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COVID-19 Update: Friday, March 26

The following is the latest COVID-19 information from Pennsylvania’s state government as of 4:00 p.m. on Friday, March 26.

Governor Wolf

According to the Philadelphia Inquirer,

Gov. Tom Wolf indicated Thursday the state might move straight to opening eligibility to all adults by May 1, as President Joe Biden directed, and skip over phases 1B and 1C, which include different tiers of essential workers.

Asked when the state would move to 1B, the governor said Biden’s plan “sort of throws out the whole 1A, 1B, 1C thing.”

Department of Health

  • Acting Secretary of Health Alison Beam signed an amended order stating that “certain vaccine providers” must work with local Area Agencies on Aging and Medical Assistance managed care organizations to schedule vaccines for adults eligible in Phase 1A of the state’s vaccination plan.  The order also requires these providers to have the ability to schedule appointments for individuals into the future.  Under this order, a vaccine provider that informs a Phase 1A individual that no appointments are available may be subject to enforcement.  The order also requires providers to continue to ensure that appointments can be scheduled both by phone and by using online scheduling systems.  The order requires vaccine providers to schedule appointments as far in advance as necessary to ensure that appointments are made for individuals in Phase 1A and they are prohibited from including messages on websites or by phone that no appointments are available.  For further information, consult the following resources:
  • The Department of Health issued quarantine recommendations for individuals who test positive for COVID-19 antibodies.  This does not apply to health care facility patients, residents, and staff.
  • The Department of Health updated its event reporting system that health care facilities use to report positive COVID-19 test results and deaths involving residents and staff.  The system will now allow for manual addition of records and spreadsheet uploads.  It also clarified that if a resident or staff member tests positive 90 days after a previous positive test, a new record should be entered into the system.  If they test positive within 90 days of a previous positive test, this information should not be entered as a new record.  A quick start guide can be found here and further instructions here.
  • The Department of Health is establishing a new, long-term, free indoor walk-in COVID-19 testing site for the general public in Centre County from March 30 through May 1.  Go here for information about location and hours.

Department of Health – by the numbers

  • The daily number of new COVID-19 cases has risen over the past ten days.  Today’s total was the highest single-day total since January 30 and the figures in the preceding days also were higher than in the recent past.
  • Yesterday the state surpassed one million cases of COVID-19 since the pandemic began, meaning that nearly eight percent of the state’s population has contracted the disease.
  • Despite the rising number of new COVID-19 cases the daily death totals are not rising.  Nearly 25,000 Pennsylvanians have now died from COVID-19.
  • More than 82,268 residents and employees in 1574 long-term-care facilities in all 67 Pennsylvania counties have contracted COVID-19.  12,904 of those residents have died – nearly 52 percent of the state’s death total but a declining proportion in comparison to the earlier months of the pandemic.
  • More than 26,000 health care workers in the state have contracted COVID-19.
  • For the week from March 12 through March 18 the state’s overall COVID-19 test positivity rate was 6.5 percent, up from 5.7 percent last week.
  • The numbers of Pennsylvanians hospitalized with COVID-19, in hospital ICUs with COVID-19, and on ventilators being treated for COVID-19 have been rising for the past ten days.
  • Currently, 21 percent of adult ICU beds in the state are unoccupied, as are 15 percent of medical/surgical beds, nine percent of pediatric ICU beds, 22 percent of pediatric beds, and 34 percent of airborne isolation units.
  • As of March 26 the state’s vaccine dashboard shows that more 1.5 million Pennsylvanians have received their first dose of a COVID-19 vaccine and nearly 1.7 million have received both doses of a vaccine.  These numbers do not include Philadelphia, which operates its own COVID-19 vaccination program.
  • The vaccine dashboard shows vaccine totals by county.
  • Philadelphia’s Department of Public Health reports that as of March 26, nearly 290,000 Philadelphians have been partially vaccinated and more than 200,000 have been fully vaccinated.

Department of Human Services

Department of State

While the Department of State has already authorized pharmacists to delegate authority to administer COVID-19 vaccinations under their supervision to a number of other types of licensed health care professionals, it has now extended that authorization to others who have been authorized or made eligible to administer COVID-19 vaccinations by way of state or federal government action, including the March 10, 2020 declaration and subsequent amendments issued by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services under the PREP Act.  See the latest Department of State notice here.

Around the State

  • Allegheny County will introduce a new vaccine registration system next week, the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review reports.
  • The county also is expanding eligibility at its own sites to everyone in group IA, adding people between the ages of 50 and 64 with certain medical conditions.  The Tribune-Review explains.
  • Amid rising case counts, Allegheny County public health officials are advising residents to continue to observe mitigation recommendations, according to KDKA.
  • Berks County commissioners heard a similar message from their emergency services director during their recent public meeting, WFMZ reports.

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

2021-03-26T16:50:16+00:00March 26th, 2021|Coronavirus, COVID-19|Comments Off on COVID-19 Update: Friday, March 26

COVID-19 Update: Wednesday, March 24

The following is the latest COVID-19 information from Pennsylvania’s state government as of 4:00 p.m. on Wednesday, March 24.

Department of Health

The Department of Health announced that beginning Tuesday, March 23, a week-long free drive-through COVID-19 testing site will open for the general public in Luzerne County.  Go here for information about the location and hours.

Department of Health – by the numbers

  • The daily number of new COVID-19 cases has risen over the past ten days.  Today’s total was the highest since February 5 and the figures in the preceding days were also higher than in the recent past.
  • Despite the rising number of new COVID-19 cases the daily death totals are not rising.
  • For the week from March 12 through March 18 the state’s overall COVID-19 test positivity rate was 6.5 percent, up from 5.7 percent last week.
  • Five counties are now considered to be in low levels of community transmission:  Cameron, Forest, Fulton, Potter, and Sullivan counties.
  • 37 counties are in moderate levels of community transmission:  Adams, Allegheny, Armstrong, Beaver, Bedford, Blair, Butler, Cambria, Chester, Clarion, Columbia, Crawford, Cumberland, Dauphin, Delaware, Elk, Erie, Fayette, Greene, Huntingdon, Indiana, Jefferson, Juniata, Lawrence, McKean, Mercer, Mifflin, Perry, Schuylkill, Snyder, Somerset, Tioga, Union, Venango, Warren, Washington, and Westmoreland.
  • 25 counties are still in substantial levels of community transmission:  Berks, Bradford, Bucks, Carbon, Centre, Clearfield, Clinton, Franklin, Lackawanna, Lancaster, Lebanon, Lehigh, Luzerne, Lycoming, Monroe, Montgomery, Montour, Northampton, Northumberland, Philadelphia, Pike, Susquehanna, Wayne, Wyoming, and York.
  • The numbers of Pennsylvanians hospitalized with COVID-19, in hospital ICUs with COVID-19, and on ventilators being treated for COVID-19 have been rising for the past week.
  • Currently, 21 percent of adult ICU beds in the state are unoccupied, as are 15 percent of medical/surgical beds, 10 percent of pediatric ICU beds, 25 percent of pediatric beds, and 35 percent of airborne isolation units.
  • As of March 24 the state’s vaccine dashboard shows that more 1.4 million Pennsylvanians have received their first dose of a COVID-19 vaccine and nearly 1.6 million have received both doses of a vaccine.  These numbers do not include Philadelphia, which operates its own COVID-19 vaccination program.
  • The vaccine dashboard shows vaccine totals by county.
  • Philadelphia’s Department of Public Health reports that as of March 24, 638,000 doses of COVID-19 vaccine have been administered in the city:  464,000 first doses and 174,000 second doses.

Department of Human Services

Teresa Miller has resigned as DHS Secretary effective April 30.  Governor Wolf has nominated Meg Snead, currently his Secretary of Policy and Planning, to replace her.

DHS has issued a Medical Assistance Bulletin informing providers that effective June 1, 2021, it will reinstate provider revalidation requirements as applicable prior to the COVID-19 public health emergency.  See the DHS announcement here.

Department of State

The Department of State has again expanded its list of health care professionals who may administer COVID-19 vaccines under appropriate supervision.

General Assembly

  • House Bill 649 was unanimously passed by the House this afternoon. This legislation requires the Department of Health, in consultation with the Department of Human Services, to establish protocols to permit an essential caregiver to provide in-person physical and emotional support to a congregate care facility resident during a declaration of disaster emergency. The provisions of the bill are applicable beginning 15 days after a declaration of disaster emergency is issued and remain in effect until 60 days after the declaration is terminated. The bill will now be sent to the Senate for consideration.
  • House Bill 63 was also passed by the House this afternoon. This legislation permits an individual who has been authorized to administer a COVID-19 vaccine by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services to administer vaccines in Pennsylvania. It also requires the Department of Health to publish specific county-level COVID-19 vaccine data, including vaccine dose allocations and eligible populations, and a description of the Department’s COVID-19 vaccine allocation formula to the Department’s website. Lastly, this legislation requires, in certain counties, the Department of Health to deliver doses of COVID-19 vaccine that are intended for a mass vaccination site to the county health department in which the mass vaccination site is to be held. The bill will now be sent to the Senate for consideration.

Pennsylvania State MapAround the State

  • The Allegheny County council postponed its public meeting this week “due to a covid outbreak amongst council members and staff,” according to the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette.
  • Philadelphia will cancel appointments for as many as 30,000 COVID-19 vaccines scheduled to be administered at its FEMA mass vaccination site in the next three weeks after it discovered that they were scheduled by people improperly using the program’s digital appointment system – a problem the city previously identified and thought it had fixed.  The Philadelphia Inquirer tells the story.
  • Where are the new COVID-19 hot spots in Pennsylvania?  The Philadelphia Inquirer offers the details and a map.
  • According to Philly Voice, “Because Philadelphia is seeing a steady increase in new cases of COVID-19 – and, recently, an uptick in hospitalizations – city officials said Tuesday they will not be further relaxing COVID-19 restrictions on restaurants and large outdoor events when the rest of Pennsylvania does so in less than two weeks.”  Go here for further details.
  • The state will establish mass vaccination sites in two of the four suburban counties surrounding Philadelphia.  The Philadelphia Inquirer explains that it will be doing so over the objections of the leaders of Bucks, Chester, Delaware, and Montgomery counties.

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

 

2021-03-25T08:25:08+00:00March 25th, 2021|Coronavirus, COVID-19|Comments Off on COVID-19 Update: Wednesday, March 24

COVID Drives Major Increase in PA Medicaid Enrollment

Medicaid enrollment in Pennsylvania has risen nearly 14 percent in the past year as rising unemployment resulting from COVID-19 drives people to turn to the state for health insurance.

As a result, Pennsylvania has added nearly 400,000 people to its Medicaid rolls in the past year.  Today, 3.2 million Pennsylvanians are enrolled in the state’s program, although among them are approximately 250,000 who would have been dropped from the program except for a federal requirement that the state not drop people from the program in exchange for a major increase in federal aid for the state’s program.

As a result of the increase, the state’s Department of Human Services, which runs its Medicaid program, has asked the legislature for nearly $1 billion in supplemental funding to help finance its services for this expanded enrollment through the rest of the state’s FY 2021 year.

Learn more about the past year’s increase in Medicaid enrollment, who the new enrollees are, and how the state is accommodating them in the Philadelphia Inquirer article “A huge spike in Medicaid enrollment in Pa. shows how devastating the coronavirus has been.”

2021-03-24T06:00:57+00:00March 24th, 2021|Coronavirus, COVID-19, Pennsylvania Medicaid, Pennsylvania Medicaid coronavirus, Pennsylvania Medicaid COVID-19|Comments Off on COVID Drives Major Increase in PA Medicaid Enrollment

COVID-19 Update: Monday, March 22

The following is the latest COVID-19 information from Pennsylvania’s state government as of 2:30 p.m. on Monday, March 22.

Department of Health

  • The Department of Health has amended the state’s universal face coverings order to align with updated federal CDC guidelines.  The amended order went into effect at 12:01 a.m. on March 17, 2021 and will remain in effect until further notice.  The new state order addresses activities that fully vaccinated people can resume now, as low risk to themselves, while being mindful of the potential risk of transmitting the virus to others.  For further information, see the following resources:
  • The Department of Health has outlined temporary plans to get more COVID-19 vaccine to Pennsylvanians and improve transparency and technical resources online.  According to officials, “Starting the week of March 22, a focused network of 200-300 providers can expect to see more first doses of vaccine arriving and will be assured of a steady supply for the next several weeks.”  In addition:

The temporarily focused network of providers was selected following an extensive review, which included a survey of all providers and mapping out an initial view of the provider network to receive focused allocations of first vaccine doses over the next few weeks. Providers were selected based on:

  • geographic reach,
  • access for residents,
  • equity across demographics,
  • vaccine throughput, and
  • estimated demand.

The selection process took into account the ability to administer a high volume of first doses within seven days of delivery while maintaining equity across racial, ethnic, and socioeconomic lines as well as the ability to capture and report vaccine administration data within 24 hours. 

The temporarily narrowed network of vaccine providers is designed to reach people with different needs and preferences using a mix of provider types, including:

  • hospitals,
  • pharmacies,
  • Federally Qualified Health Centers, and
  • public health providers.

Learn more from a Department of Health news release.

That same March 19 news release states that

As proof that the pace of vaccinations is accelerating, yesterday the CDC ranked Pennsylvania number two in the nation for the number of doses administered per 100,000 residents over the past seven days.

Department of Health – by the numbers

  • The number of new COVID-19 cases has fallen significantly since November and December but the decline has ended and the daily numbers now generally are higher than they have been in recent weeks.
  • Despite the slightly rising number of new COVID-19 cases the daily death totals continue to decline.
  • For the week from March 12 through March 18 the state’s overall COVID-19 test positivity rate was 6.5 percent, up from 5.7 percent last week.
  • The numbers of Pennsylvanians hospitalized with COVID-19, in hospital ICUs with COVID-19, and on ventilators being treated for COVID-19 have all risen slightly in the past week.
  • Currently, 24 percent of adult ICU beds in the state are unoccupied, as are 21 percent of medical/surgical beds, 11 percent of pediatric ICU beds, 30 percent of pediatric beds, and 37 percent of airborne isolation units.
  • As of March 22 the state’s vaccine dashboard shows that nearly 1.4 million Pennsylvanians have received their first dose of a COVID-19 vaccine and more than 1.5 million have received both doses of a vaccine; the latter increase is 19 percent in the past week.  These numbers do not include Philadelphia, which operates its own COVID-19 vaccination program.  The vaccine dashboard shows vaccine totals by county.
  • Philadelphia’s Department of Public Health reports that as of March 20, 580,000 doses of COVID-19 vaccine have been administered in the city:  419,000 first doses and 161,000 second doses.
  • Thus, while the state has completed vaccination of approximately 13.4 percent of its non-Philadelphia population, Philadelphia has completed vaccination of only about ten percent of its population.

Around the State

Department of Human Services

DHS has issued a Medical Assistance bulletin announcing the addition of CPT code M0245 for the use of the unapproved monoclonal antibody therapies bamlanivimab and etesevimab when administered together.  The medications have received emergency use authorization from the federal FDA.

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

2021-03-23T06:00:08+00:00March 23rd, 2021|Coronavirus, COVID-19|Comments Off on COVID-19 Update: Monday, March 22

COVID-19 Update: Tuesday, March 16

The following is the latest COVID-19 information from the state and federal government as of 3:30 p.m. on Tuesday, March 16.

Pennsylvania Update

Governor Wolf

  • Governor Wolf announced that he is easing some of the state’s restrictions on businesses that were imposed to mitigate against the spread of COVID-19.  Effective April 4, limits on participation will partially be eased for restaurants, bars, gyms, entertainment facilities (casinos, theaters, malls, personal service facilities), indoor facilities, and mass gatherings.  Mask and social distancing requirements will still apply.  Learn more from this Wolf administration news release.
  • Governor Wolf and members of the COVID-19 Vaccine Task Force announced a bipartisan effort to complete COVID phase 1A vaccinations first, set up mass vaccination clinics with regionally supplied plans to inform allocations, and vaccinate frontline workers.  Learn more from a Wolf administration news release.
  • The COVID-19 Vaccine Task Force created by Governor Wolf has announced subcommittees focused on key audiences and issues.  The new subcommittees are for aging, racial equity, business/workforce, and education, with subcommittee members representing stakeholders and advocates, state agencies, workers, academics, industry, and other interested parties.  Last week the task force announced a special initiative to vaccinate teachers, school staff, and child care workers.

Department of Human Services

Department of Health

  • Acting Secretary of Health Beam issued an order making March 31 the date by which all vaccine providers should have Phase 1A-eligible Pennsylvanians’ vaccine appointments scheduled.  See the Department of Health announcement and the department’s order.
  • The same order also requires providers to make appointments with patients outside of their current patient network.
  • The Department of Health announced that beginning on Tuesday, March 16, a long-term indoor walk-in COVID-19 testing site will open in Dauphin County.  Testing will be available daily from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. every Tuesday through Friday and from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. every Saturday until Saturday, April 10, with the opportunity to extend past that date based on need.  The testing site is located at Strawberry Square, 320 Market Street in Harrisburg.
  • The Department of Health announced that beginning on Tuesday, March 16, a rotating drive-through and indoor walk-in COVID-19 testing site will open in Blair County.  Testing will be available daily from 9 AM to 6 PM, every Tuesday through Saturday, until Saturday, April 3, with the opportunity to extend past that date based on need.  Go here for information about the different sites and their hours of operation.
  • The Department of Health has issued updated quarantine recommendations for persons exposed to COVID-19.  The update includes information both for individuals who are and who are not fully vaccinated.
  • The Department of Health has updated work restrictions for health care workers who have been exposed to COVID-19 to clarify its post-exposure recommendations for exposures that occur outside of health care settings.
  • The Department of Health, Department of Human Services, and Department of Aging have jointly urged Pennsylvania long-term-care facilities to implement the new guidance for nursing home visitation established by the federal Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS).  Go here to see the joint announcement from the three state agencies and go here to see the new federal guidance.

Department of Health – by the numbers

  • The number of new COVID-19 cases has fallen significantly since November and December but the decline has ended and the daily numbers are comparable to what they were a month ago.
  • Today Pennsylvania’s total COVID-19 case count surpassed 970,000 – more than 7.5 percent of the state’s population.The daily death toll, too, while much less than it was in November and December, has only declined modestly the past two weeks.
  • For the week from March 5 through March 11 the state’s overall COVID-19 test positivity rate fell to 5.7 percent, the same as last week.
  • The numbers of Pennsylvanians hospitalized with COVID-19 in hospital ICUs with COVID-19, and on ventilators being treated for COVID-19 has declined just slightly in the past week.
  • Currently, 22 percent of adult ICU beds in the state are unoccupied, as are 17 percent of medical/surgical beds, 15 percent of pediatric ICU beds, 29 percent of pediatric beds, and 37 percent of airborne isolation units.
  • As of March 16 the state’s vaccine dashboard shows that nearly 1.2 million Pennsylvanians have received their first dose of a COVID-19 vaccine and 1.3 million have received both doses of a vaccine; the latter increase is 30 percent over the past six days.  These numbers do not include Philadelphia, which operates its own COVID-19 vaccination program.
  • The vaccine dashboard shows vaccine totals by county.
  • Philadelphia’s Department of Public Health reports that as of March 16, 526,000 doses of COVID-19 vaccine have been administered in the city:  380,000 first doses and 146,000 second doses.

Department of General Services

The Department of General Services announced that the state Capitol building will reopen to the public on March 22.  It closed to the public on December 10 amid rising numbers of COVID-19 cases.

Pennsylvania State MapAround the State

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

Federal Update

White House

Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services

  • CMS announced that it is increasing Medicare payments for administering COVID-19 vaccines.  Effective for COVID-19 vaccines administered on or after March 15, 2021, the national average payment rate for physicians, hospitals, pharmacies, and many other immunizers will be $40 to administer each dose of a COVID-19 vaccine.  This represents an increase from approximately $28 to $40 for the administration of single-dose vaccines and an increase from approximately $45 to $80 for the administration of COVID-19 vaccines requiring two doses.  The exact rate will depend on the type of entity furnishing the service and will be geographically adjusted.  Resources that provide additional information about this increase include:
  • CMS has issued a correction notice making changes in the telehealth list finalized in the Medicare physician fee schedule rule that affects providers that bill for evaluation and management services as part of those telehealth visits.  The notice explains that CMS “inadvertently included” CPT codes 99221, 99222, and 99223 in the table that represents the Category 3 temporary additions to the telehealth list through the end of 2021 or the year in which the COVID-19 public health emergency ends.  These are evaluation and management codes for initial hospital care (30, 50, 70+ minutes).  This does not affect the ability of providers to bill for these services during the public health emergency.
  • CMS has released a fact sheet that outlines how the American Rescue Plan Act of 2021 – the COVID-19 relief bill – affects the health care marketplace, the cost of health insurance, and access to subsidized insurance made available through the Affordable Care Act.  Find that fact sheet here.
  • CMS has introduced an infographic presenting its new guidance for visiting nursing homes.  This infographic is available in English and Spanish.
  • In recent days CMS has issued two dozen section 1135 waivers to give states greater flexibility to serve their Medicaid beneficiaries during the COVID-19 public health emergency.

HHS COVID-19 Stakeholder Calls

HHS’s Office of the Assistant Secretary for Preparedness and Response sponsors COVID-19 Clinical Rounds Peer-to-Peer Virtual Communities of Practice that are interactive virtual learning sessions that seek to create a peer-to-peer learning network in which clinicians from the U.S. and abroad who have experience treating patients with COVID-19 share their challenges and successes.  These webinar topics are covered every week:

  • EMS:  Patient Care and Operations (Mondays, 12:00-1:00 PM eastern)
  • Critical Care:  Lifesaving Treatment and Clinical Operations (Tuesdays, 12:00-1:00 PM eastern)
  • Emergency Department:  Patient Care and Clinical Operations (Thursdays, 12:00-1:00 PM eastern)

Go here for information about signing up to participate in the sessions and go here for access to materials and video recordings of past sessions.

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Food and Drug Administration

2021-03-17T06:00:08+00:00March 17th, 2021|Coronavirus, COVID-19|Comments Off on COVID-19 Update: Tuesday, March 16

COVID-19 Update: Wednesday, March 10

The following is the latest COVID-19 information from Pennsylvania’s state government as of 3:00 p.m. on Wednesday, March 10.

Department of Health

  • The Department of Health issued guidance on the detection of multisystem inflammatory disease in adults (MIS-A) and instructions for providers to report suspect cases of MIS-A that meet all of the case definition criteria with onsets on or after January 1, 2021 by faxing a case report form to 717-772-6975 or the local health department or by emailing the form to radhcovidcontact@pa.gov.
  • The Department of Health announced that it is establishing a COVID-19 testing site in Delaware County.  The site, requested by the county, is located in Upland and will be open Tuesday through Saturday until at least April 3, with the possibility that it will continue to operate after that point if the need remains.  See the Department of Health’s announcement about the testing site.
  • The Department of Health sent the following message to stakeholders via email:

On Thursday, March 11, 2021, the Special Pharmaceutical Benefits Program (SPBP) will be reinstating the early refill limit for drug claims that requires at least 75% of the previous medication dispensed to be utilized prior to refilling the medication covered by SPBP. For individuals with other drug coverage in addition to SPBP, the SPBP will default to the early refill limits allowed by the other prescription plan the client is enrolled in. The SPBP allows up to 100 day supply for medications prescribed at 1 pill per day, up to 50 day supply for 2 pills per day, and up to a 34 day supply for 3 or more pills per day. Early refill requests can be submitted to SPBP for review for vacation supplies, lost or stolen medications, wrong days’ supply previously submitted, or other similar requests. To request an early refill override, please call the SPBP customer service line.

For drug claim issues, pharmacies should contact the SPBP provider line at 800-835-4080.

For all other questions or enrollment issues, contact the SPBP customer service line at 800-922-9384.

  • The Department of Health posted the following information about nursing facility licensure renewals on its provider message board:

As the Proclamation of Disaster Emergency that was issued on March 6, 2020 was renewed on February 18, 2021, the Department Division of Nursing Care Facilities continues to perform surveys in the priorities that CMS has outlined.  The extension on licenses that was granted on March 31, 2020 continues.  Licenses will be issued as licensure surveys are able to be completed.

A license that was extended will be renewed upon completion of a license renewal survey and all requirements are met, the renewed license will be in effect from the month that the survey was completed for the next year. For example, if the facility license would have expired on April 31, 2020, and pursuant to the Department’s guidance was extended and the renewal survey was completed on February 5, 2021  the renewed license the facility receives will reflect a renewal term from the month the survey was completed for the next year or February 1, 2021 to February 1, 2022.

The process may be different for Provisional Licenses.  For a provisional license the license will be effective from the date that the previous provisional license ended.

Department of Health – by the numbers

  • The number of new COVID-19 cases has fallen significantly since November and December but the decline has leveled off this month.
  • The daily death toll, too, is much less than it was in November and December but has leveled off this month.
  • The governor’s weekly COVID-19 early warning dashboard shows that for the week from February 26 through March 4 the state’s overall COVID-19 test positivity rate fell to 5.7 percent; it was 6.3 percent the week before that.  This marked the 11th consecutive week the rate fell.
  • 22 counties have positivity rates of less than five percent and no counties have positivity rates greater than 20 percent.
  • Five counties – one more than last week – are now considered to be in low levels of community transmission.  They are Cameron, Forest, Fulton, Potter, and Sullivan counties.
  • 33 counties are in moderate levels of community transmission:  Adams, Allegheny, Armstrong, Bedford, Blair, Butler, Cambria, Chester, Clarion, Clearfield, Crawford, Elk, Fayette, Franklin, Greene, Indiana, Jefferson, Juniata, Lawrence, Lebanon, McKean, Montgomery, Perry, Schuylkill, Snyder, Somerset, Susquehanna, Tioga, Venango, Warren, Washington, Westmoreland, and Wyoming.
  • 26 counties – the same number as last week – are still in substantial levels of community transmission:  Beaver, Berks, Bradford, Bucks, Carbon, Centre, Clinton, Columbia, Cumberland, Dauphin, Delaware, Erie, Huntingdon, Lackawanna, Lancaster, Lehigh, Luzerne, Lycoming, Mercer, Mifflin, Monroe, Montour, Northampton, Northumberland, Philadelphia, Pike, Union, Wayne, York.
  • This reflects movement among the counties.  Philadelphia, for example, in moderate community transmission last week, moved back into substantial community transmission this week.  Potter County, on the other hand, experienced a substantial level of community transmission last week but this week is in a low level of community transmission.
  • The numbers of Pennsylvanians hospitalized with COVID-19 and in hospital ICUs is declining modestly but the number on ventilators has held steady for the past week.
  • Currently, 22 percent of adult ICU beds in the state are unoccupied, as are 17 percent of medical/surgical beds, 10 percent of pediatric ICU beds, 23 percent of pediatric beds, and 36 percent of airborne isolation units.
  • As of March 10 the state’s vaccine dashboard shows that nearly 1.1 million Pennsylvanians have received their first dose of a COVID-19 vaccine and one million have received both doses of a vaccine.  These numbers do not include Philadelphia, which operates its own COVID-19 vaccination program.
  • The vaccine dashboard shows vaccine totals by county.
  • Philadelphia’s Department of Public Health reports that as of March 9, 422,000 doses of COVID-19 vaccine have been administered in the city:  297,000 first doses and 125,000 second doses.

Department of Human Services

DHS’s Office of Long-Term Living distributed the following message to stakeholders via its listserv:

Continuation of the Appendix K Temporary Changes to the Community HealthChoices( CHC) Waiver, OBRA Waiver, and Act 150 Program

The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) approved temporary changes to the OBRA and CHC 1915(c) waivers beginning March 6, 2020 in response to the COVID-19 pandemic.  Approval of these changes is covered under Appendix K, Emergency Preparedness and Response, which states may use during emergency situations to request amendments to their approved waivers.  These changes addressed potential staffing shortages and the need for service provision not included in approved service descriptions to ensure participant health and safety needs could be accommodated for the duration of the COVID-19 statewide emergency.   The Office of Long-Term Living (OLTL) extended the same flexibilities to the Act 150 Program.   CMS approved an amendment to Appendix K which allowed some flexibilities to continue until March 5, 2021.      

In January 2021, OLTL submitted another amendment to request extension of the Appendix K flexibilities until 6 months after the end of the Public Health Emergency.  CMS has not yet approved the amendment; however, they recently instructed OLTL to assume that any previously approved flexibilities will continue to be approved in the interim.

Until further notice, the Appendix K flexibilities can continue in CHC waiver, the OBRA waiver, and the Act 150 program.  For additional details on the flexibilities, please go to the OLTL COVID19 Provider Resources web page to view the guidance updated for the CHC waiver on January 4, 2021 and updated for the OBRA waiver and Act 150 Program on January 15, 2021.

If you have questions about the information in this Listserv email, please contact the OLTL Provider Helpline at 1-800-932-0939.

Around the State

  • Last Sunday officials of the four counties surrounding Philadelphia – Bucks, Chester, Delaware, and Montgomery counties – held a Zoom call with Pennsylvania’s acting health secretary to complain about what they insist is a continued shortchanging of their counties in the state’s distribution of COVID-19 vaccines.  The Philadelphia Inquirer tells the story.
  • Officials in Berks County, also near Philadelphia, feel they, too, are being shortchanged by the state in the distribution of COVID-19 vaccines and are unhappy that they were not included in the Sunday call with the Department of Health, according to the Reading Eagle.
  • Northampton County has launched a hotline to help seniors with limited access to the internet schedule appointments for COVID-19 vaccines, the Allentown Morning Call reports.
  • The number of vaccines administered weekly in Philadelphia has nearly doubled with the opening of a FEMA-operated site and should increase still further when five new city-operated sites open in the next two weeks, according to WHYY, which also notes that the city expects its supply of vaccines to continue to exceed its capacity to administer them “for the foreseeable future.”

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

2021-03-11T06:00:12+00:00March 11th, 2021|Coronavirus, COVID-19|Comments Off on COVID-19 Update: Wednesday, March 10

COVID-19 Update: Thursday, March 4

The following is the latest COVID-19 information from Pennsylvania’s state government as of 4:30 p.m. on Thursday, March 4.

Governor Wolf

Governor Tom Wolf and the COVID-19 Vaccine Task Force announced that Pennsylvania will use the Johnson & Johnson (Janssen) single-dose COVID-19 vaccine to vaccinate teachers and school staff members.  Learn more from this news release from the governor’s office and a Department of Education web page on the new vaccination program.

Governor Wolf has signed House Bill 326, which permits the Pennsylvania National Guard, in conjunction with the Pennsylvania Department of Health, to develop plans for the establishment and operation of regional sites for community distribution and administration of pharmaceuticals, medical equipment and supplies, and vaccines for COVID-19.  See the Wolf administration’s announcement about the bill signing.

Department of Health

The Department of Health announced that its Regional Congregate Care Assistance Teams (RCAT) will continue to operate through May 31, 2021 rather than the anticipated end date of February 28, 2021.  The RCAT program is the successor to the state’s Regional Response Health Collaborative Program (RRHC), which expired at the end of 2020 and was created to bring together established hospitals and health systems with long-term-care facilities struggling with COVID-19 challenges.

Department of Health – by the numbers

  • The number of new COVID-19 cases has been remained steady in recent days, as has the daily death toll.
  • The numbers of Pennsylvanians hospitalized with COVID-19, in hospital ICU units because of COVID-19, and on ventilators because of COVID-19 continues to remain steady as well.
  • Currently, 22 percent of adult ICU beds in the state are unoccupied, as are 15 percent of medical/surgical beds, 12 percent of pediatric ICU beds, 24 percent of pediatric beds, and 37 percent of airborne isolation units.
  • As of March 4 the state’s vaccine dashboard shows that one million Pennsylvanians have received their first dose of a COVID-19 vaccine and 826,000 have received both doses of a vaccine.  These numbers do not include Philadelphia, which operates its own COVID-19 vaccination program.

Pennsylvania Revenue Collection

Pennsylvania General Fund revenue collections for February were $2.68 billion – $509.7 million or 23.4 percent above the Independent Fiscal Office’s (IFO) projections.  According to the IFO, the increase was largely due to a temporary shift in personal income tax collections.  Fiscal-year-to-date collections are $23.87 billion, which is $267.5 million or 1.1 percent above estimate.

Around the State

  • COVID-19 hospitalizations have fallen 25 percent in Allegheny County in the past week, the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review reports.
  • The TribuneReview also reports that “The Western Pennsylvania Regional Chief Medical Officer Consortium, made up of 12 hospital leaders in the region, released a letter Thursday endorsing the benefits of the newly-authorized one-dose [Johnson & Johnson] shot as a way to prevent covid-19.”  Among those who signed the letter were Dr. Donald Yealy from UPMC, Dr. Donald Whiting from Allegheny Health Network, and Dr. Carol Fox from Excela Health System.
  • The Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) has opened a mass vaccination site in Philadelphia.  The new site is expected to administer about 47,000 vaccines a week, according to the Philadelphia Inquirer.

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

 

 

2021-03-05T09:41:10+00:00March 5th, 2021|Coronavirus, COVID-19|Comments Off on COVID-19 Update: Thursday, March 4

Pennsylvania Health Law Project Newsletter

The Pennsylvania Health Law Project has published its February 2021 newsletter.

Included in this month’s edition are articles about:

  • the continuation of certain Medicaid protections, including continuous coverage, during the COVID-19 emergency;
  • COVID-19 vaccinations and state reimbursement for those vaccines;
  • the availability of Medicaid-covered remote and in-home adult daily living services;
  • Medicaid services for individuals between the ages of 18 and 20 who have chronic disabilities;
  • a new monthly webinar that will be offered by the state’s Office of Mental Health and Substance Abuse Services; and
  • Pennsylvania’s selection of a vendor to operate its Resource Information and Services Enterprise (RISE-PA), the state’s planned resource and referral tool.

Read about these subjects and more in the Pennsylvania Health Law Project’s February 2021 newsletter.

2021-03-05T06:00:34+00:00March 5th, 2021|Coronavirus, COVID-19, Pennsylvania Medicaid, Pennsylvania Medicaid policy|Comments Off on Pennsylvania Health Law Project Newsletter

COVID-19 Update: Monday, March 1

The following is the latest COVID-19 information from Pennsylvania state government as of 3:30 p.m. on Monday. March 1.

Governor Wolf

Governor Wolf has revised the state’s COVID-19 mitigation orders.  Highlights of his revised order are:

  • Revised maximum occupancy limits for indoor events to allow for 15 percent of maximum occupancy, regardless of venue size.
  • Revised maximum occupancy limits for outdoor events to allow for 20 percent of maximum occupancy, regardless of venue size.
  • The elimination of out-of-state travel restrictions.

Learn more about the governor’s order from the following resources:

Department of Health

The Department of Health has updated guidance on the storage and transportation conditions required for the Pfizer vaccine based on new recommendations from the FDA.

Department of Health – by the numbers

  • The number of new COVID-19 cases has been less than 2000 for the past two days – the first time this has happened since early fall.
  • The daily death toll continues its steep decline.
  • More than 24,000 health care workers in Pennsylvania have contracted COVID-19, as have nearly 80,000 residents and employees of 1567 long-term-care facilities across the state.  The continual increase in these numbers since the start of the pandemic has slowed dramatically.
  • The governor’s weekly COVID-19 early warning dashboard shows that for the week from February 19 through February 25 the state’s overall COVID-19 test positivity rate fell to 6.3 percent; it was 6.5 percent the week before that.  This marked the tenth consecutive week the rate fell.
  • 26 Pennsylvania counties – down from 40 a week ago – remain in substantial levels of community transmission of COVID-19:  Adams, Beaver, Bucks, Carbon, Centre, Clinton, Dauphin, Delaware, Erie, Huntingdon, Lackawanna, Lancaster, Lebanon, Lehigh, Luzerne, Lycoming, Mifflin, Monroe, Montgomery, Northampton, Perry, Pike, Potter, Union, Wayne, and York.  Four counties – one more than a week ago – are in low levels of community transmission:  Cameron, Forest, Fulton, and Sullivan.  The remaining counties, including Allegheny and Philadelphia counties, are in moderate levels of community transmission.
  • The numbers of Pennsylvanians hospitalized with COVID-19, in hospital ICU units because of COVID-19, and on ventilators because of COVID-19 continue to decline.
  • Currently, 25 percent of adult ICU beds in the state are unoccupied, as are 21 percent of medical/surgical beds, 14 percent of pediatric ICU beds, 32 percent of pediatric beds, and 39 percent of airborne isolation units.As of March 1 the state’s vaccine dashboard shows that 948,000 Pennsylvanians have received their first dose of a COVID-19 vaccine and 739,000 have received both doses of a vaccine.  These numbers do not include Philadelphia, which operates its own COVID-19 vaccination program.
  • The vaccine dashboard shows vaccine totals by county.

General Assembly

Pennsylvania House of Representatives majority leader Kerry Benninghoff announced that the House will investigate the Wolf administration’s handling of nursing homes and other senior and long-term-care facilities during the COVID-19 pandemic.  The House Government Oversight Committee will lead the investigation.

Around the State

  • Pennsylvania State MapSpurred by concern that their counties are not receiving appropriate allocations of COVID-19 vaccines, officials of seven western Pennsylvania counties – Beaver, Butler, Fayette, Greene, Lawrence, Washington and Westmoreland – met remotely last week to discuss the possibility of creating a regional health department.  The Pittsburgh Tribune-Review tells the story.
  • The city of Philadelphia has eased some of its COVID-19 restrictions, according to the Philadelphia Inquirer.  Among them:  permitting spectators at sporting events, reopening senior centers for the first time in nearly a year, permitting food and drinks to be consumed in movie theaters and more customers in retail establishments, and expanded limits on indoor and outdoor dining, and attendance at religious services.
  • Philadelphia’s biggest problem with COVID-19 vaccines now is its ability to administer them and not the supply, the city’s health commissioner told KYW radio.
  • COVID-19 has taken a financial and emotional toll on Pennsylvania’s hospitals, the Erie Times-News reports.

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

2021-03-02T06:00:30+00:00March 2nd, 2021|Coronavirus, COVID-19|Comments Off on COVID-19 Update: Monday, March 1

COVID-19 Update: Friday, February 26

The following is the latest COVID-19 information from the state and federal governments as of 3:30 p.m. on Friday, February 26.

Pennsylvania Update

Department of Health

The Department of Health updated its guidance on hospitals’ responses to COVID-19 with information on how hospitals that have been approved by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services to participate in the Acute Hospital Care at Home program may provide acute care inpatient services to patients in their homes.

The Department of Health has updated its guidance for return-to-work criteria for health care personnel and its transmission-based precautions used by health care facilities to care for patients with confirmed or probable COVID-19.  Both updates reflect recent changes from the CDC.

Department of Health – by the numbers

  • Although today’s new COVID-19 case count is the highest in the past week, the daily numbers continue their general decline.
  • The daily death toll has only been in double digits for the past eight days – the first time that has happened since the fall.
  • More than 24,000 health care workers in Pennsylvania have contracted COVID-19, as have nearly 80,000 residents and employees of 1566 long-term-care facilities across the state.  The continual increase in these numbers since the start of the pandemic has slowed considerably.
  • For the week from February 12 through February 18 the state’s overall COVID-19 test positivity rate fell to 6.5 percent; it was 8.0 percent the week before that.  This marked the ninth consecutive week the rate fell.
  • 40 Pennsylvania counties – down from 51 a week ago – remain in substantial levels of community transmission of COVID-19:  Adams, Beaver, Berks, Bradford, Bucks, Carbon, Centre, Chester, Clinton, Columbia, Cumberland, Dauphin, Delaware, Erie, Forest, Franklin, Greene, Huntingdon, Juniata, Lackawanna, Lancaster, Lawrence, Lebanon, Lehigh, Luzerne, Lycoming, McKean, Mifflin, Monroe, Montour, Northampton, Northumberland, Perry, Philadelphia, Pike, Schuylkill, Snyder, Union, Wayne, and York.  Three counties have low levels of community transmission:  Cameron, Fulton, and Sullivan; this figure is the same as it was last week.  The remaining Pennsylvania counties, including Allegheny County, are experiencing moderate levels of community transmission.
  • The number of Pennsylvanians hospitalized with COVID-19, in hospital ICU units because of COVID-19, and on ventilators because of COVID-19 continues to decline.
  • Currently, 21 percent of adult ICU beds in the state are unoccupied, as are 16 percent of medical/surgical beds, 11 percent of pediatric ICU beds, 28 percent of pediatric beds, and 36 percent of airborne isolation units.
  • As of February 28 the state’s vaccine dashboard shows that 928,000 Pennsylvanians have received their first dose of a COVID-19 vaccine and 649,000 have received both doses of a vaccine.  These numbers do not include Philadelphia, which operates its own COVID-19 vaccination program.
  • The vaccine dashboard shows vaccine totals by county.

General Assembly

The Senate has unanimously passed House Bill 326, which would authorize the National Guard to assist with COVID-19 vaccine distribution. Within 45 days of the bill becoming law, the National Guard would be able to work with the Pennsylvania Department of Health and Pennsylvania Emergency Management Agency to establish and operate COVID-19 vaccination sites across the state. The governor’s office has indicated support for the bill.

Around the State

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

Federal Update

Congress

The House Budget Committee has passed a COVID-19 relief bill.  The following is a summary of the bill’s major spending, how it differs from the previous proposals submitted to the Budget Committee by other House committees, and what the bill does not do.

Major Spending Categories

The bill, which calls for $1.9 trillion in federal spending and tax credits, proposes:

  • $350 billion for emergency aid to states, local, and tribal governments.
  • $195 billion for state governments, with most of it distributed based on states’ share of unemployed workers.
  • $130 billion for local governments.

Proposed Health Care-Related COVID-19 Response Spending

The bill proposes:

  • $46 billion for a national strategy for COVID-19 testing, mitigation, and surveillance.
  • $10 billion for producing emergency medical equipment and supplies, including testing materials, personal protective equipment, and drugs and devices.
  • $7.6 billion for a public health workforce that includes epidemiologists, investigators, and contract-tracers.
  • $7.6 billion for community health centers.
  • $17 billion for the Department of Veterans Affairs.
  • $6.1 billion for the Indian Health Service.
  • $7.5 billion for the promoting, distributing, administering, and tracking COVID-19 vaccines.
  • $5.2 billion for COVID-19 vaccine research, manufacturing, and purchase and for the purchase of therapeutics and other products needed to treat COVID-19 and its variants.
  • $1.75 billion for community mental health block grants.
  • $1.75 billion for substance abuse prevention and treatment block grants.

Medicaid Provisions

The House bill includes several specific Medicaid provisions, including:

  • An increase of the federal medical assistance percentage – FMAP, the rate at which the federal government matches state Medicaid spending – to 95 percent for Medicaid expansion states.
  • A 100 percent federal match for Medicaid’s COVID-19 vaccine costs.
  • An increase of FMAP to 85 percent for Medicaid programs that employ community-based mobile crisis intervention services.
  • Extension of the 100 percent FMAP for two years for Medicaid services provided by urban Native American health organizations and native Hawaiian health care systems.
  • A requirement that Medicaid cover COVID-19 vaccines and treatment without cost-sharing until one year has passed after the end of the public health emergency.
  • Inclusion of outpatient drugs used to treat COVID-19 patients in Medicaid’s drug rebate program.

Changes From Previous Draft Legislation

The House bill includes several changes from legislation proposed last week:

  • The original draft legislation proposed giving states an option for five years to expand Medicaid eligibility to pregnant women postpartum for 12 months.  The length of time of this option has been extended to seven years.
  • A provision that would have made prison inmates eligible for Medicaid 30 days prior to their release was eliminated.
  • A proposed $1.8 billion for testing, contact-tracing, and monitoring of COVID-19 in congregate living settings has been eliminated.

Key Issues Not Addressed in the House Bill

The House bill does not:

  • Add any money to the Provider Relief Fund.
  • Extend the current moratorium on Medicare sequestration.
  • Address forgiveness for money provided to hospitals under the Medicare Accelerated and Advance Payment Program.

What’s Next?

The House is expected to begin deliberating on this bill this afternoon and to vote on it late tonight.  It is expected to pass with no Republican votes, after which it will go to the Senate.

The bill is not expected to survive in its current form in the Senate, where it will surely be modified.  The bill the House passes will include an increase of the minimum wage to $15 an hour but the Senate parliamentarian has already advised that such a measure is inappropriate in reconciliation, so that provision will be removed in the Senate.  It is not yet clear when the Senate might vote on the bill, what changes it might make, or what its prospects ultimately are in that chamber.  We should have a better idea about that next week.

Provider Relief Fund

  • HHS has made four additions and modifications in its Provider Relief Fund FAQ.  New questions on rural health clinics and Medicare cost reporting can be found on pp. 14 and 16 and a modified question on Medicare cost reporting can be found on page 17; all are marked “2/24/2021.”

A fourth change, a new question also marked 2/24/2021, can be found on page 16 and addresses Medicaid DSH payments and Provider Relief Fund money.

Question:

Are there any restrictions on how hospitals that receive Medicaid disproportionate share hospital (DSH) payments can use Provider Relief Fund General and Targeted Distribution payments?

Answer:

Yes. Providers may not use PRF payments to reimburse expenses or losses that have been reimbursed from other sources or that other sources are obligated to reimburse. Therefore, if a hospital has received Medicaid DSH payments for the uncompensated costs of furnishing inpatient and/or outpatient hospital services to Medicaid beneficiaries and to individuals with no source of third party coverage for the services, these expenses would be considered reimbursed by the Medicaid program and would not be eligible to be covered by money received from a General or Targeted Distribution payment. For more information on the calculation of the Medicaid hospital-specific DSH limit, see https://www.medicaid.gov/state-resource-center/downloads/covid-19-faqs.pdf.

Department of Health and Human Services

HHS and CMS COVID-19 Stakeholder Calls

HHS Clinical Rounds Peer-to-Peer Virtual Communities of Practice

HHS’s Office of the Assistant Secretary for Preparedness and Response sponsors COVID-19 Clinical Rounds Peer-to-Peer Virtual Communities of Practice that are interactive virtual learning sessions that seek to create a peer-to-peer learning network in which clinicians from the U.S. and abroad who have experience treating patients with COVID-19 share their challenges and successes.  These webinar topics are covered every week:

  • EMS:  Patient Care and Operations (Mondays, 12:00-1:00 PM eastern)
  • Critical Care:  Lifesaving Treatment and Clinical Operations (Tuesdays, 12:00-1:00 PM eastern)
  • Emergency Department:  Patient Care and Clinical Operations (Thursdays, 12:00-1:00 PM eastern)

Go here for information about signing up to participate in the sessions and go here for access to materials and video recordings of past sessions.

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.

CMS COVID-19 Office Hours Calls

Tuesday, March 16 at 5:00 – 6:00 PM (eastern)

Toll Free Attendee Dial In:833-614-0820; Access Passcode:  4177586

Audio Webcast link:  go here

Tuesday, April 6 at 5:00 – 6:00 PM (eastern)

Toll Free Attendee Dial In:833-614-0820; Access Passcode:  2769397

Audio Webcast link:  go here

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Food and Drug Administration

The FDA announced that it is permitting undiluted frozen vials of the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine to be transported and stored at conventional temperatures commonly found in pharmaceutical freezers for a period of up to two weeks.  This reflects an alternative to the preferred storage of the undiluted vials in an ultra-low temperature freezer between -80ºC to -60ºC (-112ºF to -76ºF).  Learn more from the FDA’s announcement of this new guidance and from its revised fact sheet for providers.

2021-03-01T06:00:17+00:00March 1st, 2021|Coronavirus, COVID-19|Comments Off on COVID-19 Update: Friday, February 26
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