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PA Health Policy Update for Friday, September 30

The following is an update of selected state health policy developments in Pennsylvania for the week of September 26-30, 2022.  (Some of the language used below is taken directly from state documents.)

Department of Human Services

  • The Department of Human Services (DHS) has issued a Medical Assistance Bulletin to inform providers that it has added CPT codes for administering COVID-19 pediatric boosters.  The new codes can be used immediately.  Find that bulletin here.
  • DHS has issued a Medical Assistance Bulletin to advise providers of the addition of procedure codes to the Medical Assistance fee schedule for the provision of private duty nursing services, which are provided through home health agencies to beneficiaries under 21 years of age.  The additions take effect on October 1.  Find that bulletin here.
  • DHS’s Office of Long-Term Living has launched its American Rescue Plan Act of 2021 funding reporting portal.  The online portal will be available beginning on September 30, 2022 for Office of Long-Term Living providers to submit costs associated with American Rescue Plan funding distributed in 2021, as required by the state.  Learn more from this announcement of the portal’s launch and from DHS’s guide on to how to use the portal.
  • DHS has updated its data on physical health HealthChoices enrollment and participation in the Medical Assistance Transportation Program.  Find the update here.

Department of Health

  • The Department of Health (DOH) has issued new guidance for health care providers and their employees who have been exposed to or contracted COVID-19.  The first addresses the return to work for health care workers with confirmed or suspected cases of COVID-19 and the second describes work restrictions for health care workers who have been exposed to COVID-19.  Both are introduced to align state standards with recently revised guidance from the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
  • DOH has updated its definition of how it defines whether individuals are up to date on their COVID-19 vaccinations.  Go here to see the updated definition and learn about the department’s rationale for this change.
  • DOH has issued a health alert to notify providers, laboratories, infection control specialists, and local health departments about an unvaccinated adult with poliovirus infection and acute flaccid paralysis.  Wastewater testing in treatment facilities in Rockland County, New York, which is adjacent to Pennsylvania, and surrounding counties also identified related poliovirus, indicating that the virus is circulating in the community and others may become ill.  DOH urges providers to consider polio as a possible cause of sudden onset of limb, facial, oropharyngeal, or respiratory muscle weakness; to contact their local or state health department to discuss such cases; and to encourage any unvaccinated patients to receive polio vaccines.  Learn more from this health alert.

COVID-19:  By the Numbers

  • The weekly average of newly reported COVID-19 cases in Pennsylvania and COVID-related deaths continues to hold relatively steady:  roughly 2500 new daily cases and 20 new deaths with weekly variances of 10-20 percent.
  • The number of people hospitalized with COVID-19 and in hospital ICUs and on ventilators because of the virus also remains relatively unchanged.
  • According to the CDC, the seven-day moving average of new hospital admissions for COVID-19 in Pennsylvania was 191 admissions a day over the past week, a slight reduction from the previous week.
  • Sixty-six of Pennsylvania’s 67 counties continue to have a high rate of community transmission of COVID-19.  Snyder County is currently experiencing “only” a substantial rate.

Department of Drug and Alcohol Programs

The Department of Drug and Alcohol Programs has issued Licensing Alert 02-22 to inform drug treatment programs about the process for establishing mobile narcotic treatment programs.  Find the alert here.

Insurance Department

The state Insurance Department has released Pennsylvania’s 2023 individual and small group Affordable Care Act health insurance rates.  The release also shares changes in the number of insurers offering coverage to Pennsylvanians and offers information about federal rate subsidies.  Learn about the newly released information and find a link to the rates and insurers themselves in this Insurance Department news release.

Monkeypox

  • The CDC has posted an updated map showing the distribution of 25,613 confirmed cases of monkeypox in the U.S. as of September 29, up only slightly from 23,364 cases on September 21.  713 of those cases were in Pennsylvania, up from 684 a week ago.
  • As of September 25, 475 of those Pennsylvania monkeypox cases were in Philadelphia, up from 446 on September 18.  Learn more about monkeypox in Philadelphia from the city Department of Public Health’s monkeypox web page.

Stakeholder Events

Department of Health – Health Research Advisory Committee Meeting – October 3

The Department of Health’s Health Research Advisory Committee will meet virtually on Monday, October 3 at 10:00 to hold a formal vote on upcoming priorities.  Learn more about the meeting and how to participate from this Pennsylvania Bulletin notice.

DHS – Medical Assistance Advisory Committee – Managed Long-Term Services and Supports Subcommittee Meeting – October 4

The Medical Assistance Advisory Committee’s managed long-term services and supports subcommittee will meet in Harrisburg on Tuesday, October 4 at 10:00; interested parties also may participate virtually.  For information about the location of the meeting or to register to participate virtually, see this DHS notice.

Department of Human Services Preventing Workplace Injuries – October 6

DHS’s Long-Term Care Learning Network, part of its quality strategy for nursing facilities, is offering in collaboration with the Community HealthChoices managed care organizations and the Jewish Healthcare Foundation a webinar on “Protecting and Preserving our Workforce by Preventing Common Injuries” among health care workers on Thursday, October 6 at 2:00.  Learn more about the webinar and how to register to participate from this notice.

DHS – Long-Term Care Workforce Motivation – October 13

DHS’s Long-Term Care Learning Network, part of its quality strategy for nursing facilities, is offering in collaboration with the Community HealthChoices managed care organizations and the Jewish Healthcare Foundation a webinar on how to express appreciation for long-term-care workers.  The webinar will be held on Thursday, October 13 at 2:00.  Learn more, including how to participate, from this notice.

DHS – Office of Mental Health and Substance Abuse Services and Office of Developmental Programs – Suicide Prevention – October 21

The Department of Human Services’ Office of Mental Health and Substance Abuse Services (OMHSAS) and the Office of Developmental Programs will host a quarterly “Statewide Positive Approaches & Practices” meeting that will share the most recent research and resources to help people with mental health and behavioral challenges, intellectual disabilities, autism, and other developmental disabilities live everyday lives.  The specific subject of the meeting, to be held on Friday, October 21 at 9:00, will be suicide prevention and intervention.  Find the meeting agenda and information about how to register to participate from this DHS 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.

Department of Health – Special Pharmaceutical Benefits Program – Advisory Council – October 27

The Department of Health’s Special Pharmaceutical Benefits Program Advisory Council will meet in Harrisburg on Thursday, October 27 at 10:00.  Interested individuals may attend in person or participate virtually.  For information on the location of the meeting and how to join the meeting virtually, see this Department of Health notice.

2022-09-30T21:16:03+00:00September 30th, 2022|COVID-19, HealthChoices, long-term care, Medical Assistance Bulletin, Meetings and notices|Comments Off on PA Health Policy Update for Friday, September 30

Pennsylvania Health Law Project Newsletter

The Pennsylvania Health Law Project has published its June 2022 newsletter.

Included in this month’s edition are articles about:

  • Changes in HealthChoices managed care plans that take effect on September 1.
  • The July 1 transition to Tempus as the financial management services vendor for Community HealthChoices, which means Tempus will take over paying direct care workers hired by Community HealthChoices participants as part of that program’s self-directed care model.
  • A reduction of the deadline for requesting a fair hearing in response to Medicaid eligibility rejection or termination from the program from 90 days, which it has been since the start of the COVID-19 emergency, back to the 30 days it was before that time.  This change is retroactive to May.
  • A lifting of the pandemic-driven suspension of the need for prior authorization for shift nursing services for Medicaid beneficiaries under the age of 21, which will take effect on November 1.

Read about these subjects and more in the June 2022 edition of Health Law News, the Pennsylvania Health Law Project’s newsletter.

2022-07-06T21:19:51+00:00July 7th, 2022|COVID-19, HealthChoices, Pennsylvania Medicaid, Pennsylvania Medicaid COVID-19, Pennsylvania Medicaid policy|Comments Off on Pennsylvania Health Law Project Newsletter

PA Health Policy Update for Friday, June 24

The following is an update of selected state health policy developments in Pennsylvania for the week of June 20-24, 2022.  (Some of the language used below is taken directly from state documents.)

General Assembly

  • The state House and Senate convened for voting session this week in Harrisburg.  Originally scheduled to be in session all week, the House and Senate cancelled session Thursday and Friday while legislative leaders and the governor continue to negotiate an FY 2023 spending plan.  Both chambers will back in session next week to attempt to finalize the budget by the state’s June 30 constitutionally-mandated deadline.
  • The Senate unanimously concurred with House amendments to Senate Bill 709 and sent it to Governor Wolf for his signature.  This bill establishes the CMV Education and Newborn Testing Act to create public awareness of cytomegalovirus and provide for CMV screening for certain newborns.
  • The Senate unanimously passed Senate Bill 1188, which seeks to increase awareness, testing, and access to treatment for Lyme disease.  The bill now goes to the House for consideration.
  • The Senate adopted Senate Resolution 288, which authorizes the Joint State Government Commission to research the impact of the pandemic on the staffing needs of long-term-care facilities.
  • The House unanimously passed House Bill 1393, which seeks to prevent overdose deaths by legalizing fentanyl test strips for personal use.  The bill was received in the Senate and referred to the Judiciary Committee for consideration.
  • The House unanimously passed House Bill 2527, which expands Pennsylvania’s “Good Samaritan” law to cover all opioid reversal medicines approved by FDA.  The bill was received in the Senate and referred to the Judiciary Committee.
  • The House passed House Bill 2032, which states that a health care professional’s failure to report a victim’s injuries to law enforcement as required by the Crimes Code does not constitute a criminal offense when a sexual assault victim wishes to remain anonymous.  The bill was received in the Senate and referred to the Judiciary Committee.
  • The House Human Services Committee favorably reported House Bill 107, which would require Medicaid managed care organizations to enter into an agreement with the Department of Human Services to enable the department to recoup any Medicaid funds that were spent on “provider-preventable conditions,” and House Bill 109, which increases the penalties for making a false claim against the state’s Medicaid program.
  • The House Judiciary Committee favorably reported House Bill 2660, which is a proposed constitutional amendment that would establish the General Assembly’s sole authority to establish in statute the rules regarding venue in civil lawsuits.
  • The Senate Health & Human Services Committee favorably reported House Bill 1561 and House Bill 1563 on third and final consideration.  These bills amend the Mental Health Procedures Act and the Drug and Alcohol Abuse Control Act, respectively, to align them with HIPAA and give providers, facilities, and insurers the ability to share more easily patient mental health and substance use disorder treatment information.  The committee also unanimously reported House Bill 2604, which amends the requirement for health care facility ID badges to permit the use of health system names rather than specific licensed facility names.
  • The Senate Consumer Protection & Professional Licensure Committee reported Senate Bill 485, which seeks to improve access to physical therapy services, and Senate Bill 511, which authorizes pharmacists and pharmacy interns to administer influenza and COVID-19 vaccines to individuals five and older.
  • The Senate amended Senate Bill 225 on second consideration.  The bill seeks to streamline and standardize the process for prior authorization of medical services.
  • Representative Wendy Thomas and Human Services Committee Chairman Frank Farry held a press conference to highlight House Bill 2686, which seeks to improve access to mental health care in Pennsylvania through the Behavioral Collaborative Care Model.  The legislation would provide grant funding to support the model’s implementation in physician practices.

Free COVID-19 Vaccines

Following the extension of authorization to administer COVID-19 vaccines to children six months of age and older, the federal Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) has announced that children ages six months to five years with Medicaid and CHIP coverage are eligible for COVID-19 vaccinations without cost-sharing.  Learn more about these free vaccines, and others who are eligible for free vaccines, from this CMS news release.

Department of Human Services

  • The Department of Human Services (DHS) has announced that the plan selection period for physical health HealthChoices will run from June 22 through August 16.  This selection period comes ahead of implementation of new physical health managed care agreements that will take effect on September 1.  The new agreements will result in some consumers having to choose a new physical health plan, and all consumers can review options and select a new health plan if they would like to make a change.  Notices are being mailed to all Medicaid recipients enrolled in a physical health managed care plan.  The letter explains whether or not a person’s current plan will continue to be available after September 1, all options for plans in their region, important dates, and how to choose or change their plan.  Approximately 500,000 current HealthChoices participants will have to select a new physical health plan by August 16 or be automatically assigned due to the agreement changes.  Learn more about the plan selection period and find links to additional resources from this DHS news release.
  • DHS has extended its calendar of remittance advice notifications, check mailings, and electronic funds transfers into early August.  Find the updated calendar here.
  • DHS has updated its list of drug companies that participate in the federal Medicaid drug rebate program.  For a drug product to be compensable through the Medical Assistance program the company that markets the product must participate in the Federal Medicaid Drug Rebate Program.
  • DHS’s Medical Assistance Advisory Committee met on Thursday, June 23.  Learn about the committee’s deliberations from presentations offered by:
  • DHS’s Medical Assistance Advisory Committee’s consumer subcommittee met on Wednesday, June 22.  Learn about the committee’s deliberations from presentations offered during the meeting by DHS’s Office of Medical Assistance Programs and its Office of Long-Term Living.
  • DHS has published a notice announcing the proposed assessment amount, the proposed assessment methodology, and the estimated aggregate impact on nursing facilities that will be subject to the assessment under the Nursing Facility Assessment Program beginning in FY 2023.  Find that notice here.
  • DHS has announced its intent to amend Pennsylvania’s Title XIX State Plan to update the Medical Assistance payment methodology and standards for payment of Medical Assistance-covered nursing facility services in FY 2023 to authorize the continued use of a budget adjustment factor in setting payment rates for nursing facility services.  Learn more about this proposal in this Pennsylvania Bulletin notice.
  • DHS has published its proposed annual case-mix per diem payment rates for FY 2023 for non-public and county nursing facilities that participate in the Medical Assistance program.  Find that notice here.

Department of Health

The Department of Health has issued a health alert updating its recommendations for identifying cases of monkeypox, testing for the disease, and counseling patients.  Find the updated guidance here.

The Department of Health has issued a health alert informing providers and public health officials that the first mosquito pools of the season to test positive for West Nile virus in Pennsylvania have been found in Montgomery, Philadelphia, Bucks, and Cumberland counties and that the risk of West Nile infection is likely to remain elevated over the next several months.  The alert reviews symptoms of West Nile virus and when and how to test for the virus.  Find the alert here.

Pennsylvania Rural Health Model

The Pennsylvania Rural Health Model is a federal program that seeks to test whether care delivery transformation in conjunction with hospital global budgets increase rural Pennsylvanians’ access to high-quality care and improve their health while also reducing the growth of hospital expenditures across payers, including Medicare, and improving the financial viability of rural Pennsylvania hospitals to improve health outcomes of and maintain continued access to care for Pennsylvania’s rural residents.  Eighteen Pennsylvania hospitals participate in this program.  CMS’s Center for Medicare and Medicaid Innovation has just published an evaluation of the program’s second year of operations.  Find that evaluation report here and go here for other information about the program, including a list of the participating hospitals.

Department of Drug and Alcohol Programs

The Department of Drug and Alcohol Programs has announced the expansion of ATLAS, the Addiction Treatment Locator, Assessment, and Standards platform, to Pennsylvania.  ATLAS evaluates addiction treatment facilities’ use of evidence-based best practices and offers a dashboard that enables those seeking assistance to search for and compare facilities using various criteria.  Learn more about ATLAS’s expansion to Pennsylvania in this Department of Drug and Alcohol Programs new release and on the ATLAS web site.  The news release notes that in the fall of this year there will be an open enrollment period for facilities that missed the first deadline for inclusion in ATLAS.

COVID-19:  By the Numbers

  • For the fourth consecutive week COVID-19 case counts in Pennsylvania fell, declining from a seven-day average of 2897 on June 15 to 1761 on June 22, a 39 percent decline.
  • The seven-day average of COVID-19-related deaths fell by more than half, from 24 to 11, over the same period of time.
  • The number of Pennsylvanians hospitalized with COVID-19 and on ventilators and in hospital intensive care units remained relatively unchanged over the past week.
  • Fifty-five of Pennsylvania’s 67 counties are currently experiencing high rates of community transmission of COVID-19, down from 56 counties last week.  Two counties experienced a moderate rate of community transmission and the remaining ten experienced a substantial rate.

Stakeholder Events

Department of Health – Public Health Advisory Council – June 27

The Department of Health’s Public Health Advisory Council will meet virtually on Monday, June 27 at 2:00.  The purpose of the meeting is to discuss the Preventive Health and Health Services Block Grant Federal Fiscal Year 2022 work plan.  For additional information about the meeting and how to participate, see this Pennsylvania Bulletin notice.

DHS – Medical Assistance Advisory Committee – Managed Long-Term Services and Supports Subcommittee Meeting – July 6

The managed long-term services and supports subcommittee of DHS’s Medical Assistance Advisory Committee will meet in Harrisburg on Wednesday, July 6 at 10:00; the meeting also will be available virtually.  For further information about the location of the meeting and how to participate virtually, see this announcement.

Pennsylvania Health Care Cost Containment Council – July 7

The Pennsylvania Health Care Cost Containment Council (PHC4) will meet virtually on Thursday, July 7 at 10:00.  For access to the meeting agenda and information about how to participate, see this Pennsylvania Bulletin notice.

Department of Health – COVID-19 Therapeutics – July 12

The Department of Health, Department of Human Services, and Pennsylvania Emergency Management Agency will hold a webinar on COVID-19 therapeutics on Tuesday, July 12 at 4:00.  The webinar is intended for providers and facility administrators and will cover why, when, and
how to prescribe and obtain outpatient COVID-19 treatment and preventive therapies.  Learn more about the webinar and how to register to participate in this notice.

 

2022-06-24T20:48:16+00:00June 24th, 2022|COVID-19, Federal Medicaid issues, HealthChoices, Meetings and notices, Pennsylvania Bulletin, Pennsylvania Medicaid, Pennsylvania Medicaid policy, Uncategorized|Comments Off on PA Health Policy Update for Friday, June 24

PA Health Policy Update for Friday, June 17

The following is an update of selected state health policy developments in Pennsylvania for the week of June 13-17, 2022.  (Some of the language used below is taken directly from state documents.)

Bookshelf with law booksGeneral Assembly

  • The state House and Senate convened for voting session this week in Harrisburg.
  • The Senate passed on final consideration Senate Bill 967, which creates the Women, Infants, and Children State Advisory Board.  The bill will now be sent to the House for consideration.
  • The House passed Senate Bill 709 on third consideration and final passage.  This bill establishes the CMV Education and Newborn Testing Act to create public awareness of cytomegalovirus and provide for CMV screening for certain newborns.  The bill will now be sent back to the Senate for concurrence.
  • The House also passed Senate Bill 915, which is the capital budget bill, on third consideration and final passage.  This will be sent back to the Senate for concurrence as well.
  • The House Health Committee convened on Monday, June 13 and favorably reported, among others, the following health care-related bills:
    • House Bill 2357, the Kratom Consumer Protection Act, which prohibits the preparation, manufacture, sale, or distribution of unsafe kratom products and the sale or distribution of kratom products to individuals younger than 21 years of age.
    • House Bill 2579, which seeks to increase the number of EMTs and paramedics in Pennsylvania by requiring the Department of Health to develop state-specific examinations for EMTs, EMRs, and paramedics and no longer rely on the National Registry exam.
    • House Bill 2604, which amends the requirement for health care facility ID badges to permit the use of health system names rather than specific licensed facility names.
  • House Bill 2604 was subsequently amended on the House floor during second consideration.  The amendment, which makes certain changes and adds a definition of “health system,” was agreed to by stakeholders and the Department of Health.
  • The House Insurance Committee convened on Tuesday, June 14 and favorably reported Senate Bill 1235, which prohibits the Department of Human Services from developing or using bidding or service zones that limit a health service corporation or hospital plan corporation contractor from submitting bids.
  • The House Veterans Affairs & Emergency Preparedness Committee met on Wednesday, June 15 and favorably reported, among other bills, Senate Bill 861 which enters Pennsylvania into the EMS Compact.
  • The state House and Senate will convene next Monday (6/20) through Friday (6/24) for voting session.

Department of Human Services

  • The Department of Human Services has issued a Medical Assistance Bulletin to notify dentists, federally qualified health centers, and rural health clinics that Medical Assistance will pay for teledentistry, effective with dates of service on and after May 2, 2022, and to announce that procedure codes for counseling services have been added to the MA program fee schedule.  Find the bulletin here.
  • The Department of Human Services has posted the contract into which it has entered HealthChoices physical health managed care organizations effective January 1, 2022.  Find that contract here.

COVID-19:  By the Numbers

  • For the third consecutive week COVID-19 case counts fell, declining from a seven-day average of 3223 on June 8 to 2143 on June 15, a 34 percent decline.
  • The seven-day average of COVID-19-related deaths also fell, from 23 to 16, over the same period of time.
  • The number of Pennsylvanians hospitalized with COVID-19 and on ventilators and in hospital intensive care units all declined over past week.
  • Fifty-six of Pennsylvania’s 67 counties are currently experiencing high rates of community transmission of COVID-19, down from 65 counties last week.  Two counties experienced moderate rates of community transmission and nine experienced a substantial rate.

Stakeholder Events

Rural Health Redesign Center Authority – June 21

The board of the Pennsylvania Rural Health Redesign Center Authority will meet virtually on Tuesday, June 21 at 10:00.  Learn more about the board and how to participate in this meet from this Pennsylvania Bulletin notice.

Department of Health – Preventative Health and Health Services Block Grant Application for Federal Fiscal Year 2022; Public Hearing – June 21

The Department of Health is making available copies of its proposed Preventive Health and Health Services Block Grant Application for federal FY 2022.  This block grant application shall serve as the state’s request to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services for block grant funding to address the Healthy People 2030 Health Status Objectives.  A public hearing will be held virtually on June 21 at 10:00.  Learn more about the hearing, how to participate, and how to obtain a copy of the grant funding application from this Pennsylvania Bulletin notice.

Department of Health – Health Research Advisory Committee – June 21

The Department of Health’s Health Research Advisory Committee will meet virtually on Tuesday, June 21 at noon.  The purpose of the meeting is to vote on 2022 priorities and to plan for future health research priorities.  For information about how to join the meeting see this Pennsylvania Bulletin notice.

Department of Human Services – Medical Assistance Advisory Committee – Consumer Subcommittee – June 22

The Medical Assistance Advisory Committee’s consumer subcommittee will meet virtually on Wednesday, June 22 at 1:00.  For information about how to join the meeting, go here.

Department of Human Services – Medical Assistance Advisory Committee – June 23

The Medical Assistance Advisory Committee will meet virtually on Thursday, June 23 at 10:00.  Go here to register to join the meeting.

Department of Human Services – Long-Term Care Learning Network/Nursing Facilities – June 23

DHS’s Long-Term Care Learning Network, part of its quality strategy for nursing facilities, is offering in collaboration with the Community HealthChoices managed care organizations and the Jewish Healthcare Foundation a “learning collaborative” webinar in which participants in past Long-Term Care Learning Network events share information about best practices for avoiding hospitalizations from nursing homes.  The webinar will be held on Thursday, June 23 at 2:00 and the deadline to sign up to share best practices is June 1.  For further information about the webinar, sharing best practices, and participating virtually, go here.

Patient Safety Authority – June 23

The board of the Patient Safety Authority will meet virtually on Thursday, June 23 at 1:00.   Registration is required.  Learn about how to participate in the meeting from this Pennsylvania Bulletin notice.

Department of Health – Public Health Advisory Council – June 27

The Department of Health’s Public Health Advisory Council will meet virtually on Monday, June 27 at 2:00.  The purpose of the meeting is to discuss the Preventive Health and Health Services Block Grant Federal Fiscal Year 2022 work plan.  For additional information about the meeting and how to participate, see this Pennsylvania Bulletin notice.

DHS – Medical Assistance Advisory Committee – Managed Long-Term Services and Supports Subcommittee Meeting – July 6

The managed long-term services and supports subcommittee of DHS’s Medical Assistance Advisory Committee will meet in Harrisburg on Wednesday, July 6 at 10:00; the meeting also will be available virtually.  For further information about the location of the meeting and how to participate virtually, see this announcement.

2022-06-17T21:32:45+00:00June 17th, 2022|COVID-19, Medical Assistance Bulletin, Meetings and notices, Pennsylvania Bulletin, Pennsylvania Medicaid, Pennsylvania Medicaid policy|Comments Off on PA Health Policy Update for Friday, June 17

PA Health Policy Update for the Week of February 7-11

The following is an update of selected state health policy developments in Pennsylvania for the week of February 7-11, 2022.  (Some of the language used below is taken directly from state documents.)

Proposed State FY 2023 Budget

This week Governor Wolf proposed his state budget for FY 2023.  Pennsylvania will go into FY 2023 with a budget surplus of approximately $3 billion and more than $2 billion in unspent federal American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA) funds.  Health care highlights include a $91 million increase in Medicaid rates for skilled nursing facilities; a $37 million increase in funding for county mental health services; and $325 million in ARPA fund spending for long-term care recruitment and retention, health care workforce development, behavioral health workforce expansion, and loan forgiveness for critical care workers (highlighted here).

The proposed state funding for the Department of Human Services is nearly $4 billion more than the current fiscal year’s total, though much of that reflects increased spending attributable to the loss of enhanced federal matching funds.  Proposed spending increases include:

  • rate increases for HealthChoices, Community HealthChoices, and CHIP managed care plans
  • increased Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program benefits
  • increased supplemental payments to personal care homes
  • increased county mental health funding
  • reducing the waiting list for intellectual disability services
  • expanding court-appointed child special advocates
  • expanding access to evidence-based home visiting programs (for parents of young children).

The budget also assumes a slight decrease in Medicaid spending attributable to the expectation that once the COVID-19 public health emergency officially ends states will be required to redetermine eligibility for the program – they are not permitted to do this during the emergency in exchange for additional federal assistance – and that Pennsylvania’s Medicaid enrollment will then be reduced.  The budget assumes a smaller increase in CHIP spending for the same reason.

For further information, find Wolf administration budget documents here and a summary of the proposed Department of Human Services budget here.

Governor Wolf

Governor Wolf signed House Bill 1082 into law on Wednesday following its unanimous passage by the House and Senate.  Act 9 of 2022 directs the Department of Health to establish and maintain an “Early Detection and Diagnosis of Alzheimer’s Disease or a Related Disorder” toolkit that includes best practices and cognitive assessment tools, including the use of appropriate diagnostics, to assist the primary care workforce with the detection, diagnosis, treatment, and care planning for individuals with Alzheimer’s disease.  It also makes a technical change in the definition of “High Medical Assistance hospital” in Act 2 (House Bill 253) to align it with the legislation’s original intent.

Governor Wolf signed Senate Bill 739 following its unanimous passage in the House and Senate.  Act 10 of 2022 appropriates $25 million in American Rescue Plan Act funding to support Pennsylvania’s emergency management services (EMS) companies.  A press release issued by the governor’s office can be viewed here.

General Assembly

  • The state House and Senate convened for voting session this week.  The following is a selection of health-related bills that received consideration.
    • House Bill 1440 passed on third and final consideration by a vote of 132 to 67.  This bill provides for the regulation and licensure of medical imaging and radiation therapy professionals.  It will now be sent to the Senate.
    • House Bill 19, which creates professional licensure for behavior analysts, passed on third and final consideration by a vote of 134-66.  The bill was received in the Senate and referred to the Consumer Protection and Professional Licensure Committee.
  • The House Health Committee convened on Monday, February 7 and favorably reported House Bill 1741, which allows for the prescribing and dispensing of off-label drugs to treat COVID-19, and House Bill 1693, which requires nursing home residents to be notified at the time of their admission that they have the option of having legal representation to assist with applying for Medicaid benefits.
  • The Senate Health & Human Services Committee met on Wednesday, February 9 and favorably reported Senate Bill 1057, which enables pharmacists to be reimbursed for administering COVID-19 antigen tests.
  • The House Appropriations Committee will begin budget hearings next Tuesday, February 15.  The Senate Appropriations Committee will begin budget hearings the following week, on February 22.  The hearing schedules can be viewed here.

Department of Human Services

  • The Department of Human Services (DHS) has issued a Medical Assistance Bulletin informing providers that Chartwell Pennsylvania will be the preferred specialty pharmacy in the Medicaid fee-for-service specialty pharmacy drug program effective July 1 and explaining to providers how to access drugs included in that program.  The bulletin applies to pharmacies and prescribers enrolled in Medicaid that serve participants in the fee-for-service delivery system.  Find the bulletin here.
  • DHS has updated the Medicaid program fee schedule to include a CPT code for dispensing the oral antiviral therapeutics Paxlovid (nirmatrelvir tablets and ritonavir tablets, co-packaged for oral use) and molnupiravir capsules for treatment of COVID-19.  Learn more, including the new CPT code, in this Pennsylvania Bulletin notice, which also includes information about submitting comments in response to this action.  Such comments are due within 30 days.
  • DHS has released the minutes of the January 27 meeting of the Medical Assistance Advisory Committee meeting.  Find them here.

Department of Health

The Department of Health (DOH) has updated its infection prevention and control recommendations for health care settings during the COVID-19 pandemic.  The update reflects a recent revision in the CDC’s guidance.  Find the state update here.

DOH has updated its information about state-sponsored COVID-19 testing sites in Berks, Blair, Centre, Clinton, Clearfield, Fayette, Monroe, Somerset, and Venango counties and its map of additional testing sites around the state.  Learn more in this DOH news release.

COVID-19:  By the Numbers

  • Daily COVID-19 case counts remain very high but fell significantly again over the past week.  Pennsylvania’s seven-day average yesterday (February 10) was 5163 cases day; a week ago (February 3) its seven-day average was 8512 cases a day.
  • To date, Pennsylvania has experienced more than 2.7 million cases of confirmed or probable COVID-19.
  • The number of new COVID-19-related deaths also remains very high but declined slightly over the past week.  Pennsylvania’s seven-day average yesterday (February 10) was 119 deaths a day; a week ago (February 3) its seven-day average was 135 deaths a day.
  • To date, more than 42,000 Pennsylvanians have died from COVID-19.
  • The Department of Health reports that the percentage of available adult ICU beds rose from 18.9 percent to 23.6 percent during the past week but the percentage of available pediatric ICU beds fell slightly, from 14.4 percent to 14 percent, over the same period of time.
  • The Department of Health also reports that that in approximately 17.3 percent of all staffed adult ICU beds are COVID-19 patients this week, down from 22.1 percent last week, and that 27.6 percent of all ventilators in the state are currently in use, down from 30.6 percent last week.
  • All 67 Pennsylvania counties continue to experience a high rate of COVID-19 transmission.
  • The decline in the number of new COVID-19 cases is reflected in a 36 percent decline over since February 1 in the number of Pennsylvanians hospitalized with the virus.  The number of people on ventilators also has fallen 36 21 percent since the first of the month and the number in ICUs has fallen 37 percent.

Stakeholder Events

Human Immunodeficiency Virus Community Prevention Planning Committee – February 16 and 17

The Statewide HIV Planning Group will hold virtual public meetings on Wednesday, February 16 and Thursday, February 17, 2022 from 9:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.  Learn more about the meetings and how to participate from this Pennsylvania Bulletin notice.

DHS – Managed Long-Term Services and Supports Subcommittee – March 1

The Medical Assistance Advisory Committee’s managed long-term services and support (MLTSS) subcommittee will meet virtually on Tuesday, March 1 at 10:00 a.m.  Go here to register to participate.

 

PA Health Policy Update for the Week of July 19-23

The following is an update of selected state health policy developments in Pennsylvania for the week of July 19-23, 2021.  (Some of the language used below is taken directly from state documents.)

General Assembly

The Senate Health & Human Services Committee and Communications & Technology Committee held a joint hearing on Wednesday to examine contracts awarded by the Department of Health  through emergency procurements.  The hearing largely focused on the department’s recent announcement that it intends to enter into a year-long $34 million contract with Public Consulting Group (PCG) to conduct COVID-19 contact tracing.  PCG is being hired to replace the state’s former contact-tracing vendor, Insight Global, which received a multi-million contract last year through an emergency procurement but was fired in May for mishandling sensitive personal information.  Read Acting Health Secretary Alison Beam’s testimony here and watch a replay of the hearing here.

Office of the Attorney General

Attorney General Josh Shapiro announced this week a $26 billion settlement with Cardinal, McKesson, AmerisourceBergen, and Johnson & Johnson for their role in the opioid epidemic.  This agreement would resolve the claims of nearly 4,000 state and local governments across the country that have filed lawsuits against these companies.  States have 30 days to agree to the settlement and local governments have 150 days.  Shapiro has estimated that Pennsylvania will receive as much as $1 billion from the settlement.

Department of Health

Wolf administration officials announced proposed changes in state nursing home regulations that seek to improve the quality of care received by residents by increasing the minimum direct care hours by 1.4 hours each day.  The current skilled nursing facility regulations have not been updated since 1999.   The Department of Health has indicated that it intends for this to be the first of five proposals to update the regulations governing long-term-care facilities.  With this announcement the Department of Health submitted the first installment of the proposed nursing home regulations to the General Assembly, the state’s Independent Regulatory Review Commission, and the Legislative Reference Bureau.  The next step is for these proposed regulations to be published in the Pennsylvania Bulletin by the end of July, which will start a 30-day public comment period.  Learn more from this Wolf administration news release about the newly proposed regulations and go here, to the web site of the Independent Regulatory Review Commission, to find the proposed regulations themselves.

Department of Human Services

DHS has updated its “Monthly Physical Health Managed Care Program Enrollment Report” with new data on the number of Pennsylvanians who participated in Medical Assistance managed care in April, May, and June.  The report breaks down Medicaid managed care enrollment by county, by racial and ethnic group, and by health plan.  Find the report here.

COVID-19:  By the Numbers

  • The daily number of new COVID-19 cases rose considerably over the past week, with Tuesday’s total the highest one-day figure in more than one month.  Even these higher numbers are only between one-third and one-half of what they were at this time two months ago.
  • The number of Pennsylvanians hospitalized with COVID-19 has risen 12 percent since the beginning of July and the number in hospital ICUs has risen a good deal in recent days.  The number of COVID-19 patients on ventilators continues to decline.
  • 5.6 million Pennsylvanians have been fully vaccinated against COVID-19, according to the state’s COVID-19 dashboard, but only 56,000 completed the full vaccination regimen in the past week – barely more than half the number of last week; another 823,000 Philadelphians are now fully vaccinated but only 10,000 reached that status in the past week.

Around the State

  • The Philadelphia Department of Public Health now “…strongly recommends that everyone, including fully vaccinated people, wear masks in all public indoor places,” Philadelphia health officials announced in their latest update on the state of COVID-19 in the city.
  • A long-sought psychiatric residential treatment facility in Philadelphia for kids with complex needs may close just a few months after it opened because the state has revoked its license.  The Philadelphia Inquirer explains why.
  • Opioid problems, addictions, and deaths are rising in western Pennsylvania, the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review reports.
  • Will Pennsylvania public school students be required to wear masks when they return to the classroom in September?  In Pittsburgh it looks like they will; elsewhere in Allegheny County, some will and some will not; in Philadelphia they definitely will; in the Scranton School District they are still deciding; and in the Central Bucks School District masks will be optional.
  • “Pennsylvania officials in Harrisburg are mulling pay increases, signing bonuses and student loan forgiveness for the state’s care workers who provide home and community based services – part of a plan to spend an additional $1.2 billion in federal funding for those services that allow seniors and people with disabilities to live independently,” according to the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, which also reports on the proposed strategy the state has submitted to the federal Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services.
  • City and State Pennsylvania, which describes itself as a “…multi-media news firm that dedicates its coverage to Pennsylvania’s state and local government, political and advocacy news,” has come out with a list of “The Pennsylvania Healthcare Power 100.”  See who made the cut here.
  • About 1500 employees of more than a dozen Pennsylvania nursing homes will go on a one-day strike on July 27.  GoErie explains why.
  • Worried about the recent increase in the number of new COVID-19 cases?  Experts in western Pennsylvania are not – at least not yet.  The Pittsburgh Tribune-Review shares their thoughts.
  • The Justice Department has informed the Wolf administration that it will not investigate whether the state ordered nursing homes to accept residents after they had been treated in a hospital for COVID-19, which would have been a violation of federal law, according to the Associated Press.

Stakeholder Events

Special Pharmaceutical Benefits Program

July 29 at 10:00

This is a telephone meeting.

Join on your computer or mobile app

Click here to join the meeting

Or call in (audio only)

+1 412-648-8888,,785376728#   United States, Pittsburgh

(866) 588-4789,,785376728#   United States (Toll-free)

Phone Conference ID: 785 376 728#

Traumatic Brain Injury Advisory Board

August 6 at 9:00 a.m.

The Traumatic Brain Injury Advisory Board will hold a virtual public meeting on Friday, August 6, 2021.  For information about the board’s mission, meeting materials, and how to participate virtually, see the meeting announcement in the Pennsylvania Bulletin.

Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) Community Prevention Planning Committee

August 11-12 at 9:00 a.m.

The state-wide Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) Community Prevention Planning Committee will hold public meetings on Wednesday, August 11, 2021, and Thursday, August 12, 2021 from 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.  To see the agenda and find information about where the meeting will be held and how individuals can participate virtually, see the meeting announcement in the Pennsylvania Bulletin.

2021-07-23T21:07:14+00:00July 23rd, 2021|Coronavirus, COVID-19, HealthChoices, long-term care, Pennsylvania Bulletin, Pennsylvania Medicaid, Pennsylvania Medicaid policy|Comments Off on PA Health Policy Update for the Week of July 19-23

Pennsylvania Health Law Project Newsletter

The Pennsylvania Health Law Project has published its latest Health Law News.
Included in the November edition are articles about:

  • a proposal to impose a work requirement on Pennsylvania Medicaid recipients
  • the CHIP program
  • leadership changes in health care-related state agencies
  • the rollout of the Community HealthChoices program of managed long-term services and supports
  • HealthChoices managed care contracts
  • changes in several state waiver programs

Find these stories here in the latest edition of Health Law News.

2017-11-20T06:00:01+00:00November 20th, 2017|HealthChoices, Pennsylvania Medicaid, Pennsylvania Medicaid policy|Comments Off on Pennsylvania Health Law Project Newsletter

Pennsylvania Health Law Project Newsletter

The Pennsylvania Health Law Project has published its latest Health Law News.
Included in the June/July edition are articles about the status of Pennsylvania’s FY 2018 budget, including possible changes in the state human services code; a delay in awarding new HealthChoices contracts; new quality initiatives in the state’s contracts with HealthChoices managed care organizations; an update on the implementation of Community HealthChoices, the state’s new program of managed long-term services and supports; and more.
Find the newsletter here.

2017-07-18T13:59:58+00:00July 18th, 2017|Pennsylvania Medicaid policy|Comments Off on Pennsylvania Health Law Project Newsletter

Pennsylvania Health Law Project Newsletter

The Pennsylvania Health Law Project has published its March 2017 newsletter.
Included in this edition are stories about:

  • new starting dates for the beginning of new HealthChoices physical health contracts
  • an update on Community HealthChoices, the state’s planned program of managed long-term services and supports for those who qualify for nursing home care but wish to continue living independently in the community
  • the launch of the state’s ABLE Savings Program through which children and adults with significant disabilities can open special state-sponsored investment accounts
  • the introduction of a new assessment tool for people in need of substance disorder treatment

Find the latest edition of PA Health Law News here.

2017-04-06T06:00:52+00:00April 6th, 2017|HealthChoices, Pennsylvania Medicaid, Pennsylvania Medicaid policy|Comments Off on Pennsylvania Health Law Project Newsletter

Controversy Continues Over HealthChoices Awards

Pennsylvania appears to be no closer to awarding new contracts to serve its HealthChoices Medicaid physical health program than it was when it first launched the process of soliciting bids for such contracts in September of 2015.
When losing bidders protested the contracts awarded based on the state’s original request for proposals and took the state to court, the state threw out all the bids and cast aside its decision and started the process all over again, issuing a new request for proposals last year.  When the state announced new awards in January the losing bidders again protested, this time alleging “irregularities” in the decision-making process.  With the renewed threat of litigation, the planned implementation of the new contracts on June 1 now appears to be in jeopardy.
For a closer look at the issues, the alleged irregularities, and what is being done to resolve this matter once and for all, see this Philadelphia Inquirer article.

2017-02-28T17:16:45+00:00February 28th, 2017|HealthChoices|Comments Off on Controversy Continues Over HealthChoices Awards
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