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COVID-19 Update: May 28, 2020

Coronavirus update for Thursday, May 28 as of 2:30 p.m.

Pennsylvania Update

State Budget

Harrisburg, PA capital buildingToday the Senate passed the interim state general fund budget bill, House Bill 2387, by a vote of 44-6.  The Senate also approved a package of supplemental appropriation bills for the 2020-21 state fiscal year.  The bills will be signed in the House and the governor is expected to add his signature.  The Senate also passed an amended House Bill 2510, a fiscal code bill appropriating a portion of the $3.9 billion in federal CARES Act funding for COVID-19 relief.  The House is expected to concur in the amended fiscal code bill and the governor is also expected to sign.  Another fiscal code bill appropriating state general funds for FY 2020-21, House Bill 1083, is also expected to be enacted this week.

Department of Health – by the numbers

  • Today’s new COVID-19 case and death counts were similar to yesterday’s.
  • Four more long-term-care facilities now report cases of COVID-19 among patients or staff.
  • Nearly 5300 health care workers have tested positive for COVID-19.
  • 1476 Pennsylvanians are hospitalized because of COVID-19.
  • 314 of them are on ventilators.
  • 45 percent of acute-care beds, 38 percent of adult ICU beds, and 24 percent of pediatric beds are currently unoccupied, as are 53 percent of Pennsylvania hospitals’ isolation rooms.

Department of Human Services

Beginning May 28, DHS resumes annual renewal inspections in alignment with the governor’s plan to reopen parts of the state.  These inspections apply to programs and facilities regulated by DHS’s Office of Developmental Programs; Office of Children, Youth and Families; Office of Mental Health and Substance Abuse Services; and Office of Long-Term Living/Bureau of Human Service Licensing.  Learn more here.

Department of State

The Department of State has automatically extended certain temporary licenses for occupational therapists and occupational therapy assistants.  This extension applies to all temporary licenses that were valid and active as of March 6 and any temporary licenses issued during the COVID-19 emergency.  These temporary licenses will expire no earlier than 90 days following the end of the COVID-19 emergency.

Federal Update

Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services

CMS has updated its COVID-19 FAQs on Medicare fee-for-service billing with additional or revised answers to the following sections:

  • Expansion of Virtual Communication Services for FQHCs/RHCs – questions 11-23
  • Medicare Telehealth (please note that these FAQs do not include flexibilities that might be exercised under the CARES act) – questions 23-33
  • General Billing Requirements – questions 2 and 3
  • Diagnosis Coding under International Classification of Diseases, Tenth Revision, Clinical Modification (ICD-10-CM) – question 1
  • Chronic Care Management Services – question 1
  • Outpatient Therapy Services – questions 1-3

Department of Health and Human Services

HHS has redesigned its CARES Act Provider Relief Fund web pageThe new layout maintains the previous section for timely alerts but separates additional information about the Provider Relief Fund into the following categories that each redirect to their own, more detailed pages:  For Providers; About the Provider Relief Fund; Data, and FAQs.  The updated web page also included nuanced changes in the language describing the distribution of CARES Act money.

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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

PA Health Alert Network

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Main COVID-19 Page

FAQ

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

2020-05-29T06:00:11+00:00May 29th, 2020|Coronavirus, COVID-19, Pennsylvania proposed FY 2021 budget|Comments Off on COVID-19 Update: May 28, 2020

Sneak Peek: PA Medicaid Costs to Rise $650 Million in FY 2014

In its mid-year budget briefing, the Corbett administration projects that Pennsylvania’s Medical Assistance costs will rise $650 million in the state’s 2014 fiscal year, which will begin on July 1, 2013.
The budget briefing also noted that the governor has directed state agencies to maintain level funding in their proposed FY 2014 budgets, that level funding essentially means a cut of seven to eight percent because of rising personnel costs, and that the governor “has reiterated that no new taxes will be part of the 2013-14 budget.”
Although the governor does not present his proposed FY 2014 budget for another two months, this raises the question of how the state might pay these increased Medicaid costs – or if next year’s budget might include payment cuts for the state’s Medicaid providers.
Cut would be particularly burdensome to Pennsylvania’s safety-net hospitals because of the especially high numbers of Medicaid patients they serve and their unusual dependence on Medicaid revenue.
Read about the mid-year budget briefing in this PA Independent article and find the budget briefing itself hereFinancial graphs.

2012-12-10T06:00:27+00:00December 10th, 2012|Pennsylvania Medicaid policy, Pennsylvania state budget issues|Comments Off on Sneak Peek: PA Medicaid Costs to Rise $650 Million in FY 2014

New PA Health Law Project Newsletter

The Pennsylvania Health Law Project has just published its June/July “Health Law PA News” newsletter.  The latest edition includes articles about the recently passed state Medical Assistance budget, the implications of the Supreme Court’s Affordable Care Act decision for Pennsylvania, changes in state human resources funding, a delay in HealthChoices expansion in western Pennsylvania, and the lawsuit to compel the state to reinstitute the AdultBasic program.
Read the newsletter here.

2012-07-16T06:00:50+00:00July 16th, 2012|Health care reform, Pennsylvania Medicaid policy, Pennsylvania state budget issues|Comments Off on New PA Health Law Project Newsletter

Budget Brings Good News for PA Safety-Net Hospitals

The new state budget passed in Harrisburg last weekend restored cuts to key payments to Pennsylvania’s safety-net hospitals.
Harrisburg, PA capital buildingAlthough the budget proposed by Governor Corbett in February called for a four percent cut in fee-for-service hospital base rate payments, that cut was restored – as were mid-year cuts to OB/NICU, burn center, and trauma center payments, which were restored to their FY 2012 enacted levels.
In addition, the budget increased payments to critical access hospitals and restored payments to academic medical centers and physician practice plans.
The budget also restored funding for separate fee-for-service payments for normal newborn care, thereby rescinding at least for FY 2013 an expedited regulation promulgated by the Department of Public Welfare that would have eliminated payments for such services.
For further information about Pennsylvania’s FY 2013 Medical Assistance budget and its implications for Pennsylvania’s safety-net hospitals, please contact Michael Chirieleison, SNAP’s president, at 717-234-6970 or mike@debrunner.us.

2012-07-02T16:24:34+00:00July 2nd, 2012|Medicaid supplemental payments, Pennsylvania Medicaid laws and regulations, Pennsylvania Medicaid policy, Pennsylvania state budget issues|Comments Off on Budget Brings Good News for PA Safety-Net Hospitals
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