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June 2020

Telehealth Gives a Free Health Clinic a Lifeline to its Patient Population

By News

Mobile healthcare, telemedicine, telehealth, BYOD

By Eric Wicklund

The Order of Malta Clinic of Northern California is using a new telehealth platform to improve access and care for thousands of residents in and around Oakland – many of whom have no other access to care.

– A community health clinic in Oakland that offers free healthcare to underserved populations is discovering just how important telehealth can be when payment and reimbursement are taken off the table.

The Order of Malta Clinic of Northern California, launched in 2008, saw some 4,500 uninsured and underinsured patients last year – and that number is growing, due to the coronavirus pandemic and a resulting surge in unemployment. With the crisis reducing in-person care to emergencies, the clinic has ramped up a telemedicine platform recently put in place with assistance from Kareo.

(For more coronavirus updates, visit our resource page, updated twice daily by Xtelligent Healthcare Media.)

“We’ve become a lifeline for people whose only access to care is through us,” says Dr. Michael Matly, the clinic’s managing director. “We’re providing care that they wouldn’t get.”

The clinic, part of a global order that has been providing free healthcare for about 900 years, offers free care, including testing, preventive healthcare and access to dozens of specialists, to a population of roughly 300,000 in the Bay Area. It’s funded solely through an annual fundraising event and donations.

Up until COVID-19, that care had been delivered strictly through the downtown site or a mobile clinic introduced in 2018. Now, much of that care comes through the telephone.

“It’s been a huge relief for them,” says Dr. Thomas Wallace, who volunteers four days a week at the clinic and, at 89 years, is its senior staffer. “With the clinic being closed, we need this opportunity to stay in touch with them and see how they’re doing.”

Working through an electronic health record platform and laptops, the clinic’s roughly 50 volunteers can coordinate care for patients on a connected health platform, ordering tests, prescribing medications and updating medical records. The platform is currently audio-based, but the clinic is working to launch a video visit service soon.

“I think video is going to allow us to see more patients,” says Matly. “Phones are good for many of our patients, but to be able to actually see them will give us new opportunities.”

“The key is giving them access to care,” he adds. “This is a population that has always been vulnerable,” many of which have little or no insurance, are multilingual, perhaps homeless, have emigrated here from other countries, and are unsure or untrusting of the health system.

“In the COVID-19 age, people don’t want to go to the hospital,” Matly says. “This population is even more vulnerable now.”

“Before the transition to telemedicine, it was disturbing not being able to communicate with our patients,” Wallace noted in a recent press release announcing the Kareo partnership. “During a time of social distancing and following the shelter-in-place mandate, this is a window of hope to a community that is desperately in need of regular medical attention.”

Matly says the clinic staff are “learning new skillsets” through telehealth, and the clinic itself is forging partnerships with the likes of Twitter and the Mayo Clinic to expand its reach and offer new resources, even some eConsults. They envision someday using mHealth devices and platforms to capture more data, perhaps even expand care management into the home.

Once the crisis has passed, Matly and Wallace don’t expect patients to come flocking back to the clinic or mobile unit. But with a telehealth program in place, the clinic can reach out to those patients, as well as making inroads to new patients and new communities. Care delivered through a phone, online or via video is infinitely better than no care at all.

“We’re excited to see where this leads,” says Wallace.

FCC Announces 11th Batch of COVID-19 Telehealth Program Awards

By News

Mobile healthcare, telemedicine, telehealth, BYOD

By Eric Wicklund

As Congress asks for more transparency from the agency, another 62 telehealth projects are approved for funding, bringing the total to $128.23 million for 367 programs in 45 states and Washington DC

– The Federal Communications Commission has approved another 62 applications from healthcare providers for funding from the COVID-19 Telehealth Program.

With its 11th set of applications, the FCC has awarded $128.23 million from the $200 million program to 367 connected health programs in 45 states and Washington DC.

(For more coronavirus updates, visit our resource page, updated twice daily by Xtelligent Healthcare Media.)

The announcement comes as the FCC faces increasing scrutiny from Congress over the program, which was launched out of the CARES Act at the end of March.

In a letter to FCC Chairman Ajit Pai last week, US Reps Frank Pallone Jr (D-NJ) and Michael Doyle Jr. (D-PA) called for the agency to provide weekly updates, beginning this week, on the number of applications received for funding from the $200 million program, as well as those approved for funding, those not approved for funding and the amount of money dispersed to healthcare providers.

“While the FCC has posted weekly updates of funding awards, we are troubled by the lack of transparency regarding the health care providers who have applied but have not yet received an award,” Pallone, chair of the Commerce and Energy Committee, and Doyle, chair of the Subcommittee on Communications and Technology, wrote. “We have heard reports that many health care providers are facing issues obtaining funds, particularly those serving tribal lands.”

“Similarly, health care providers report they have been unable to receive funding for some important telehealth equipment that we believe should be covered under the law,” they added.

The COVID-19 Telehealth Program is not a grant program. To receive disbursements, healthcare providers will be required to submit an invoicing form and supporting documentation to receive reimbursement for eligible telemedicine and mHealth expenses and services.

The latest group of approved applications, as usual, includes a mix of large and small providers, from clinics and programs to hospitals and health systems, all looking for support to expand telemedicine and mHealth technology platforms to meet the demand caused by the coronavirus pandemic.

This list includes Miami’s Baptist Hospital, Florida’s Citrus Health Network, the Hearts for Hearing Foundation in Oklahoma City, Detroit’s Henry Ford Health System, the Hospital for Special Surgery in New York City, Maimonides Medical Center in Brooklyn, Marshfield Medical Center in Wisconsin, Cleveland’s Metrohealth System, the Oregon Health and Science University in Portland, the Providence St. Joseph Health Consortium in Washington, Thomas Jefferson University Hospitals in Philadelphia, University of Colorado Health, here hospitals in the UPMC network and the West Virginia United Health System.

Bipartisan senators call for making telehealth expansion permanent post-coronavirus

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A group of 30 senators from both sides of the aisle on Monday urged leadership to make permanent the expansion of telehealth services that has been undertaken during the coronavirus pandemic.

The letter to Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) and Senate Minority Leader Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.) calls for provisions from the CONNECT for Health Act included in previous COVID-19 legislation be extended after the public health emergency is over.

“Americans have benefited significantly from this expansion of telehealth and have come to rely on its availability,” said the lawmakers led by Sens. Brian Schatz (D-Hawaii) and Roger Wicker (R-Miss.). “Congress should expand access to telehealth services on a permanent basis so that telehealth remains an option for all Medicare beneficiaries both now and after the pandemic.”

Telehealth has grown in popularity during the coronavirus pandemic as a safer alternative to in-person visits.

The services help doctors work with patients diagnosed with COVID-19 without putting themselves at risk.

It also helps providers care for high-risk patients who might contract the disease if forced to leave their homes for medical visits.

Advocates say enhanced telehealth capabilities could result in improved service with lower fees even beyond the pandemic.

“Doing so would assure patients that their care will not be interrupted when the pandemic ends,” the senators wrote. “It would also provide certainty to health care providers that the costs to prepare for and use telehealth would be a sound long-term investment.”

Telehealth, Tested in Covid-19 Crucible, Expands in Health Plans

By News

 

Convinced that telemedicine, which exploded during Covid-19 shelter-in-place orders, is here to stay, insurers are moving to expand networks and provide virtual primary care plans at lower premiums and less cost-sharing for patients.

Telehealth lets patients meet with health-care providers electronically, via computers or telephones, instead of in person. Patients can receive services at home from providers outside their areas, including monitoring for such chronic conditions at diabetes.

When Covid-19 hit, telehealth, typically available in health plans but not robustly used, took off, with many insurers waiving out-of-pocket costs so consumers could get care without exposing themselves or their providers to the risk of coronavirus infection. The federal government and many states issued regulations or enacted emergency laws to raise reimbursement rates for providers and ease restrictions, such as licensing requirements, to expand telehealth access.

Now, that shift may be here to stay. More insurers, spurred by telemedicine’s lower costs and greater efficiencies, are setting up networks beyond their geographic areas, potentially boosting competition among providers. But telehealth has limits, and it’s also unclear if the savings long associated with virtual medicine will be undermined by the higher rates that insurers and the federal government paid to help expand the sector in the first place.

Virus Opened Door

Telehealth services have been available for years, primarily for people in rural areas or those who lack access to specialized services, but use has been anemic.

More than 70% of people with health insurance have access to telehealth through their plans, and many insurers have partnerships with telehealth providers, Sam Glick, a leader of the Oliver Wyman Health Innovation Center, an initiative of the management consulting firm, said. Still, the pandemic led many consumers to telehealth for the first time.

“Before Covid, fewer than 10% had ever used it,” Glick said. “Now with Covid, a lot more people have tried it.”

The cost savings can be substantial. Visits with medical providers using telehealth services such as Teladoc Health Inc., a U.S.-based multinational telemedicine and virtual health-care company, can be as low as $75 for cash payments and even less if covered by insurance, compared with a typical charge of $150 to $300 for an in-person visit, he said.

Increased use of telehealth may also help drive down costs by expanding health plans’ networks of doctors and other providers and creating greater competition, Glick said.

While individual doctors have to be licensed in the state where their patient is located, many physicians have licenses in more than one state and, more importantly, companies such as Teladoc or Amwell set up systems so patients can be matched with appropriately licensed medical practitioners, Glick said.

That makes them national competitors, “which is very different than what a local medical group with all of its doctors in one place can do.”

Virtual Primary Care

Three months into the pandemic, some health insurers are creating primary care networks based on telehealth, offering reduced or no-costing sharing for members who enroll and lower premiums.

Louisville, Ky.-based Humana Inc. June 1 expanded its On Hand primary care plan, first started in 2019, from two to 13 states. On Hand uses telehealth service Doctor on Demand and is being offered to companies with 100 or more employees where, previously, it was available only to smaller companies.

“We wanted to take it another level” and create entirely virtual primary care plans instead of just embedding basic telehealth options in traditional plans, Caleb Gallifant, Humana’s vice president of product development and partnerships, said. Telehealth previously was used mostly for urgent care, he said.

Humana, with 1.3 million members in employer-sponsored plans, wouldn’t divulge the number of people enrolled in On Hand, but Gallifant said it has gotten more requests as it has expanded its market.

“I think there’s some pent-up demand,” he said.

On Hand makes it easier for geographically dispersed companies with remote workers to offer broader networks, and most companies who buy the plan have never offered health benefits before, Gallifant said.

Premiums are cheaper—20% to 50% less than traditional plans; there are no copays for telemedicine primary care visits; and enrollees receive thermometers and blood pressure monitoring devices at home, he said.

Comfort Level

Familiarity with telehealth grew so quickly in the pandemic that Mountlake Terrace, Wash.-based Premera Blue Cross fast-tracked the creation of its virtual primary care plan, Premera NOW, which came out in mid-May in time for open enrollment season, said Rick Abbott, vice president of product and market solutions.

“We’ve seen a progression of almost a decade in terms of experience and comfort with things like telehealth just in the past 90 days,” Abbott said.

Premera, which operates primarily in the Pacific Northwest, has more than 2.2 million members, including some with large employers such as Microsoft Corp. and Amazon.com Inc.

Premera NOW uses telehealth primary care clinic 98point6. Patients who use telehealth for a substantial portion of their primary care needs receive “unlimited access for free” and are charged a copay for specialist office visits when referred by a virtual primary care doctor, Abbott said.

Premiums for Premera NOW run about 10% less than traditional employer-offered plans, and Premera is looking at offering a similar type of virtual primary care plan in the individual market, he said.

Cost and Care

The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, as well as private insurers in many cases, raised telehealth rates to match in-person visits, providing incentives to providers to participate in telehealth during the pandemic, Danielle Showalter, a principal with consulting firm Avalere Health, said.

Higher rates, though, call into question whether cost savings long associated with telehealth will be lost. Premera decided “for the near term” to equalize payments for local providers to help them “make it through this pandemic whether you were in telehealth or in-person,” Abbott said.

But the company hasn’t decided what to do about future rates.

Abbott said telemedicine probably warrants “a lower price point” than in-person health care because it’s delivered in a way that uses fewer resources, “but that’s a discussion our network team is having with our local providers and our insurance commissioner as well.”

Telehealth isn’t suited for all medical scenarios, but health plan administrators expect it to play a bigger role in some areas, such as monitoring chronic conditions.

Devices that track blood sugar, blood pressure, and other health metrics will increasingly be used in telehealth plans, Glen Tullman, executive chairman and founder of Livongo Health, a digital health company aimed at helping people manage chronic diseases, said. That will cut down on unnecessary visits for people who are doing well and flag those in need of extra help, he said.

Glick agreed telehealth would play a bigger role in monitoring chronic illnesses, a shift that could have implications for the structure of health insurance by pushing it toward monthly provider payments for continuous care rather than paying for individual claims or visits.

Others say telehealth may continue to play a greater role in mental and behavioral health services, two areas that were a “real focal point area of expansion” during the pandemic—and where providers are lacking in some regions, said Showalter. Or it could be used for tasks that have, so far, been less explored, like emergency room triage.

“There are just a lot of uses for telehealth that haven’t previously been tapped as much, really across all of the markets, that have that kind of opportunity now that we’ve been put in a nice little test bubble thanks to the coronavirus,” Showalter said.

To contact the reporter on this story: Sara Hansard in Washington at [email protected]

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Fawn Johnson at [email protected]; Melissa B. Robinson at [email protected]

Senators call for permanent changes to expand telehealth access post-pandemic

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Home

Congress took steps to quickly expand access to telehealth during the COVID-19 pandemic .

Now 30 senators are calling for those changes to become permanent.

Senator Brian Schatz, D-Hawaii, wrote a letter (PDF) urging Senate majority leader Mitch McConnell, R-Kentucky, and minority leader Charles Schumer, D-New York, to support expanding access to telehealth services on a permanent basis so that it remains an option for Medicare beneficiaries both now and after the pandemic.

“Doing so would assure patients that their care will not be interrupted when the pandemic ends. It would also provide certainty to health care providers that the costs to prepare for and use telehealth would be a sound long-term investment,” Schatz wrote in the letter, which was co-signed by a bipartisan group of senators including Commerce Chair Roger Wicker, R-Mississippi; Mark Warner, D-Virginia; Kyrsten Sinema, D-Arizona; Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska; Lindsey Graham, R-South Carolina; and Amy Klobuchar, D-Minnesota.

Virtual care has proven to be a lifeline for patients during the COVID-19 pandemic and the use of telehealth services has skyrocketed in the past three months.

The number of Medicare beneficiaries using telehealth services during the pandemic increased 11,718% in just a month-and-a-half, according to Schatz.

Two of the measures Congress took up this spring—the Coronavirus Preparedness and Response Supplemental Appropriations Act 2020 and the Coronavirus Aid Relief and Economic Security Act (CARES Act)—enabled temporary policies during the COVID-19 emergency, such as allowing the Secretary of Health and Human Services the authority to waive telehealth requirements.

Because of these new authorities provided by Congress, Medicare has expanded coverage of telehealth services for the duration of the pandemic to include all areas of the country—as well as allowing a patient’s home to serve as an originating site for telehealth. In addition, more types of health care providers—including federally qualified health centers and rural health clinics that provide primary care in rural and underserved areas—can furnish and bill Medicare for telehealth services, the senators wrote in the letter.

RELATED: HHS official: ‘Cat out of the bag’ on telehealth but unclear what changes will stick

“Americans have benefited significantly from this expansion of telehealth and have come to rely on its availability,” Schatz wrote.

Many of the temporary policies were adopted from the Creating Opportunities Now for Necessary and Effective Care Technologies (CONNECT) for Health Act of 2019, which Schatz introduced in October. The bipartisan legislation aims to expand Medicare coverage for telehealth services.

The healthcare industry is speculating about the future of telehealth changes after increased use during the pandemic. Health providers and medical groups have been pushing Congress and CMS to make these short-term policy changes permanent as many believe virtual care is here to stay.

The College of Healthcare Information Management Executives (CHIME) wrote in a recent letter to CMS Administrator Seema Verma that healthcare CIOs view telehealth and the ability for patients to access care at a distance as “critical to fighting this disease.”

RELATED: Lawmakers introduce bipartisan measure to expand Medicare coverage for telehealth

Providers are starting to look at what life without a public health emergency and COVID-19 will look like, CHIME president and CEO Russell Branzell wrote.

“The increased use of telehealth has moved the country further into 21st Century medicine. The flexibilities are reducing burdens on providers and patients alike and reverting to pre-COVID telehealth policies will be seen as a step backward,” Branzell wrote.

Given the recent flexibilities provided by both Congress and the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, steps should be taken to measure the impact of telehealth on Medicare, the senators wrote.

The senators are calling for the federal government to collect and analyze data on the impact of telehealth on utilization, quality, health outcomes, and spending during the COVID-19 pandemic.

“There is currently a scarcity of data available regarding the impact of telehealth on the Medicare program. This data would assist Congress in crafting additional policies to improve health outcomes and use resources more effectively,” Schatz wrote.

RELATED: Telehealth could grow to a $250B revenue opportunity post-COVID-19: analysis

Last week, Senators Martha McSally, R-Arizona, and Doug Jones, D-Alabama, introduced bipartisan legislation to make $50 million available for a Virtual Health Pilot administered to support remote patient monitoring programs in community health centers rural health clinics during the pandemic.

Those funds would be administered by the Health Resources and Services Administration, according to the legislation.

The Health Innovation Alliance cheered the legislation, saying it provides a “vital step forward to ensuring telehealth can deliver for those who need it the most.”

“Telehealth continues to meet the challenge during this pandemic to help reduce the spread of COVID-19 while giving patients access to health care services they need. Congress needs to take action to permanently eliminate the outdated barriers to telehealth services that have been waived by the Administration,” the organization said.

New Bill Aims to Make Telehealth Coverage Permanent for FQHCs, RHCs

By News

A bill introduced this week in the House would ensure Medicare coverage for telehealth services provided by FQHCs and RHCs and eliminate originating site facility and location requirements for distant site telehealth services.

 

By Eric Wicklund

– A bill introduced in Congress this week aims to improve telehealth coverage for federally qualified health centers (FQHCs) and rural health clinics (RHCs).

Introduced by US Reps. Glenn Thompson (R-PA) and George Butterfield (D-NC), the Helping to Ensure Access to Local TeleHealth (HEALTH) Act of 2020 would, if approved, mandate Medicare coverage for telehealth services at these clinics and remove originating site facility and location requirements for distant site telehealth services delivered by them.

The bill would make permanent connected health coverage included in the CARES Act, which only lasts as long as the COVID-19 emergency, and bring into the spotlight one of the most troubling barriers to widespread telehealth adoption.

As defined by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, there are roughly 1,400 FQHCs and another 4,300 RHCs in the US, many of them serving predominantly underserved populations and communities. Because they’re haven’t been considered a distant site for telehealth by CMS, opportunities for reimbursement are few and far between, and many rely on grants and donations to offer telehealth services.

With the coronavirus pandemic sharply curtailing in-person care and putting both patients and providers at risk of catching the virus, many clinics have turned to telehealth and mHealth to keep the virtual doors open.

But the telehealth freedoms enabled by the CARES Act last only as long as the emergency. In addition, many experts note that the nation’s current economic troubles and soaring unemployment rate will leave millions without health insurance and push them toward these clinics for care.

Some states – notably Colorado and California – made moves prior to the pandemic to extend telehealth coverage for FQHCs and RHCs. In addition, the Creating Opportunities for Necessary and Effective Care Technologies (CONNECT) for Health Act of 2019, introduced for a third time by a large group of Senators in October 2019, proposes to remove geographic restrictions on originating sites for FQHCs and other locations and allow them to qualify as distant sites for telehealth reimbursement.

“The HEALTH Act recognizes the new normal that community health centers and our patients are living in,” Chris Shank, CEO and president of the North Carolina Community Health center Association, said in a press release issued by Thompson and Butterfield. “The pandemic has led community health centers nationwide to adopt innovations like telehealth in order to protect the safety of patients and the medically underserved communities we serve. Through the temporary telehealth changes thus far, community health center patients have been able to access primary care and behavioral health services while physically distancing to limit spread of coronavirus.”

“Patients and providers alike will benefit from permanent telehealth access even once the virus is under control,” he added. “Allowing patients to connect virtually to their health care provider removes significant barriers like transportation, which disproportionately affects patients with lower incomes and those living in rural communities. The HEALTH Act will reduce longstanding barriers to health care access by reducing red tape and providing sustainable reimbursement for telehealth services provided by community health centers.”

Telehealth Will Continue to Grow After Coronavirus Pandemic

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The coronavirus pandemic sparked the growth of telehealth across the healthcare industry. This growth will continue after the pandemic, industry experts said at the Value-Based Care Summit | Telehealth20: Virtual Series.

 

– The healthcare industry saw an unprecedented rise in telehealth amidst the coronavirus pandemic. This trend will continue, according to industry leaders at the Value-Based Care Summit | Telehealth20: Virtual Series.

(For more coronavirus updates, visit our resource page, updated twice daily by Xtelligent Healthcare Media.)

Various panels at the event highlight strategies and best practices across the industry. And attendees weighed in on their organization’s strategies to combat COVID-19 and plans to move forward in a post-coronavirus world.

Speakers from the Center for Telehealth and Connected Care at Dartmouth-Hitchock Medical Center, Boise State University, and St. John’s Health discussed how to reduce care disparities in rural populations using telehealth.

Meanwhile, representatives from Memorial Hermann Health System, SR Health by Solutionreach, and CHRISTUS Good Sheperd Health System walked through designing an effective business plan for telehealth solutions.

And UnitedHealthcare and Moonshot Health Consulting highlighted strategies for developing stronger payer/provider relationships for telehealth solutions after COVID-19.

A key element of all discussions was the important role telehealth have played, and continue to play, across the industry.

Stay-at-home orders meant many patients were not seeking care on-site. So organizations needed to adjust their practices if patients were going to continue receiving care safely. Telehealth was the obvious solution.

Unsurprisingly, 91 percent of conference attendees said the role of telehealth had increased at their organization since March 2020. And over two-thirds (68 percent) were explicitly motivated to participate in telehealth programs because of the coronavirus.

Now, as stay-at-home orders are lifting and hospitals and health systems are resuming elective care, organizations need to think about what telehealth programs will look like moving forward.

An overwhelming majority (96 percent) of attendees believe that telehealth’s role will continue to grow in the industry. Only 4 percent of respondents believe that telehealth’s role will stay the same.

Organizations will continue building their telehealth programs to support success. Sixty-eight percent said they planned to further invest in telehealth following the public health emergency. Another 44 percent said they plan to invest in IT infrastructure and capabilities, which support telehealth solutions. Robust IT capabilities allow telehealth programs to thrive.

Many organizations have gotten a handle on the coronavirus as case numbers begin to decline in some states. As these organizations come up for air, they can begin expanding these programs that helped them successfully respond to the pandemic.

There is some evidence organizations will get support in these pursuits. Telehealth is here to stay, Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) Administrator, Seema Verma, has admitted.

“CMS’ rapid changes to telehealth care a godsend to patients and providers and [allow] people to be treated in the safety of their home,” she said in an earlier press release. “The changes we are making will help make telehealth more widely available in Medicare Advantage and are part of larger efforts to advance telehealth.”

Moving forward, telehealth’s role will only become more integral as organizations resume normal services and start to understand how the new normal of care delivery looks.

CCHP Releases New Tool to Track COVID-19 State Actions – Includes Topic Area & Expiration Date

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The Center for Connected Health Policy (CCHP) has developed a new tool on its website to track the emergency actions and legislation directly resulting from the COVID-19 pandemic.  Since state Governors declared states of emergency in mid-March, Medicaid programs have released a multitude of documents pertaining to waivers and easing of restrictions related to telehealth.  Common temporary allowances found in the Medicaid documents include:

  • Allowing the home to be an originating site for telehealth
  • Expanding the types of providers allowed to be distant site providers during a telehealth interaction
  • Providing reimbursement for additional types of services when delivered via telehealth
  • Allowing the telephone as a mode of service delivery

In addition to the above, most state Departments of Insurance have released either guidance or provided temporary requirements for health plans in their state to cover telehealth delivered services sometimes mandating payment parity with in-person services.  Medical Boards have also in some cases eased cross-state licensing, consent and prescribing requirements for telehealth delivered services on a temporary basis during the state of emergency.  CCHP has identified in its tool which documents address each of the above described topic areas, along with their corresponding expiration date, if available.

The sources used to gather the list of state actions include each state’s Office of the Governor (which often includes executive orders), Medicaid Program, Medical Board and/or Department of Insurance.  CCHP plans to update this tool on a regular basis so that the current telehealth waivers and guidance documents are all in one place and can be tracked as they are either extended in duration, altered, expire or made permanent.  If you have additional information on state actions that are not included in CCHP’s state action tool, please submit your information to [email protected] and we will be sure to include it in future updates.

Senators Target Telehealth Access for Farmers, Loggers and Fishermen

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A new bill before Congress aims to create an annual $10 million grant program to help providers extend telemental health programs into rural areas focused on the farming, forestry and fishing industries.

 

 

By Eric Wicklund

– Lawmakers are looking to extend telehealth into rural parts of America to improve access for people in need of mental health services.

A group of Senators last week introduced the Home-Based Telemental Health Care Act of 2020 (S.3917), which would create a grant program to help providers to extend their connected health platforms into rural areas focused on the farming, fishing and forestry industries.

(For more coronavirus updates, visit our resource page, updated twice daily by Xtelligent Healthcare Media.)

“Now, especially as our nation continues dealing with a pandemic, we need to help rural America overcome the unique obstacles that small towns and rural communities face in providing mental health,” Senator Tina Smith (D-MN), who sponsored the bill with Senator Mike Rounds (R-SD), said in a press release. “Our bipartisan bill will help health providers in rural areas expand telemental health care services for farmers, ranchers and foresters, and many others in local communities who are experiencing stress and burnout caused by the pandemic, difficult weather, low commodity prices and more. It’s important that they get the services they need during this uncertain time.”

According to the Senators, the bill would create a $10 million loan program, to be renewed each fiscal year through 2025. The Health and Human Services Secretary, through the Health Resources and Services Administration’s Office of the Advancement of Telehealth and the rural health liaison at the Department of Agriculture, would administer the grants.

While lawmakers have cited the stress caused by the current COVID-19 crisis, the farming, forestry and fishing industries have been hard hit by behavioral health issues long before the pandemic – and care providers have sought to use telemedicine and mHealth to help them.

The bill is one of several introduced recently that aims to expand telehealth services and coverage at least through the coronavirus pandemic, if not indefinitely. Advocates are hoping that some might get swept up into the next coronavirus relief bill.

Joining Smith and Rounds as co-sponsors of the bill are Senators Kevin Cramer ((R-ND), John Boozman (R-AR), Susan Collins (R-ME), Ed Markey (D-MA), Cindy Hyde-Smith (R-MS) and Michael Bennet (D-CO).