Special
Edition – Wednesday, March 4, 2020
CMS
Announces Actions to Address Spread of Coronavirus
CMS calls on all health care providers to
activate infection control practices and issues guidance to inspectors as
they inspect facilities affected by Coronavirus
On March 4, the Centers for Medicare &
Medicaid Services (CMS) announced several actions aimed at limiting the
spread of the Novel Coronavirus 2019 (COVID-19). Specifically, CMS is issuing
a call to action to health care providers across the country to ensure they
are implementing their infection control procedures, which they are required
to maintain at all times. Additionally, CMS is announcing that, effective
immediately and, until further notice, State Survey Agencies and Accrediting
Organizations will focus their facility inspections exclusively on issues
related to infection control and other serious health and safety threats,
like allegations of abuse – beginning with nursing homes and hospitals. Critically,
this shift in approach, first announced yesterday by Vice President Pence,
will allow inspectors to focus their energies on addressing the spread of
COVID-19.
As the agency responsible for Medicare and
Medicaid, CMS requires facilities to maintain infection control and
prevention policies as a condition for participation in the programs. CMS is
also issuing three memoranda to State Survey Agencies, State Survey Agency
directors and Accrediting Organizations – to inspect thousands of Medicare-participating
health care providers across the country, including nursing homes and
hospitals.
“Today’s actions, taken together, represent a
call to action across the health care system,” said CMS Administrator Seema
Verma. “All health care providers must immediately review their procedures to
ensure compliance with CMS’ infection control requirements, as well as the
guidelines from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). We
sincerely appreciate the proactive efforts of the nursing home and hospital
associations that have already galvanized to provide up-to-the-minute
information to their members. We must continue working together to keep
American patients and residents safe and healthy and prevent the spread of
COVID-19.”
The first memorandum provides important
detail with respect to the temporary focus of surveys on infection control
and other emergent issues. Importantly, it notes that, in addition to the
focused inspections, statutorily-required inspections will also continue in
the 15,000 nursing homes across the country using the approximately 8,200
state survey agency surveyors. Surveys will be conducted according to the
following regime:
The memorandum also includes protocols for
the inspection process in situations in which COVID-19 is identified or
suspected. These protocols include working closely with CMS regional offices,
coordinating with CDC, and other relevant agencies at all levels of
government. The agency is also providing key guidance related to inspectors’
usage of adequate personal protective equipment.
The other two memoranda provide critical
answers to common questions that nursing homes and hospitals may have with
respect to addressing cases of COVID-19. For example, the memoranda discuss
concerns like screening staff and visitors with questions about recent travel
to countries with known cases and the severity of infection that would
warrant hospitalization instead of self-isolation. They detail the process
for transferring patients between nursing homes and hospitals in cases for
which COVID-19 is suspected or diagnosed. They also describe the
circumstances under which providers should take precautionary measures (like
isolation and mask wearing) for patients and residents diagnosed with
COVID-19, or showing signs and symptoms of COVID-19.
Finally, the agency is announcing that it has
deployed an infection prevention specialist to CDC’s Atlanta headquarters to
assist with real-time in guidance development.
These actions from CMS are focused on
protecting American patients and residents by ensuring health care facilities
have up-to-date information to adequately respond to COVID-19 concerns while
also making it clear to providers that as always, CMS will hold them
accountable for effective infection control standards. The agency is also
supplying inspectors with necessary and timely information to safely and
accurately inspect facilities.
To view each memo, please visit:
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