Healthcare Information & Management Systems Society: States Tackling COVID-19 Using Information and Technology
As the number of confirmed cases of coronavirus (COVID-19) continues to grow, state policymakers in
The federal government is also taking important actions on telehealth. Read more: Telehealth in the COVID-19 Spotlight.
Resources from CMS
Telehealth Actions
Overall, Medicaid provides states with a great deal of flexibility to use telehealth services in their programs, including various methods of communication such as telephonic or video technology commonly available on smart phones and other devices. Ultimately, no federal approval is needed for state Medicaid programs to reimburse providers for telehealth services in the same manner or at the same rate that states pay for face-to-face services.
In response to COVID-19, CMS issued a FAQ on
* Licensure requirements and renewal waivers: (
Thirty-two states are temporarily waiving in-state licensing requirements for qualified medical personnel overall and specifically for delivering telehealth for providers outside of state lines.
* Expansion of Medicaid coverage:
Twenty-eight states are expanding access to telehealth for Medicaid recipients. These policies include one or more of the following rules: allowing the patient's home to be the originating site (i.e. location of patient during service), requiring that provider reimbursement for telehealth be equal to that of a traditional in-person visit, covering telehealth for specified services (e.g. physical therapy, occupational therapy), allowing for multiple methods of telehealth, such as telephone without the requirement of video, and removing the requirement of a face to face initial appointment.
* Expansion of Commercial/Private Insurance Coverage (
Nineteen states are mandating that commercial insurance carriers cover telehealth throughout the duration of the declared public health emergency. This may include waiving all copays, coinsurance, and deductibles for patients relating to COVID-19 diagnostic testing and requiring provider reimbursement for telehealth be the same as reimbursement for a traditional in-person visit.
Data Surveillance and Electronic Case Reporting
Besides telehealth, states are beginning to appropriate funds for surveillance to detect and manage the outbreak and require electronic case reporting to public health entities.
*
*
*
*
Coordination with HIEs
Several state and regional HIEs and health information networks are leading efforts to respond to COVID-19, since they have the capability to share valuable patient data. The level of infrastructure of each HIE varies by state. Here are a few examples:
*
* Indiana Health Information Exchange (IHIE) is coordinating with the
* In order to coordinate rapid information sharing,
*
* The Health Collaborative, a regional nonprofit based in
To effectively respond to the spread of COVID-19 through the support of information and technology,
1. Scale-up telehealth to reduce the number of people using healthcare facilities while at the same time preserving and improving health. The Administration has issued flexible and constructive guidelines for Medicaid, but much more is needed. States can help to account for the uninsured population or those outside of the safety net.
2. Encourage routine public health data submission and query and, wherever possible require by law or policy, to enable a health IT infrastructure to be built and maintained, including in an emergency. Investments should continue in key initiatives, such as electronic case reporting, to enable cross-jurisdiction sharing of notifiable condition reports.
3. Leverage HIEs to facilitate cross-sector health data platforms or open health data portals to collect data across sectors including emergency management encounters, EMS data, and public health surveillance data. This approach can create targeted interventions, emergency response plans relating to communicable diseases and other non-health data such as transportation to support health impact assessments for policymakers to leverage and make informed decisions during all public health emergencies.
Do you have a story to tell about how you or your organization is responding to COVID-19? Please share your story with us.
In the CARES Act passed on
Stocks Skid Worldwide As Coronavirus Infections Keep Soaring
‘It’s like we are just a piece of garbage’: Laid-off Philly workers face life without health insurance
Advisor News
Annuity News
Health/Employee Benefits News
Life Insurance News