The following is the latest COVID-19 information from Pennsylvania state and federal officials and others as of 4:15 p.m. on Tuesday, April 7.

Pennsylvania Update

Department of Health Daily Briefing

  • Secretary Levine acknowledged that many cases are undercounted. In many situations, providers encounter patients who have all of the symptoms, conclude that they have COVID-19, but do not order testing.  This is standard practice.
  • All 67 Pennsylvania counties now have experienced cases.
  • Yesterday saw more than six times as many deaths as the day before and the number of deaths state-wide has more than doubled since last Friday.
  • Secretary Levine said there is a significant increase in deaths among patients with comorbidities.
  • 664 health care workers have been diagnosed with COVID-19, as have 674 residents of long-term-care facilities across the state.
  • 51 percent of hospital beds and 40 percent of ICU beds in the state remain unoccupied and 70 percent of ventilators are not currently in use.
  • Other states have released data on race and cases and deaths but Pennsylvania has not done so yet because hospitals are not always providing this data. Secretary Levine said the department is looking for ways to gather this information.
  • The mass testing sites in Philadelphia and Montgomery County will close after Friday. They were established by the federal government, which informed the state that it is withdrawing its funding and supplies at that time.

Department of Health

Department of Human Services

  • DHS has posted an announcement to administrators, brokers, and transit agencies that participate in the Medical Assistance Transportation Program presenting precautions necessary to ensure the safe provision of non-emergency medical transportation, including the need for drivers and passengers to wear face masks. The announcement also offers revised criteria for whether beneficiaries need to be transported or whether telehealth might be an appropriate alternative to a medical visit; it also describes how to screen would-be passengers for symptoms that suggest they may have COVID-19, in which the request for transportation should be denied and the individual advised to contact his or her medical provider.

DHS has posted questions and answers from its April 1 COVID-19 webinar. Below are selected highlights:

Q:  Will DHS reimburse for telehealth home health services? If so, which home health services will be eligible for reimbursement?

A:  Additional guidance is forthcoming that will clarify that home health providers are able to perform initial certifications and 60-day recertification visits via telemedicine and will identify which services can be provided using telemedicine. Services like home health aide services related to activities of daily living must be provided in-person, and therefore would not be able to be provided using telemedicine.

Q:  How will providers bill for the protective personal protective equipment (PPE) within the waiver? Will PPE be paid per patient, and which codes should be used?

A:  PPE will be treated as medical supplies through the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act (OBRA), Appendix K waiver submitted by the Office of Long-Term Living (OLTL). For the Office of Developmental Programs (ODP), payment for operational needs and supplies is included in the MA fee paid for residential services. For individuals who live in private homes, Specialized Supplies is a benefit under ODP waivers that can cover some PPE. Specific billing instructions for the Community HealthChoices (CHC) waiver should be answered by the CHC Managed Care Organizations (MCOs). Billing guidance for the OBRA waiver is forthcoming.

PPE was not added to Medicaid fee-for-service (FFS) through the 1135 waiver. PPE is not billable under the Medical Assistance (MA) FFS program. Payment for operational needs and supplies is included in the MA fee paid for the service. Providers should follow the Department of Health guidance for securing PPE. To access this guidance, please visit: https://www.health.pa.gov/topics/Documents/Diseases%20and%20Conditions/COVID-19%20Guidance%20PPE.pdf

Q:  Will DHS continue to process Medical Assistance (MA) renewals even after the determination that participants will not be terminated?

A:  MA renewals will continue to be mailed. DHS encourages applicants to complete the renewal if they are able. However, participants who do not complete their renewal or are unable to complete one will not have their case closed. In addition, cases open as of March 18 will not close for any reason other than voluntary withdraw, move out of state, or death.

Q:  Are CAOs still able to process applications and adequately ensure the integrity/validity of information submitted?

A:  CAOs are staffed and completing the essential work necessary to ensure individuals who are eligible receive benefits. The online COMPASS application tool allows clients to apply for benefits, compete renewals, provide required verifications, and report changes remotely without needing to come to a CAO in-person. CAO staff can accept information provided through COMPASS and take appropriate actions. Additionally, clients with smart phones can access the COMPASS mobile app – myCOMPASSPA – to report changes, upload documents, complete semi-annual renewals, and view benefit status.

Clients are also contacting the customer service centers, which are making changes and updates to client case records as necessary. Clients in Philadelphia with questions or information to report about their case should call the Philadelphia Customer Service Center at 215-560-7226. Clients in all other counties can call the Statewide Customer Service Center at 1-877-395-8930. Call volumes and wait times are likely to be high, and we appreciate the public’s patience with the dedicated commonwealth employees working to assist clients under stressful circumstances.

Clients can also apply for Medicaid benefits by telephone through our contracted consumer service center at 1-866-550-4355.

Department of Aging

The Department of Aging has issued guidance informing operators of facilities that serve older adults that the Identogo/Idemia sites that facilitate the FBI background checks of individuals who work at such facilities may remain open as life-sustaining businesses during the COVID-19 crisis; that there is no change in the background check requirements or processes for applicants seeking employment in such facilities; and that there are circumstances under which individuals who are unable to obtain FBI background checks because of the closure of some Identogo/Idemia sites may qualify for provisional hiring.  See the guidance here.

Department of State

The Department of State has temporarily changed certain licensing requirements for nursing home administrators, accountants, barbers, and cosmetologists during the COVID-19 crisis.  Under a waiver the governor has granted, certain deadlines for obtaining state licenses have been extended until after the COVID-19 emergency disaster declaration ends.

General Assembly

This week the House and Senate are meeting remotely for caucus and committee meetings and to position budget vehicles and vote on crisis response legislation.  Today Chairman Saylor offered amendments to S.B. 327 in an Appropriations Committee meeting that would:

  • attempt to foster inter-branch governmental cooperation by creating a COVID-19 Cost and Recovery Task Force;
  • attempt to reduce future financial obligations by requiring the Treasury Department to conduct a review of all outstanding state debt obligations and to identify refinancing options to reduce state costs; and
  • attempt to ensure direct communication between the governor and the legislature by requiring the governor to provide legislative leadership with a list of provisions of law that he has waived related to the COVID-19 response and continue to notify them within one day of any additional waivers he might invoke.

The bill as amended in the Appropriations Committee passed along party lines on the House floor this afternoon.  The bill was sent to the Senate for its concurrence to the House amendments.

Federal Update

Department of Labor

The Department of Labor has published an advisory on unemployment insurance provisions of the CARES Act.  While the advisory memo is directed to state workforce agencies, it includes detailed information about program eligibility and benefits.

Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services

  • The Families First Coronavirus Response Act (the second major COVID-19 bill, adopted March 18) waives cost-sharing under Medicare Part B (coinsurance and deductible amounts) for Medicare patients for COVID-19 testing-related services. The latest edition of the CMS publication MLN Matters summarizes the services for which cost-sharing is waived, the types of providers to which the waived cost-sharing applies, and the coding those providers need to do to get paid.  Find the explanation here.
  • CMS has published a “Dear Clinician” letter with guidance for physicians that they may bill for e-visits for both existing and new patients; previously published guidance suggested that they could bill only for existing patients but this policy has been revised. The letter also offers guidance for how to code such telehealth visits.
  • CMS has updated its recommendations for non-emergent elective medical services and treatment. These recommendations supersede previous guidelines.
  • Earlier today CMS hosted a call to discuss CMS waivers and COVID-19 response. Find the slides used during that presentation here.
  • CMS will hold a special open door forum tomorrow, April 8, at 1:30 p.m. to discuss its actions to improve access to telehealth during the COVID-19 crisis. This one-hour call is open to everyone:  the dial-in number is 1-888-455-1397, the passcode is 3535324, and participants are asked to call in at 1:15 p.m.
  • On April 3, CMS Administrator Seema Verma, Deborah Birx, MD, White House Coronavirus Task Force, and officials from the FDA, CDC, and FEMA participated in a call on COVID-19 flexibilities. During the call physicians presented best practices from their COVID-19 experiences.

Food and Drug Administration

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

The CDC will soon be providing $186 million in funding for additional resources for state and local jurisdictions to support their response to the COVID-19 emergency.  Funding will be for lab equipment, supplies, staff, and more for areas considered “hot zones” for COVID-19 and to enhance COVID-19 surveillance and tracking.  The news release announcing this new funding notes that “CDC will use existing networks to reach out to state and local jurisdictions to access this initial funding.”

Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration

SAMHSA will fund $110 million in emergency grants to provide treatment for substance use disorders/serious mental illness during the coronavirus pandemic.  The purpose of the emergency grants is to provide crisis intervention services, mental and substance use disorder treatment, and other related recovery supports for children and adults, with funding to be provided to states, territories, and tribes.

Department of Health and Human Services

HHS has announced that it will purchase for the Strategic National Stockpile the new COVID-19 test that produces results in less than 13 minutes.  HHS will provide the tests to public health labs in every state and territory and to Indian Health Services sites.

White House

President Trump has signed a memorandum directing the Department of Defense and Department of Homeland Security to make available the National Guard to the states of Georgia, Hawaii, Indiana, Missouri, New Hampshire, New Mexico, Ohio, Rhode Island, Tennessee, and Texas and the territory of the U.S. Virgin Island to provide emergency assistance with addressing the COVID-19 crisis and for the Federal Emergency Management Agency to pay 100 percent of the cost of such assistance.

National Association of Medicaid Directors

The National Association of Medicaid Directors has written to CMS and the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) urging them “…to allow states to make retainer payments to essential Medicaid providers through Section 1115 waivers during this emergency.”  See the letter here.

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

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Main COVID-19 Page

FAQ

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