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COVID-19 Update: April 21, 2020

COVID-19 update for April 21 as of 5:00 p.m.

Pennsylvania Update

SNAP Advocacy

Safety-Net Association of Pennsylvania logoToday SNAP wrote to members of Pennsylvania’s congressional delegation to ask them to support new COVID-19 and economic relief legislation that was expected to include $75 billion for hospitals.  See SNAP’s letter here.  The Senate has voted to approve the legislation and the house is expected to take it up on Thursday.  More detail about the bill’s contents is included in the federal update.

General Assembly

Today the House and Senate met to consider bills related to COVID-19 and to position legislation for FY 2020-21 budget negotiations.  Most notable of the votes today was final passage of S.B. 857, which would authorize health care providers to use telemedicine and require insurers to provide coverage and reimbursement for these services.  Over the last several months this bill stalled in the Senate due to controversial amendments added by House Republicans to restrict the use of telemedicine for certain abortion-related services.  Circumstances related to the COVID-19 pandemic have elevated the importance of ensuring access to telemedicine services, and today the Senate voted to concur in those controversial House amendments, along a party-line vote, and send the legislation to the governor.  The governor is expected to veto the bill.

Daily COVID-19 Briefing

  • The Department of Health new daily case counts are now the sum of two figures:  “confirmed” cases that have been determined by testing plus cases that have been ruled “probable” because of an individual’s symptoms and recent contact with someone who has a confirmed case of COVID-19.
  • Death counts are now being presented in a similar fashion:  “confirmed” deaths of patients who tested positive for COVID-19 plus “probable” cases for which a patient’s death certificate lists COVID-19 as a cause contributing to death but for which no COVID-19 test was administered.
  • As a result, the death figures are rising significantly.  They do not, however, reflect a sudden increase in daily deaths; instead, they are the result of after-the-fact reconciliation of case data.
  • More than half of all deaths have been residents of long-term-care facilities.
  • The state is working to get antibody testing materials but is first evaluating the array of test products, which appear to be of varying quality.
  • Antibody testing is now available through Quest.
  • Secretary Levine said she would like to do much more testing across the state, including through more mass testing sites and other sources.
  • Rite Aid, she noted, is now doing COVID-19 testing.
  • 40 percent of ICU beds across the state are currently unoccupied.
  • On the whole, the state’s hospitals are doing well.  Some are more challenged, especially in Philadelphia and the surrounding counties.
  • As a result of this challenge, an alternate site of care at Temple University has now opened to serve COVID-19 patients who are on the road to recovery but need to remain hospitalized.  This is being done to free hospital beds for more seriously ill COVID-19 patients.
  • Secretary Levine discussed the process of permitting hospitals to resume non-urgent procedures, explaining that this reflects a need to balance the desire to limit patients’ exposure to COVID-19 with the medical needs of patients who need procedures that are essential to their health.  Decisions about when and how to begin resuming non-urgent procedures will be made in consultation with the hospital industry.

Department of Human Services

DHS has published its answers to the questions asked by stakeholders and interested parties during its April 15 COVID-19 webinar.  Find that document here.

Two things are especially noteworthy in the information DHS provided.

First, DHS is still evaluating whether to take advantage of the CARES Act provision enabling states to temporarily expand Medicaid coverage to cover COVID-19 testing for uninsured individuals at 100 percent federal match.

Second, DHS is internally finalizing its request to CMS to alter its Medicaid State Plan to respond to the public health emergency.  The so-called Disaster SPA will include the following:

The Medicaid Disaster SPA is currently under internal review and will be submitted in the near future. When the Disaster SPA is submitted, DHS will be requesting the following:

  • Flexibilities related to eligibility determinations by CAOs;
  • Suspension of copayments for screening, diagnostic and treatment services related to COVID-19;
  • Coverage for certain cough and cold medications for adults;
  • Expansion of the outpatient drug day supply limit from 34 day/100 unit to 90 days;
  • Suspension of annual reassessments related to targeted support management for Individuals with an intellectual disability or autism;
  • Suspension of the prior authorization requirements for certain services, including:
    • Automated utilization reviews for emergency and urgent inpatient admissions;
    • First 28 of days of Home Health Services;
    • First 30 days of the following medical supplies:
      • Feeding supplies;
      • Respiratory supplies;
      • Urinary catheters;
      • Ostomy supplies; and,
      • Infusion supplies.
    • Appliances or equipment that costs more than $600; and,
    • Initial prescriptions of oxygen and related equipment.
  • A 90-day extension of the timeframe to complete cost reconciliation activities for Pennsylvania’s School-Based ACCESS Program (SBAP); and,
  • Waiver of Public notice requirements related to State Plan submission.

Department of Corrections

In our April 13 update we reported that Pennsylvania Correctional Industries, a business operated by Pennsylvania’s Corrections Department, was taking orders from non-profit organizations for masks and hand sanitizer.  Today the department announced that it is no longer fulfilling such orders at this time.

Federal Update

Congress and Administration Agree on Next Aid Package

Congressional leaders and the Trump administration have agreed to provide $75 billion for hospitals as part of a $484 billion COVID-19 and economic relief package.  This $75 billion would be addition to the money from the CARES Act and would have the same parameters as the CARES Act money.

The bill also includes $25 billion to research, develop, validate, manufacture, purchase, administer, and expand capacity for COVID-19 tests.  Among others, this $25 billion would be distributed as follows:

  • $11 billion for states, localities, and territories to develop, purchase, administer, process, and analyze COVID-19 tests, increase laboratory capacity, trace contacts, and support employee testing.
  • $1 billion to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention for surveillance, epidemiology, lab capacity expansion, contact tracing, public health data surveillance, and the modernization of analytics infrastructure.
  • $1.8 billion to the National Institutes of health to develop, validate, improve, and implement testing and associated technologies, accelerate research and development of point-of-care testing, and partnerships with other entities.
  • $1 billion for the Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority (BARDA) for advanced research, development, manufacture, production, and purchase of diagnostic, serologic, and other COVID-19 tests and supplies.
  • $825 million for Community Health Centers and rural health clinics.
  • Up to $1 billion to pay for testing for the uninsured.

Other major components of the bill include $310 billion to replenish the Paycheck Protection Program and $60 billion for the Small Business Administration’s disaster relief fund.

The Senate has already passed the bill and the House will vote on it on Thursday.

Department of Health and Human Services

Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Food and Drug Administration

Accreditation Association for Ambulatory Health Care

In the wake of CMS’s announcement earlier this month that ambulatory surgery centers would temporarily be permitted to operate as hospitals to increase the capacity of the health care system during the COVID-19 emergency, the Accreditation Association for Ambulatory Health has posted resources for use in facilitating those temporary transitions.

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.)

2020-04-22T08:23:40+00:00April 22nd, 2020|Coronavirus, COVID-19, Safety-Net Association of Pennsylvania|Comments Off on COVID-19 Update: April 21, 2020

COVID-19 Update: April 20, 2020

The following is the latest information from state and federal regulators and others as of 4:30 p.m. on Monday, April 20.

Pennsylvania Update

Governor Wolf

Pennsylvania State MapGovernor Wolf today announced that he was extending his stay-at-home order through May 8, at which time the state may, depending on the status of spread of COVID-19, begin permitting some industries and businesses to resume operations while still observing social distancing guidelines.  Pennsylvania’s liquor stores have begun curbside pick-up and online auto sales will be permitted to resume, with notaries doing their work online.  Construction projects would be permitted to resume on May 8.  The administration is exploring permitting some retailers to engage in curbside pick-ups but the governor acknowledged that this presented different challenges in different places.  He said the reopening of the state’s economy would be regional rather than state-wide, that some things that may be realistic in Cameron County may not be feasible in Philadelphia, and that all reopening efforts would be contingent on the progress of the COVID-19 pandemic between now and May 8.  He did not speak about anything involving health care other than to note that social distancing appears to have been effective in preventing the health care system from becoming overwhelmed at the height of the crisis.

In addition, today Governor Wolf signed S.B. 841 into law, providing flexibilities for businesses.  The bill reauthorizes the Health Care Cost Containment Council (PHC4) and requires that it study the impact of COVID-19 on hospitals and health systems.  It also:

  • permits local governments to conduct remote public meetings;
  • provides property tax relief by permitting taxing districts to waive late fees and penalties for property taxes paid by December 31, 2020;
  • permits school districts to renegotiate contracts with service providers to ensure payment of personnel and fixed costs during the school closure; and
  • permits remote notarization of documents.

Governor Wolf vetoed S.B. 613, which would have immediately reopened the state and ended the governor’s stay-in-place orders.

Daily COVID-19 Briefing

  • With a one-day exception, the number of new cases reported daily has continued to decline in recent days and fell into three figures yesterday for the first time this month.
  • Despite this, the death count continues to rise, although this rise can be attributed in part to a more careful analysis of death reports and decisions to link some deaths to COVID-19 that were not previously categorized that way. The overall state death toll from COVID-19 now exceeds 1200, all of them adults.
  • Data on COVID-19 cases in Pennsylvania is now available on the department’s web site at the county level and at the zip code level.
  • 3057 Pennsylvanians are currently hospitalized with COVID-19 and 645 of them are now on ventilators.
  • 42 percent of acute-care hospital beds and 36 percent of ICU beds are currently unoccupied and nearly 70 percent of ventilators are currently available for use.
  • Secretary Levine reported that the state’s hospitals are doing well and are not overwhelmed with COVID-19 patients although she noted that hospitals in the southeastern part of the state have higher-than-usual daily censuses but are still doing well.

Department of Health

  • The department posted an FAQ on staffing resources for nursing care facilities during the COVID-19 crisis in response to requests for guidance on what staffing measures can be implemented or contemplated during the crisis. In addition, guidance is now available for facilities that wish to expand their number of beds or convert closed wings or entire facilities to support COVID-19 patients or residents. Because this latter guidance is available only through a subscription-only department message board and cannot be reached through a direct link, it is presented in its entirety below:

If a facility wishes to expand the number of beds or convert closed wings or entire facilities to support COVID-19 patients or residents, first review PA-HAN 496, Universal Message Regarding Cohorting of Residents in Skilled Nursing Facilities. If the facility’s planned strategy appears to conform with PA-HAN 496, submit a request to the Department of Health’s (Department) field office (list below). Each request will be considered on a case-by-case basis, and dialogue with the facility will occur to acquire all details needed to render a decision. To ensure the Department has the necessary information to enter into that dialogue, include at a minimum the following (if applicable) with the request:

Number of beds and/or residents impacted, including whether residents will be moved initially

Whether the beds are Medicare or Medicaid (including proof of approval from the Department of Human Services to expand the number of MA beds, if applicable)

Location and square footage (with floor plan and pictures, if appropriate)

Available equipment

Staffing levels and plan for having adequate staffing for the duration

Plan for locating residents (including care of vulnerable residents (such as dementia residents)

Description of how residents with COVID-19 will be handled (e.g., moving within the facility, admitted from other facilities, admitted from the hospital)

Plan for discontinuing use of any new, altered or renovated space upon the expiration of the Governor’s Proclamation of Disaster Emergency issued on March 6, 2020

Upon submission of the request, a representative from the Department will reach out to the facility’s contact person to discuss next steps. Questions regarding this process can be directed to the appropriate field office.

Field Office Contacts:

Michele Gresko MGRESKO@pa.gov – Scranton Field Office
Traci Duncan tduncan@pa.gov – Williamsport Field Office
Rose Martin ROMARTIN@pa.gov – Lehigh Valley Field Office
Ellen Fuller elfuller@pa.gov – Lionville Field Office
Jennifer Lyons jelyons@pa.gov – Jackson Field Office
Mary Anne Bennis mbennis@pa.gov – Norristown Field Office
Heidi McKay hmckay@pa.gov – Norristown Field Office
Kiera Price kieprice@pa.gov – Harrisburg Field Office
Renee Bergamaschi rbergamasc@pa.gov – Johnstown Field Office
Denise Scolieri dscolieri@pa.gov – Pittsburgh Field Office
Lil Agostinella – LAGOSTINEL@pa.gov – Pittsburgh Field Office

Department of Human Services

Department of State

The Department of State has extended the expiration dates of temporary permits for more health care licenses during the COVID-19 emergency.  The boards and professions to which this temporary waiver applies are:

  • State Board of Massage Therapy
  • State Board of Physical Therapy – physical therapists, physical therapy assistants
  • State Board of Medicine – graduate physician assistants, respiratory therapists, athletic trainers, orthotic fitters, pedorthists, graduate orthotist, provisional orthotist, prosthetist graduate permits, and genetic counselor provisional licenses
  • State Board of Osteopathic Medicine – respiratory therapist temporary licenses, athletic trainer temporary licenses, genetic counselor temporary provisional licenses.

Federal Update

Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services

  • CMS has issued guidance on providing non-essential non-COVID-19 care to patients without symptoms of COVID-19 in regions with low and stable incidence of COVID-19. It views this guidance as part of phase one of the administration’s plan to reopen the U.S. economy.  See CMS’s news release on this guidance here and the guidance itself here.  Under this guidance, individual states will determine for themselves when it is appropriate to begin the “reopening” process.  As a practical matter, only Oklahoma, Texas, and Alaska, to our knowledge, have identified concrete dates for commencing the delivery of the described non-essential care.
  • To ensure appropriate tracking, response, and mitigation of COVID-19 in nursing homes, CMS is reinforcing an existing requirement that nursing homes must report communicable diseases, health care-associated infections, and potential outbreaks to state and local health departments. In rulemaking that will follow, CMS is requiring facilities to report this data to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and Control (CDC) in a standardized format and frequency defined by CMS and CDC.  See CMS’s announcement of its intentions; a memo CMS has sent to state Medicaid agencies; and additional CDC guidance.
  • In February, CMS published a rule that would change certain requirements for pre-admission screening and resident review (PASRR) to reflect updates in diagnostic criteria for mental illness and intellectual disability. Because of the COVID-19 emergency, the agency is extending the deadline for stakeholder comment from the current April 20 – today – to May 20.

Department of Health and Human Services

Food and Drug Administration

Federal Emergency Management Agency

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.)

2020-04-21T06:00:36+00:00April 21st, 2020|Coronavirus, COVID-19|Comments Off on COVID-19 Update: April 20, 2020

COVID-19 Update: April 17, 2020

The following is the latest COVID-19 information from the state and federal governments as of 4:30 p.m. on Friday, April 17.

Pennsylvania Update

Daily COVID-19 Briefing

During today’s COVID-19 briefing, Governor Wolf addressed the subject of “reopening” Pennsylvania following the limits he has placed on the state’s residents and its businesses, community life, and social interactions in response to the COVID-19 crisis.  He emphasized the need to continue social distancing, said his administration has been working for weeks to develop plans for reopening the state, and explained that any such effort would be data-driven and local and regional, as opposed to state-wide.  He mentioned the importance of doing more to support the health care system and said that any reopening must ensure the state’s continued ability to respond to COVID-19 challenges if they re-emerge.  What he described today, he said, was a framework for future action, and he said he would provide more details next week.

In the meantime, his office released three documents in support of his plans:  one on relief, reopening, and recovery; one on businesses; and one on health care.

From the Department of Health’s daily update news release on the COVID-19 crisis:

  • After several days of more modest numbers, new COVID-19 cases rose considerably yesterday and deaths remain high.
  • More than half of all COVID-19 deaths in Pennsylvania to date have been among residents of 321 different long-term-care facilities.

Department of Health

The department has updated its March 24 interim infection prevention and control recommendations for patients in health care settings who have COVID-19 or are under investigation for COVID-19.  The new guidance explains that “As community transmission intensifies within a region, healthcare facilities may consider foregoing contact tracing for exposures in a healthcare setting in favor of universal source control for HCP and screening for fever and symptoms before every shift, as well as the end of every work shift…”

The Department of Health sent a letter to hospitals reminding them that the CARES Act requires each provider of a diagnostic test for COVID-19 to publicize the cash price of the test on a public internet website of the provider.

Department of Human Services

DHS has updated its March 20 guidance to reflect that it will not be conducting any annual licensing inspections for entities licensed by its Office of Developmental Programs, Office of Child Development and Early Learning, Office of Long-Term Living/Bureau of Human Services Licensing, and Office of Children, Youth and Families until Governor Wolf lifts his current disaster emergency proclamation or until such other time determined by DHS.

DHS has issued a memorandum to HealthChoices physical health managed care organizations about telemedicine guidelines related to COVID-19.  This memo clarifies issues related to HIPAA compliance in the use of communication technology and the use of out-of-state practitioners and supersedes a similar memo DHS sent to the HealthChoices plans last month.

Department of State

The Department of State has waived certain administrative requirements for graduate medical trainees during the COVID-19 emergency.  Until this waiver was implemented, medical residents with graduate medical trainee licenses who wished to work elsewhere, in addition to where they were serving as residents, needed to provide to the state a detailed written statement of the medical services they would be providing beyond the parameters of the graduate medical trainee program and receive a board evaluation of their training and education.  This required statement has now been temporarily waived.

Pennsylvania Congressional Delegation

Ten Democratic members of Pennsylvania’s congressional delegation have written to Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar and Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services Administrator Seema Verma to complain that the manner in which they have allocated the first $30 billion of the $100 billion designated for hospital and health care providers in the federal CARES Act “…disadvantages Pennsylvania and many of our key providers in several ways.”  Go here for a link to the letter.

Federal Update

The White House

  • President Trump has unveiled “Guidelines for Opening Up America Again,” a three-phase approach to reopening the economy.  Find that plan here.
  • President Trump has signed a memorandum authorizing the use of the National Guard by governors in five more states to help with their response to the COVID-19 emergency, with the cost of National Guard assistance to be assumed 100 percent by the federal government.  The five states are Iowa, Kansas, Maine, Nebraska, Oklahoma, and Vermont.

Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services

Food and Drug Administration

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

National Institutes of Health

National Health Services Corps

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.)

2020-04-20T06:00:18+00:00April 20th, 2020|Coronavirus, COVID-19|Comments Off on COVID-19 Update: April 17, 2020

SNAP Covid-19 Update: April 16, 2020

The following is the latest COVID-19 information from the Pennsylvania and federal governments and others as of 4:00 p.m. on Thursday, April 16.

Pennsylvania Update

Daily COVID-19 Briefing

  • The number of new COVID-19 cases has remained relatively steady for the past four days and well below where it was a week ago.
  • But the death toll remains higher than it has been in Pennsylvania for most of the past month.
  • 1401 people with COVID-19 are health care workers.
  • 2503 COVID-19 patients are currently in hospitals, 664 of them on ventilators.
  • As of today, 41 percent of the state’s acute-care hospital beds and 37 percent of its ICU beds are unoccupied and nearly 70 percent of its ventilators are not currently in use.
  • The state is now providing negative test result numbers on a county-by-county basis; included in those figures are gender breakdowns.
  • While race and ethnicity data remains elusive, the Department of Health is working on this providers and is now presenting data on positive test results and deaths by race (scroll down about halfway).
  • The state will not give retailers more time to comply with the new requirement that employees and customers all wear masks.
  • The Department of Health recommends that people riding public transportation wear masks but is not requiring it.
  • When asked, Secretary Levine would not reject the possibility of some form of stay-at-home requirement extending into the fall but reiterated her past explanation that the disease will determine the time line.

Department of Human Services

DHS has updated its guidance on the use of the CR modifier and the DR condition code for COVID-19 disaster/emergency-related claims.

Department of Health

The federal Department of Health and Human Services Office of Civil Rights has resolved a civil rights complaint against Pennsylvania over complaints that the state’s interim Pennsylvania Crisis Standards of Care for Pandemic Guidelines would discriminate against the disabled if the state needed to begin triaging access to critical care and ventilators.  Pennsylvania has revised those standards to the Office of Civil Rights’ satisfaction.

Department of State

The Department of State has expanded “clinical clerk” services during the COVID-19 emergency.  Under ordinary circumstances, clinical clerks may serve only patients in hospital settings.  Under this waiver, clinical clerks will be assigned to work in hospitals but may provide services by phone to other health care settings.  The objective of this change is to facilitate the use of medical students as clinical clerks with the understanding that they will work under the supervision of MDs and DOs.

Federal Update

Department of Health and Human Services

Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services

  • CMS has updated its list of blanket waivers for health care providers. CMS updates this document regularly, with the latest update including changes in Medicare reimbursement for acute-care hospitals, long-term care hospitals, and inpatient rehabilitation facilities required by the CARES Act.

Federal Emergency Management Agency

Food and Drug Administration

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

National Institutes of Health

Industry Groups

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.)

 

2020-04-17T06:00:33+00:00April 17th, 2020|Coronavirus, COVID-19|Comments Off on SNAP Covid-19 Update: April 16, 2020

COVID-19 Update: April 15, 2020

The following is the latest COVID-19 information from Pennsylvania state and federal officials as of 4:00 p.m. on Wednesday, April 15.

Pennsylvania Update

Governor Wolf

  • The governor’s office issued a news release today in which it announced that it is “…offering taxpayers increased flexibility, additional time to meet their tax obligations, and a pause on several of its standard enforcement actions.”  Go here to see the news release with more details about the specific changes.
  • Governor Wolf has established a COVID-19 Response Task Force for Health Disparity to look into and address how COVID-10 affects minorities.  Lieutenant Governor John Fetterman will serve as its chairman.

Daily COVID-19 Briefing

  • The number of new COVID-19 cases has declined for the third consecutive day.
  • But yesterday’s death toll was among the highest since the pandemic began.
  • 1327 health care workers have tested positive for COVID-19.
  • Health Department staff took a “deep dive” on the data on the status of COVID-19 in long-term-care facilities and has significantly increased both the case and the death totals in those facilities to 3316 residents of such facilities with COVID-19 and 324 deaths attributed to the disease.  The latter figure accounts for nearly one-half of all COVID-19 deaths state-wide.
  • 2392 people are currently hospitalized with COVID-19 and 662 are on ventilators.
  • 41 percent of the state’s acute-care beds and 39 percent of its ICU beds are currently unoccupied and nearly 70 percent of its ventilators are currently not in use.
  • Both Secretary Levine and Governor Wolf said that Pennsylvania is “bending the curve.”
  • Governor Wolf expressed opposition to the bill passed by the state House that would give county governments greater authority over which businesses can remain open during the COVID-19 emergency but when asked did not say he would veto the bill.
  • A new mass testing site will open on the premises of the Mohegan Sun casino in Wilkes-Barre.
  • The Montgomery County mass testing site has relocated and opened.
  • Secretary Levine said she did not know why hospital uncompensated care rose in 2019, as reported today by the Pennsylvania Health Care Cost Containment Council, but she said she is not worried about the impact of COVID-19 on this year’s total because the federal government has said it will pay for care for uninsured people suffering from COVID-19.

Department of Health

Department of Human Services

DHS’s Office of Long-Term Living has issued clarification guidance for Pennsylvania’s pre-admission screening resident review (PASRR) process for nursing homes.  This clarification comes in the wake of guidance from the CMS Center for Clinical Standards and Quality that addresses a blanket waiver CMS has issued indicating that nursing facilities will not be cited for non-compliance with federal PASRR requirements.   While Pennsylvania requested and received approval from CMS that would permit the state to suspend the PASSR assessment process for 30 days, the state has decided to continue performing PASRR activities through remote means and will only invoke the blanket waiver on a case-by-case basis.  See the clarification guidance for further details.

General Assembly

The Senate met to consider S.B. 613 on concurrence in amendments passed in the House yesterday.  During debate, Senate Republicans pointed to the bill’s requirement that businesses comply with CDC guidance for mitigating exposure to COVID-19 before reopening while Senate Democrats argued that the timing of this legislation would detract from the mitigation efforts of the governor and Secretary of Health.  The bill was passed by the Senate along party lines and now goes to the governor for action.

S.B. 327 was also considered on concurrence in amendments from the House.  The bill was amended in the Senate today to delegate authority to counties to develop emergency mitigation plans for businesses.  Senate Democrats expressed concern about this amendment not establishing a statewide, uniform approach to addressing the pandemic.  The bill was adopted along party lines and will return to the House for its concurrence with the Senate’s additional amendments.

The House has added tomorrow, April 16, as a non-voting session day and April 20 and 21 as voting session days.  The Senate stands in recess until the call of the President Pro Tempore.

Federal Update

The White House

Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services

Health Resources and Services Administration

HRSA is temporarily waiving fees for skilled health care practitioner license queries of the National Practitioner Data Bank to facilitate the deployment of workforce resources.

Food and Drug Administration

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Medicare Payment Advisory 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

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Main COVID-19 Page

FAQ

New resource:

PA Health Alert Network

The health alerts published on this page include emergency-related information the Department of Health wishes to communicate to public health agencies, health care providers, hospitals, and emergency management officials.

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

 

2020-04-16T06:00:55+00:00April 16th, 2020|Coronavirus, COVID-19|Comments Off on COVID-19 Update: April 15, 2020

COVID-19 Update: April 14, 2020

The following is the latest COVID-19 information from Pennsylvania state regulators, the Pennsylvania legislature, and federal regulators and others as of 4:00 p.m. on Tuesday, April 14.

Pennsylvania Update

Governor Wolf

Governor Wolf today announced that businesses that collect Pennsylvania sales tax will not have to make accelerated sales tax pre-payments over the next three months.  That means businesses that normally have a monthly prepayment requirement will not be charged penalties for missing the prepayment deadline during this three-month period.

Daily COVID-19 Briefing

  • For the fourth time in the last five days, the number of newly reported cases fell. Today’s total was the lowest in nearly two weeks.
  • But the death count was the third highest single-day total since the pandemic began. Secretary Levine warned that this could be because of reports still coming in from the weekend.
  • 1250 health care workers have tested positive for COVID-19, as have 1869 residents of 232 long-term-care facilities.
  • 42 percent of acute-care beds and 37 percent of ICU beds remain unoccupied and nearly 70 percent of ventilators are still available for use.
  • To date, about one percent of the state’s population has been tested for COVID-19, with nearly 20 percent testing positive.
  • 2306 COVID-19 patients are currently in the hospital, 666 of them on ventilators.
  • Demographic data on race and ethnicity is still proving elusive. (See the paragraph below about the department’s alert on this subject.)
  • A mass testing site should be opening in East Stroudsburg later this week or next week. It will focus on testing health care workers and seniors.  There are not enough testing materials to test those without symptoms.
  • An alternative care facility in East Stroudsburg will serve patients who are on the road to recovery from COVID-19, to free hospital beds for more seriously ill patients.
  • In no part of the state are hospitals overwhelmed at this time. The state is keeping a close eye on this.
  • Yesterday the state shipped a “large push-out” of personal protective equipment to providers.
  • The secretary attributed the decline in the number of daily tests administered to the closing of the mass testing site in Philadelphia and the temporary closing of the mass testing site in Montgomery County.

Department of Health

  • The Department of Health, working with the Hospital and Healthsystem Association of Pennsylvania, has published a revised Interim Pennsylvania Crisis Standards of Care for Pandemic Guidelines Work on this document started last fall and not in response to the COVID-19 public health emergency and is viewed by the Department of Health as a work in progress that will resume once the current pandemic ends.  The purpose of the document, it states, “…is to help guide the allocation of patient care resources during an overwhelming public health emergency of any kind when demand for services dramatically exceeds the supply of resources needed.”
  • The department has issued an alert to laboratories after identifying a large number of laboratory test results submitted without key variables such as patient date of birth, address, and telephone number. In addition, the alert notes that race and ethnicity data is missing from more than 60 percent of reports submitted.  In the alert, the department directs laboratories to include all of this data in the reports they submit to the Department of Health.  Recipients of this alert included hospitals, EMS councils, local health jurisdictions, professional organizations, and long-term-care facilities.

Department of Human Services

Department of State

Department of Labor

The state’s Department of Labor has established a new hiring portal on which employers in life-sustaining businesses can advertise job openings.  Employers may advertise on the site if they are formally considered life-sustaining businesses and have at least 10 jobs to offer.  The process begins with completing an employer intake form.  A number of health care entities already list jobs on the site.

General Assembly

Today the House of Representatives met to continue considering legislation that would create a pathway for businesses to reopen despite the governor’s executive order mandating the closure of non-essential businesses.  Arguments on the floor and in committee meetings fell along party lines, with Republicans advocating the reopening of businesses and Democrats wanting to continue following the governor’s orders.  Ultimately the House passed along party lines SB 613, which primarily provides for the creation of a COVID-19 emergency mitigation plan for businesses.

The House is also expected to pass, in concurrence with Senate amendments, SB 841, which reauthorizes the Pennsylvania Health Care Cost Containment Council (PHC4) Act by adding data collection requirements and other measures in response to the COVID-19 emergency.

The Senate announced today that it will return to session this week to “consider legislation that will provide a safe path for re-opening the state’s economy.”  This came in response to Governor Wolf’s announcement yesterday that he is participating in a multi-state effort to begin planning for next steps beyond stay-at-home orders and for re-opening the state’s economy.

Federal Update

Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services

Department of Health and Human Services

Drug Enforcement Administration

Occupational Safety and Health Administration

Food and Drug Administration

American Medical 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

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.)

2020-04-15T06:00:22+00:00April 15th, 2020|Coronavirus, COVID-19, Uncategorized|Comments Off on COVID-19 Update: April 14, 2020

COVID-19 Update: April 13, 2020

The following is the latest COVID-19 information from Pennsylvania state and federal regulators, legislators, and others as of 4:00 p.m. on Monday, April 13.

Pennsylvania Update

Governor Wolf

  • Last week Governor Wolf signed an executive order to facilitate the targeted distribution of COVID-19 personal protective equipment and supplies among Pennsylvania health care providers. The Department of Health has published an FAQ on this executive order.  The state also has published a survey for health care providers to complete to help it identify current resources.  All covered entities – including hospitals – are required to report inventories of the specified supplies, equipment, and pharmaceuticals by 11:59 p.m. on Thursday, April 16.  The state will update and direct completion of the survey in the future as needed.
  • Governor Wolf today announced that he and the governors of New York, New Jersey, Connecticut, Delaware, and Rhode Island will create a multi-state council to “…develop a fully integrated regional framework to gradually lift the states’ stay at home orders while minimizing the risk of increased spread of the [COVID-19] virus.” See the governor’s announcement here.

General Assembly

Harrisburg, PA capital buildingOver the weekend, House Speaker Michael Turzai changed the House of Representatives’ session schedule to hold a non-voting session day today and a voting session day tomorrow in an effort to enable Republicans to move forward with relief efforts for businesses related to the COVID-19 crisis.  There has been speculation that if a quorum is present the Speaker may seek to suspend temporary House rules permitting remote voting to ease the passage of Republican-sponsored relief measures for businesses affected by limits on their ability to operate during the COVID-19 emergency.  The House also has canceled its session for Wednesday and Thursday of this week.

Both the House and Senate are scheduled to return to session on May 4.

Daily Department of Health COVID-19 Briefing

  • In the past few days the number of newly reported COVID-19 cases has declined slightly, leading Department of Health Secretary Levine to declare that “social distancing is working.” The new case increase, she explained, is now linear rather than exponential, although she warned that Pennsylvania may not yet have reached its peak.
  • 1179 health care workers have been diagnosed with COVID-19, which is about four percent of the total state case count.
  • 1688 residents of 215 long-term-care facilities have tested positive as well.
  • Currently 2205 people are in hospitals to be treated for COVID-19 and 665 of them are on ventilators.
  • Across the state, 44 percent of acute-care beds and 38 percent of ICU beds remain unoccupied and nearly 70 percent of ventilators are available for use.
  • The state still lacks testing supplies so only those who are symptomatic are being tested. Secretary Levine hopes to do population-based testing in the future but does not expect to be able to do it in the near future.
  • Serology testing is not available at this time.
  • Governor Wolf spoke to Vice President Pence this morning and reports that the state will be receiving a shipment of N95 masks later this week.
  • Eventually the state hopes to follow up on those who have been discharged from hospitals after being treated for COVID-19 but is not doing that now.
  • While there have been published reports of people who seem to have recovered from COVID-19 suffering relapses, Pennsylvania has not seen any such cases yet.
  • When asked if the state planned to take any additional measures to help hospitals, Secretary Levine pointed to the health care provider money in the federal CARES Act and the $450 million loan program Governor Wolf announced last week.
  • During her Saturday briefing, Secretary Levine said that Philadelphia and southeastern Pennsylvania have enough acute-care beds, ICU beds, and ventilators right now.
  • She also said there could be a surge in southeastern and northeastern Pennsylvania over the next week, with possible surges in western and southeastern Pennsylvania coming later.

Hospital Emergency Loan Program

Late last week Governor Wolf announced a $450 million Hospital Emergency Loan Program.  The state’s Department of Community and Economic Development, which is administering the program, describes it as follows:

The Hospital Emergency Loan Program (HELP) was established to provide critical working capital bridge financing to hospitals located within the Commonwealth that are adversely impacted by the coronavirus (COVID-19) outbreak. The loan funds are intended to provide a short-term financing solution for hospitals until federal grant funding through the Coronavirus Aid Relief, and Economic Security (CARES) Act is received by the hospitals. The program is administered by the Pennsylvania Department of Community and Economic Development (DCED) through the Pennsylvania First Program (PA First).

Go here for a more detailed description of the program and go here to apply for a loan.

Children’s Health Insurance Program

The state’s CHIP program has announced changes in its program requirements that seek to ease access to CHIP and keep families enrolled in CHIP during the duration of the COVID-19 emergency.

Pennsylvania Hospitals and the CARES Act

Pennsylvania Senator Pat Toomey’s office reports that the state’s hospitals will receive $1.2 billion of the $30 billion now being distributed by the federal government to hospitals and health care providers.  The $30 billion comes from $100 billion that the CARES Act designated for health care providers.  A second round of funding is expected.

Pennsylvania Department of Labor and Industry

The Wolf administration has issued a news release summarizing the new federal unemployment compensation benefits established under the CARES Act, including eligibility and payment information.

Federal Update

Department of Health and Human Services

Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services

Department of Labor

Food and Drug Administration

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

National Institutes of Health

Medicaid and CHIP Payment and Access Commission

  • MACPAC has written to CMS administrator Seema Verma to express its concern that the manner in which CMS has chosen to distribute $30 billion of the $100 billion designated in the CARES Act for hospitals and health care providers “…does not account for the real and pressing concerns of safety-net providers that are on the frontlines of serving the nation’s poorest and most vulnerable people…” MACPAC also asks Ms. Verma to “…ensure that safety-net providers, including hospitals considered deemed disproportionate share hospitals (DSH) for the purpose of Medicaid payment…children’s hospitals, and other providers serving Medicaid and other low-income patients have access to federal funds made available through the CARES Act without delay.”  See the MACPAC 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

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

 

2020-04-14T06:00:15+00:00April 14th, 2020|Coronavirus, COVID-19, Pennsylvania Department of Health and COVID-19, Pennsylvania Department of Health coronavirus|Comments Off on COVID-19 Update: April 13, 2020

SNAP Asks HHS for More Coronavirus Grants

Private safety-net hospitals should be among high-volume Medicaid providers that receive priority consideration in the distribution of additional grants from the CARES Act, SNAP has written in a letter to Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services Administrator Seema Verma.

Safety-Net Association of Pennsylvania logoWith CMS already conceding that high-volume Medicaid providers may be shortchanged in the initial distribution of funds from the $100 billion designated for hospitals and health care providers in the CARES Act, SNAP asked Ms. Verma to “…acknowledge the special needs of these hospitals and the roles they play in their communities by ensuring that they will receive much-needed assistance in the second round of grants as well.”

See SNAP’s letter here.

2020-04-12T06:00:57+00:00April 12th, 2020|Coronavirus, COVID-19, Pennsylvania safety-net hospitals, Safety-Net Association of Pennsylvania|Comments Off on SNAP Asks HHS for More Coronavirus Grants

SNAP Asks PA Delegation for More COVID-19 Funding

More federal funding is needed for hospitals that serve especially high proportions of Medicaid patients and patients insured by government programs, the Safety-Net Association of Pennsylvania has written to members of the state’s congressional delegation.Safety-Net Association of Pennsylvania logo

This is especially important now, SNAP emphasized in its letter, because of new plans to use some of the $100 billion designated for hospitals and health care providers in the federal CARES Act to pay instead for care for uninsured patients who contract COVID-19.  Those payments, which SNAP supports, do not address the needs for which the original $100 billion was designated:  to help hospitals – including Pennsylvania safety-net hospitals – with the cost of the investments they made to prepare for the expected influx of COVID-19 patients and to help them with cash flow challenges arising from the loss of revenue associated with suspending elective procedures.

See SNAP’s letter to Pennsylvania’s congressional delegation here.

2020-04-10T13:00:10+00:00April 10th, 2020|Coronavirus, COVID-19|Comments Off on SNAP Asks PA Delegation for More COVID-19 Funding

COVID-19 Update: April 9, 2020

The following is the latest COVID-19 information from Pennsylvania state and federal regulators as of 4:30 on Thursday, April 9.

Pennsylvania Update

Safety-Net Association of Pennsylvania logoSNAP Advocacy for Additional COVID-19 Funding for Safety-Net Hospitals

Yesterday SNAP wrote to Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services administrator Seema Verma asking her to give special consideration to high-volume Medicaid hospitals in the distribution of additional grants from the $100 billion designated for hospitals and health care providers in the CARES Act. The previous day, Ms. Verma publicly acknowledged that the first round of that funding, to be received by hospitals later this week, may not have been entirely fair to high-volume Medicaid providers and said CMS would address shortcoming that when it plans its next round of CARES Act grants.  Find that letter here, on SNAP’s web site.

SNAP also wrote yesterday to every member of the Pennsylvania congressional delegation, asking them to work with their colleagues to ensure that additional funds for safety-net hospitals are included in any future COVID-19-related legislation.  Find that letter here.

Department of Health Daily Briefing

  • For the first time in five days the number of reported cases rose significantly: 18 percent.
  • But new deaths were less than one-third of those from the previous day.
  • 1058 residents of 168 long-term-care facilities have now tested positive.
  • As have 850 health care workers.
  • 2033 Pennsylvanians are currently hospitalized with COVID-19, still about 11 percent of the total cases.
  • 600 are on ventilators.
  • 45 percent of the state’s acute-care beds and 37 percent of its ICU beds remain unoccupied and 70 percent of its ventilators are currently available for use.
  • The state will soon be sharing more specific information about the precise location of cases with county emergency management officials.
  • The state plans to work with home health care associations to ensure that home health care workers assigned to care for COVID-19 patients in their homes have appropriate personal protective equipment.
  • Secretary Levine believes social distancing is working, noting that the curve is no longer rising as much. Problems remain, though, in southeastern and northeastern Pennsylvania.
  • A mass testing site is planned for northeastern Pennsylvania and a field hospital will be established in East Stroudsburg.
  • Amid reports that ventilator use is not as effective as originally expected, Secretary Levine said the state has no formal standards for the use of ventilators in the care of COVID-19 patients and is leaving those decisions to individual doctors.

Department of Human Services

Department of Drug and Alcohol Programs

DDAP has posted a COVID-19 resource guide for individuals with substance abuse disorder.

Federal Update

Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services

CMS has issued a news release announcing that it has approved approximately $34 billion for providers through its Accelerated and Advance Payment Program, which was created in the CARES Act.  Note: CMS is now touting this as $51 billion in payments, but has not updated the press release at this time.

See an  updated list of the section 1135 waivers CMS has granted to help states and health care providers respond to the COVID-19 crisis.

National Institutes of Health

The NIH has announced the launch of a clinical trial to evaluate the safety and effectiveness of hydroxychloroquine for the treatment of adults hospitalized with COVID-19.

Department of Health and Human Services

Food and Drug Administration

Federal Emergency Management Agency

FEMA has posted a notice that it is issuing a temporary rule to allocate certain scarce or threatened materials for domestic use so that these materials may not be exported from the U.S. without the agency’s explicit approval.  These items include ventilators, personal protective equipment, and materials used to make personal protective equipment.

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

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

2020-04-09T17:22:15+00:00April 9th, 2020|Coronavirus, COVID-19|Comments Off on COVID-19 Update: April 9, 2020
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