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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

PA Health Policy Update for Friday, September 2

The following is an update of selected state health policy developments in Pennsylvania for the week of August 29-September 2, 2022.  (Some of the language used below is taken directly from state documents.)

Revenue Collection Update

The Department of Revenue has released its monthly revenue update for August.  General Fund revenue collection exceeded estimate by $63.8 million, or 2.3 percent, for the month.  Fiscal year-to-date General Fund collections total $5.6 billion, which is $60.4 million, or 1.1 percent, above estimate.

Department of Human Services

  • The Department of Human Services (DHS) has published a Medical Assistance Bulletin to notify providers of updates to the Medical Assistance fee schedule for adult vaccines.  Find the bulletin here.
  • DHS has published a Medical Assistance Bulletin to expand the scope of eligible providers that may render certain services to include psychiatric outpatient clinics, outpatient drug and alcohol clinics, and physicians and to add behavioral health providers to certain procedure codes and make other procedure code changes.  Find the bulletin here.
  • DHS has published a Medical Assistance Bulletin to announce changes to the Medical Assistance fee schedule, including changes resulting from the implementation of the 2022 Healthcare Common Procedure Coding System (HCPCS) procedure codes updates.  In addition, it also is adding other procedure codes and making changes to procedure codes currently on the Medical Assistance fee schedule, including setting limitations and prior authorization requirements.  These changes are effective for dates of service on and after August 29, 2022.  Find the bulletin here.
  • DHS has published a Medical Assistance Bulletin to inform Federally Qualified Health Centers and Rural Health Clinics of updates to the Medical Assistance fee schedule for the distribution of take-home supplies of nasal or injectable naloxone to Medicaid
    beneficiaries.  Find the bulletin here.
  • DHS has published brief notices addressing extra recoupments it has returned to some providers and provider enrollment summary enhancements.
  • DHS has posted federal financial participation rate changes and continued billing requirements for community support service providers.  Find the notice here.
  • DHS has posted HealthChoices enrollment and Medical Assistance Transportation Program utilization data for July.  Find the information here.

Department of Health

  • The Department of Health (DOH) has updated its “Innovative Hospital Model” guidance to make requested changes about locations eligible to operate outpatient emergency departments.  Find that updated information here.
  • DOH has revised its guidance for contacting the Division of Acute and Ambulatory Care prior to an event or change that requires advance notification, such as addition of new equipment or occupancy.  The updated guidance includes email subjects that providers should use when sending these notices to expedite review by the Division of Acute and Ambulatory Care.  Find the updated guidance here.
  • DOH’s annual Pennsylvania Long Term Care Questionnaire is now open until Friday, October 28.  Providers that have not received an email containing login information and instructions should contact Thomas Gavrish at tgavrish@pa.gov.
  • DOH will offer free potassium iodide, or KI, tablets on Thursday, September 15 to Pennsylvanians who are within 10 miles of the state’s four active nuclear power plants as part of routine preventive efforts in case of future emergencies.  Learn more from this department news release.

COVID-19:  By the Numbers

Monkeypox

  • DHS has published a Medical Assistance Bulletin to advise providers of the addition of procedure codes to use when billing for diagnostic laboratory testing for the orthopoxvirus and for the administration of the monkeypox vaccines.  Find the bulletin here.
  • The CDC has posted an updated map showing the distribution of 19,465 confirmed cases of monkeypox in the U.S. as of September 1, up from 16,926 cases on August 25.  561 of those cases were in Pennsylvania, up from 465 a week ago.
  • As of August 29, 327 of those Pennsylvania monkeypox cases were in Philadelphia, up from 257 a week ago.  Learn more about monkeypox in Philadelphia from the city Department of Public Health’s digital monkeypox dashboard.

Stakeholder Events

Department of Human Services – Mental and Behavioral Health Considerations for Long-Term Care – September 8

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 mental and behavioral health considerations for long-term care on Thursday, September 8 at 2:00.  This presentation will explore the most common behavioral health diagnoses seen among residents living in nursing facilities and will share approaches to managing appropriate use of psychotropic medication and best practices around deprescribing.  Learn more about the event and how to participate from this notice.

Pennsylvania Health Care Cost Containment Council – September 8

The Pennsylvania Health Care Cost Containment Council (PHC4) will meet virtually on Thursday, September 8 at 10:00.  Agendas will be available here 24 hours.  The public is invited to participate. Contact rgreenawalt@phc4.org at least 24 hours in advance for participation instructions.

Patient Safety Authority – September 8

The Patient Safety Authority will meet virtually on Thursday, September 22 at 1:00.  For information about how to participate, see this Pennsylvania Bulletin notice.

DHS – Medical Assistance Advisory Committee Consumer Subcommittee – September 21

The consumer subcommittee of DHS’s Medical Assistance Advisory Committee will meet virtually on Wednesday, September 21 at 1:00.  Go here to register to participate.

DHS – Medical Assistance Advisory Committee – September 22

DHS’s Medical Assistance Advisory Committee will meet virtually on Thursday, September 22 at 10:00.  Go here to register to participate.

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.

 

2022-09-02T18:45:52+00:00September 2nd, 2022|COVID-19, HealthChoices, Medical Assistance Bulletin, Meetings and notices, Pennsylvania Bulletin, Pennsylvania Medicaid, Pennsylvania Medicaid policy|Comments Off on PA Health Policy Update for Friday, September 2

PA Health Policy Update for Friday, August 26

The following is an update of selected state health policy developments in Pennsylvania for the week of August 22-26, 2022.  (Some of the language used below is taken directly from state documents.)

Governor Wolf

In the wake of the governor’s signing of Act 54, the Wolf administration has written to institutional facilities and programs that will receive American Rescue Plan Act funding.  Among the recipients will be nursing facilities, personal care homes, assisted living residences, home- and community-based providers, and LIFE programs.  The correspondence outlines how much funding has been allocated to each category of recipient, notes any tasks recipients may need to complete to receive their money, explains that recipients should know how much they will receive before their money arrives, and notes that payments will be made during the fall of 2022.  Find the communication here.

The Courts

The state Supreme Court has issued an order amending the Pennsylvania Rules on Civil Procedure governing venue for medical malpractice.  The amendment eliminates the existing requirement that a medical professional liability action may only be filed in the county in which the cause of action occurred.  The court’s order, amendment, and the Civil Procedural Rules Committee adoption report may be viewed here.  It will take effect January 1, 2023.

Pennsylvania’s Commonwealth Court has ordered the state’s Department of Health to make public information about how many medical marijuana patients have been authorized by the state to use cannabis to treat an opioid addiction.  Learn more from the Commonwealth Court decision.

Department of Health

The Department of Health announced in this Pennsylvania Bulletin notice that it will adopt the 2022 edition of the Guidelines for Design and Construction of Hospitals and Guidelines for Design and Construction of Outpatient Facilities (Guidelines) to set the standard for renovation and constructions at hospitals and ambulatory surgery facilities effective February 1, 2023.  The department had previously adopted the 2018 Guidelines and will permit hospitals and ambulatory surgical facilities to elect to use either the 2018 or 2022 Guidelines from August 1, 2022, until January 31, 2023.  After February 1, 2023, the 2022 Guidelines must be used.

The Department of Health announced details on how it will implement the Cytomegalovirus Education and Newborn Screening Act that was signed into law on June 27, 2022 in this Pennsylvania Bulletin notice.

Department of Drug and Alcohol Programs

The Department of Drug and Alcohol Programs has issued an information bulletin implementing Act 33, which Governor Wolf signed on July 7 and took effect immediately.  Act 33 makes significant changes in the confidentiality provisions for substance use disorder treatment records under Pennsylvania law and in the Department of Drug and Alcohol Programs’ enforcement of those provisions.  Find the bulletin here.

Auditor General

The Pennsylvania Department of the Auditor General announced the release of tobacco settlement fund audits for 22 health care facilities in Allegheny, Berks, Bucks, Chester, Clarion, Cumberland, Dauphin, Luzerne, Montour, Montgomery, Philadelphia, Schuylkill, Washington, Westmoreland, and York counties.

COVID-19:  By the Numbers

Monkeypox

The Department of Health has established a “what you need to know about monkeypox” web page.  Find it here.

The CDC has posted an updated map showing the distribution of 16,926 confirmed cases of monkeypox in the U.S. as of August 25.  465 of those cases were in Pennsylvania.

As of August 22, 257 of those Pennsylvania monkeypox cases – more than half of them – were in Philadelphia.  Learn more about monkeypox in Philadelphia from the city Department of Public Health’s digital monkeypox dashboard.

Stakeholder Events

Department of Human Services – Improving Resident Relationships in Long-Term Care– September 1

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 improving resident relationships in long-term-care facilities.  The webinar will seek to educate staff about the prevalence of resident-to-resident aggression in nursing facilities and teach webinar participants how to recognize and address it in their facilities.  The webinar will be held on Thursday, September 1 at 2:00.  Learn more about the webinar and how to participate from this notice.

Behavioral Health Commission for Adult Mental Health – September 1

The next meeting of the Behavioral Health Commission for Adult Mental Health will take place on September 1 from 1:00-6:30.  Interested individuals may attend in person or virtually.  Go here to learn more about the participation options.

Department of Health – Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) Community Prevention Planning Committee – September 7-8

The Statewide HIV Planning Group will hold a public meeting at the Best Western Premier Central Hotel and Conference Center, 800 East Park Drive, Harrisburg, PA on Wednesday, September 7, 2022, and Thursday, September 8, 2022, from 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.  Learn more from this Pennsylvania Bulletin notice.

Department of Health – Pennsylvania Achieving Better Care by Monitoring All Prescriptions Board – October 25

The Department of Health’s Pennsylvania Achieving Better Care by Monitoring All Prescriptions Board will hold its next meeting on Tuesday, October 25 at 9:30.  The meeting location will depend on COVID-19 mitigation efforts at that time.  If the meeting can be held in person it will be in Room 129 in the Pennsylvania Health and Welfare Building at 625 Forster Street in Harrisburg.  If the meeting is held virtually it will be held at bit.ly/ABC_MAP.  To dial in, call 267-332-8737, conference ID 440 338 696#.  Learn more from this Pennsylvania Bulletin notice.

 

 

 

2022-08-29T15:44:30+00:00August 29th, 2022|COVID-19, Meetings and notices, Pennsylvania Bulletin, Pennsylvania Medicaid, Pennsylvania Medicaid policy|Comments Off on PA Health Policy Update for Friday, August 26

PA Health Policy Update for Friday, July 15

The following is an update of selected state health policy developments in Pennsylvania for the week of July 11-15, 2022.  (Some of the language used below is taken directly from state documents.)

Final FY 2023 Budget

Governor Wolf signed the Fiscal Code (House Bill 1421) into law on Monday, July 11. With the Fiscal Code’s signing, all the relevant budget-related bills for FY 2023 are enacted, including the budget bill (Senate Bill 1100) and the Tax Code (House Bill 1342).

Governor Wolf

Governor Wolf has signed several bills addressing health care issues.

  • House Bill 1421 increases Medicaid rates for skilled nursing facilities to help them meet upcoming Department of Health regulation updates that in part will increase staffing requirements.  The rate increase of nearly 20 percent increases Medicaid funding for skilled nursing care by almost $300 million a year.
  • House Bill 2097 amends Title 35 (Health and Safety), in emergency medical services system, further providing for basic life support ambulances.
  • House Bill 2419 amends the Outpatient Psychiatric Oversight Act by adding a definition of “telebehavioral health technology” and provisions regarding the use of the technology.
  • House Bill 2604 amends the employee photo identification provisions of the Health Care Facilities Act.
  • House Bill 2679 amends the Pharmacy Act to preserve three regulatory suspensions authorized under the COVID-19 disaster emergency declaration, including the ability of pharmacists to provide influenza and COVID-19 vaccines to children ages five and older.
  • Senate Bill 818 amends the Health Care Facilities Act for the purpose of allowing ambulatory surgical facilities to seek an exception or waiver from the Department of Health for certain surgical procedures and permits cardiac catheterization to be performed in ambulatory surgical facilities.
  • Senate Bill 1235 amends the Insurance Company Law, further providing for contracts and coverage packages in comprehensive health care for uninsured children.
  • House Bill 2032 amends the Sexual Assault Testing and Evidence Collection Act, providing that the failure to report injuries by firearm or criminal act does not constitute an offense if the submission of sexual assault evidence is an anonymous submission.

General Assembly

The state House and Senate are currently in recess. The House is scheduled to return to session on Monday, September 12 and the Senate is scheduled to return on Monday, September 19.

Department of Human Services

COVID-19:  By the Numbers

  • The daily average of newly reported COVID-19 cases rose 17 percent over the past week, to 2850 new cases a day.
  • COVID-19-related deaths in the past week remained comparable to their level of recent weeks.
  • The number of Pennsylvanians hospitalized with COVID-19 and on ventilators because of the virus remained generally steady over the past week but the number in hospital ICUs rose 30 percent.
  • Fifty-two of Pennsylvania’s 67 counties are currently experiencing high rates of community transmission of COVID-19, down from 62 counties last week.  Four counties experienced a moderate rate of community transmission and 11 a substantial rate.

Monkeypox

The Department of Health has issued a health alert advising providers about the current state of availability of testing for monkeypox and when providers should consider pursuing such testing for their patients.  Find that alert here.

The CDC has posted an updated map showing the distribution of 1053 confirmed cases of monkeypox in the U.S. as of July 13, 32 of them in Pennsylvania and more than half of those cases in Philadelphia.

Stakeholder Events

Department of Human Services – Medical Assistance Advisory Committee – Consumer Subcommittee – July 27

The Medical Assistance Advisory Committee’s consumer subcommittee will meet virtually on Wednesday, July 27 at 1:00.  Go here to register to participate.

Department of Human Services – Medical Assistance Advisory Committee – July 28

The Medical Assistance Advisory Committee will meet virtually on Thursday, July 28 at 10:00.  Go here to register to participate.

Department of Health – Special Pharmaceutical Benefits Program Advisory Council – July 28

The Department of Health’s Special Pharmaceutical Benefits Program (SPBP) Advisory Council will hold a public teleconference meeting on Thursday, July 28, 2022, from 10 a.m. to 12 p.m. The SPBP Advisory Council will provide program guidance and recommendations to the Department’s SPBP in regard to the following: drug formulary; covered lab services; drug utilization review; clinical programs; eligibility; and program management. Learn more about the meeting and how to register to participate in this notice.

 

2022-07-18T17:02:52+00:00July 18th, 2022|COVID-19, Medical Assistance Bulletin, Pennsylvania Medicaid, Pennsylvania Medicaid policy, Pennsylvania proposed FY 2023 budget|Comments Off on PA Health Policy Update for Friday, July 15

PA Health Policy Update for the Week of April 25-29

The following is an update of selected state health policy developments in Pennsylvania for the week of April 25-29, 2022.  (Some of the language used below is taken directly from state documents.)

Pennsylvania State MapGeneral Assembly

  • The House of Representatives held session Monday (4/25), Tuesday (4/26), and Wednesday (4/27).  The Senate was in recess this week.
  • The House Professional Licensure Committee held an informational meeting on Monday, April 25 to examine House Bill 1956, which creates a license for certified anesthesiologist assistants.
  • The House Health Committee convened on Tuesday, April 26 and favorably reported the following bills.
    • House Bill 398, which requires a non-custodial parent of a child to enroll their child in their own health insurance plan before seeking Medicaid coverage.
    • House Bill 2441, which gives legislative agencies access to records information for research purposes under the Vital Statistics Law.
    • Senate Bill 317, which provides for the authority to prescribe antibiotics to treat sexually transmitted infections without having examined the individual for whom the drug is intended, in accordance with the Expedited Partner Therapy in the Management of Sexually Transmitted Diseases guidance issued by the CDC.
    • Senate Bill 818, which seeks to align procedures permitted in licensed ambulatory surgery centers with those of the federal Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS).
  • The House Human Services Committee met on Tuesday, April 26 and favorably reported House Bill 1644, which directs the Department of Human Services (DHS) to develop an escalation process to place Medicaid patients with behavioral health or long-term-care needs in an appropriate care setting, and House Bill 2530, which ends the practice of prudent pay in DHS’s Office of Developmental Programs.

Department of Human Services

COVID-19:  By the Numbers

  • Daily COVID-19 case counts climbed for the fifth consecutive week.  The state’s seven-day average of new cases rose 29 percent, from 1343 cases on April 21 to 1734 on April 28.
  • The seven-day average of COVID-19-related deaths resumed its decline after a one-week detour, falling from 16 on April 20 to nine on April 28.
  • The growing number of COVID-19 cases in the state – Wednesday, April 27 and Thursday, April 28 were the first days the state experienced more than 2000 new cases in a single day since late February – has led to a corresponding increase in COVID-19-related hospitalizations, which rose 22 percent in the past week and have risen 48 percent since April 1.
  • These figures, though, need to be viewed in context.  The last time the state had as many new cases as it experienced in recent days more than twice as many Pennsylvanians were hospitalized because of COVID-19 than are hospitalized today.
  • In addition, this resurgence in new COVID-19 cases and hospitalizations has not translated into more serious types of hospital care.  The number of COVID-19 patients in hospital ICUs was the same on April 28 as it was on April 1 and the number of such patients on ventilators is now just two-thirds of the number receiving such care on April 1.
  • The numbers of COVID-19 patients in hospital ICUs and on ventilators, moreover, are only a fraction of what they were in late February, the last time daily case counts were as high as they were this week.  During the week of April 25 the number of COVID-19 patients in hospital ICUs is only 24 percent of what it was in late February while the number on ventilators is only 18 percent of what it was in late February.
  • During the past week 22 Pennsylvania counties, up from nine last week, experienced high rates of community transmission of COVID-19; three counties, the same number as last week, experienced a low rate of transmission; 22 counties, up from 20 last week, experienced a substantial rate of community transmission; and the remaining 20 counties experienced a moderate rate.

Department of Drug and Alcohol Programs

The Department of Drug and Alcohol Programs has announced the opening of its Substance Use Disorder Loan Repayment Program.  This program seeks to help substance use disorder treatment and single county authority-funded case management professionals repay their outstanding qualifying educational loans.  Applications must be submitted via the online application portal by May 26.  Eligible practitioners must have the capacity to provide substance use disorder treatment or single-county authority-funded case management services at approved practice site(s) and meet the requirements in Section 6 of the Project Summary.  Selected candidates must demonstrate a minimum of two prior years of experience in the substance use disorder treatment field and agree to a service commitment of two additional years.  For more information, see the Application Guidance.  Questions regarding the grants and the application process should be emailed to RA-DAGrantsMgmt@pa.gov.

Stakeholder Events

Behavioral Health Services for the Nursing Facility Population – May 3

DHS’s Office of Long-Term Living, Office of Mental Health and Substance Abuse Services (OMHSAS), the HealthChoices behavioral health managed care organizations, and the Community HealthChoices managed care organizations will host a joint webinar on Tuesday, May 3 at 2:00 on the importance of providing behavioral health services in nursing facilities and ensuring that nursing facilities know how to gain access to these services.  Go here for more information and to register to participate.

Department of Health – Organ Donation Advisory Committee – May 5

The Department of Health’s Organ Donation Advisory Committee will hold a virtual public meeting on Thursday, May 5 at 10:00 to review progress in the area of organ and tissue donation in Pennsylvania, recommend education and awareness activities, recommend priorities in expenditures from the Organ and Tissue Donation Awareness Fund (Fund), and advise the Acting Secretary on matters relating to the administration of the fund.  For information about how to participate, see this Pennsylvania Bulletin notice.

Department of Health – Traumatic Brain Injury Advisory Board – May 6

The Traumatic Brain Injury Advisory Board will hold a public meeting on Friday, May 6 at 10:00 at the Pennsylvania Training and Technical Assistance Network, 6340 Flank Drive in Harrisburg, in the Dauphin Conference Room.  To learn more about the meeting, and for information about how to participate virtually, see this Pennsylvania Bulletin notice.

Department of Human Services – Medical Assistance Advisory Committee – Managed Long-Term Services and Supports Subcommittee – May 10

The managed long-term services and supports subcommittee of DHS’s Medical Assistance Advisory Committee will meet virtually on Tuesday, May 10 at 10:00.  To register to participate, go here.

2022-04-29T20:21:51+00:00April 29th, 2022|Coronavirus, COVID-19, Meetings and notices, Pennsylvania Bulletin, Pennsylvania Medicaid, Pennsylvania Medicaid policy|Comments Off on PA Health Policy Update for the Week of April 25-29

PA Health Policy Update for the Week of January 3-7

The following is an update of selected state health policy developments in Pennsylvania for the week of January 3-7, 2022.  (Some of the language used below is taken directly from state documents.)

Governor Wolf

Governor Wolf announced that the state is organizing regional support sites for both hospitals and long-term-care facilities and strike teams to support hospitals facing staffing shortages.  The effort, to be coordinated by the Department of Health and the Pennsylvania Emergency Management Agency, will include the following major components:

  • Critical capacity support through the launch of regional support sites for Pennsylvania hospitals suffering from a lack of beds or staffing to meet inpatient needs.  Hospitals struggling to meet inpatient demands will have the opportunity to transfer patients to ​hospitals within these regional sites for care.  Each regional site will have increased capacity for approximately 60 days beginning in February, supported by medical support staff including physicians, respiratory therapists, and registered nurses.
  • Staffing support that will be sent directly to hospitals from the Department of Health based on identified need.  Staffing resources may include physicians, respiratory therapists, and registered nurses for short-term deployments over the next three months.
  • Expanded long-term-care capacity through the launch of regional sites to allow for more rapid discharge of patients by hospitals.  Each site will increase the state’s capacity to support long-term-care residents with additional medical staff, including registered nurses and aides.

Go here to see the announcement from the governor’s office.

General Assembly

  • The House of Representatives will hold voting session during the week of January 10 on Monday (1/10), Tuesday (1/11), and Wednesday (1/12).
  • House Bill 1280, which amends the Patient Test Result Information Act, is scheduled for second consideration on Monday and third consideration on Tuesday.  This bill would eliminate the definition of “significant abnormality” and revise the written notice requirement for health care providers in an effort to provide clarity and eliminate conflicting interpretations of the act.
  • The House Health Committee is scheduled to convene on Tuesday, January 11 at 9:30 a.m. to consider, among other bills, House Bill 1630, which would grant the Pennsylvania Auditor General the authority to audit managed care contracts and subcontracts with pharmacy benefit managers (PBMs) in Medicaid.  The committee also will consider Senate Bill 780, which would create public awareness of cytomegalovirus (CMV) and provide for CMV screening for certain newborns.

State Revenue Collection

The Revenue Department announced that Pennsylvania collected $3.8 billion in General Fund revenue in the month of December – $464.3 million, or 13.7 percent, more than projected.  Year-to-date General Fund revenue collections total $22.6 billion, which is $1.5 billion, or 7.0 percent, above estimate.

Department of Human Services

The Department of Human Services has issued a Medical Assistance Bulletin explaining that Medicaid will pay pharmacies for the administration of vaccines to Medicaid beneficiaries by licensed pharmacists effective November 1, 2021.  The bulletin also provides instructions for pharmacies to submit claims for the administration of vaccines by pharmacists to Medicaid fee-for-service beneficiaries.  Find the bulletin here.

Department of Health

  • The Department of Health (DOH) has issued revised guidance, applicable to the general population in a community setting, about who needs isolation or quarantine because of a diagnosis of COVID-19 or contact with someone who has been diagnosed with or is suspected of having COVID-19 and how long that isolation or quarantine must last.  Find that guidance here.
  • DOH has updated its recommended work restrictions for health care workers based on vaccination status and type of exposure.
  • DOH has recirculated a series of long-term care-specific vaccine materials that long-term-care facilities can use in their efforts to comply with federal requirements for staff vaccination.  Find the vaccine outreach toolkit here and an accompanying fact sheet here.
  • DOH has updated its long-term-care facilities COVID-19 visitation guidance FAQ.  Find it here.  (Note:  this link opens to a downloadable file.)
  • DOH has issued an alert about an outbreak of  hepatitis A in southeastern Pennsylvania.  The alert includes instructions for providers about diagnosing the condition, preserving laboratory samples, and reporting diagnosed cases to the state.
  • DOH has introduced changes in Lyme disease surveillance requirements and testing practices and has shared these changes with providers in this health alert.

COVID-19:  By the Numbers

  • Daily COVID-19 case counts are higher than they have been at any time since the pandemic began.  The state’s total of 29,026 new cases on Thursday, January 6 was the highest single-day total since the pandemic began, breaking a new record set the previous day.
  • The number of new COVID-19-related deaths remains high.
  • To date, Pennsylvania has had 1.8 million confirmed cases of COVID-19, nearly 400,000 cases that have been classified as “probably” COVID-19, and 37,500 deaths attributed to the disease.
  • All 67 Pennsylvania counties continue to experience a high rate of COVID-19 transmission.
  • From December 1 through December 31, the number of Pennsylvanians hospitalized because of COVID-19 rose 33 percent; the number in hospital ICUs because of COVID-19 rose 12 percent; and the number on ventilators because of the virus rose 23 percent.
  • This situation is reflected in the high rate of occupancy in the state’s hospitals.  There currently are only 477 unoccupied adult ICU beds – 13.4 percent of the total of such beds in the state; 2026 unoccupied medical/surgical beds – 10 percent of such beds; 41 unoccupied pediatric ICU beds (11 percent); 239 unoccupied pediatric beds (21.9 percent); and 912 unoccupied airborne isolation beds (28.4).
  • On January 4 the Department of Health elaborated on some of these figures, reporting that approximately 28 percent of all staffed adult ICU beds are occupied by COVID-19 patients and that 32 percent of all ventilators state-wide are in use.
  • Media reports confirm the challenges some communities and hospitals are facing, including limited numbers of hospital beds, staffing challenges, and difficulty getting enough COVID-19 testing materials.  For examples, see these reports about conditions in the Philadelphia area (here, here, and here), the Pittsburgh area (here and here), and central Pennsylvania.
  • According to the CDC, as of Thursday, December 30, 74.1 percent of Pennsylvanians age 18 and older are fully vaccinated.

Stakeholder Events

Health Research Advisory Committee – January 10

The Department of Health’s Health Research Advisory Committee will hold a virtual public meeting on Monday, January 10, 2022 at 2:30 pm via Microsoft Teams at (267) 332-8737 with Conference ID: 994 021 882#.  Learn more from this Pennsylvania Bulletin notice.

Medical Marijuana Advisory Board – January 27

The Medical Marijuana Advisory Board will hold virtual meetings on the following days at 10:00 am:  Thursday, January 27, 2022; Tuesday, March 22, 2022; Thursday, May 26, 2022; Thursday, July 28, 2022; Tuesday, September 27, 2022; and Tuesday, November 22, 2022.  These virtual meetings will be broadcasted live for the public through Commonwealth Media Services. Check www.medicalmarijuana.pa.gov and click on the Medical Marijuana Advisory Board tab for live streaming information the day of the virtual meeting.  Learn more from this Pennsylvania Bulletin notice.

Special Pharmaceutical Benefits Program Advisory Council – January 27

The Statewide Special Pharmaceutical Benefits Program Advisory Council will hold a public teleconference meeting on Thursday, January 27, 2022 at 10 am.  To participate dial in by location at (412) 648-8888 or (866) 588-4789.  The meeting ID is 487 872 318#.  Learn more from this Pennsylvania Bulletin notice.

COVID-19 Update: March 31, 2020

Coronavirus Update: March 31, 2020.

COVID-19-related developments in Pennsylvania as of 4:00 p.m. on Tuesday, March 31.  To receive this daily update directly, sign up for our mailing list at info@pasafetynet.org.

State Update

Governor Wolf                                                                                                     

Today, Governor Wolf announced that the President approved part of his request for a major disaster declaration to support state, county, and local responses to COVID-19.  Included in the approved requests are reimbursement of up to 75 percent of eligible expenses (staff overtime, supplies, equipment) related to COVID-19 response for all levels of state government and private non-profits that qualify and direct federal assistance for materials and supplies to state and local governments.  Staff from the Pennsylvania Emergency Management Agency will be contacting potential applicants in the coming weeks.

The governor also expanded his ‘Stay at Home’ order to include seven more counties to mitigate the spread of the virus:  Cameron, Crawford, Forest, Franklin, Lawrence, Lebanon, and Somerset counties until April 30 for all 33 affected counties.

State Daily COVID-19 Briefing

  • There are now positive cases of COVID-19 in 60 of Pennsylvania’s 67 counties.
  • Five percent of the total 4,843 cases are affected health care workers while fewer than one percent are nursing home-related.
  • The administration continues to monitor the impact of the virus on New York and to prepare Pennsylvania for the expected surge of positive cases by stockpiling supplies, providing regulatory relief for health care professionals, seeking health care volunteers, and monitoring the availability of ICU and nursing home beds throughout the state.
  • About 40 percent of the licensed ICU beds in the state are still unoccupied.  The Department of Health continues to monitor the availability of ventilators as well.

Department of Health

The Department of Health released interim guidance on licensing and survey activities consistent with the guidance issued by CMS calling for states to prioritize provider survey and certification activities during the pandemic.

DOH also shared a guidance document from CMS, counseling state surveyors on how providers can limit the transmission of the virus and a CMS memo specifically related tor limiting the spread within dialysis facilities.

Department of Human Services, Office of Children Youth and Families

The Office of Children, Youth, and Families (OCYF) has developed these linked recommendations for entities operating as a Child Residential and Day Treatment Facility.

Department of Human Services, Office of Mental Health and Substance Abuse Services

The Office of Mental Health and Substance Abuse Services (OMHSAS) issued guidance for County Emergency Behavioral Health/Disaster Crisis Outreach and Referral Teams.  That guidance can be found here.

In addition, the office shared documents from the Center for the Study of Traumatic Stress related to the psychological effects of quarantine.  One for helping homebound children, one directed at Public Health leaders, and one directed at health care providers.

Yesterday the federal Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) published a major update of Medicare and Medicaid regulations that included blanket waivers of a large number of Medicare and Medicaid regulations and requirements.  The following is a summary of the major aspects of this new regulation.

Federal Update

New Policies and Waivers From Medicare and Medicaid Regulations and Requirements

CMS has introduced dozens of changes that involve waivers from current regulations and requirements.  A comprehensive, 26-page CMS document describing these changes can be found here and below are the highlights organized into four broad categories:

  • increasing hospital capacity (what CMS calls “hospitals without walls”)
  • expanding the health care workforce
  • increasing the use of telehealth in Medicare
  • reducing paperwork

Increasing Hospital Capacity

  • CMS is waiving the enforcement of section 1867(a) of EMTALA to permit hospitals to screen patients at off-site locations to help prevent the spread of COVID-19.
  • CMS is waiving certain requirements under the Medicare conditions of participation allow for flexibilities during hospital and psychiatric hospital surges, permitting non-hospital buildings/space to be used for patient care and quarantine sites.
  • For the duration of the public health emergency, CMS is waiving certain requirements under the Medicare conditions of participation and the provider-based department requirements to permit hospitals to establish and operate as part of the hospital any location meeting those conditions of participation for hospitals that continue to apply during the public health emergency. This waiver also permits hospitals to change the status of their current provider-based department locations to the extent necessary to address the needs of hospital patients.
  • CMS is waiving requirements to permit acute-care hospitals to house acute-care inpatients in excluded distinct part units, such as excluded distinct part unit inpatient rehabilitation facilities or inpatient psychiatric facilities, where the distinct part unit’s beds are appropriate for acute-care inpatients.
  • CMS is permitting acute-care hospitals with excluded distinct part inpatient psychiatric units to relocate inpatients from the excluded distinct part psychiatric unit to acute-care beds and units as a result of a disaster or emergency.
  • CMS is permitting acute-care hospitals with excluded distinct part inpatient rehabilitation units that, as a result of a disaster or emergency, need to relocate inpatients from the excluded distinct part rehabilitation unit to an acute-care bed and unit.
  • CMS is waiving certain physical environment requirements. Provided that the state has approved the location as one that sufficiently addresses safety and comfort for patients and staff, CMS is waiving requirements to allow for a non-skilled nursing facility building to be temporarily certified and available for use by a skilled nursing facility in the event there are needs for isolation processes for COVID-19-positive residents, which may not be feasible in the existing skilled nursing facility structure to ensure care and services during treatment for COVID-19 are available while protecting other vulnerable adults.
  • CMS is waiving certain conditions of participation and certification requirements for opening a nursing facility if the state determines there is a need to quickly stand up a temporary COVID-19 isolation and treatment location.
  • CMS is waiving requirements to temporarily allow for rooms in a long-term care facility not normally used as a resident’s room to be used to accommodate beds and residents for resident care in emergencies and situations needed to help with surge capacity.

Expanding the Health Care Workforce

  • CMS is waiving current requirements to permit physicians whose privileges will expire to continue practicing at the hospital and for new physicians to be able to practice before full medical staff/governing body review and approval to address workforce concerns related to COVID-19.  CMS also is waiving requirements about details of the credentialing and privileging process.
  • CMS is waiving the requirement that Medicare patients be under the care of a physician.
  • CMS is waiving requirements that a certified registered nurse anesthetist (CRNA) work under the supervision of a physician. CRNA supervision will be at the discretion of the hospital and state law.
  • CMS is waiving the requirement that a skilled nursing facility and nursing facility may not employ anyone for longer than four months unless they meet current training and certification requirements. CMS is not waiving the requirement that such facilities ensure that nurse aides are able to demonstrate competency in skills and techniques necessary to care for residents’ needs.
  • CMS is waiving the requirement that physicians and non-physician practitioners must perform in-person visits for nursing home residents and will permit visits to be conducted, as appropriate, via telehealth options.
  • CMS is temporarily waiving requirements that out-of-state practitioners be licensed in the state where they are providing services when they are licensed in another state. CMS will waive the physician or non-physician practitioner licensing requirements when the following four conditions are met:
    • must be enrolled as such in the Medicare program;
    • must possess a valid license to practice in the state which relates to his or her Medicare enrollment;
    • is furnishing services – whether in person or via telehealth – in a state in which the emergency is occurring to contribute to relief efforts in his or her professional capacity; and,
    • is not affirmatively excluded from practice in the state or any other state that is part of the 1135 emergency area.
    • This does not have the effect of waiving state or local licensure requirements or any requirement specified by the state or a local government as a condition for waiving its licensure requirements.
  • CMS has a toll-free hotline for physicians and non-physician practitioners and Part A-certified providers and suppliers establishing isolation facilities to enroll and receive temporary Medicare billing privileges. CMS is waiving the following screening requirements:
    • application fee,
    • criminal background checks associated with fingerprint-based criminal background checks,
    • site visits,
    • postpone all revalidation actions,
    • allow licensed providers to render services outside of their state of enrollment,
    • expedite any pending or new applications from providers,
    • allow physicians and other practitioners to render telehealth services from their home without reporting their home address on their Medicare enrollment while continuing to bill from their currently enrolled location, and
    • allow opted-out physicians and non-physician practitioners to terminate their opt-out status early and enroll in Medicare to provide care to more patients.
  • CMS has issued blanket waivers of sanctions under the Stark Act.  The blanket waivers may be used now without notifying CMS.  Individual waivers of sanctions under section 1877(g) of the Act may be granted upon request.  For more information, go here and here.

Increasing the Use of Telehealth in Medicare

  • CMS is waiving the requirement that physicians and non-physician practitioners must perform in-person visits for nursing home residents and will permit visits to be conducted, as appropriate, via telehealth options.
  • Clinicians can provide virtual check-in services to new and established patients.
  • CMS will pay for telephone evaluation and management services provided by physicians and the same services provided by qualified non-physician health care providers. These services may be used for telephone-only evaluation and management services.
  • Licensed clinical social workers, clinical psychologists, physical therapists, occupational therapists, and speech language pathologists can perform e-visits via telehealth.
  • Limits have been lifted for subsequent inpatient visits, subsequent skilled nursing visits, and critical care consult codes.
  • Physicians may provide supervision virtually using real-time audio/visual technology for services that require direct supervision by a physician or other type of practitioner.
  • For additional information on new flexibilities in the use of telehealth for Medicare patients, go here.

Reducing Paperwork

  • CMS is waiving various requirements that limit and define the use and documentation of verbal orders in a hospital.
  • CMS is waiving reporting requirements when patients who have passed away required soft restraints prior to their death.  If restraints were a factor in the death, the usual reporting requirements apply.
  • CMS is waiving the current requirements for providing “detailed information” in discharge planning as long as discharging hospitals continue to provide the data patients and their families need to make decisions about appropriate post-acute care.  This does not waive the requirement that patients have all of the necessary medical information they need for their post-acute setting.
  • While maintaining the discharge planning requirements that ensure that patients are discharged to an appropriate setting with the necessary medical information, CMS is waiving some of the specific components of discharge information acute-care hospitals are ordinarily required to provide.
  • CMS is waiving requirements involving the organization and staffing of medical records departments and requirements for the form and content of medical records and is allowing for flexibility in completion of medical records within 30 days following discharge from a hospital.
  • CMS is waiving the requirements for hospitals to provide information about their advance directive policies to patients.
  • CMS is waiving the requirement that hospitals participating in Medicare and Medicaid must have a utilization review plan that meets specified requirements. CMS is waiving the entire utilization review condition of participation.
  • CMS is waiving – for “surge facilities” only – the requirement that the emergency services function operate according to written policies and procedures during surge periods.
  • CMS is waiving the requirement that hospital emergency preparedness policies and procedures include specified elements for the emergency preparedness communication plans of hospitals when a hospital is a surge site.
  • CMS is waiving requirements for hospital quality assessment and performance improvement programs that address the scope of the program, the incorporation and setting of priorities for the program’s performance improvement activities, and integrated quality assurance and performance improvement programs. The requirement that hospitals maintain an effective, ongoing, hospital-wide, data-driven quality assessment and performance improvement program remains.
  • CMS is waiving the requirement that providers must have a current therapeutic diet manual approved by the dietitian and medical staff readily available to all medical, nursing, and food service personnel. Such manuals would not need to be maintained at surge capacity sites.
  • CMS is waiving the requirement for nursing staffs to develop and keep current a nursing care plan for each patient and to have policies and procedures in place establishing which outpatient departments are not required to have a registered nurse present.
  • Completed 2019 Occupational Mix Surveys, Hospital Reporting Form CMS-10079, for the Wage Index Beginning FY 2022, are due to the Medicare Administrative Contractors (MACs). CMS is granting an extension for hospitals nationwide affected by COVID-19 until August 3, 2020.
  • CMS is waiving requirements that govern pre-admission screening and annual resident review (PASARR) to permit states and nursing homes to suspend these assessments for new residents for 30 days. After 30 days, new patients admitted to nursing homes with a mental illness or intellectual disability should receive the assessment as soon as resources become available.
  • CMS is waiving many paperwork requirements for home health agencies, skilled nursing facilities, nursing facilities, end-stage renal dialysis facilities, home health agencies, and hospices. Find those changes here (pages 9-16).
  • Medicare Administrative Contractors (MACs) and Qualified Independent Contractors (QICs) in the fee-for-service program may allow extensions to file an appeal. CMS is allowing MACs and QICs in the fee-for-service program and the MA and Part D independent review entities (IREs) to:
    • waive requests for timeliness requirements for additional information to adjudicate appeals;
    • process appeals even with incomplete appointment of representation forms;
    • process requests for appeals that do not meet the required elements using information that is available; and
    • use all flexibilities available in the appeal process if good cause requirements are satisfied.

Others

  • CMS offers stakeholders examples of section 1135 waivers available to individual providers.  Find those examples here beginning on page 23.
  • CMS is waiving certain patient rights involving copies of medical records, patient visitation limits, and quarantine processes in states that have had more than 50 confirmed COVID-19 cases.

For further information:

To learn more about these changes, you may wish to consult the following resources:

The following is the latest information from the administration and federal regulators as of 4:30 today.

The White House

President Trump has issued a presidential memorandum to the Secretary of Defense and the Secretary of Homeland Security authorizing the use of the National Guard to provide COVID-19-related services to the states of Connecticut, Illinois, Massachusetts, and Michigan, with the federal government to pay 100 percent of the cost of such a deployment.  The federal assumption of 100 percent of this cost expires in 30 days.

Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services

Department of Health and Human Services

The Department of Health and Human Services has posted a news release in which it outlines the steps it has taken and will be taking to accelerate clinical trials for possible COVID-19 vaccines and to prepare for the manufacture of approved vaccines.

U.S. Public Health Service

The U.S. Public Health Service has issued a letter on optimizing ventilator use during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Food and Drug Administration

Resources to Consult

Pennsylvania Department of Human Services

Main COVID-19 Page

COVID-19 Provider Resources

Press Releases

Pennsylvania Department of Health

Main COVID-19 Page

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Main COVID-19 Page

FAQ

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2020-03-31T20:58:06+00:00March 31st, 2020|Coronavirus, COVID-19, Federal Medicaid issues, Medicare|Comments Off on COVID-19 Update: March 31, 2020

COVID-19 Update: March 30, 2020

COVID-19-related developments in Pennsylvania as of 4:00 p.m. on Monday, March 30.  To receive this daily update directly, sign up for our mailing list at info@pasafetynet.org.

State Update

Governor Wolf

  • On Saturday the governor requested a major disaster declarationfrom the President to provide additional support for state, county, and municipal governments, certain non-profits, and individuals who are struggling during the COVID-19 outbreak.
  • Over the weekend Governor Wolf expanded his ‘Stay at Home’ order to include three more counties to mitigate the spread of the virus:  Beaver, Centre, and Washington counties.  Today, he added four more counties to the order:  Carbon, Cumberland, Dauphin, and Schuylkill counties and extended the order to April 30 for all 26 affected counties.  The governor’s amended order, the secretary of health’s amended order, and the stay at home guidance are available online.
  • Today Governor Wolf announced that all schools and non-life-sustaining businesses will remain closed until further notice.

Governor’s Daily Briefings

  • Four percent of all cases are health care workers.
  • The COVID-19 death rate is now more than 10 percent. All deaths so far have been adults.
  • Over the weekend nine Pennsylvania counties experienced their first cases, so the total is now cases in 59 counties.
  • There are people with COVID-19 in about five percent of the state’s nursing homes (36 out of 695); most of those cases are in southeastern Pennsylvania.
  • Two field hospitals will be established in southeastern Pennsylvania through an effort led by the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA).
  • 40 percent of the state’s ICU beds are currently unoccupied.
  • The state has more than 4000 ventilators in hospitals and other facilities, has an unstated number in its own stockpile, and has purchased more that should be arriving shortly. Governor Wolf said that if the state could add 1400 more ventilators he thinks it would be in good shape.
  • Based on the criteria the state currently employs for who is to be tested, the supply of testing materials in the state is adequate for now.
  • Governor Wolf said there has been no discussion about limiting or prohibiting New Yorkers from entering Pennsylvania.
  • The governor acknowledged reports of residents of New York coming to Pennsylvania for health care and specifically mentioned reports of increased newborn deliveries in Philadelphia by women from New York. He offered no numbers.  He said no hospitals have reported an unmanageable surge of patients as a result.
  • Governor Wolf said that he and his staff are still trying to figure out how much money the latest stimulus law will bring to Pennsylvania and when that money might arrive.  It will come in a lot of buckets, he said.  They expect about $5 billion but have no idea yet on how it might be allocated.

Pennsylvania Department of Health

The Department of Health sent a reminder to providers through its message board to report all initial “Activation of Internal/External Emergency Plan.”  Providers may submit additional reports as updates if necessary and must report under ‘Health Department Reportable Disease’ all COVID-19 positive test results for staff and patients including name, date of birth, symptoms (if known), and date of test results.

Department of Human Services

Protocols for Procuring Difficult-to-Source Personal Protective Equipment

The protocol for procuring difficult-to-source PPEs is:

  • Your first contact should be with your regional health care coalition (HCC).  HCC contacts can be found at the bottom of the web page linked here.
  • The HCC may decide to forward a formal request to the County Emergency Management Agency.  Agency contact information can be found here.
  • At that point, the County Emergency Management Agency may submit a resource request to the Pennsylvania Emergency Management Agency (PEMA).

Federal Update

The White House

Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services

Department of Health and Human Services

The HHS Office of Inspector General (OIG) published a statement regarding the discretion the OIG will employ when investigating any conduct during this emergency that may be subject to OIG administrative enforcement. The office also advised providers to contact the OIG for extension of any OIG investigation deadlines during this time.

Food and Drug Administration

Department of Veterans Affairs

The U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs has published its emergency response plan for the COVID-19 emergency.

Environmental Protection Agency

The EPA has published a memo outlining the discretion it intends to exercise in fulfilling its inspection and compliance efforts during the COVID-19 emergency.

Department of Homeland Security

In a new document with guidance on the essential critical infrastructure workforce, the Department of Homeland Security specifies essential jobs within the workforce during the COVID-19 emergency.

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

Pennsylvania Emergency Preparedness Guide

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Main COVID-19 Page

FAQ

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2020-03-30T17:50:01+00:00March 30th, 2020|Coronavirus, COVID-19, Pennsylvania Department of Health and COVID-19, Pennsylvania Medicaid COVID-19, Uncategorized|Comments Off on COVID-19 Update: March 30, 2020

COVID-19 Update: March 26, 2020

The following is a summary of the major COVID-19-related developments in Pennsylvania as of 5:00 on March 26.

Pennsylvania Update

Governor Wolf

House Bill 1232, which includes up to $50 million to help with the state’s COVID-19 response, is now on Governor Wolf’s desk and he is expected to sign it tomorrow, when he also is expected to sign three other bills the legislature passed late yesterday:

  • HB 68 – amends the rules of unemployment compensation during an emergency declaration such as easing work search requirements and extending the length of time that benefits are available.
  • SB 422 – amends the election code to move the Pennsylvania primary election to June 2, 2020.
  • SB 751 – amends the school code to protect employees and address various changes in state education requirements.

Department of Health

  • Secretary Levine has ordered ambulatory surgical facilities to report on specific items for the purpose of managing supplies and equipment.  Portions of the survey are to be updated each day, including the number of procedures they perform and their remaining supplies of personal protective equipment.  Click here for a copy of the survey, which was also shared by the department via email to facility administrators.  Click here to view the Secretary’s order.
  • More information is now available to assist hospitals with complying with Secretary Levine’s March 25 order that they report three times a day on specific data regarding hospital facilities, beds, supplies, equipment, and staffing.  Data will be collected using the Essential Elements of Information (EEI) tool in the Knowledge Center – Health Incident Management System (KC-HIMS).  Hospitals needing onboarding for the Knowledge Center should contact the HAP Readiness Coordinator for their regional health care coalition; that contact information is at the bottom of the webpage here.
  • During her daily briefing, Department of Health Secretary Levine reported the following:
  • More than twice as many new cases today as yesterday.
  • Cases hold steady at about 10 percent requiring hospitalization.
  • Of nearly 1700 cases so far, 56 required ICU and 32 needed ventilators.
  • 46 percent of new cases fall in the 25-40 age group.
  • The state is focused on standards of care and is not contemplating triage for patients getting all the care they need.
  • Those standards of care may evolve as the number of cases rises and the state adds more beds, whether that means new hospital beds or places like ambulatory surgery centers and hotels where people can receive post-acute care when they no longer need acute care.  The Department of Health is working to find such additional beds.
  • The state is doing “everything we can” to support hospitals.
  • Among other measures, Pennsylvania has distributed 678,000 N-95 masks, 380,000 pairs of gloves, and 744,000 goggles and face protectors to hospitals and providers.  The federal government is replenishing the state’s supplies and the state is also looking to purchase more of its own.

Department of Human Services

  • The Department of Human Services (DHS)’ Office of Mental Health and Substance Abuse Services has sent an FAQ to HealthChoices behavioral health managed care organizations, fee-for-service providers, and county mental health authorities on the subject of behavioral health Medicaid programs and the COVID-19 crisis. Find that FAQ here.
  • DHS has submitted a section 1135 waiver request to the federal Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services. Such requests seek temporary exemption from federal Medicaid requirements.  Pennsylvania’s request covers requirements involving Medicaid authorization, long-term services and supports, fair hearings, provider enrollment, reporting and oversight, and other matters.  See the state’s 1135 waiver request here.
  • DHS’s Office of Child Development and Early Learning has issued guidance to child care advisors to help them keep children, their families, and staff safe during the COVID-19 emergency. Find that guidance here.
  • The federal government approved Pennsylvania’s request to extend the time that people are eligible to participate in the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP, formerly food stamps). The state also will be submitting a waiver to enable many college students, currently ineligible for such benefits, to participate in SNAP.
  • DHS has published its latest COVID-19 stakeholder update. Find it

Department of State

The Department of State has provided guidance for doctors prescribing chloroquine and hydroxychloroquine and pharmacists dispensing it.  See that language here.

Federal Update

Department of Health and Human Services

  • The Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) will be publishing a “Notice of Designation of Scarce Materials or Threatened Materials Subject to COVID-19 Hoarding Prevention Measures” in the Federal Register on March 30.  The notice gives the Secretary of HHS authority to designate such materials as scarce and to invoke prohibitions against hoarding them.  The notice, which is not a regulation and expires in four months, lists specific medical supplies to which it applies.  Find the notice here.
  • HHS’s Office of Civil Rights has posted notice in response to questions about whether HIPAA requirements permit covered entities to share with law enforcement, paramedics, other first responders, or public health authorities the names or other identifying information of individuals who have been infected with or exposed to COVID-19 without the permission of those individuals.  The notice outlines the specific situations under which such disclosure is permitted.  See the notice here.

Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services

  • The Families First Coronavirus Response Act, signed into law on March 18, includes a temporary 6.2 percentage point increase in the federal medical assistance percentage (FMAP:  the rate at which the federal government matches state Medicaid expenditures).  A new CMS FAQ provides information about the state Medicaid expenditures to which the increase applies, its applicability to Medicaid DSH payments, the duration of the supplemental funding, and more.  Find this FAQ here.
  • CMS has approved more section 1135 waivers for states.
  • CMS has published an FAQ on Medicare provider enrollment relief.  Find it here.
  • CMS’s Center for Consumer Information & Insurance Oversight has issued a memo to qualified health plans and stand-alone dental plans offered on the federal exchange and state exchanges on the subject of payment and grace period flexibilities associated with the COVID-19 crisis  See that memo here.

Food and Drug Administration

  • The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has published guidance for industry and food staff on the enforcement policy for face masks and respirators during the COVID-19 health emergency.  Find the guidance document here.
  • The FDA has sent a detailed letter to manufacturers and other stakeholders authorizing the emergency use of authorized ventilators, ventilator tubing connectors, and ventilator accessories, including alternative products used as medical devices, during the COVID-19 pandemic subject to the terms detailed in this letter and based on the specific types of equipment and supplies involved as also described in the letter.  Find the document here.

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

  • The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention published the following documents relevant to health care providers:
  • The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has issued interim clinical guidelines for the management of patients with COVID-19.  Find those guidelines here.
  • CDC has updated its guidelines for collecting, handling, and testing clinical specimens from persons with COVID-19.  Find those updated guidelines here.
  •  The CDC has developed two checklists that identify key actions that can be taken now to enhance preparedness for potential or confirmed patients with COVID-19.  Find them here.
  • The CDC has developed a spreadsheet-based model that to help providers plan and optimize their use of personal protective equipment for response to COVID-19.  Find a link to that downloadable spreadsheet here.
  • The CDC has updated its guidance on the collection and submission of post-mortem specimens from deceased persons under investigation.  See the updated guidance here.

National Uniform Billing Committee

The National Uniform Billing Committee, the governing body for forms and codes use in medical claims billing in the United States for institutional providers, has published guidance on claims for COVID-19 treatment.  The guidance, which addresses use of the “DR” condition code and use of hospital outpatient bill type for COVID-19 testing locations, can be found 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

Pennsylvania Emergency Preparedness Guide

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Main COVID-19 Page FAQ

 

 

 

COVID-19 Update: March 25, 2020

The following is a summary of the major COVID-19-related developments in Pennsylvania as of 5:15 on March 25.

State Legislature

Today the Senate passed House Bill 1232, as amended, which includes up to $50 million of additional funding to be made available for the state’s COVID-19 response efforts.  The legislation stipulates that funding shall only be used to buy medical equipment and supplies for health care entities to meet urgent patient and staff needs to address surge demand.  It also requires available federal funding and any funding made available through the governor’s disaster proclamation to be used before these funds.  The authority to transfer funds expires on September 30, 2020.

Senate leadership noted that this is the first phase in its crisis response and recognizes that additional funds will likely be needed.  The House is expected to pass the bill as amended today.  The bill will then be signed in both chambers and sent to the governor for consideration and he is expected to sign it.  It would take effect immediately.

The Administration

Governor Wolf

Today the governor added Lehigh and Northampton counties to his stay-at-home order.

Department of Health

Secretary Levine today issued an order requiring hospitals to make daily report of specified data regarding hospital facilities, beds, supplies, equipment, and staffing.  Among the measures hospitals will be required to report daily are available beds, psychiatric beds, number of other beds in facilities, current emergency department capacity, number of COVID-19 patients, expected number of days remaining N-95 masks will last, expected number of days remaining until other personal protective equipment supplies will exhausted, supply of remaining NP specimen collection supplies in days, number of ventilators in facility and in use, and number of employees available for work.  See the secretary’s order here.

Department of Human Services – Office of Medical Assistance Programs

  • The Office of Medical Assistance Programs has issued billing guidance to CHIP managed care organizations on the subject of alternative screening sites related to COVID-19. Find that two-page document here.
  • It issued another policy clarification to CHIP managed care organizations with directions to bypass the prior authorization requirements for chest CT scans for COVID-19 payments. See that policy clarification document here.

Another notice announces a new ICD-10 code for COVID-10 that takes effect on April 1. Find it here.

  • The Office of Medical Assistance Programs has posted an FAQ on Medicaid program coverage of COVID-19 testing and related services. It includes information about what Pennsylvania Medicaid will pay for COVID-19 testing, the services it will cover, and more.  Find it here.

Department of Human Services – Office of Long Term Living

  • The Office of Long Term Living (OLTL) has published guidance on conducting pre-admission screening and resident reviews for applicants to and residents of Medicaid-certified nursing facilities. This includes an explanation of performing such screens by phone or video conference.  See the guidance here.
  • OLTL also has sent a memo to nursing home transition coordination agencies about a new, COVID-19-motivated nursing home transition tenant-based rental assistance process. Find that memo here.
  • OLTL also communicated via its listserv that it is delaying the implementation deadline for electronic visit verification (EVV) until October 1, 2020.

Department of Drug and Alcohol Programs

  • The Department of Drug and Alcohol Programs (DDAP) has issued a document clarifying the state’s response to federal guidance on the disclosure of patients’ substance abuse disorder records during the telehealth process. See that policy clarification here.
  • DDAP has issued a policy bulletin addressing telehealth services for gambling treatment. Find that bulletin here.

Department of State

The Pennsylvania Department of State, which is responsible for licensing many health care providers, has announced new guidelines and processes for reactivating the licenses of retired health care professionals such as doctors, nurses, nurse practitioners, pharmacists, and others.  This new policy supplements previous announcements the department has made on this subject.  Find this updated information here.

Pennsylvania Health Centers Awarded Federal Funds

The federal Health Resources and Services Administration has awarded $100 million in grants to 1381 health centers across the country.  Among them are 43 health centers in Pennsylvania that will share $12.9 million in federal funds.  See a list of those grant recipients 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

Pennsylvania Emergency Preparedness Guide

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Main COVID-19 Page

FAQ

 

 

 

 

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