CMS NEWS
FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE April 27, 2021
Contact:
CMS Media Relations
CMS Media Inquiries
CMS proposes to enhance the
medical workforce in rural and underserved communities to support
COVID-19 recovery and beyond
Proposed rule would require
hospitals to report vaccination rates among healthcare staff
The
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) issued a
proposed rule (CMS-1752-P) today for inpatient and long-term care
hospitals that builds on the Biden Administration’s key priorities
to close health care equity gaps and provide greater accessibility
to care. Major provisions in the proposed rule would fund medical
residency positions in hospitals in rural and underserved
communities to address workforce shortages, and require hospitals
to report COVID-19 vaccination rates among their workers to contain
the spread of the virus.
CMS
recognizes the importance of encouraging more health professionals
to work in rural hospitals and underserved areas, and the need to
retain and train high-quality physicians to help address access to
health care in these communities. In accordance with the
Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2021, CMS is proposing to
distribute 1,000 additional physician residency slots to qualifying
hospitals, phasing in 200 slots per year over five years. CMS
estimates that the additional funding for these additional
residency slots, once fully phased in, will total approximately
$0.3 billion each year to fund medical residency positions in
hospitals to address the workforce shortages.
“Hospitals
are often the backbone of rural communities – but the COVID-19
pandemic has hit rural hospitals hard, and too many are struggling
to stay afloat,” said HHS Secretary Xavier Becerra. “This rule will
give hospitals more relief and additional tools to care for
COVID-19 patients and it will also bolster the health care
workforce in rural and underserved communities. The Biden
Administration is committed to expanding health equity in
communities across the country, especially in rural America.”
Consistent
with President Biden’s Executive Order 13985 on Advancing Racial
Equity and Support for Underserved Communities Through the Federal
Government, CMS is also committed to addressing significant and
persistent inequities in health outcomes in the U.S. through
improving data collection to better measure and analyze disparities
across programs and policies. In this proposed rule, CMS is
soliciting feedback on opportunities to leverage diverse sets of
data (race, Medicare/Medicaid dual eligible status, disability
status, LGBTQ+, socioeconomic status, etc.) and new methodological
approaches to advance equity through the quality measurement and
value-based purchasing programs.
The
rule also proposes to implement section 9831 of the American Rescue
Plan Act of 2021 to permanently reinstate the imputed
floor-wage-index for all-urban States for FY 2022.
Additionally,
the rule proposes to update Medicare fee-for-service payment rates
and policies for acute care inpatient hospitals and long-term care
hospitals for fiscal year 2022. CMS estimates total Medicare
spending on acute care inpatient hospital services will increase by
about $2.5 billion in fiscal year 2022.
Strengthening
COVID-19 Ongoing Response
In
November 2020, CMS established the New COVID-19 Treatments Add-on
Payment (NCTAP) to mitigate any potential financial disincentives
for hospitals to provide new COVID-19 treatments during the PHE.
The proposed rule would extend the NCTAP for certain eligible
technologies through the end of the fiscal year in which the PHE
ends.
In
addition, the proposed rule seeks to strengthen the ongoing
response to the public health emergency and future health threats
by leveraging meaningful measures for quality programs. CMS is
proposing the adoption of the COVID-19 Vaccination Coverage among
Healthcare Personnel (HCP) Measure to require hospitals to report
COVID-19 vaccinations of workers in their facilities. This proposed
measure is designed to assess whether hospitals are taking steps to
limit the spread of COVID-19 among their workforce, reduce the risk
of transmission within their facilities, help sustain the ability
of hospitals to continue serving their communities through the
public health emergency, and assess the nation’s long-term recovery
and readiness efforts.
Additionally,
CMS is proposing to modify the Promoting Interoperability program
requirements for eligible hospitals and critical access hospitals
to expand reporting within the Public Health and Clinical Data
Exchange Objective. The proposal would require hospitals to report
on all four of the following measures: Syndromic Surveillance
Reporting, Immunization Registry Reporting, Electronic Case
Reporting, and Electronic Reportable Laboratory Result Reporting.
Requiring
hospitals to report these four measures would help to prepare
public health agencies to respond to future health threats and a
long-term COVID-19 recovery by strengthening public health
functions, including early warning surveillance, case surveillance,
and vaccine uptake which will increase the information available to
help hospitals better serve their patients. Requiring these
measures would enable nationwide syndromic surveillance for early
warning of emerging outbreaks and threats; automated case and
laboratory reporting for rapid public health response; and local
and national visibility on immunization uptake so public health can
tailor vaccine distribution strategies.
For a
fact sheet on the proposed rule visit: https://www.cms.gov/newsroom/fact-sheets/fiscal-year-fy-2022-medicare-hospital-inpatient-prospective-payment-system-ipps-and-long-term-care
The
proposed rule can be downloaded from the Federal Register at: https://www.federalregister.gov/public-inspection/2021-08888/medicare-program-hospital-inpatient-prospective-payment-systems-for-acute-care-hospitals-and-the
### Get
CMS news at cms.gov/newsroom, sign up for CMS
news via email and follow CMS on @CMSgov
|
No comments:
Post a Comment