April 1, 2021 6:07 AM By Brandon Lee
President Joe Biden’s call to spend $400 billion to
expand home and community-based care is raising advocates’ hopes that lawmakers
might finally address long-standing challenges the industry, the elderly and
people with disabilities face.
Biden’s multi-trillion-dollar infrastructure proposal unveiled
yesterday included the new funds over eight years to boost access to long-term
care under Medicaid, the federal government’s public health insurance program
for the poor and disabled. Many Americans suffer on waiting lists for home care
under Medicaid, the main payer for home- and community-based support. Wages
remain low for home-care workers in demanding jobs. Biden has signaled he wants
to handle these costly issues side-by-side.
“This is a bigger investment than anything we’ve seen in recent
years and it’s probably not enough,” Robert Espinoza, vice president of policy
for PHI, a nonprofit research group that tracks the home-care sector, said.
“It’s promising and could be a big step.”
The U.S. spent $379 billion in 2018 for long-term services and
support—which are used to help seniors and those with disabilities with
anything from cooking meals to bathing and dressing, and managing medication or
mobility, the Kaiser Family Foundation found. Medicaid paid for more than half
of this, which includes nursing home and home health services.
Demand for these services is increasing. Home-health aides and
personal-care aides make up the sixth-fastest growing occupation in the
country, according to Labor Department data, and pay about $12.15 per hour, or
$25,280 per year. In many areas that’s not enough: Most home-health aides
qualify for federal help like food assistance and Medicaid, research by PHI shows.
Biden’s plan, scant on details, explicitly calls for addressing
the industry’s low wages. A White House outline of the infrastructure proposal
calls for extending Medicaid’s Money Follows the Person program, and expanding
home care workers’ capacity to bargain collectively. Espinoza said funds should
go to raising wages for home care workers as well to employers to improve
training. States also need funds for Medicaid if they’re to expand home-care
services, he said.
Members of Congress crafting the final details likely will need to
meet the demand of budget reconciliation, which allows the Senate to pass
legislation with a simple majority. Republicans have scoffed at the high price
tag for Biden’s infrastructure plan and his call for raising some taxes to pay
for it. Read more from
Alex Ruoff.
BGOV OnPoint:
Biden Unveils $2.25 Trillion Infrastructure Plan
Preventing Future Pandemics: Also in Biden’s proposal is $30 billion over the
next four years to help prevent the next pandemic, just as the U.S. just starts
to see the light at the end of the Covid-19 tunnel. The funds would be directed
to the Strategic National Stockpile, development of testing and therapies for
emerging diseases, prototype vaccines, and improved technology for faster
vaccine production.
Public health scientists and researchers expect pandemics to
become more common in the coming decades and say that preparing against
diseases is more a necessity than an option. “Our national health security is
as vital to our national defense as buying tanks and planes,” said Greg Burel,
director of the Strategic National Stockpile from 2007 to January 2020. The
nation’s Covid-19 response has only amplified the issues that have been brewing
in the U.S. health-care system for decades.
“Outbreaks of SARS, Ebola, influenza, Zika and others have cost
billions in lost productivity,” the administration said. “The risk of
catastrophic biological threats is increasing due to our interconnected world,
heightened risk of spillover from animals to humans, ease of making and modifying
pandemic agents, and an eroding norm against the development and use of
biological weapons.” Shira Stein has
more.
·
Related: Covid-19:
Sustained Federal Action Is Crucial as Pandemic Enters Its Second Year (GAO)
Happening on the Hill
Cornyn Eyes Probe of Avantor Sales in Mexico: Sen. John Cornyn (R-Texas) said he
wants the chamber to investigate Avantor and other drug companies that sold
internationally controlled drugmaking chemicals into Mexico’s “unregulated and
corrupt market” amid a U.S. narcotics epidemic. Cornyn, who sits on the
Judiciary Committee and the bipartisan Caucus on International Narcotics
Control, cited an investigation by Bloomberg exposing how Avantor’s Mexican
sales of an essential heroin-making chemical were easily diverted by drug
syndicates. Read more from
Cam Simpson.
Clyburn Says Memos Show Trump-Era Pandemic Failures: House Select Subcommittee on the Coronavirus
Crisis Chair James Clyburn (D-S.C.) sent letters yesterday to the
Health and Human Services and Homeland Security departments as part of an
ongoing investigation into the Trump administration’s efforts “to procure and
distribute personal protective equipment and other critical supplies during the
pandemic,” according to a statement, citing documents suggesting that Trump’s
administration “failed to react quickly” to the novel virus last spring
“despite urgent warnings.” Read the documents here.
Disability Rights Groups Concerned by Opioid Bills: A coalition of 100 nationwide and state
disability rights organizations will deliver a joint letter to Congress next
week “voicing unified concern” over recently introduced legislation “that risk
endangering the health and safety of people with disabilities who require
prescribed opioids to manage pain,” the groups said in a statement yesterday.
Key aspects of the legislation distort guidance issued by the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention by establishing “inflexible pill limits that the
agency itself has publicly warned against due to the risk such limits pose to
patients,” they wrote. Read it here.
More on the Pandemic
Moderna Starts Human Tests of South Africa Variant Shot: Moderna’s experimental booster shot to protect
against the Covid-19 variant first identified in South Africa has moved into
human testing, the NIH announced yesterday. The trial, which the the National
Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases is leading and funding at four
sites across the U.S., comes as nine states have identified the B.1.351 variant
of the SARS-Cov-2 virus in patients.
Moderna’s vaccine, authorized in December, appears to protect
against Covid-19 variants that have developed over the past several months. Its
overall high protection level (94%) makes it effective—although perhaps not as
effective—against different versions of the virus. Moderna’s variant vaccine
differs from one now authorized for emergency use because it delivers genetic
instructions that incorporate key mutations in the B.1.351 variant, the NIH
said. Read more from
Jeannie Baumann.
·
J&J
Manufacturing Error: A manufacturing error
at a plant involved in Covid-19 vaccine production affected 15 million doses
worth of an ingredient for Johnson & Johnson’s vaccine, according to two
sources familiar with the matter, though the company downplayed the situation
and said it met its most recent vaccine delivery target. Read more from
Josh Wingrove, Riley Griffin and Emma Court.
B.1.1.7 Variant Now Top Strain in Five Regions: A more contagious strain of the coronavirus is
now predominant in five U.S. regions and accounts for one-quarter of new cases
nationally, the head of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said.
The B.1.1.7 variant, first seen in the U.K., makes up between 4% and 35% of
cases depending on the area, and 26% of cases across the country, Rochelle
Walensky said at a press briefing yesterday. U.S. officials warned earlier this
year it might become the predominant strain of the virus in the U.S. by early
April.
“We are starting to see it creep up. We do know it’s more
transmissible, somewhere between 50% and 70% more transmissible than the
wild-type strain,” Walensky said. “So, to the extent people are not practicing
the standard mitigation strategies, we do think that more infections will
result because of B.1.1.7.” Walensky didn’t specify in which U.S. regions that
strain is now predominant. Read more from
Josh Wingrove.
·
The variant’s rapid spread
comes as the CDC found Covid-19 was the third-leading cause of death in the
U.S. last year, contributing to a 15.9% increase in the nationwide mortality
rate from a year earlier. The disease was the underlying or contributing cause
of 377,883 deaths in the country last year, according to the CDC National Vital
Statistics System. Just heart disease and cancer were deadlier. Riley Griffin
and Robert Langreth have more.
Pfizer Vaccine 100% Effective in Youth: Pfizer said its Covid-19 vaccine was 100%
effective in a final-stage trial in adolescents ages 12 to 15, a finding that
could pave the way for teens and pre-teens to get shots before the next school
year. Pfizer and partner BioNTech said that they planned to submit the data to
regulators in the U.S and Europe as soon as possible, seeking to amend their
vaccine authorizations to include the younger age group. In people 16 and
older, Pfizer’s mRNA vaccine was 95% effective at preventing symptomatic cases
in a final-stage trial. Read more from
Robert Langreth.
Self-Test Pilot Aims to Reduce Community Spread: Residents of an eastern North Carolina county
will have access to rapid at-home coronavirus tests over the next month under a
new initiative that seeks to determine if frequent self-testing helps curb
community spread of the virus. The federal initiative called “Say Yes! COVID
Test” will give Pitt County residents access to free, rapid antigen tests that
they can administer themselves three times per week for one month. Read more from
Jeannie Baumann.
FDA Oks Rapid Covid Tests For Use at Home Without a Prescription: U.S. regulators authorized rapid Covid-19
tests made by Abbott Laboratories and Quidel for use at home without a
prescription, making self-monitoring for the disease even more accessible. The
Food and Drug Administration clearance of the tests opens the door to their
wide availability at retail stores, allowing consumers to keep them on hand for
routine use. The move will help solidify Abbott and Quidel’s positions in the
rapid test space, where only a few small companies have won over-the-counter
authorizations. Read more from
Emma Court and Michelle Fay Cortez.
More Vaccine News:
·
U.S.-China
Rivalry Snarls Paraguay’s Desperate Quest for Vaccine
·
EU Regulator
Sees Possible Link Between AstraZeneca Shot, Clots
·
Facebook Is
Letting Anti-Vaxxers Scare Women From Covid Shots
·
U.S. White Vaccination Rates Are 1.7 Times Those of Black People
More Headlines:
·
WHO Origin
Hunters Push Back as Report Assailed From All Sides
·
Bolsonaro
Increasingly Cornered by Pandemic He Tried to Ignore
·
How the Tokyo
Olympics Risks Becoming a Super-Spreader Event
·
France Entering
Month-Long Lockdown as Cases Surge in Europe
·
Trump-Touted
Drug Lives On as Covid Therapy Despite Trial Flops
What Else to Know
HHS Doubles ACA Ad Spending After Boost: The Biden administration will spend $50 million
to promote new Obamacare subsidies made available through the latest pandemic
relief law, doubling the amount it’s put toward encouraging people to sign up
for health-care coverage. The new subsidies, which are available for the first
time to those with incomes above 400% of the federal poverty level, means an
average of four out of five customers will be able to buy a plan for $10 or
less per month, the HHS said in a statement announcing the new ad campaign,
which will begin today. Read more from
Sara Hansard.
HHS Asked to Shield Drug Discounts Despite Patient Shift: America’s hospitals are calling on the Biden
White House to continue letting health-care providers access discounted drugs
in spite of coronavirus-stirred changes to the number of patients they treat
with low-income health coverage. The pandemic pushed U.S. hospitals to halt
“non-urgent services” and shift resources to treat those suffering from
Covid-19, reducing the amount of poor patients, the American Hospital
Association told HHS Secretary Xavier Becerra. Read more from
Ian Lopez.
DOD Announces Updated Transgender Policy: Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin on
yesterday announced the Pentagon has updated its policies regarding the
military service of transgender people, Roxana Tiron reports. The policy update
reinforces the Biden administration’s reversal of a ban instituted by former
President Donald Trump and will support recruitment, retention and the care of
qualified transgender individuals, Austin said in a Tweet.
The policies provide a path for those in service for medical
treatment, gender transition, and recognition in one’s self-identified gender,
according to a release issued by the Defense Department. The policy also
addresses the transition and approval process, including the roles of the
service member, commander, and medical community.
·
1,000 to 8,000 troops
self-identify as transgender and an additional 2,200 are diagnosed with gender
dysphoria, an associated medical condition, the Pentagon said yesterday, Travis Tritten
reports.
Related:
·
Virginia Latest
to Strike ‘Trans Panic’ Defense of Violent Crime
·
Trans Teens in
Arizona Denied Medicaid Pay for Chest Surgeries
More Agency Headlines:
·
FCC Considering
‘9-8-8′ Text Hotline for Suicide Prevention Help
·
Medicare Data
Collection Rule Change Moots Clinical Labs’ Case
·
CVS Health Wins
Renewal of Federal Pharmacy Plan Contract
·
FDA Says Some
ADM Products Yield High Complication Potential
·
FDA Studying
Heart Rhythm Issues Across Similar Seizure Drugs
More Headlines:
·
Purdue, Other
Opioid Makers Lose Quest to Dismiss Chicago Case
·
Pharma Groups to
Face Antitrust Suit Over Drug Import Websites
With assistance from Roxana Tiron
To contact the reporter on this story: Brandon Lee in
Washington at blee@bgov.com
To contact the editors responsible for this story: Zachary
Sherwood at zsherwood@bgov.com; Giuseppe
Macri at gmacri@bgov.com; Michaela
Ross at mross@bgov.com
https://about.bgov.com/news/health-care-briefing-biden-boosts-home-health-in-economic-plan/
No comments:
Post a Comment