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COVID-19 Update: May 6, 2020

COVID-19 update for Wednesday, May 6 as of 3:00 p.m.

Pennsylvania Update

Governor Wolf

  • The Wolf administration announced that it is establishing a facility in Delaware County that has the capacity to decontaminate “tens of thousands” of N95 respirators a day.  The equipment has been provided by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, the service is free, and among those eligible to use this service are health care facilities, first responders, and others, such as hospitals, urgent care centers, nursing homes, rehabilitation facilities, cancer centers, pharmacies, dialysis centers, assisted living facilities, clinical laboratories, emergency medical services, private practice/outpatient facilities, first responder organizations, and others.  Interested organizations must register and information will be available through the Pennsylvania Department of Health, the Pennsylvania Emergency Management Agency, the Hospital and Healthsystem Association of Pennsylvania, and others.  Read the Wolf administration’s announcement here.
  • Governor Wolf announced the creation of a new Commonwealth Civilian Coronavirus Corps to “…support efforts this fall to increase testing and contact tracing and provide critical new job opportunities in the public health sector.”  Learn more from the Wolf administration’s announcement, which includes a description of the anticipated areas of endeavor of the new organization.

Department of Human Services

  • DHS has circulated a survey requesting detailed information about the financial impact of COVID-19 on hospitals.  It requests responses by May 20.

Department of Health

The Department of Health has issued a message to its Health Alert Network to reflect that among the various types of COVID-19 tests available, the federal Food and Drug Administration has now authorized some serology tests.

Department of Health Daily Briefing

  • Governor Wolf and Secretary Levine participated in today’s briefing.
  • The governor discussed the new Commonwealth Civilian Coronavirus Corps and said he will provide further information about it in the near future.
  • Secretary Levine reported that among the more than 50,000 cases of COVID-19 in the state, more than 3300 are health care workers, more than 2000 work in the food industry in 122 establishments, and more than 10,000 reside in long-term-care facilities.
  • 2553 COVID-patients are currently hospitalized and 549 are on ventilators.
  • Today marked the fourth straight day of new case counts under 1000, a point that the Secretary described as potentially signifying a promising trend.
  • 46 percent of the state’s acute-care beds and 40 percent of its ICU beds are currently unoccupied and nearly 75 percent of its ventilators are idle.
  • Governor Wolf described the N95 mask decontamination facility in Delaware County.
  • The governor said his administration is not discussing giving civil liability immunity to long-term-care facilities but is discussing some protections for some other health care providers.
  • The state’s overall testing numbers are down, the governor said, because as long as the criteria for testing remains showing symptoms of COVID-19 and the number of cases in the state declines, the number of tests administered declines along with it.
  • The state wants to expand testing, Secretary Levine elaborated, especially in southeastern and northeastern Pennsylvania.  It also hopes to engage in some population-based and surveillance testing, especially in the parts of the state that are reopening, at which time the number of tests performed in the state will increase significantly.

Federal Update

Department of Health and Human Services/Health Resources and Services Administration

Department of Health and Human Services/Office of Civil Rights

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Food and Drug Administration

Department of Labor

Resources to Consult

Pennsylvania Department of Human Services

Main COVID-19 Page

COVID-19 Provider Resources

Press Releases

Pennsylvania Department of Health

Main COVID-19 Page

PA Health Alert Network

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Main COVID-19 Page

FAQ

(To receive this daily update directly, sign up for our mailing list at  info@pasafetynet.org.)

2020-05-07T08:24:56+00:00May 7th, 2020|Coronavirus, COVID-19|Comments Off on COVID-19 Update: May 6, 2020

COVID19 Update: May 5, 2020

COVID-19 update for Tuesday, May 5 as of 3:00 p.m.

Pennsylvania Update

Governor Wolf:  Reopening Pennsylvania

Governor Wolf has provided guidance to businesses as 24 counties move to the “yellow phase” of reopening beginning this Friday, May 8.  The guidance details procedures businesses must follow to conduct in-person operations.  See the administration’s announcement of the guidance here and go here for the guidance itself.

Department of Human Services

Department of Health

The Department of Health has published interim guidance on conditions and circumstances for discontinuing non-health care isolation for persons with COVID-19.

The department has written to the leaders of hospitals, health care facilities, and laboratories asking them to complete a survey that will be used by the state to determine Pennsylvania’s current capacity for administering COVID-19 tests.  See the letter here and the survey here.

Department of Health Daily Briefing

  • After reconciling death count data over the past two weeks, including data from Philadelphia, the state has added 554 new deaths to its total count.  This raises the total death count nearly 23 percent over yesterday’s announced total.
  • Among the nearly 51,000 Pennsylvanians who have been diagnosed with COVID-19 are 3200 health care workers, more than 9600 residents of long-term-care facilities, and more than 2000 workers in food processing facilities.
  • 2583 Pennsylvanians are currently hospitalized with COVID-19 and 542 of them are on ventilators.
  • 46 percent of the state’s acute-care hospital beds and 40 percent of its ICU vents are unoccupied and nearly 75 percent of its ventilators are idle.
  • Secretary Levine told a legislative committee that the state would not provide personal protective equipment to hospitals that have resumed performing non-urgent procedures because one of the conditions for resuming such procedures is having an adequate supply of such materials.

Federal Update

Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Food and Drug Administration

  • The FDA has updated its policy on the review and approval of diagnostic and antibody tests for COVID-19.  In a commentary titled “Insight Into FDA’s Revised Policy on Antibody Tests for COVID-19,” FDA officials explain the evolution of the agency’s approach to issuing emergency use authorizations for antibody tests.  The new policy itself can be found here.
  • The FDA has issued emergency use authorizations (EUA) for two specific commercial diagnostic tests for COVID-19.  See them here and here.

Medicaid Health Plans of America

  • Medicaid Health Plans of America, a trade association that represents more than 90 Medicaid managed care plans serving Medicaid beneficiaries in 37 states, has written to leaders of Congress to ask that they increase the federal medical assistance percentage (FMAP), the rate at which the federal government matches state Medicaid expenditures, by 12 percent retroactive to January 1, 2020 and through September 30, 2021.  The group also asked Congress to delay or cancel CMS’s Medicaid fiscal accountability regulation (MFAR).

Resources to Consult

Pennsylvania Department of Human Services

Main COVID-19 Page

COVID-19 Provider Resources

Press Releases

Pennsylvania Department of Health

Main COVID-19 Page

PA Health Alert Network

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Main COVID-19 Page

FAQ

(To receive this daily update directly, sign up for our mailing list at  info@pasafetynet.org.)

2020-05-06T06:00:45+00:00May 6th, 2020|Coronavirus, COVID-19|Comments Off on COVID19 Update: May 5, 2020

COVID-19 Update: May 4, 2020

COVID-19 update for Monday, May 4 as of 2:30 p.m.

Pennsylvania Update

Department of Health

The Department of Health has issued an advisory on the criteria for the discontinuation of transmission-based precautions for patients with COVID-19.

The department has issued an update on its criteria for health care personnel returning to work after confirmed or suspected COVID-19.  The advisory includes extending the amount of time such personnel need to be excluded from work after the first symptoms arise.

The department has posted an alert reminding health care providers that only labs with CLIA certification can perform COVID-19 tests, that only molecular and serology tests have been authorized by the FDA, and providing additional clarifications.  It also offers a graphic depiction of COVID-19 testing requirements.

Department of Health Daily Briefing

  • With 825 new cases yesterday, Pennsylvania has surpassed 50,000 people diagnosed with COVID-19.  2500 of them have passed away.
  • Of the 50,000 cases, 3100 are health care workers and more than 9300 reside in long-term-care facilities.
  • 2689 people are currently hospitalized with COVID-19; among them, 553 are on ventilators.
  • 46 percent of the state’s acute-care beds and 40 percent of its ICU beds are currently unoccupied and nearly 75 percent of its ventilators are now idle.
  • The process of reviewing counties and regions for eligibility to reopen will be conducted on a continual basis as new data becomes available.
  • Secretary Levine believes that if mitigation measures are reduced that case counts will rise.
  • She believes the strategy the state has been employing has been appropriate.
  • She said the state is still not getting the data on race that it needs to perform a more complete analysis of the impact of COVID-19.
  • The Department of Health is working on guidance for dental practices and hopes to have that guidance by the end of the week.
  • State officials are still discussing whether to share data with the public on cases and deaths in individual long-term-care facilities.
  • The death counts Philadelphia announces and those the state announces for Philadelphia continue to disagree.  The two jurisdictions use different data systems and are working to reconcile the differences between those systems.
  • With another outbreak predicted for later this year, Secretary Levine said that one of the major lessons the state has learned, and that it should apply in the future, is to seek to be able to do more testing, especially at the point of care and with a faster turnaround time for results.

Department of Human Services

DHS has issued a Medical Assistance Bulletin adding COVID-19 lab test codes to the Medicaid program fee schedule.

DHS has issued a Medical Assistance Bulletin adding the multi-function ventilator to the Medicaid program fee schedule.

DHS has issued a Medical Assistance Bulletin on COVID-19 testing and related treatments that are exempt from Medicaid copayment requirements.

DHS has issued a Medical Assistance Bulletin to advise providers that certain non-physician practitioners may prescribe home health services and medical supplies, equipment, and appliances effective March 1.

DHS’s Office of Long-Term Living has posted a notice presenting a new way to certify people to administer insulin injections in long-term-care facilities that may have a shortage of qualified staff to perform this task.

Federal Update

Department of Health and Human Services

  • Last Friday HHS began processing $22 billion in payments from the CARES Act’s provider relief fund to hospitals with large numbers of COVID-19 admissions through April 10 and to rural providers in support of the national response to COVID-19.  See HHS’s announcement of the distribution of this money, including a breakdown by state of grant recipients.

Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services

CMS Stakeholder Calls

CMS hosts recurring stakeholder engagement sessions to share information about the agency’s response to COVID-19.  These sessions are open to members of the health care community and are intended to provide updates, share best practices among peers, and offer participants an opportunity to ask questions of CMS and other subject matter experts.  Conference lines are limited so CMS encourages interested parties to join via audio webcast.  Call recordings and transcripts are posted on the CMS podcast page at https://www.cms.gov/Outreach-and-Education/Outreach/OpenDoorForums/PodcastAndTranscripts

CMS COVID-19 Office Hours Call

Office Hour Calls provide an opportunity for hospitals, health systems, and providers to ask questions of agency officials regarding CMS’s temporary actions that empower local hospitals and health care systems to increase hospital capacity, expand the health care work force, and promote greater use of telehealth in Medicare.  This week’s first of two Office Hours Calls will be held on Tuesday, May 5 at 5:00 p.m. (eastern).  The toll-free dial-in number is 833-614-0820 and the access passcode is 3996146.  Interested parties also can join the audio webcast here.

This week’s second Office Hours Call will be held on Thursday, May 7 at 5:00 p.m. (eastern).  The toll-free dial-in number is 833-614-0820 and the access passcode is 1181167.  Interested parties also can join the audio webcast here.

Lessons from the Front Lines

Lessons from the Front Lines calls are a joint effort between CMS Administrator Seema Verma, FDA Commissioner Stephen Hahn, MD, and the White House Coronavirus Task Force.  Physicians and other clinicians are invited to share their experience, ideas, strategies, and insights with one another related to their COVID-19 response.  There is an opportunity to ask questions of presenters.  This week’s Lessons From the Front Lines call will be held on Friday, May 8 at 12:30 p.m. (eastern).  The toll-free dial-in number is 877-251-0301 and the access code is 9146779.  Interested parties also can join the meeting via audio webcast here.

Home Health and Hospice

This week’s home health and hospice call will be held on Tuesday, May 5 at 3:00 p.m. (eastern).  The toll-free dial-in number is 833-614-0820 and the access passcode is 7844154.  Interested parties also can join the meeting via audio webcast here.

Nursing Homes

This week’s nursing homes call will be held on Wednesday, May 6 at 4:30 p.m. (eastern).  The toll-free dial-in number is 833-614-0820 and the access passcode is  8899983.  Interested parties also can join the meeting via audio webcast here.

Dialysis Organizations

This week’s call for dialysis organizations will be held on Wednesday, May 6 at 5:30 p.m. (eastern).  The toll-free dial-in number is 833-614-0820 and the access passcode is 8278522.  Interested parties also can join the meeting via audio webcast here.

Nurses

This week’s call for nurses will be held on Thursday, May 7 at 3:00 p.m. (eastern).  The toll-free dial-in number is 833-614-0820 and the access passcode is 5486361.  Interested parties also can join the meeting via audio webcast here.

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Food and Drug Administration

Department of Labor

  • The Department of Labor has issued additional guidance about 100 percent federal reimbursement of certain state short-term compensation payments and other changes in short-term compensation programs.  The guidance seeks to address “…how states can take advantage of this program as they look to re-open their businesses.”  For further information see the department’s news release and its official unemployment insurance program letter.

National Institutes of Health

Resources to Consult

Pennsylvania Department of Human Services

Main COVID-19 Page

COVID-19 Provider Resources

Press Releases

Pennsylvania Department of Health

Main COVID-19 Page

PA Health Alert Network

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Main COVID-19 Page

FAQ

(To receive this daily update directly, sign up for our mailing list at  info@pasafetynet.org.)

2020-05-05T06:00:40+00:00May 5th, 2020|Coronavirus, COVID-19|Comments Off on COVID-19 Update: May 4, 2020

COVID-19 Update: May 1, 2020

COVID-19 update for Friday, May 1 as of 4:00 p.m.

Pennsylvania Update

Reopening Pennsylvania

Governor Wolf on Friday announced the reopening of 24 Pennsylvania counties in the northwestern and north-central parts of the state, moving them from red to yellow in his three-color plan for reopening the state.  The governor outlined the criteria used to reach these decisions and the provisions for contact tracing and additional testing that make reopening possible.  The reopening calls for reduced use but not elimination of social distancing and includes guidance on work, congregate, and social activities that are now permitted as well as those that remain restricted or prohibited.  On Monday the administration will release guidance for businesses permitted to reopen in the selected counties.

Health Secretary Levine encouraged residents of the 24 counties to continue the recent practices of social distancing and use of face masks.  For more information on the reopening, what it means, and how it will work, see this news release from the governor’s office.  Additional resources of interest include:

Department of Health

The Department of Health has updated its interim guidance for collecting clinical specimens for COVID-19 testing.

Department of Health Daily Briefing

  • Governor Wolf and Secretary Levine discussed the reopening of 24 counties during the daily briefing.
  • The governor said that southwestern and south-central Pennsylvania look like good candidates for reopening in the near future.
  • Secretary Levine discussed how contact tracing would be undertaken in the 24 counties, listing the resources that would be involved and holding out the possibility that the state may hire additional people to help, if needed.
  • Community-based testing will be available in the 24 counties for people with COVID-19 symptoms.
  • The governor said the state has already reduced spending in the current fiscal year in light of reduced revenue and that he will be working with the legislature on an FY 2021 budget with the understanding that revenues will continue to be down from past levels.
  • 2677 people are currently hospitalized with COVID-19 and 561 of them have required help from a ventilator.
  • 40 percent of the state’s acute-care beds and 47 percent of its ICU beds are currently unoccupied and 70 percent of ventilators are now idle.

Department of Human Services

DHS has posted information about all-patient refined-diagnosis related groups (APR-DRGs) to be updated with COVID-19 billing codes.

Department of Revenue

The Revenue Department announced that Pennsylvania collected $2.2 billion in General Fund revenue in April, which was $2.2 billion, or 49.7 percent, less than anticipated.   For the fiscal year-to-date General Fund collections total $27.5 billion, which is $2.2 billion, or 7.4 percent, below estimate.  It is too soon to draw any conclusions about how this will affect negotiations for the state’s FY 2021 budget and its Medicaid program but this loss of revenue clearly poses a challenge state officials will need to address.

Federal Update

Follow-Up to Thursday’s Interim Final Rule Release

Yesterday CMS released a second interim final rule with comment period announcing a new round of regulatory waivers and rule changes to provide additional flexibility to the health care system as the COVID-19 crisis continues and the country begins to reopen.

These changes included some of the telehealth flexibilities providers have asked for in recent weeks, such as hospital reimbursement for the originating site when telehealth services for Medicare patients are furnished by a physician or practitioner who ordinarily practices in a hospital outpatient department to a patient who is located at home or other applicable temporary expansion location that has been made provider-based to the hospital; an expanded list of telehealth codes that may be offered with audio-only technology; and an expanded list of professionals who may bill for telehealth visits.  CMS has also increased reimbursement for three of the audio-only evaluation and management telehealth services described with codes 99441-99443.

Teaching hospitals are permitted to expand their number of beds without affecting indirect medical education (IME) bed ratios; to count the time of residents sent to other hospitals; and to permit teaching physicians to remotely review services provided by residents immediately after a patient visit.

The interim final rule implements sweeping changes for many provider types.  CMS has updated its provider-specific fact sheets to include this new information.  Please let us know if you have any questions that are not answered in the fact sheets.

Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services

  • The White House announced that CMS will be distributing $12 billion of CARES Act provider relief to 395 hospitals that have cared for 70 percent of the diagnosed COVID-19 cases.  The majority of the funds will go to providers in New York, New Jersey, and Illinois.  $2 billion of this money will go toward a Medicare DSH adjustment for those hospitals.  We are still awaiting additional details.
  • CMS has announced the creation of an independent commission to conduct a comprehensive assessment of the nursing home response to the COVID-19 emergency. See CMS’s news release and a fact sheet.
  • CMS has updated it EMTALA FAQ for hospitals to address COVID-19-related issues. 

Department of Health and Human Services

Food and Drug Administration

Department of Labor

Federal Communications Commission

Medicaid and CHIP Payment and Access Commission

 Resources to Consult

Pennsylvania Department of Human Services

Main COVID-19 Page

COVID-19 Provider Resources

Press Releases

Pennsylvania Department of Health

Main COVID-19 Page

PA Health Alert Network

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Main COVID-19 Page

FAQ

(To receive this daily update directly, sign up for our mailing list at  info@pasafetynet.org.)

 

2020-05-03T12:38:33+00:00May 3rd, 2020|Coronavirus, COVID-19, Uncategorized|Comments Off on COVID-19 Update: May 1, 2020

COVID-19 Update: April 30, 2020

COVID-19 update for Thursday, April 30 as of 4:00 p.m.

Pennsylvania Update

Governor Wolf

Earlier this month the state launched a $450 million Hospital Emergency Loan Program to provide short-term loans to hospitals struggling financially with their response to the COVID-19 emergency.  Today the Wolf administration announced that it has provided $324 million in loans from this fund to 31 Pennsylvania hospitals.  The news release includes a link to a list of loan recipients.

Department of Health

The Department of Health and Pennsylvania Emergency Management Agency have updated their guidance on the distribution of state-acquired personal protective equipment to reflect the state’s current priorities when deciding on the distribution of such materials.  According to the new guidance, the state’s current priority is “…congregate care settings with an identified and investigated need.”  Hospitals, the latest guidance explains, “…will no longer receive PPE directly from the commonwealth.”

Department of Health Daily Briefing

  • The number of new cases increased again yesterday.
  • Among those who have tested positive for COVID-19 in Pennsylvania, 2753 are health care workers and 8112 reside in 468 long-term-care facilities.
  • 2706 people are currently hospitalized with COVID-19 and 562 of them are on ventilators.  The latter is a decline of about 100 in the past week.
  • 40 percent of the state’s acute-care beds and 40 percent of its ICU beds are currently unoccupied and 70 percent of its ventilators are idle.
  • Since the start of the pandemic, the state has made 1378 shipments of personal protective equipment to providers and institutions.  This includes more than four million N95 respirators, 241,000 hospital gowns, 1.3 million surgical masks, 1.3 million pairs of gloves, and 80,000 face shields.
  • Pennsylvania’s stay-at-home order remains in effect.
  • If and when some counties or regions are declared “yellow” and targeted for partial reopening, some businesses will remain closed.  The state will provide more information about this tomorrow.
  • Testing is still not being done for those without symptoms but is being expanded for those with symptoms of COVID-19, including those with just mild symptoms.
  • The state is still collecting and reconciling death data so there could be another spike in the death count in the future.
  • The capacity to perform tests around the state has expanded.
  • Hospitals will be testing patients before they undergo elective procedures.

Federal Update

Major New Regulation From CMS

CMS this afternoon published a 279-page interim final rule with comment period covering Medicare and Medicaid, the Basic Health Program, and additional policy and regulatory revisions in response to the COVID-19 emergency and delaying certain reporting requirements for the skilled nursing facility quality reporting program.  The CMS news release announcing the policy changes describes them as a “…round of sweeping regulatory waivers and rule changes to deliver expanded care to the nation’s seniors and provide flexibility to the healthcare system as America reopens.  These changes include making it easier for Medicare and Medicaid beneficiaries to get tested for COVID-19 and continuing CMS’s efforts to further expand beneficiaries’ access to telehealth services.”

If you would like to explore the changes, you can do so through the following resources:

As of this writing we believe the following are the highlights, which are taken directly from CMS’s compendium document on blanket waivers and from the interim final rule posted today.

Flexibility for Medicare Telehealth Services

  • “When a registered outpatient of the hospital is receiving a telehealth service, the hospital may bill the originating site facility fee to support such telehealth services furnished by a physician or practitioner who ordinarily practices there.”
  • CMS is increasing reimbursement for the audio-only E/M codes 99441-99443 that were temporarily recategorized as reimbursable under the last IFC.  Reimbursement for CPT Codes 98966-98968 is not being increased.  CMS describes the revised RVUs for these codes as follows:
  • “Specifically, we are crosswalking CPT codes 99212, 99213, and 99214 to 99441, 99442, and 99443 respectively. We are finalizing, on an interim basis and for the duration of the COVID-19 PHE the following work RVUs: 0.48 for CPT code 99441; 0.97 for CPT code 99442; and 1.50 for CPT code 99443. We are also finalizing the direct PE inputs associated with CPT code 99212 for CPT code 99441, the direct PE inputs associated with CMS-5531-IFC 140 CPT code 99213 for CPT code 99442, and the direct PE inputs associated with CPT code 99214 for CPT code 99443.”
  • Eligible Practitioners. Pursuant to authority granted under the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act (CARES Act) that broadens the waiver authority under section 1135 of the Social Security Act, the Secretary has authorized additional telehealth waivers. CMS is waiving the requirements of section 1834(m)(4)(E) of the Act and 42 CFR § 410.78 (b)(2) which specify the types of practitioners that may bill for their services when furnished as Medicare telehealth services from the distant site. The waiver of these requirements expands the types of health care professionals that can furnish distant site telehealth services to include all those that are eligible to bill Medicare for their professional services. This allows health care professionals who were previously ineligible to furnish and bill for Medicare telehealth services, including physical therapists, occupational therapists, speech language pathologists, and others, to receive payment for Medicare telehealth services.
  • Audio-Only Telehealth for Certain Services. Pursuant to authority granted under the CARES Act, CMS is waiving the requirements of section 1834(m)(1) of the ACT and 42 CFR § 410.78(a)(3) for use of interactive telecommunications systems to furnish telehealth services, to the extent they require use of video technology, for certain services. This waiver allows the use of audio-only equipment to furnish services described by the codes for audio-only telephone evaluation and management services, and behavioral health counseling and educational services (see designated codes https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/MedicareGeneral-Information/Telehealth/Telehealth-Codes). Unless provided otherwise, other services included on the Medicare telehealth services list must be furnished using, at a minimum, audio and video equipment permitting two-way, real-time interactive communication between the patient and distant site physician or practitioner.

Physician Services

  • Doctor listening to patientQuality Assurance and Performance Improvement (QAPI). (New since 4/21 Release) CMS is modifying certain requirements in 42 CFR §483.75, which requires long-term care facilities to develop, implement, evaluate, and maintain an effective, comprehensive, data-driven QAPI program. Specifically, CMS is modifying §483.75(b)–(d) and (e)(3) to the extent necessary to narrow the scope of the QAPI program to focus on adverse events and infection control. This will help ensure facilities focus on aspects of care delivery most closely associated with COVID-19 during the PHE.
  • In-Service Training: (New since 4/21 Release) CMS is modifying the nurse aide training requirements at §483.95(g)(1) for SNFs and NFs, which requires the nursing assistant to receive at least 12 hours of in-service training annually. In accordance with section 1135(b)(5) of the Act, we are postponing the deadline for completing this requirement throughout the COVID-19 PHE until the end of the first full quarter after the declaration of the PHE concludes.
  • Detailed Information Sharing for Discharge Planning for Long-Term Care (LTC) Facilities. (New since 4/21 Release) CMS is waiving the discharge planning requirement in §483.21(c)(1)(viii), which requires LTC facilities to assist residents and their representatives in selecting a post-acute care provider using data, such as standardized patient assessment data, quality measures and resource use. This temporary waiver is to provide facilities the ability to expedite discharge and movement of residents among care settings. CMS is maintaining all other discharge planning requirements, such as but not limited to, ensuring that the discharge needs of each resident are identified and result in the development of a discharge plan for each resident; involving the interdisciplinary team, as defined at 42 CFR §483.21(b)(2)(ii), in the ongoing process of developing the discharge plan address the resident’s goals of care and treatment preferences.
  • Clinical Records. (New since 4/21 Release) Pursuant to section 1135(b)(5) of the Act, CMS is modifying the requirement at 42 CFR §483.10(g)(2)(ii) which requires long-term care (LTC) facilities to provide a resident a copy of their records within two working days (when requested by the resident). Specifically, CMS is modifying the timeframe requirements to allow LTC facilities ten working days to provide a resident’s record rather than two working days.

Medical Education

  • Hospitals may expand their number of beds without affecting their resident to bed ratios for IME (they will use the ratio from before the public health emergency) and , in a significant departure from normal policy, residency programs can count time of residents sent to other hospitals.
  • On an interim basis for the duration of the PHE for the COVID-19 pandemic, the teaching physician may not only direct the care furnished by residents, but also review the services provided with the resident, during or immediately after the visit, remotely through virtual means via audio/video real time communications technology.

Home Health

  • 12-hour Annual In-Service Training Requirement for Home Health Aides. (New since 4/21 Release) CMS is modifying the requirement at 42 C.F.R. §484.80(d) that home health agencies must assure that each home health aide receives 12 hours of in-service training in a 12-month period. In accordance with section 1135(b)(5) of the Act, we are postponing the deadline for completing this requirement throughout the COVID-19 PHE until the end of the first full 17 04/29/2020 quarter after the declaration of the PHE concludes. This will allow aides and the registered nurses (RNs) who teach in-service training to spend more time delivering direct patient care and additional time for staff to complete this requirement.
  • Detailed Information Sharing for Discharge Planning for Home Health Agencies.  (New since 4/21 Release) CMS is waiving the requirements of 42 CFR §484.58(a) to provide detailed information regarding discharge planning, to patients and their caregivers, or the patient’s representative in selecting a post-acute care provider by using and sharing data that includes, but is not limited to, (another) home health agency (HHA), skilled nursing facility (SNF), inpatient rehabilitation facility (IRF), and long-term care hospital (LTCH) quality measures and resource use measures. o This temporary waiver provides facilities the ability to expedite discharge and movement of residents among care settings. CMS is maintaining all other discharge planning requirements.
  • Clinical Records: (New since 4/21 Release) In accordance with section 1135(b)(5) of the Act, CMS is extending the deadline for completion of the requirement at 42 CFR §484.110(e), which requires HHAs to provide a patient a copy of their medical record at no cost during the next visit or within four business days (when requested by the patient). Specifically, CMS will allow HHAs ten business days to provide a patient’s clinical record, instead of four.

Home Health and Hospice

  • Training and Assessment of Aides: (New since 4/21 Release) CMS is waiving the requirement at 42 CFR §418.76(h)(2) for Hospice and 42 CFR §484.80(h)(1)(iii) for HHAs, which require a registered nurse, or in the case of an HHA a registered nurse or other appropriate skilled professional (physical therapist/occupational therapist, speech language pathologist) to make an annual onsite supervisory visit (direct observation) for each aide that provides services on behalf of the agency. In accordance with section 1135(b)(5) of the Act, we are postponing completion of these visits. All postponed onsite assessments must be completed by these professionals no later than 60 days after the expiration of the PHE.
  • Quality Assurance and Performance Improvement (QAPI). (New since 4/21 Release) CMS is modifying the requirement at 42 CFR §418.58 for Hospice and §484.65 for HHAs, which requires these providers to develop, implement, evaluate, and maintain an effective, ongoing, hospice/HHA-wide, data-driven QAPI program. Specifically, CMS is modifying the requirements at §418.58(a)–(d) and §484.65(a)–(d) to narrow the scope of the QAPI program to concentrate on infection control issues, while retaining the requirement that remaining activities should continue to focus on adverse events. This modification decreases burden associated with the development and maintenance of a broad-based QAPI program, allowing the providers to focus efforts on aspects of care delivery most closely associated with COVID-19 and tracking adverse  events during the PHE. The requirement that HHAs and hospices maintain an effective, ongoing, agency-wide, data-driven quality assessment and performance improvement program will remain.

Hospice

  • Annual Training. (New since 4/21 Release) CMS is modifying the requirement at 42 CFR §418.100(g)(3), which requires hospices to annually assess the skills and competence of all 19 04/29/2020 individuals furnishing care and provide in-service training and education programs where required. Pursuant to section 1135(b)(5) of the Act, we are postponing the deadline for completing this requirement throughout the COVID-19 PHE until the end of the first full quarter after the declaration of the PHE concludes. This does not alter the minimum personnel requirements at 42 CFR §418.114. Selected hospice staff must complete training and have their competency evaluated in accordance with unwaived provisions of 42 CFR Part 418.

Physical Environment for Multiple Providers/Suppliers

  • Inspection, Testing & Maintenance (ITM) under the Physical Environment Conditions of Participation: CMS is waiving certain physical environment requirements for Hospitals, CAHs, inpatient hospice, ICF/IIDs, and SNFs/NFs to reduce disruption of patient care and potential exposure/transmission of COVID-19. The physical environment regulations require that facilities and equipment be maintained to ensure an acceptable level of safety and quality.
  • CMS will permit facilities to adjust scheduled inspection, testing and maintenance (ITM) frequencies and activities for facility and medical equipment.
  • Specific Physical Environment Waiver Information: o 42 CFR §482.41(d) for hospitals, §485.623(b) for CAH, §418.110(c)(2)(iv) for inpatient hospice, §483.470(j) for ICF/IID; and §483.90 for SNFs/NFs all require these facilities and their equipment to be maintained to ensure an acceptable level of safety and quality. CMS is temporarily modifying these requirements to the extent necessary to permit these facilities to adjust scheduled inspection, testing and maintenance (ITM) frequencies and activities for facility and medical equipment. o 42 CFR §482.41(b)(1)(i) and (c) for hospitals, §485.623(c)(1)(i) and (d) for CAHs, §482.41(d)(1)(i) and (e) for inpatient hospices, §483.470(j)(1)(i) and (5)(v) for ICF/IIDs, and §483.90(a)(1)(i) and (b) for SNFs/NFs require these facilities to be in compliance with the Life Safety Code (LSC) and Health Care Facilities Code (HCFC). CMS is temporarily modifying these provisions to the extent necessary to permit these facilities to adjust scheduled ITM frequencies and activities required by the LSC and HCFC. The following LSC and HCFC ITM are considered critical are not included in this waiver:
  • Sprinkler system monthly electric motor-driven and weekly diesel engine-driven fire pump testing.
  • Portable fire extinguisher monthly inspection.
  • Elevators with firefighters’ emergency operations monthly testing.
  • Emergency generator 30 continuous minute monthly testing and associated transfer switch monthly testing.
  • Means of egress daily inspection in areas that have undergone construction, repair, alterations or additions to ensure its ability to be used instantly in case of emergency. o 42 CFR §482.41(b)(9) for hospitals, §485.623(c)(7) for CAHs, §418.110(d)(6) for inpatient hospices, §483.470(e)(1)(i) for ICF/IIDs, and §483.90(a)(7) for SNFs/NFs require these facilities to have an outside window or outside door in every sleeping room. CMS will permit a waiver of these outside window and outside door requirements to permit these providers to utilize facility and non-facility space that is not normally used for patient care to be utilized for temporary patient care or quarantine.

Ambulatory Surgical Centers

  • Medical Staff. 42 CFR 416.45(b). CMS is waiving the requirement at § 416.45(b) that medical staff privileges must be periodically reappraised, and the scope of procedures performed in the ASC must be periodically reviewed. This will allow for physicians whose privileges will expire to continue practicing at the ambulatory surgical center, without the need for reappraisal, and for ASCs to continue operations without performing these administrative tasks during the PHE. This waiver will improve the ability of ASCs to maintain their current workforce during the PHE.

Community Mental Health Centers

  • Quality assessment and performance improvement (QAPI). 42 CFR 485.917(a)-(d) We are modifying the requirements for CMHC’s quality assessment and performance improvement (QAPI). Specifically, we are retaining the overall requirement that CMHC’s maintain an effective, ongoing, CMHC-wide, data-driven QAPI program, while providing flexibility for CMHCs to use their QAPI resources to focus on challenges and opportunities for improvement related to the PHE by waiving the specific detailed requirements for the QAPI program’s organization and content at § 485.917(a)-(d). Waiving the requirements related to the details of the QAPI program’s organization and content will make it easier for CMHCs to reconfigure their QAPI programs, as needed, to adapt to specific needs and circumstances that arise during the PHE. These flexibilities may be implemented so long as they are consistent with a state’s emergency preparedness or pandemic plan.
  • Provision of Services. 42 CFR 485.918(b)(1)(iii). We are waiving the specific requirement at § 485.918(b)(1)(iii) that prohibits CMHCs from providing partial hospitalization services and other CMHC services in an individual’s home so that clients can safely shelter in place during the PHE while continuing to receive needed care and services from the CMHC. This waiver is a companion to recent regulatory changes (INSERT IFR CITATION WHEN RELEASED) that clarify how CMHCs should bill for services provided in an individual’s home, and how such services should be documented in the medical record. While this waiver will now allow CMHCs to furnish services in client homes, including through the use of using telecommunication technology, CMHCs continue to be, among other things, required to comply with the nonwaived provisions of 42 CFR Part 485, Subpart J, requiring that CMHCs: 1) assess client needs, including physician certification of the need for partial hospitalization services, if needed; 2) implement and update each client’s individualized active treatment plan that sets forth the 25 04/29/2020 type, amount, duration, and frequency of the services; and 3) promote client rights, including a client’s right to file a complaint.
  • 40 Percent Rule. 42 CFR 485.918(b)(1)(v) We are waiving the requirement at § 485.918(b)(1)(v) that a CMHC provides at least 40 percent of its items and services to individuals who are not eligible for Medicare benefits. Waiving the 40 percent requirement will facilitate appropriate timely discharge from inpatient psychiatric units and prevent admissions to these facilities because CMHCs will be able to provide PHP services to Medicare beneficiaries without restrictions on the proportion of Medicare beneficiaries that they are permitted to treat at a time. This will allow communities greater access to health services, including mental health services.

Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services

  • CMS has published new information for clinicians about multiple flexibilities for its Quality Payment Program in response to the COVID-19 crisis, including extending the 2019 MIPS data submission deadline, information on reporting data from clinical trials, and more.
  • CMS has published a memo to state Medicaid programs to clarify the different types of testing available for laboratories, whether the tests are being offered under an emergency use authorization issued by the FDA or as described in the FDA’s COVID-19 Test Guidance for these tests systems, and the CLIA certificates under which testing can be performed.
  • CMS has posted a guide to flexibilities for home health agencies in their response to COVID-19.
  • CMS has awarded $20 million in grants to combat COVID-19 through greater use of telehealth.
  • CMS will host a call on nursing homes on Wednesday, May 6 at 4:30 p.m. (eastern) to provide updates on its latest COVID-19 guidance and leaders in the field will share best practices.  The call-in number is 833-614-0820 and the access passcode is 8899983.  Individuals who cannot get through to the call can follow it on an audio webcast.
  • CMS will host an “office hours” call on Tuesday, May 5 at 5:00 p.m. (eastern) during which providers can ask CMS staff questions about the agency’s temporary actions in response to the COVID-19 emergency.  The call-in number is 833-614-0820 and the access code is 3996146.  Individuals who cannot get through to the call can follow it on an audio webcast.
  • CMS will host a call on home health and hospice care on Tuesday, May 5 at 3:00 (eastern) to provide updates on its latest COVID-19 guidance and to hear leaders in the field share their best practices.  The call-in number is 833-614-0820 and the access passcode is 7844154.  Individuals who cannot get through to the call can follow it on an audio webcast.

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Food and Drug Administration

National Institutes of Health

Resources to Consult

Pennsylvania Department of Human Services

Main COVID-19 Page

COVID-19 Provider Resources

Press Releases

Pennsylvania Department of Health

Main COVID-19 Page

PA Health Alert Network

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Main COVID-19 Page

FAQ

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2020-05-01T08:42:28+00:00May 1st, 2020|Coronavirus, COVID-19|Comments Off on COVID-19 Update: April 30, 2020

COVID-19 Update: April 29, 2020

COVID-19 update for Wednesday, April 29 as of 3:30 p.m.

Pennsylvania Update

Department of Human Services

DHS is accelerating estimated April-June 2020 Appendix 14 and 17 payments to the HealthChoices physical health managed care plans.  That money should be distributed to hospitals on June 4.

Department of Health Daily Briefing

  • The state today reported a large increase in the COVID-19 death count, the result of researching and then reconciling data regarding questionable cases dating back a week or more. The increase does not suggest a sudden surge in deaths.
  • 7698 residents of 461 long-term-care facilities have contracted COVID-19, as have 2634 health care workers.
  • 2781 people with COVID-19 are currently hospitalized and 602 of them are on ventilators.
  • 47 percent of the state’s hospital beds and 40 percent of its ICU beds are currently unoccupied and nearly 70 percent of its ventilators are idle.
  • Social distancing and masks will still be needed in areas of the state that reopen.
  • The state will provide information later this week about which types of businesses will be permitted to reopen and how it intends to undertake contact tracing.
  • The state has distributed a large quantity of N95 masks in the last 24 hours.
  • The state is still taking a regional approach to deciding which areas can begin to reopen but may deviate from that approach if appropriate.
  • Regular flu cases are not included in COVID-19 case counts. The state counts 130,000 cases of flu this season resulting in 102 deaths while it has had (so far) more than 43,000 cases of COVID-19 leading to 2195 deaths.
  • In addition to the quantitative measure to be used to help determine whether regions or counties are permitted to open, the state also will consider testing capacity, contact tracing plans, and health system capacity if there were to be another outbreak.
  • State officials are still discussing how much information, if any, to reveal about death and case counts in individual long-term-care facilities.

Governor Wolf

Governor Wolf, as expected, vetoed S.B. 857, which would have authorized health care professionals to use telemedicine and require its coverage and payment by health insurers.  In his veto message, Governor Wolf noted that the bill, as amended in the House, interferes with women’s health care and the decision-making between patients and their physicians.  As a reminder, the amendment would have prohibited numerous drugs determined by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration to be “risky,” including a drug used to induce abortions, from eligibility for telemedicine consultative services.

General Assembly

Harrisburg, PA capital buildingPennsylvania Senate Democrats unveiled their plan for using $3.9 billion in federal CARES Act money the state has received.  To date, Governor Wolf and Senate and House Republican leaders have agreed to keep the money in the state Treasury while awaiting what they hope will be additional guidance from the federal government – and the possibility that they will be permitted to use the money to replace state revenue lost amid the COVID-19 crisis.

The Senate Democrats’ proposal would allocate $650 million of the $3.9 billion for certain health care providers, first responders, and frontline workers and $1.1 billion for individuals/families.  See a complete list of how they would allocate the funding here.

Federal Update

Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services

  • CMS has posted a letter to clinicians participating in its Merit-based Incentive Payment System (MIPS) explaining how participating in a clinical trial and reporting their findings to a clinical data repository or registry may earn them credit in the 2020 performance period.
  • CMS has updated its FAQ on Medicare fee-for-service billing. The update features a new question on the MIPS program.
  • CMS has issued a transmittal on the quarterly update of the long-term-care hospital (LTCH) prospective payments system fiscal year 2020 pricer to reflect changes in the 50 percent rule, site-neutral payments, and the 25-day length-of-stay requirement during the COVID-19 emergency. The change request updates the LTCH pricer software used in original Medicare claims processing.  The update also is described in an article in CMS’s online publication MLN Matters.
  • CMS is holding a COVID-19 stakeholders call for nurses on Thursday, April 30 at 3:30 p.m. (eastern). The toll-free dial-in number is 833-614-0820 and the access code is 4268398.  An audio webcast can be reached here.  Individuals who cannot participate during the call can find information about transcripts and podcasts here.
  • CMS is hosting a call for ambulatory surgery centers and freestanding emergency departments to provide updates on the agency’s latest COVID-19 guidance on Thursday, April 30 at 12 noon (eastern). Agency officials will be available to answer technical and operational questions from providers.  The toll-free dial-in number is 833-614-0820 and the access code is 4366486.  An audio webcast can be reached here.  Individuals who cannot participate during the call can find information about transcripts and podcasts here.
  • CMS is holding a COVID-19 stakeholders call on “lessons from the front lines,” featuring CMS Administrator Seema Verma, FDA Commissioner Stephen Hahn, MD, and the White House Coronavirus Task Force on Friday, May 1 at 12:30 p.m. (eastern). The toll-free dial-in number is 877-251-0301 and the access code is 9545128.  An audio webcast can be reached here.  Individuals who cannot participate during the call can find information about transcripts and podcasts here.

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Food and Drug Administration

Resources to Consult

Pennsylvania Department of Human Services

Main COVID-19 Page

COVID-19 Provider Resources

Press Releases

Pennsylvania Department of Health

Main COVID-19 Page

PA Health Alert Network

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Main COVID-19 Page

FAQ

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2020-04-30T08:42:33+00:00April 30th, 2020|Coronavirus, COVID-19|Comments Off on COVID-19 Update: April 29, 2020

COVID-19 Update: April 28, 2020

COVID-19 update for Tuesday, April 28 as of 4:00 p.m.

Pennsylvania Update

Department of Human Services

DHS has sent a memo to the HealthChoices physical health managed care organizations advising them on the use of the CR modifier and the DR condition code for COVID-19-related claims.

Department of Health Daily Briefing

  • After three days of declines in the number of new COVID-19 cases, the total increased yesterday.
  • More than 2500 of the state’s 43,000 positive tests for COVID-19 are for health care workers and more than 7300 are residents of 452 long-term-care facilities.
  • 2777 patients are currently hospitalized with COVID-19 and 611 of them are on ventilators.
  • 47 percent of the state’s hospital beds and 40 percent of its ICU beds are currently unoccupied and 70 percent of its ventilators are not in use.
  • Governor Wolf has indicated that the state will be looking at both counties and regions when deciding which parts of the state to reopen.
  • The current plan is to announce the first openings on May 1, with those openings to take effect on May 8.
  • The state has not developed benchmarks for testing capacity when counties or regions reopen but will provide further information about this on Friday.
  • Secretary Levine agrees with Philadelphia’s health commissioner that the COVID-19 peak has probably passed in Philadelphia but cautioned against future outbreaks and spoke of the need to be prepared for them if they occur.

Federal Update

White House

The Trump administration has released two new documents to support its plan for reopening the country and its economy:  a testing overview and an accompanying testing blueprint.

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

The CDC has updated its COVID-19 guidance for different types of clinical facilities.

Food and Drug Administration

Resources to Consult

Pennsylvania Department of Human Services

Main COVID-19 Page

COVID-19 Provider Resources

Press Releases

Pennsylvania Department of Health

Main COVID-19 Page

PA Health Alert Network

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Main COVID-19 Page

FAQ

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2020-04-29T06:00:54+00:00April 29th, 2020|Coronavirus, COVID-19|Comments Off on COVID-19 Update: April 28, 2020

COVID-19 Update: April 27, 2020

COVID-19 update for Monday, April 27 as of 3:30 p.m.

Pennsylvania Update

Department of Health

Hospital buildingThe Department of Health has issued guidance on the terms under which hospitals can begin performing elective procedures again and under which ambulatory surgical facilities may begin performing elective procedures again.

Department of Health Daily Briefing

  • The number of newly reported cases has declined for the third consecutive day.
  • 2394 positive tests have been among health care workers and 7037 have been among residents of 441 long-term-care facilities.
  • 2799 people are currently hospitalized for COVID-19 and 615 of them are on ventilators.
  • 47 percent of the state’s hospital beds and 40 percent of its ICU beds are currently unoccupied and nearly 70 percent of its ventilators are not in use.
  • Secretary Levine discussed the criteria for the state to reopen regions.  She cautioned against too great a focus on the number of cases per 100,000 population and explained that to reopen, regions also would need a certain level of testing capacity, enough personal protective equipment, have enough hospital staff to handle any surge in cases, and not be operating under crisis standards of care.
  • The state is doing well in finding more testing materials for the state lab and Secretary Levine said more needs to be done to make this supply chain more reliable and to do the same for others that perform tests as well.

Governor Wolf

The Wolf administration has issued a news release elaborating on the data-driven and qualitative measures that will be used to determine when individual regions of the state will be permitted to reopen.

Federal Update

Department of Health and Human Services

  • Last Friday HHS deposited its second tranche of CARES Act funding in hospitals’ bank accounts.  We have contacted HHS to inquire about the specifics of the funding formula, whether there are additional future attestation requirements, the timing for the next round of payments, and more.

In the meantime, providers that received Provider Relief Payments in either round of funding should visit the CARES Act General Distribution Portal, where you will be able to provide data that HHS may use to calculate payment distributions from the Provider Relief Fund.  (Other useful resources:  the CARES Act Provider Relief Fund web page and an FAQ on the General Distribution Portal.  Also, please note: the General Distribution Portal is not the same as the Attestation Portal.)

Specifically, the portal is collecting the following four pieces of information:

  1. a provider’s “Gross Receipts or Sales” or “Program Service Revenue” as submitted on its federal income tax return;
  2. the provider’s estimated revenue losses in March 2020 and April 2020 due to COVID;
  3. a copy of the provider’s most recently filed federal income tax return; and
  4. a listing of the tax identification numbers any of the provider’s subsidiary organizations that have received relief funds but that DO NOT file separate tax returns.

In addition, providers can submit separate applications for CARES Act funding for any additional entities that received Provider Relief Fund payments and that also filed a separate tax return for 2017, 2018, or 2019.  See the provider relief fund page and FAQ for further details.

Health care providers who have conducted COVID-19 testing or provided treatment for uninsured COVID-19 individuals on or after February 4, 2020 can request claims reimbursement through the program electronically and will be reimbursed generally at Medicare rates, subject to available funding. Steps will involve: enrolling as a provider participant, checking patient eligibility, submitting patient information, submitting claims, and receiving payment via direct deposit.

To participate, providers must attest to the following at registration:

  • You have checked for health care coverage eligibility and confirmed that the patient is uninsured. You have verified that the patient does not have coverage such as individual, employer-sponsored, Medicare or Medicaid coverage, and no other payer will reimburse you for COVID-19 testing and/or care for that patient
  • You will accept defined program reimbursement as payment in full.
  • You agree not to balance bill the patient.
  • You agree to program terms and conditions and may be subject to post-reimbursement audit review.

The new web page also includes information about covered services, claims submission, and claims reimbursement.

Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services

  • CMS has announced that it is re-evaluating the amounts it will have available for Part A providers with new and pending applications under its Accelerated Payment Program and is suspending its Advance Payment Program for Medicare Part B suppliers effective immediately.  Now that Congress has appropriated $175 billion for the grant-style “Provider Relief Fund,” CMS is shifting away from the cash advance approach of the Advance and Accelerated Payment Programs.  Part B suppliers will no longer be able to apply for the Advance Payment Program and CMS will be re-evaluating the amounts available for Part A providers with new and pending applications under the Accelerated Payment Program.  Previously, Part A and Part B providers were able to request an advance on Medicare fee-for-service payments up to a maximum value of six months’ worth of payments.  See CMS’s news release explaining its shift in approach and an updated fact sheet on the Accelerated and Advance Payment Programs.
  • CMS has updated its FAQ on Medicare fee-for-service billing.  In particular, the updated FAQ provided more specific information about use of the condition code “DR” and the modifier “CR” for claims for which Medicare payment is conditioned on the premise of a formal waiver.
  • CMS has informed state governments that it will hold constant the inspection domain of the Nursing Home Compare site due to the prioritization and suspension of certain surveys during the COVID-19 emergency to ensure that the rating system provides fair information for consumers.

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Food and Drug Administration

Occupational Safety and Health Administration

Resources to Consult

Pennsylvania Department of Human Services

Main COVID-19 Page

COVID-19 Provider Resources

Press Releases

Pennsylvania Department of Health

Main COVID-19 Page

PA Health Alert Network

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Main COVID-19 Page

FAQ

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2020-04-28T09:04:56+00:00April 28th, 2020|Coronavirus, COVID-19|Comments Off on COVID-19 Update: April 27, 2020

COVID-19 Update: April 24, 2020

COVID-19 update for Friday, April 23 as of 4:00 p.m.

Attention:  Health Care Providers

HHS has extended until 3:00 p.m. (eastern) on Saturday, April 25 the deadline for providers to submit data that will be used to determine how it will allocate the $10 billion it will be distributing to providers hit especially hard by COVID-19Providers that have been targeted for possible assistance from this pool have already been notified of the need to submit data, although such notice does not assure funding.

State Update

Department of Health Daily Briefing

  • After a week of declines in the number of new COVID-19 cases, the daily case count has returned to its higher levels of one to two weeks ago.
  • More than 6000 residents of 418 long-term-care facilities located in 40 of the state’s counties have tested positive for COVID-19, as have more than 700 people who work at those facilities.
  • More than 2000 of the Pennsylvanians who have tested positive for COVID-19 are health care workers.
  • 2746 people are currently hospitalized with COVID-19 and 662 of them are on ventilators.
  • 47 percent of the state’s acute-care beds and 40 percent of its ICU beds are currently unoccupied and nearly 70 percent of its ventilators are not in use at this time.

Department of Health

The Department of Health has issued a notice to hospitals reminding them that they are required to promptly notify any first responder agency that is known to have transported a patient determined to be positive for COVID-19 and that they must do so as soon possible and no later than 48 hours after the determination.  This requirement is the same as that called for in the Ryan White HIV/AIDS Treatment Extension Act of 2009.

Insurance Department

The state Insurance Department has published COVID-19 guidance regarding volunteer physicians, podiatrists, and certified nurse midwives practicing under a reactivated license.  The notice addresses the medical malpractice insurance obligations of such volunteers depending on where they practice during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Pennsylvania Health Law Center

The Pennsylvania Health Law Center has launched a “COVID-19 Resource Center.”  While it has useful information, its primary target audiences appears to be consumers and those who work with consumers.

Federal Update

Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Food and Drug Administration

National Institutes of Health

The White House

Resources to Consult

Pennsylvania Department of Human Services

Main COVID-19 Page

COVID-19 Provider Resources

Press Releases

Pennsylvania Department of Health

Main COVID-19 Page

PA Health Alert Network

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Main COVID-19 Page

FAQ

(To receive this daily update directly, sign up for our mailing list at info@pasafetynet.org.)

2020-04-25T07:21:45+00:00April 25th, 2020|Coronavirus, COVID-19|Comments Off on COVID-19 Update: April 24, 2020

COVID-19 Update: April 23, 2020

COVID-19 update for Thursday, April 23 as of 5:00 p.m.

Pennsylvania Update

Governor Wolf

On Wednesday night Governor Wolf addressed the state about his plan to gradually reopen Pennsylvania and its economy.  While the governor had previously announced some reopenings, he outlined general parameters for authorizing additional steps and further business activity.

Reopening the state, he said, would be based on a three-phase approach and guidelines for attempting to maintain control of COVID-19:  to make sure that case counts are under control and that the population of the regions identified for possible reopening have fewer than 50 cases per 100,000 residents over 14 days before people can return to work.  Target dates for some reopenings may change, he said, if conditions and case counts change, but the goal is to begin on May 8.

Governor Wolf emphasized that continued social distancing and use of masks is imperative and that reopening would not be state-wide but would be on a regional basis, depending on their conditions.  He will be making the decisions about regional reopenings, he said, and not local or county officials, and those decisions will be data-driven.  Based on current conditions, he said, reopening is most likely to start in northern central Pennsylvania and the northwestern part of the state, but that has not yet been decided.

The governor also said the Department of Health has been talking to hospital industry representatives about resuming non-urgent elective procedures.

Learn more about Governor Wolf’s plan here.

Department of Human Services

  • DHS has written to the federal Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services to request Medicaid state plan amendments in response to the COVID-19 emergency.  The amendments include suspension of co-payments for screening, diagnosis, and treatment for COVID-19; benefit flexibility to authorize the use of additional cough and cold suppressant products; suspension of prior authorization requirements for certain services and for the permitted supply of covered outpatient drugs; and more.
  • DHS has also written to CMS to request approval of its disaster relief state plan amendment to seek flexibilities in how the state operates its Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP).  These flexibilities include:
  • allowing enrollees to receive services beyond their certification period by extending CHIP renewal deadlines;
  • temporarily delaying acting on certain changes in circumstances;
  • accepting self-attestation and conduct post-enrollment verification;
  • allowing individuals to provide a reasonable explanation of inconsistencies in lieu of requiring paper documentation;
  • extending deadlines for submitting verification at renewal;
  • temporarily suspending application of co-payments related to COVID-19 testing, screening, and treatment services; and
  • temporarily delaying payment of premiums (and/or delay payment of premium balance).
  • DHS has published an announcement listing the functions managed by its Office of Developmental Programs that it is suspending state-wide until further notice.  Previously, these functions had been suspended for a limited period of time.

Department of Health Daily Briefing

  • Secretary Levine explained the difference between confirmed cases of COVID-19 and probable cases and between confirmed deaths from COVID-19 and probable deaths from COVID-19.  She said that in both situations, “probable” means the cases are under investigation.
  • “Probable” classifications account for only about two percent of cases.
  • Investigation of probable deaths has led the state to reduce its COVID-19 death count by 201 from yesterday.
  • Secretary Levine responded to numerous questions about Governor Wolf’s plan for reopening Pennsylvania.
  • When making decisions about regional reopenings the state will be using confirmed data, not probable data.
  • She stressed that reopening parts of Pennsylvania will be on a regional basis and not a county-by-county basis.  The state has not yet completely defined the regions it will use for this purpose.
  • When determining whether regions meet the cases per 100,000 population criterion for reopening, cases in long-term-care facilities will be counted because employees enter and exit those facilities.
  • The Department of Health is currently formulating its plan for future contact tracing.
  • When deciding whether to reopen regions, factors such as the availability of testing, an adequate supply of hospital beds, contact tracing capabilities, and other considerations will figure in the governor’s decisions.
  • Those regions will need to have enough testing capacity to accommodate a loosening of the current, strict criteria for who can be tested for COVID-19.
  • Amid concern about how many COVID-19 patients end up needing dialysis, the Department of Health will be exploring the adequacy of the current supply of dialysis machines.

Department of Health

With long-term-care facilities now accounting for approximately 50 percent of COVID-19 deaths in Pennsylvania. The Department of Health’s web site now tracks cases and deaths associated with nursing homes and personal care homes.  Go here and scroll about two-thirds of the way down the page.

Department of Community and Economic Development

The Department of Community and Economic Development has established a business-to-business exchange through which health care organizations seeking N95 masks, fabric and other masks, surgical and procedure masks, and thermometers can identify and do business with Pennsylvania companies that sell such supplies.

Pennsylvania Emergency Management Agency

The Wolf administration has launched an online portal for individuals, corporations, and community organizations to inform others about critical medical supplies available for donation during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Federal Update

Congress

The House has passed H.R. 266, the $384 billion COVID-19 relief/economic stimulus bill  that includes $75 billion for health care providers and $25 billion for testing.

Department of Health and Human Services

  • Providers that received an email from CMS on Sunday night informing them that they are in a COVID-19 hotspot were directed to register their information through https://www.teletracking.com/ by noon on Saturday, April 25.  Doing so does not guarantee eligibility for a share of the $10 billion that CMS announced yesterday that it would be distributing among providers that have been hit hard by COVID-19 but failing to provide the requested information will exclude providers from eligibility.  Only providers that received the Sunday night email from CMS can submit the information to the site.
  • The Department of Health and Human Services has updated its CARES Act Provider Relief Fund web page to include new information about how it intends to distribute the final $70 billion of the $100 billion designated for hospitals in the CARES Act.  It also describes its distribution methodology and timetable for distribution in this news release.
  • HHS’s Office of the Inspector General has updated its FAQ addressing the application of its administrative enforcement authority to arrangements directly connected to the COVID-19 emergency.

Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Food and Drug Administration

National Governors Association

Resources to Consult

Pennsylvania Department of Human Services

Main COVID-19 Page

COVID-19 Provider Resources

Press Releases

Pennsylvania Department of Health

Main COVID-19 Page

PA Health Alert Network

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Main COVID-19 Page

FAQ

(To receive this daily update directly, sign up for our mailing list at info@pasafetynet.org.)

2020-04-24T08:40:42+00:00April 24th, 2020|Coronavirus, COVID-19|Comments Off on COVID-19 Update: April 23, 2020
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