|
CMS NEWS
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
April 30, 2020
Contact: CMS Media
Relations
(202) 690-6145 | CMS Media Inquiries
Trump Administration Issues Second Round of Sweeping
Changes to Support U.S. Healthcare System During COVID-19 Pandemic
At President Trump’s
direction, and building on its recent historic efforts to help the U.S.
healthcare system manage the 2019 Novel Coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic, the
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services today issued another round of
sweeping regulatory waivers and rule changes to deliver expanded care to the
nation’s seniors and provide flexibility to the healthcare system as America
reopens. These changes include making it easier for Medicare and Medicaid
beneficiaries to get tested for COVID-19 and continuing CMS’s efforts to
further expand beneficiaries’ access to telehealth services.
CMS is taking action to
ensure states and localities have the flexibilities they need to ramp up
diagnostic testing and access to medical care, key precursors to ensuring a
phased, safe, and gradual reopening of America.
Today’s actions are
informed by requests from healthcare providers as well as by the Coronavirus
Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act, or CARES Act. CMS’s goals during the
pandemic are to 1) expand the healthcare workforce by removing barriers for
physicians, nurses, and other clinicians to be readily hired from the local
community or other states; 2) ensure that local hospitals and health systems
have the capacity to handle COVID-19 patients through temporary expansion
sites (also known as the CMS Hospital Without Walls initiative); 3) increase
access to telehealth for Medicare patients so they can get care from their
physicians and other clinicians while staying safely at home; 4) expand
at-home and community-based testing to minimize transmission of COVID-19
among Medicare and Medicaid beneficiaries; and 5) put patients over paperwork
by giving providers, healthcare facilities, Medicare Advantage and Part D
plans, and states temporary relief from many reporting and audit requirements
so they can focus on patient care.
“I’m very encouraged that
the sacrifices of the American people during the pandemic are working. The
war is far from over, but in various areas of the country the tide is turning
in our favor,” said CMS Administrator Seema Verma. “Building on what was
already extraordinary, unprecedented relief for the American healthcare
system, CMS is seeking to capitalize on our gains by helping to safely reopen
the American healthcare system in accord with President Trump's guidelines.”
Made possible by President
Trump’s recent emergency declaration and emergency rule making, many of CMS’s
temporary changes will apply immediately for the duration of the Public
Health Emergency declaration. They build on an unprecedented array of
temporary regulatory waivers and new rules CMS announced March 30 and April
10. Providers and states do not need to apply for the blanket waivers
announced today and can begin using the flexibilities immediately. CMS also
is requiring nursing homes to inform residents, their families, and
representatives of COVID-19 outbreaks in their facilities.
New rules
to support and expand COVID-19 diagnostic testing for Medicare and Medicaid
beneficiaries
“Testing is vital, and
CMS’s changes will make getting tested easier and more accessible for
Medicare and Medicaid beneficiaries,” Verma said.
Under the new waivers and
rule changes, Medicare will no longer require an order from the treating
physician or other practitioner for beneficiaries to get COVID-19 tests and
certain laboratory tests required as part of a COVID-19 diagnosis. During the
Public Health Emergency, COVID-19 tests may be covered when ordered by any
healthcare professional authorized to do so under state law. To help ensure
that Medicare beneficiaries have broad access to testing related to COVID-19,
a written practitioner’s order is no longer required for the COVID-19 test
for Medicare payment purposes.
Pharmacists can work with
a physician or other practitioner to provide assessment and specimen
collection services, and the physician or other practitioner can bill
Medicare for the services. Pharmacists also can perform certain COVID-19
tests if they are enrolled in Medicare as a laboratory, in accordance with a
pharmacist’s scope of practice and state law. With these changes,
beneficiaries can get tested at “parking lot” test sites operated by
pharmacies and other entities consistent with state requirements. Such
point-of-care sites are a key component in expanding COVID-19 testing
capacity.
CMS will pay hospitals and
practitioners to assess beneficiaries and collect laboratory samples for
COVID-19 testing, and make separate payment when that is the only service the
patient receives. This builds on previous action to pay laboratories for
technicians to collect samples for COVID-19 testing from homebound beneficiaries
and those in certain non-hospital settings, and encourages broader testing by
hospitals and physician practices.
To help facilitate
expanded testing and reopen the country, CMS is announcing that Medicare and
Medicaid are covering certain serology (antibody) tests, which may aid in
determining whether a person may have developed an immune response and may
not be at immediate risk for COVID-19 reinfection. Medicare and Medicaid will
cover laboratory processing of certain FDA-authorized tests that beneficiaries
self-collect at home.
Additional
highlights of the waivers and rule changes announced today:
Increase
Hospital Capacity - CMS Hospitals Without Walls
Under its Hospitals
Without Walls initiative. CMS has taken multiple steps to allow hospitals to
provide services in other healthcare facilities and sites that aren’t part of
the existing hospital, and to set up temporary expansion sites to help
address patient needs. Previously, hospitals were required to provide
services within their existing departments.
Healthcare
Workforce Augmentation:
To bolster the U.S.
healthcare workforce amid the pandemic, CMS continues to remove barriers for
hiring and retaining physicians, nurses, and other healthcare professionals
to keep staffing levels high at hospitals, health clinics, and other
facilities. CMS also is cutting red tape so that health professionals can
concentrate on the highest-level work they’re licensed for.
Put
Patients Over Paperwork/Decrease Administrative Burden
CMS continues to ease
federal rules and institute new flexibilities to ensure that states and
localities can focus on caring for patients during the pandemic and that care
is not delayed due to administrative red tape.
Further
Expand Telehealth in Medicare:
CMS directed a historic
expansion of telehealth services so that doctors and other providers can
deliver a wider range of care to Medicare beneficiaries in their homes.
Beneficiaries thus don’t have to travel to a healthcare facility and risk
exposure to COVID-19.
In addition, CMS is making
changes to the Medicare Shared Savings Program to give the 517 accountable
care organizations (ACOs) serving more than 11 million beneficiaries greater
financial stability and predictability during the COVID-19 pandemic.
ACOs are groups of
doctors, hospitals, and other healthcare providers, that come together
voluntarily to give coordinated high-quality care to their Medicare patients.
The goal of coordinated care is to ensure that patients get the right care at
the right time, while avoiding unnecessary duplication of services and
preventing medical errors. When an ACO succeeds both in delivering
high-quality care and spending healthcare dollars more wisely, it may share
in any savings it achieves for the Medicare program.
Because the impact of the
pandemic varies across the country, CMS is making adjustments to the
financial methodology to account for COVID-19 costs so that ACOs will be
treated equitably regardless of the extent to which their patient populations
are affected by the pandemic. CMS is also forgoing the annual application
cycle for 2021 and giving ACOs whose participation is set to end this year
the option to extend for another year. ACOs that are required to increase
their financial risk over the course of their current agreement period in the
program will have the option to maintain their current risk level for next
year, instead of being advanced automatically to the next risk level.
CMS is permitting states
operating a Basic Health Program to submit revised BHP Blueprints for
temporary changes tied to the COVID-19 public health emergency that are not
restrictive and could be effective retroactive to the first day of the
COVID-19 public health emergency declaration. Previously, revised BHP
Blueprints could only be submitted prospectively.
CMS sets and enforces
essential quality and safety standards for the nation’s healthcare system. It
is also the nation’s largest health insurer, serving more than 140 million
Americans through Medicare, Medicaid, the Children’s Health Insurance
Program, and federal Health Insurance Exchanges.
For additional background
information on the waivers and rule changes, go to: https://www.cms.gov/newsroom/fact-sheets/additional-backgroundsweeping-regulatory-changes-help-us-healthcare-system-address-covid-19-patient
For more information on
the COVID-19 waivers and guidance, and the Interim Final Rule, please go to
the CMS COVID-19 flexibilities webpage: https://www.cms.gov/about-cms/emergency-preparedness-response-operations/current-emergencies/coronavirus-waivers.
These actions, and earlier
CMS actions in response to COVID-19, are part of the ongoing White House Coronavirus
Task Force efforts. To keep up with the important work the Task Force is
doing in response to COVID-19, visit www.coronavirus.gov. For a complete
and updated list of CMS actions, and other information specific to CMS,
please visit the Current Emergencies Website.
###
Get CMS news at cms.gov/newsroom, sign up for CMS news via email and follow CMS on Twitter CMS
Administrator @SeemaCMS, @CMSgov, and @CMSgovPress.
|
|
To be a Medicare Agent's source of information on topics affecting the agent and their business, and most importantly, their clientele, is the intention of this site. Sourced from various means rooted in the health insurance industry - insurance carriers, governmental agencies, and industry news agencies, this is aimed as a resource of varying viewpoints to spark critical thought and discussion. We welcome your contributions.
Thursday, April 30, 2020
CMS NEWS: Trump Administration Issues Second Round of Sweeping Changes to Support U.S. Healthcare System During COVID-19 Pandemic
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment