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.
- CMS is giving providers flexibility during the
pandemic to increase the number of beds for COVID-19 patients while
receiving stable, predictable Medicare payments. For example, teaching
hospitals can increase the number of temporary beds without facing
reduced payments for indirect medical education. In addition,
inpatient psychiatric facilities and inpatient rehabilitation
facilities can admit more patients to alleviate pressure on acute-care
hospital bed capacity without facing reduced teaching status payments.
Similarly, hospital systems that include rural health clinics can
increase their bed capacity without affecting the rural health
clinic’s payments.
- CMS is excepting certain requirements to enable
freestanding inpatient rehabilitation facilities to accept patients
from acute-care hospitals experiencing a surge, even if the patients
do not require rehabilitation care. This makes use of available beds
in freestanding inpatient rehabilitation facilities and helps
acute-care hospitals to make room for COVID-19 patients.
- CMS is highlighting flexibilities that allow
payment for outpatient hospital services -- such as wound care, drug
administration, and behavioral health services -- that are delivered
in temporary expansion locations, including parking lot tents,
converted hotels, or patients’ homes (when they’re temporarily
designated as part of a hospital).
- Under current law, most provider-based hospital
outpatient departments that relocate off-campus are paid at lower
rates under the Physician Fee Schedule, rather than the Outpatient
Prospective Payment System (OPPS). CMS will allow certain
provider-based hospital outpatient departments that relocate
off-campus to obtain a temporary exception and continue to be paid
under the OPPS. Importantly, hospitals may also relocate outpatient
departments to more than one off-campus location, or partially
relocate off-campus while still furnishing care at the original site.
- Long-term acute-care hospitals can now accept any
acute-care hospital patients and be paid at a higher Medicare payment
rate, as mandated by the CARES Act. This will make better use during
the pandemic of available beds and staffing in long-term acute-care
hospitals.
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.
- Since beneficiaries may need in-home services
during the COVID-19 pandemic, nurse practitioners, clinical nurse
specialists, and physician assistants can now provide home health
services, as mandated by the CARES Act. These practitioners can now
(1) order home health services; (2) establish and periodically review
a plan of care for home health patients; and (3) certify and re-certify
that the patient is eligible for home health services. Previously,
Medicare and Medicaid home health beneficiaries could only receive
home health services with the certification of a physician. These
changes are effective for both Medicare and Medicaid.
- CMS will not reduce Medicare payments for teaching
hospitals that shift their residents to other hospitals to meet
COVID-related needs, or penalize hospitals without teaching programs
that accept these residents. This change removes barriers so teaching
hospitals can lend available medical staff support to other hospitals.
- CMS is allowing physical and occupational
therapists to delegate maintenance therapy services to physical and
occupational therapy assistants in outpatient settings. This frees up
physical and occupational therapists to perform other important
services and improve beneficiary access.
- Consistent with a change made for hospitals, CMS is
waiving a requirement for ambulatory surgery centers to periodically
reappraise medical staff privileges during the COVID-19 emergency
declaration. This will allow physicians and other practitioners whose
privileges are expiring to continue taking care of patients.
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.
- CMS is allowing payment for certain partial
hospitalization services – that is, individual psychotherapy, patient
education, and group psychotherapy – that are delivered in temporary
expansion locations, including patients’ homes.
- CMS is temporarily allowing Community Mental Health
Centers to offer partial hospitalization and other mental health
services to clients in the safety of their homes. Previously, clients
had to travel to a clinic to get these intensive services. Now,
Community Mental Health Centers can furnish certain therapy and
counseling services in a client’s home to ensure access to necessary
services and maintain continuity of care.
- CMS will not enforce certain clinical criteria in
local coverage determinations that limit access to therapeutic
continuous glucose monitors for beneficiaries with diabetes. As a
result, clinicians will have greater flexibility to allow more of
their diabetic patients to monitor their glucose and adjust insulin
doses at home.
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.
- For the duration of the COVID-19 emergency, CMS is
waiving limitations on the types of clinical practitioners that can
furnish Medicare telehealth services. Prior to this change, only
doctors, nurse practitioners, physician assistants, and certain others
could deliver telehealth services. Now, other practitioners are able
to provide telehealth services, including physical therapists, occupational
therapists, and speech language pathologists.
- Hospitals may bill for services furnished remotely
by hospital-based practitioners to Medicare patients registered as
hospital outpatients, including when the patient is at home when the
home is serving as a temporary provider based department of the
hospital. Examples of such services include counseling and educational
service as well as therapy services. This change expands the types of
healthcare providers that can provide using telehealth technology.
- Hospitals may bill as the originating site for
telehealth services furnished by hospital-based practitioners to
Medicare patients registered as hospital outpatients, including when
the patient is located at home.
- CMS previously announced that Medicare would pay
for certain services conducted by audio-only telephone between
beneficiaries and their doctors and other clinicians. Now, CMS is
broadening that list to include many behavioral health and patient
education services. CMS is also increasing payments for these
telephone visits to match payments for similar office and outpatient
visits. This would increase payments for these services from a range
of about $14-$41 to about $46-$110. The payments are retroactive to
March 1, 2020.
- Until now, CMS only added new services to the list
of Medicare services that may be furnished via telehealth using its
rulemaking process. CMS is changing its process during the emergency,
and will add new telehealth services on a sub-regulatory basis,
considering requests by practitioners now learning to use telehealth
as broadly as possible. This will speed up the process of adding
services.
- As mandated by the CARES Act, CMS is paying for
Medicare telehealth services provided by rural health clinics and
federally qualified health clinics. Previously, these clinics could
not be paid to provide telehealth expertise as “distant sites.” Now,
Medicare beneficiaries located in rural and other medically
underserved areas will have more options to access care from their
home without having to travel.
- Since some Medicare beneficiaries don’t have access
to interactive audio-video technology that is required for Medicare
telehealth services, or choose not to use it even if offered by their
practitioner, CMS is waiving the video requirement for certain
telephone evaluation and management services, and adding them to the
list of Medicare telehealth services. As a result, Medicare
beneficiaries will be able to use an audio-only telephone to get these
services.
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.
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.
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