Wolf Makes Major Health Appointments
Pennsylvania Governor Tom Wolf has nominated Alison Beam to be Secretary of the state’s Department of Health.
Beam, currently Wolf’s deputy chief of staff, is a graduate of the Drexel University of Law. If confirmed by the state Senate, Ms. Beam would replace Dr. Rachel Levine, who has been nominated by President Biden to serve as Assistant Secretary of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.
Governor Wolf also has appointed Dr. Wendy Braund to be the state’s Interim Acting Physician General. Dr. Levine currently serves in that capacity as well. Dr. Braund, currently the COVID-19 response director in the state’s Department of Health, earned a master’s degree in public health from Johns Hopkins and an M.D. from the Penn State College of Medicine.
Learn more about the two nominees from this news release from the Wolf administration.
Over the weekend, House Speaker Michael Turzai changed the House of Representatives’ session schedule to hold a non-voting session day today and a voting session day tomorrow in an effort to enable Republicans to move forward with relief efforts for businesses related to the COVID-19 crisis. There has been speculation that if a quorum is present the Speaker may seek to suspend temporary House rules permitting remote voting to ease the passage of Republican-sponsored relief measures for businesses affected by limits on their ability to operate during the COVID-19 emergency. The House also has canceled its session for Wednesday and Thursday of this week.
Children’s Health Insurance Program
Department of Health and Human Services
The FDA has released guidance on its
MACPAC has written to CMS administrator Seema Verma to express its concern that the manner in which CMS has chosen to distribute $30 billion of the $100 billion designated in the CARES Act for hospitals and health care providers “…does not account for the real and pressing concerns of safety-net providers that are on the frontlines of serving the nation’s poorest and most vulnerable people…” MACPAC also asks Ms. Verma to “…ensure that safety-net providers, including hospitals considered deemed disproportionate share hospitals (DSH) for the purpose of Medicaid payment…children’s hospitals, and other providers serving Medicaid and other low-income patients have access to federal funds made available through the CARES Act without delay.” See the MACPAC letter
Until Monday, the state needed to send any samples it wanted tested to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta, which meant a two- to three-day wait for results. State turnaround will be 24 hours.
The report, prepared by the organization Catalyst for Payment Reform, seeks to
