CMS Takes Steps to Ensure Medicare
Beneficiaries Have Wide Access to COVID-19 Antibody Treatment
Coverage Available at No Cost to
Beneficiaries Across Variety of Settings in Health Care System
The
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services announced that
starting today, Medicare beneficiaries can receive coverage of
monoclonal antibodies to treat coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)
with no cost-sharing during the public health emergency (PHE). CMS’
coverage of monoclonal antibody infusions applies to bamlanivimab,
which received an emergency use authorization (EUA) from the U.S.
Food and Drug Administration yesterday.
“Today,
CMS is announcing a historic, first-of-its kind policy that
drastically expands access to COVID-19 monoclonal antibodies to
beneficiaries without cost sharing,” said CMS Administrator Seema
Verma. “Our timely approach means beneficiaries can receive these
potentially life-saving therapies in a range of settings – such as
in a doctor’s office, nursing home, infusion centers, as long as
safety precautions can be met. This aggressive action and
innovative approach will undoubtedly save lives.”
CMS
anticipates that this monoclonal antibody product will initially be
given to health care providers at no charge. Medicare will not pay
for the monoclonal antibody products that providers receive free
but today’s action provides for reimbursement for the infusion of
the product. When health care providers begin to purchase
monoclonal antibody products, Medicare anticipates setting the
payment rate in the same way it set the payment rates for COVID-19
vaccines, such as based on 95% of the average wholesale price for
COVID-19 vaccines in many provider settings. CMS will issue billing
and coding instructions for health care providers in the coming
days.
CMS
anticipates the announcement today will allow for a broad range of
providers and suppliers, including freestanding and hospital-based
infusion centers, home health agencies, nursing homes, and entities
with whom nursing homes contract, to administer this treatment in
accordance with the EUA, and bill Medicare to administer these
infusions.
Under section
6008 of the Families First Coronavirus Response Act (FFCRA), state
and territorial Medicaid programs may receive a temporary 6.2
percentage point increase in the Federal Medical Assistance
Percentage (FMAP), through the end of the quarter in which the
COVID-19 PHE ends. A condition for receipt of this enhanced federal
match is that a state or territory must cover COVID-19 testing
services and treatments, including vaccines and their
administration, specialized equipment, and therapies for Medicaid enrollees
without cost sharing. This means that this monoclonal antibody
infusion is expected to be covered when furnished to Medicaid
beneficiaries, in accordance with the EUA, during this period, with
limited exceptions.
To View
the Monoclonal Antibody COVID-18 Infusion Program Instruction,
visit: https://www.cms.gov/files/document/covid-medicare-monoclonal-antibody-infusion-program-instruction.pdf
|
No comments:
Post a Comment