CENTERS FOR MEDICARE &
MEDICAID SERVICES (CMS) Special
Edition – Tuesday, December 1, 2020
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Trump Administration Finalizes Permanent Expansion of Medicare
Telehealth Services and Improved Payment for Time Doctors Spend with
Patients
On December 1, CMS released the annual
Physician Fee Schedule (PFS) final rule, prioritizing CMS’ investment in primary
care and chronic disease management by increasing payments to physicians and
other practitioners for the additional time they spend with patients,
especially those with chronic conditions. The rule allows non-physician
practitioners to provide the care they were trained and licensed to give,
cutting red tape so health care professionals can practice at the top of
their license and spend more time with patients instead of on unnecessary
paperwork. This final rule takes steps to further implement President Trump’s
Executive Order on Protecting and Improving Medicare for Our Nation’s Seniors
including prioritizing the expansion of proven alternatives like telehealth. “During the COVID-19 pandemic, actions by the
Trump Administration have unleashed an explosion in telehealth innovation,
and we’re now moving to make many of these changes permanent,” said HHS
Secretary Alex Azar. “Medicare beneficiaries will now be able to receive
dozens of new services via telehealth, and we’ll keep exploring ways to deliver
Americans access to health care in the setting that they and their doctor
decide makes sense for them.” “Telehealth has long been a priority for the
Trump Administration, which is why we started paying for short virtual visits
in rural areas long before the pandemic struck,” said CMS Administrator Seema
Verma. “But the pandemic accentuated just how transformative it could be, and
several months in, it’s clear that the health care system has adapted
seamlessly to a historic telehealth expansion that inaugurates a new era in
health care delivery.” Finalizing Telehealth Expansion and Improving
Rural Health Before the COVID-19 Public Health Emergency
(PHE), only 15,000 Fee-for-Service beneficiaries each week received a
Medicare telemedicine service. Since the beginning of the PHE, CMS has added
144 telehealth services, such as emergency department visits, initial
inpatient and nursing facility visits, and discharge day management services,
that are covered by Medicare through the end of the PHE. These services were
added to allow for safe access to important health care services during the
PHE. As a result, preliminary data show that between mid-March and
mid-October 2020, over 24.5 million out of 63 million beneficiaries and
enrollees have received a Medicare telemedicine service during the PHE. This final rule delivers on the President’s
recent Executive Order on Improving Rural Health and Telehealth Access by
adding more than 60 services to the Medicare telehealth list that will
continue to be covered beyond the end of the PHE, and we will continue to
gather more data and evaluate whether more services should be added in the
future. These additions allow beneficiaries in rural areas who are in a
medical facility (like a nursing home) to continue to have access to
telehealth services such as certain types of emergency department visits,
therapy services, and critical care services. Medicare does not have the
statutory authority to pay for telehealth to beneficiaries outside of rural
areas or, with certain exceptions, allow beneficiaries to receive telehealth
in their home. However, this is an important step, and as a result, Medicare
beneficiaries in rural areas will have more convenient access to health care. Additionally, CMS is announcing a
commissioned study of its telehealth flexibilities provided during the
COVID-19 PHE. The study will explore new opportunities for services where
telehealth and virtual care supervision, and remote monitoring can be used to
more efficiently bring care to patients and to enhance program integrity,
whether they are being treated in the hospital or at home. Payment for Office/Outpatient Evaluation and
Management (E/M) and Comparable Visits Last year, CMS finalized a historic increase
in payment rates for office/outpatient face-to-face E/M visits that goes into
effect in 2021. The Medicare population is increasing, with over 10,000
beneficiaries joining the program every day. Along with this growth in
enrollment is increasing complexity of beneficiary health care needs, with
more than two-thirds of Medicare beneficiaries having two or more chronic
conditions. Increasing the payment rate of E/M office visits recognizes this
demand and ensures clinicians are paid appropriately for the time they spend
on coordinating care for patients, especially those with chronic conditions.
These payment increases, informed by recommendations from the American
Medical Association (AMA), support clinicians who provide crucial care for
patients with dementia or manage transitions between the hospital, nursing
facilities, and home. Under this final rule, CMS continues to
prioritize this investment in primary care and chronic disease management by
similarly increasing the value of many services that are similar to E/M
office visits, such as maternity care bundles, emergency department visits,
end-stage renal disease capitated payment bundles, and physical and
occupational therapy evaluation services. These adjustments ensure CMS is
appropriately recognizing the kind of care where clinicians need to spend more
face-to-face time with patients. “This finalized policy marks the most
significant updates to E/M codes in 30 years, reducing burden on doctors
imposed by the coding system and rewarding time spent evaluating and managing
their patients’ care,” Administrator Verma added. “In the past, the system
has rewarded interventions and procedures over time spent with patients –
time taken preventing disease and managing chronic illnesses.” In addition to the increase in payment for
E/M office visits, simplified coding and documentation changes for Medicare
billing for these visits will go into effect beginning January 1, 2021. The
changes modernize documentation and coding guidelines developed in the 1990s,
and come after extensive stakeholder collaboration with the AMA and others.
These changes will significantly reduce the burden of documentation for all
clinicians, giving them greater discretion to choose the visit level based on
either guidelines for medical decision-making (the process by which a
clinician formulates a course of treatment based on a patient’s information,
i.e., through performing a physical exam, reviewing history, conducting
tests, etc.) or time dedicated with patients. These changes are expected to
save clinicians 2.3 million hours per year in administrative burden so that
clinicians can spend more time with their patients. Professional Scope of Practice and
Supervision As part of the Patients Over Paperwork
Initiative, the Trump Administration is cutting red tape so that health care
professionals can practice at the top of their license and spend more time
with patients instead of on unnecessary paperwork. The PFS final rule makes
permanent several workforce flexibilities provided during the COVID-19 PHE
that allow non-physician practitioners to provide the care they were trained
and licensed to give, without imposing additional restrictions by the
Medicare program. Specifically, CMS is finalizing the following
changes:
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