Sen. Hyde-Smith Supports Continuing Expanded Telehealth Services Beyond Pandemic
In all, 38 Senators signed a letter to the
"We appreciate your recognition that, due to the COVID-19 pandemic, more patients and providers see the value of telehealth. We believe telehealth is an important tool that enhances patient care and can provide efficiency in health care delivery," the Senators wrote to HHS Secretary
The letter also encouraged "the Administration to consider how permanent changes to telehealth policy can be part of broader movement, including a shift toward value-based care. We look forward to your response and urge you to continue working with
Through coronavirus relief legislation,
The telehealth expertise of the
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To: The Honorable
The Honorable
Dear Secretary Azar and Administrator Verma:
We write to commend you for the steps you have taken to remove barriers to the broad-based delivery of telehealth services during the COVID-19 pandemic. We appreciate your commitment to making these temporary telehealth flexibilities permanent--most recently with the proposed rule to permanently extend telehealth changes under the home health benefit--and ask you to provide
Telehealth has been a lifeline to patients and providers during the COVID-19 pandemic. For patients, telehealth has provided continuity of care, allowing them to access care without exposing themselves or their providers to the risk of a COVID-19 infection. For providers, telehealth has maintained access to patients and provided an important source of financial stability, which is particularly important now as providers attempt to recover some of the financial losses associated with delaying non-emergency procedures and following stay at home orders.
However, telehealth would not have been as critical of a lifeline during the pandemic without action from
Due to the combined effect of Congressional and administrative actions, health care providers and patients can now deliver and receive telehealth services in their own homes. Physicians can supervise staff remotely, more easily provide services across state lines, and see new patients-- not just established patients--through a telehealth visit. Physical therapists, occupational therapists, and speech language pathologists can now provide telehealth services, and a longer list of mental health and addiction treatment services can be provided through telehealth. Patients and providers can use audio-only telephone telehealth to get care, and they don't face the same limits on the number of services they can receive via telehealth.
As you stated, it is hard to imagine rolling back these changes./2 However, we are hearing from patients and providers who are concerned about when Medicare's temporary changes to telehealth rules will be rolled back and whether they will receive any advance notice. Patients are anxious about when private payers will change rates for telehealth services and if they will decide to rescind telehealth coverage all together.
We appreciate your recognition that, due to the COVID-19 pandemic, more patients and providers see the value of telehealth. We believe telehealth is an important tool that enhances patient care and can provide efficiency in health care delivery. While telehealth may not be able to replace all in-person care, we believe it should continue to be an option to meet individual care needs.
We therefore ask you to continue working with
1. Provide a written plan and timeline for making permanent the administrative changes-- including the expansion of the definition of telecommunications systems--you have made to Medicare, Medicaid, and
2. Provide a timeline for if and when you intend to end enforcement discretion by the
3. Clarify whether you intend to extend existing in-office Medicare reimbursement parity to telehealth services provided by
4. Detail the list of permanent telehealth changes to Medicare, Medicaid, and CHIP rules that you can act on within your own authority and those that require Congressional action.
5. Develop and issue guidance for private health plans to provide advance notice to their enrollees on future changes to coverage of telehealth services.
Lastly, we encourage the Administration to consider how permanent changes to telehealth policy can be part of broader movement, including a shift toward value-based care. We look forward to your response and urge you to continue working with
See footnotes and signatories here https://www.hydesmith.senate.gov/sites/default/files/2020-07/070220%20Smith%20Cassidy%20HHS%20CMS%20Telehealth%20Letter.pdf
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