The following is an update of selected state health policy developments in Pennsylvania for the week of July 25-29, 2022. (Some of the language used below is taken directly from state documents.)
Governor Wolf
Governor Wolf has issued an executive order on reproductive health services that addresses the delivery of legal reproductive health services in Pennsylvania; investigations of reproductive health services initiated by or in other states regarding services that are legal in Pennsylvania; the protection of health care and other professionals involved in the provision of reproductive health services; communication about reproductive health services; and circumstances under which the governor will not approve interstate extradition for alleged violations of reproductive health laws in other states that are not violations of reproductive health laws in Pennsylvania. Learn more from the governor’s executive order on reproductive health services.
Governor Wolf has filed a lawsuit against the General Assembly for what the Wolf administration calls its “…unconstitutional attempt to ban abortion in Pennsylvania” through an amendment of the state’s constitution. The governor’s suit also cites what he believes to be procedural flaws in the manner in which the legislature adopted the proposed amendment. Learn more from this news release from the governor’s office.
Executive Branch Regulatory Agenda
Pennsylvania Executive Order 1996-1 requires all agencies under the jurisdiction of the governor to submit for semi-annual publication an agenda of regulations under development or consideration. These agendas are compiled to give the regulated community advance notice of regulatory activity. This week’s Pennsylvania Bulletin includes the latest such publication of regulations under development and consideration. They include:
- Department of Aging – matters involving older adult living centers and the Pennsylvania Community Adult Respite Program.
- Department of Health – matters involving long-term-care facilities.
- Department of Human Services – matters involving psychiatric rehabilitation services, Medical Assistance manual changes, the Office of Developmental Programs, county children’s and youth social programs, child residential and day treatment facilities, medical marijuana in facilities, adult protective services, crisis regulations, children with intellectual disabilities and autism, child care regulations, the county mental health and intellectual disabilities fiscal manual, and psychiatric residential treatment facilities.
Learn more about what these agencies are contemplating and find contact information for seeking additional information from this Pennsylvania Bulletin notice.
Department of Human Services
The Department of Human Services has extended its calendar of remittance advice (RA) delivery dates, mailing of checks, and electronic transfers of funds into early September. Find the updated schedule here.
Department of Health
The Wolf administration has expanded the Department of Health’s naloxone standing order to combat the rise of opioid overdoses to include ZIMHI, an intra-muscular version of naloxone in the form of an injection device that comes as a single-dose pre-filled syringe or a carton containing two cases of the pre-filled syringes. Pennsylvanians can present a copy of the standing order at pharmacies to obtain naloxone and can obtain the standing order here. Learn more from this news release.
COVID-19: By the Numbers
- The daily average of newly reported COVID-19 cases rose 12 percent over the past week and the number of COVID-related deaths rose just slightly.
- The number of people hospitalized with COVID-19 rose modestly over the past week, the number in hospital ICUs remained similar to last week, and the number on ventilators fell 20 percent and that number itself is modest.
- All 67 Pennsylvania counties are currently experiencing a high rate of community transmission of COVID-19, up from 63 counties last week.
Monkeypox
The CDC has posted an updated map showing the distribution of 4639 confirmed cases of monkeypox in the U.S. as of July 27 – more than twice as many as a week ago. 114 of those cases were in Pennsylvania.
Pennsylvania Health Care Cost Containment Council (PHC4)
PHC4 has issued its latest legislatively mandated report on the financial impact of COVID-19 on the state’s hospitals; the report covers the first quarter of the 2022 calendar year. Hospitals that submitted data to PHC4 (71 percent of the state’s hospitals and health systems) reported $418.8 million in COVID-19-related costs – a combination of COVID-related expenses and revenue losses – during that period and a collective COVID-related revenue loss of $95.7 million. The figures do not reflect COVID-related emergency funding from either the state or federal government. Learn more from this PHC4 news release and the report itself.
Stakeholder Events
Department of Health – State Child Death Review Team – August 10
The Department of Health’s State Child Death Review Team will hold a virtual public meeting on
Wednesday, August 10 at 1:00. The state’s Child Death Review Program provides training and technical assistance to local child death review teams. Learn more about the State Child Death Review Team and how to join the August 10 meeting from this Pennsylvania Bulletin notice.
Department of Health – Pennsylvania Achieving Better Care by Monitoring All Prescriptions Board – October 25
The Department of Health’s Pennsylvania Achieving Better Care by Monitoring All Prescriptions Board will hold its next meeting on Tuesday, October 25 at 9:30. The meeting location will depend on COVID-19 mitigation efforts at that time. If the meeting can be held in person it will be in Room 129 in the Pennsylvania Health and Welfare Building at 625 Forster Street in Harrisburg. If the meeting is held virtually it will be held at bit.ly/ABC_MAP. To dial in, call 267-332-8737, conference ID 440 338 696#. Learn more from this Pennsylvania Bulletin notice.