CMS NEWS
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
October 14, 2020
Contact: CMS Media Relations
(202) 690-6145 | CMS Media Inquiries
Trump
Administration Drives Telehealth Services in Medicaid and Medicare
Today, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid
Services (CMS) expanded the list of telehealth services that Medicare
Fee-For-Service will pay for during the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)
Public Health Emergency (PHE). CMS is also providing additional support to
state Medicaid and Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP) agencies in
their efforts to expand access to telehealth. The actions reinforce
President Trump’s Executive Order on Improving Rural Health and Telehealth
Access to improve the health of all Americans by increasing access to
better care.
“Responding to President Trump’s Executive
Order, CMS is taking action to increase telehealth adoption across the
country,” said CMS Administrator Seema Verma. “Medicaid patients should not
be forgotten, and today’s announcement promotes telehealth for them as
well. This revolutionary method of improving access to care is transforming
healthcare delivery in America. President Trump will not let the genie go
back into the bottle.”
Expanding Medicare Telehealth
Services
For the first time using a new expedited
process, CMS is adding 11 new services to the Medicare telehealth services
list since the publication of the May 1, 2020, COVID-19 Interim Final Rule
with comment period (IFC). Medicare will begin paying eligible
practitioners who furnish these newly added telehealth services effective
immediately, and for the duration of the PHE. These new telehealth services
include certain neurostimulator analysis and programming services, and
cardiac and pulmonary rehabilitation services. The list of these newly
added services is available at: https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-General-Information/Telehealth/Telehealth-Codes.
In the May 1 COVID-19 IFC, CMS modified the
process for adding or deleting services from the Medicare telehealth
services list to allow for expedited consideration of additional telehealth
services during the PHE outside of rulemaking. This update to the Medicare
telehealth services list builds on the efforts CMS has already taken to
increase Medicare beneficiaries’ access to telehealth services during the
COVID-19 PHE.
Since the beginning of the PHE, CMS has
added over 135 services to the Medicare telehealth services list – such as
emergency department visits, initial inpatient and nursing facility visits,
and discharge day management services. With today’s action, Medicare will
pay for 144 services performed via telehealth. Between mid-March and
mid-August 2020, over 12.1 million Medicare beneficiaries – over 36 percent
– of people with Medicare Fee-For-Service have received a telemedicine
service.
Preliminary Medicaid and CHIP
Data Snapshot on Telehealth Utilization and Medicaid & CHIP Telehealth
Toolkit Supplement
In an effort to provide greater
transparency on telehealth access in Medicaid and CHIP, CMS is releasing,
for the first time, a preliminary Medicaid and CHIP data snapshot on
telehealth utilization during the PHE. This snapshot shows, among other
things, that there have been more than 34.5 million services delivered via
telehealth to Medicaid and CHIP beneficiaries between March and June of
this year, representing an increase of more than 2,600% when compared to
the same period from the prior year. The data also shows that adults ages
19-64 received the most services delivered via telehealth, although there
was substantial variance across both age groups and states.
To further drive telehealth, CMS is
releasing a new supplement to its State Medicaid &
CHIP Telehealth Toolkit: Policy Considerations for States Expanding Use of
Telehealth, COVID-19 Version that provides numerous new
examples and insights into lessons learned from states that have
implemented telehealth changes. The updated supplemental information is
intended to help states strategically think through how they explain and
clarify to providers and other stakeholders which policies are temporary or
permanent. It also helps states identify services that can be accessed
through telehealth, which providers may deliver those services, the ways
providers may use in order to deliver services through telehealth, as well
as the circumstances under which telehealth can be reimbursed once the PHE
expires.
The toolkit includes approaches and tools
states can use to communicate with providers on utilizing telehealth for
patient care. It updates and consolidates in one place the Frequently Asked
Questions (FAQs) and resources for states to consider as they begin
planning beyond the temporary flexibilities provided in response to the
pandemic.
To view the Medicaid and CHIP data snapshot
on telehealth utilization during the PHE, please visit: https://www.medicaid.gov/resources-for-states/downloads/medicaid-chip-beneficiaries-COVID-19-snapshot-data-through-20200630.pdf.
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