. Your messaging should be simple, clear, and focused on continuity of care.
  • Pre-scripted Message for Patients (for website, patient portal, and front desk staff): "We are closely monitoring the situation in Washington regarding a potential U.S. government shutdown. Please be assured that [Practice Name] will remain open and fully operational to serve your healthcare needs. All scheduled appointments will proceed as planned. We do not anticipate any immediate impact on your Medicare or Medicaid coverage for services at our practice. We will post any important updates on our website." (Derived from principles in 41).
  • Monitor and Adapt: Utilize a multi-channel communication strategy (including email, website banners, patient portal messages, and social media updates) to effectively reach all stakeholders. Monitor patient inquiries and social media to identify and quickly correct any rumors or misinformation.40

Navigating Compliance in a Vacuum

While a shutdown pauses most external regulatory enforcement, it does not suspend your practice's underlying compliance obligations. The correct strategy is to use this period to strengthen your compliance posture in anticipation of a post-shutdown surge in activity.

  • Maintain Internal Vigilance: Continue all scheduled internal auditing and monitoring activities related to billing, coding, HIPAA, and OSHA standards. This "quiet period" is an ideal opportunity to self-identify and remediate potential compliance gaps without the pressure of an active external audit.45
  • Document Everything: Maintain meticulous records of all operational decisions and challenges that arise as a direct or indirect result of the shutdown. For example, document any difficulties in verifying patient eligibility or delays in receiving guidance from federal agencies. This documentation will be invaluable for explaining any performance anomalies to regulators or payers upon the shutdown's end.46
  • Prepare for the Backlog: Assume that once funding is restored, regulatory agencies will work aggressively to clear their backlog of audits, surveys, and investigations. Ensure that all compliance documentation is well-organized, up-to-date, and readily accessible. This preparation will enable your practice to respond to post-shutdown inquiries efficiently and demonstrate a consistent commitment to compliance.

Information and Intelligence Gathering

Staying informed with accurate, timely information is critical for making sound strategic decisions. Designate a point person or team to monitor key sources and provide daily briefings to leadership.

  • Official Government Sources: The most authoritative information on agency-specific operations can be found directly from the agencies themselves. While the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) has historically aggregated contingency plans, recent guidance indicates that plans will be hosted on individual agency websites.48 Key sites to monitor include:
  • HHS Contingency Plan Page: This is the central repository for plans from all HHS operating divisions, including CMS, CDC, NIH, and HRSA.50
  • Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) Contingency Plan Page: For practices serving a large veteran population or located near military bases.51
  • Industry Association Guidance: National physician and practice management organizations provide invaluable analysis and advocacy tailored to the healthcare sector.
  • American Medical Association (AMA): The AMA provides crucial updates on legislative developments and their direct impact on physicians. A shutdown often becomes an "extender event" where the fate of unrelated but critical healthcare policies, such as Medicare telehealth flexibilities, is tied to the passage of a funding bill. The AMA is a primary source for tracking these developments.52
  • Medical Group Management Association (MGMA): As a leading voice for practice administration, the MGMA provides operational guidance, checklists, and advocacy resources specifically designed to help practice leaders navigate the business challenges of a shutdown.

Recent shutdown threats have also introduced a new, more severe risk: the possibility of a Reduction in Force (RIF), or permanent layoffs, at federal agencies, rather than just temporary furloughs.30 Should this occur, it would represent a permanent loss of institutional knowledge and capacity at agencies like CMS and HHS. The disruption would not be temporary; it would create a long-term challenge of navigating a smaller, less responsive regulatory landscape, making proactive planning and information gathering even more essential.

Conclusion: Navigating Uncertainty with Strategic Foresight

A U.S. government shutdown is a complex event that poses a significant and multifaceted risk to medical practices. While the core benefit payments for Medicare and Medicaid are protected by their status as mandatory spending programs and are likely to continue uninterrupted in the short term, this surface-level stability belies deeper operational and financial threats.

The primary risks for medical practice leadership are clear. First is the operational friction caused by the mass furlough of federal employees at key agencies, such as CMS, HHS, and OSHA. This will manifest as delays in rulemaking, a halt to new provider enrollment, reduced administrative support, and a pause in routine regulatory oversight. Second, and more critically, is the potential for a liquidity crisis in the event of a prolonged shutdown lasting more than 30 days. At that point, the operational funding for Medicare Administrative Contractors may be exhausted, leading to significant delays in Medicare Fee-for-Service reimbursements that could impact a practice's cash flow.

These challenges are compounded by indirect impacts, including disruptions to the broader public health ecosystem, financial stress on staff and patients connected to federal employment, and the potential for critical policies, such as telehealth flexibilities, to expire as a result of the legislative impasse.

However, these risks are manageable with proactive and strategic leadership. A government shutdown should not be a moment of crisis, but a test of a practice's resilience. By stress-testing financial models, securing adequate cash reserves and lines of credit, implementing a clear and consistent crisis communication plan, and maintaining rigorous internal compliance, practice leaders can navigate this period of uncertainty from a position of strength.

The time for preparation is now. Do not wait for the headlines to dictate your response. The call-to-action for every medical practice leadership team is to convene this week, review this guide, and rigorously assess your financial and operational contingency plans. By doing so, you can ensure your practice is prepared to not only weather the storm but to emerge from it a more resilient and strategically sound organization.

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