NEWS
ALERT
April
21, 2020
Here
is a summary of recent Centers for Medicare & Medicaid
Services (CMS) actions taken in response to the 2019 Novel
Coronavirus (COVID-19), as part of the ongoing White House Task
Force efforts. To keep up with the important work the Task Force
is doing in response to COVID-19, click here www.coronavirus.gov. For
information specific to CMS, please visit the CMS News Room and Current Emergencies Website. CMS
updates these resources on an ongoing basis throughout the day;
the information below is current as of April 21, 2020 at 12:00
p.m.
CMS
Issues Recommendations to Re-Open Health Care Systems in Areas
with Low Incidence of COVID-19
As
the United States continues to face the unprecedented public
health emergency from the COVID-19 pandemic, the tide is turning
and some areas throughout the country are seeing a decline in
cases. As states and localities begin to stabilize, CMS is
issuing guidance on providing essential non-COVID-19 care to
patients without symptoms of COVID-19 in regions with low and
stable incidence of COVID-19. This is part of Phase 1 in the
Trump Administration’s Guidelines for Opening Up America Again. The
recommendations update earlier guidance provided by CMS on
limiting non-essential surgeries and medical procedures.
Trump
Administration Announces New Nursing Homes COVID-19 Transparency
Effort
CMS
announced new regulatory requirements that
will require nursing homes to inform residents, their families,
and their representatives of COVID-19 cases in their facilities.
In addition, as part of President Trump’s Opening Up America, CMS
will now require nursing homes to report cases of COVID-19
directly to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).
This information must be reported in accordance with existing
privacy regulations and statute. This measure augments
longstanding requirements for reporting infectious disease to State
and local health departments. CMS will also require nursing homes
to fully cooperate with CDC surveillance efforts around COVID-19
spread.
Trump
Administration Champions Reporting of COVID-19 Clinical Trial
Data through Quality Payment Program, Announces New Clinical
Trials Improvement Activity
CMS
is encouraging clinicians who participate in the Quality Payment
Program (QPP), such as physicians, physician assistants, nurse
practitioners, and others, to contribute to scientific research
and evidence to fight the COVID-19 pandemic. Clinicians may now
earn credit in the Merit-based Incentive Payment System (MIPS), a
performance-based track of QPP that incentivizes quality and
value, for participation in a clinical trial and reporting
clinical information by attesting to the new COVID-19 Clinical
Trials improvement activity. This action will provide vital data
to help drive improvement in patient care and develop innovative
best practices to manage the spread of COVID-19 within
communities.
RHC
& FQHCs: Telehealth and Virtual Communications Flexibilities
During COVID-19 Public Health Emergency
To
support Rural Health Clinics (RHCs), Federally Qualified Health
Centers (FQHCs), and their patients, Congress and CMS made
changes to requirements and payments during the COVID-19 Public
Health Emergency, including:
- New payment for
telehealth services, including how to bill Medicare
- Expansion of
virtual communication services
- Revision of home
health agency shortage requirement for visiting nursing
services
- Consent for care
management and virtual communication services
- Accelerated/advance
payments
CMS
Amends Certain Activities Related to the Health Insurance
Exchange Quality Rating System, QHP Enrollee Experience Survey,
and Quality Improvement Strategy
CMS
is easing burden on Qualified Health Plans (QHPs) during the
Public Health Emergency. CMS directed plans that are eligible to
report for the Quality Rating System and the Quality Improvement
Strategy programs to discontinue collecting clinical quality
measure data. Eligible QHPs can discontinue reporting in June
2020 for display on Exchange websites for the 2021 Open
Enrollment period. CMS will continue to accept QHP Enrollee
survey data submissions for this year, given that the survey
administration is already underway.
CMS
Approves Additional State Medicaid Waivers and Amendments to Give
States Flexibility to Address Coronavirus Pandemic
CMS
has approved 53 COVID-related emergency waivers, 39 state
amendments, 16 COVID-related Medicaid Disaster Amendments and one
CHIP COVID-related Disaster Amendment in record time. States are
using a toolkit CMS developed to
expedite the application and approval of Medicaid state waivers
and State Plan Amendments.
CMS
recently approved an additional COVID-related emergency Medicaid
waiver for Wisconsin, delivering urgent regulatory relief to
ensure the state can quickly and effectively care for its most
vulnerable citizens. CMS also recently approved COVID-19 related
Medicaid Disaster Amendments that bring relief to Guam,
Louisiana, Maryland, and Minnesota. These approvals help to
ensure that states have the tools they need to combat COVID-19
through a wide variety of state plan flexibilities. CMS continues
to authorize amendments to ensure emergency flexibilities in
programs that care for the elderly and people with disabilities,
including most recently for the District of Columbia, Florida,
Mississippi, Nebraska, Utah, and Virginia. These approved
flexibilities support President Trump’s commitment to a COVID-19
response that is locally executed, state managed, and federally
supported.
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