COVID-19 Update – April 13, 2020


.
April 13, 2020 Latest COVID-19 Statistics
New York reported 10,056 statewide deaths as of Monday morning, including 671 more fatalities in the past day. As of Monday, New York reported 195,031 confirmed cases, including 106,763 cases in New York City alone. As of Monday, the state reported 7,349 deaths of New York City residents.

As of Monday, 18,825 New Yorkers were hospitalized with the coronavirus. As of Friday, 4,903 of those hospitalized were in intensive care units. For more numbers, including the latest statewide and borough-by-borough statistics, click here. Here is the governor’s April 13 presentation.


To apply for SBA Loans (COVID-19 Disaster Loan Application or the Paycheck Protection Program Application), click here.


Providers Begin Receiving First Round of CARES Act Grants
Providers on Friday began receiving $30 billion from the first round of grant funding from Congress’ third stimulus package.

The funds, from the $100 billion provider relief fund in the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act, were distributed based on providers’ share of 2019 Medicare fee-for-service reimbursements.

The grants do not have to be repaid, but administration officials said Thursday that grant recipients have to agree not to balance bill patients for out-of-network COVID-19 treatment.

Federation of American Hospitals President and CEO Chip Kahn said he generally supports the administration’s surprise billing ban, though he said important details were unclear including insurer reimbursement for out-of-network services.

“This is in a framework that we support,” Kahn said.

Many providers received direct deposits on Friday morning. HHS said that payment was made through information on file either with UnitedHealth Group or the CMS, and paper checks will be sent out for remaining providers within the next few weeks. Payments for larger medical groups will be sent to the group’s central billing office, according to background materials.

UnitedHealth Group said combined with its affiliates, it has relationships with more than 80% of all U.S. healthcare providers and hospitals. The insurer donated administrative costs in the partnership.

HHS said it is working on how to distribute the remaining $70 billion. The agency said it will prioritize providers in areas with severe COVID-19 outbreaks, rural providers and those who serve the Medicaid population or have a payer mix that’s lighter on Medicare fee-for-service payments in the next round. The Friday announcement also reiterated the department’s intent to use some of the funds to reimburse providers for COVID-19 treatment for the uninsured at Medicare rates.

The NY and NJ congressional delegations have complained that the across-the-board distribution did not provide enough support to hard-hit areas. As of Friday afternoon, New York and New Jersey combined had 45% of confirmed COVID-19 cases in the United States.


Notes from Governor Cuomo’s Briefing:

– Curve continues to flatten. We are seeing a plateau, unsure of how long
this “apex” will last. The Governor says the curve is “still going up a
little bit” but is overall flat.
– Net downturn in hospitalizations. The 3-day rolling average is also down.
– Net change in ICU admissions down as well.
– Net change in intubations 3-day rolling average is down.
– Stabilization in spread. Have been reacting to clusters.
– New COVID hospitalizations per day is down. The Governor clarified that
though hospitals see about 2k new cases per day, many are discharged as well.
– Death toll for April 12: 671. Total lives lost: 10,056.
– The Governor explained the spread has been great because of the density
that exists in NYC, as well as other cities throughout the country. He also
added that physical environment is not the only problem, dense gatherings
can also be problematic.

REOPENING:

– Wants to learn from countries currently undergoing reopening
procedures to see what works and what doesn’t to avoid a second wave. Says
actions will be based on public health and economic experts’ recommendations
and data.
– Want to ease isolation, increase economic activity, recalibrate
“essential worker” economy, apply more testing and precautions, and to keep
infection rate low. Governor says we need to watch the infection rate
throughout reopening. “It’s a delicate balance,” he explained.
– Made points that the economy has not been shut down, however, must
be recalibrated in reopening procedures.
– Would like to reopen with a regional design and systems must
coordinate (economic, transportation, schools, etc.).
– Again said reopening would need Federal support.
– Precautions to be continued (masks, gloves, temperature taking).
– Have been talking with RI, CT, NJ, DE, and PA on working together
for reopening plan. Announcement to come later this afternoon. No time was
specified.
– The Governor claims he doesn’t believe a uniform plan can be made
unless they recognize state by state distinctions.
– The Governor says that there will be no short-term point to declare as
the end, but there will be points of resolution over time. These will be
incremental and based on control of spread of infection.
– Celebrated accomplishments made in controlling the spread and
keeping “the tide from overwhelming [hospitals].”
– Hopefully, within 12-18 months a vaccine will be produced. But the
Governor promised that there will be points within this time span that will
help lessen the burden.
– Must continue distancing protocols.

Q&A:
HOSPITALS:

– Malatras also mentioned that 200 test kits to NYC’s Med Assist
Network Hospital, and many hospitals often report having a 20-30 day supply
of PPE.
– When asked if Buffalo was considered a hot spot for the virus, Malatras
said there has been a recent stabilization in cases.

REOPENING:

– There is a possibility that areas with lower infection rates may open
sooner, though the Governor continued pushing for a coordinated effort
between states.
– The Governor says schools must be opened in coordination with other
systems. He mentioned mixing populations between outer-city areas and issues
with childcare as barriers.

COVID-19:

– The Governor reiterated that though the worst is currently behind us,
people must continue distancing protocols to avoid a second wave of
infection. He explained that facts will continue un-biased.
– When questioned on why nursing homes were unable to report infection rates,
the Governor explained that they are protected under privacy laws. Zucker
added that these protections apply due to these institutions being people’s
homes.

NYSDOH Issues Evidence-Based Pharma Info
The Department of Health today issued COVID-19 Drug Topics,  which provides prescribers with an evidence-based, non-commercial source of the latest objective information about pharmaceuticals.  The information is provided through our Prescriber Education Program (PEP), which is a partnership between the Department of Health and the State University of New York (SUNY) Medical and Pharmacy institutions.

Information regarding Colchicine, Hydroxychloroquine and Ibuprofen is now available on the COVID-19 Guidance for Medicaid Providers webpage.


Telehealth Thursday WEBINAR: Playing Critical Role in Virtual Care in Crisis
DrFirst is offering a webinar this Thursday, April, 16th at 11AM EDT for physicians to discover how they may leverage HIPAA-compliant video conferencing, secure messaging, file transfer and other communication tools to stay connected with their patients during the pandemic.

Event Highlights and Learning Objectives:

  • Find out how healthcare organizations of all types are using telehealth technology to improve communication and care collaboration
  • Hear telehealth success stories and learn best practices your practice can utilize in your COVID-19 response
  • Learn about key “must-haves” when evaluating telehealth solutions
  • Engage with clinical consultants and ask questions about you can better connect with patients and remote providers.

To register for this important webinar, go to this link.


Physicians on the Frontlines and Mortality Rates
Concerns among healthcare professionals are well-founded. The epidemic is horrific, and any loss of human life is a tragedy. In order to investigate this issue, we looked at summaries of physician deaths attributable to COVID-19 through April 10, 2020, in Medscape. I concentrated on physicians rather than all providers because mortality reports appeared more complete.

Through April 10, there were 17 physician deaths in the United States. Sixteen of the 17 deaths occurred among physicians aged 60 or older. The range in age was 37-92: the only death under age 65 was an oral surgery resident. 65% (11 of 17 deaths) occurred in physicians aged 65 or older and 47% where among those older than 70. Obituaries or press releases were available for 16 of the cases. Although it is uncertain from the write-ups, it appeared that about half of the physicians who died were retired or only practicing part-time. Several of the write-ups noted that the deceased physician had serious health problems, including recurrent cancers.

The COVID-19 epidemic is creating legitimate anxiety among healthcare professionals. Media reports focus on young physicians expressing fear for their own safety. One healthcare provider explained that she felt like a sacrificial lamb being sent off to slaughter. But are healthcare providers at significantly greater risk of death than the general population?

In order to put the 17 deaths in perspective, I compared the COVID-19 death rate among physicians to that in the general population. There are approximately 1.1 million physicians in the U.S. population of 330 million people. In other words, there is approximately one physician for each 300 persons in the population. By April 10, there were approximately 20,000 COVID-19 deaths in the US.

If physicians are dying at the same rate as people in the general population, we would expect about 66 physician deaths. If the data are accurate, physician deaths are about 75% lower than expected. And, the risk from exposure to sick patients may be an overestimate because in nearly half of cases the physicians appeared to have retired or reduced clinical practice. Medscape by Robert M. Kaplan, PhD, is a faculty member at Stanford University’s Clinical Excellence Research Center, former associate director of the National Institutes of Health, former chief science officer for the U.S. Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality.


GNYHA Pres/CEO Kenneth Raske Spoke with WH Senior Adviser Jared Kushner
“This distribution methodology is woefully insufficient to address the financial challenges facing hospitals at this time, especially those located in hot spot areas such as the New York City region,” Raske wrote in a letter to GNYHA members.

The largest recipients by state were California with $2.9 billion, Florida with $2.2 billion, Texas with $2.1 billion, New York with $1.9 billion and Pennsylvania with $1.2 billion.

Republicans on the House Ways & Means Committee acknowledged concerns with the initial allocation.

“While this distribution system is not perfect, the administration should be commended for developing a system that delivers support to key healthcare facilities quickly,” members wrote in a statement Friday.

Providers receiving grant funding will have to certify that they will only use the funds for coronavirus-related costs and cannot use the funds for expenses reimbursed from other sources. Providers receiving more than $150,000 from the federal government will have to file quarterly reports detailing how the funds were spent. Providers must within 30 days confirm receipt of the grant payments and agree to the terms in an online HHS portal opening April 13 or refund the money.

The CARES Act requires the HHS Office of Inspector General to send a report to Congress on audit findings for the $100 billion grant program within three years of when final payments from the fund are made.


GNYHA Ensuring the Safety of Our Direct Caregivers
GNYHA and the Healthcare Association of New York State (HANYS) continue to work with Governor Andrew Cuomo and the New York State Department of Health (DOH) to help you achieve your number one priority during the COVID-19 crisis—ensuring that direct caregivers at your institutions have safe, adequate levels of personal protective equipment. At the Governor’s request, GNYHA and HANYS are asking all hospitals across the State to adhere to the following policy: When a direct caregiver in a hospital asks for a new N95 mask, they will receive one at least once a day.

As has been stated on Governor Cuomo’s calls with hospital chief executive officers, any hospital whose N95 inventory is low should call Larry Schwartz at 914-393-8254 or Jim Malatras at 518-281-1754. We will continue to do everything we can to support your heroic response to the COVID-19 crisis.


New COVID-19 Resources from the AMA

  • The AMA just released a resource to help physicians and practice staff track the rapidly evolving prior authorization policy changes health plans and PBMs are making in response to COVID-19. They will be regularly updating this resource to stay current with payers’ policy chanhttps://www.ama-assn.org/system/files/2020-04/prior-auth-policy-covid-19.pdfges.
  • The AMA has updated its COVID-19 coding guidance document to reflect the most recent information released by CMS. The document has been expanded to now outline 18 different treatment scenarios and recommended coding for each.

NY Hospital Systems Losing Money as They Respond to Coronavirus
The Wall Street Journal (4/12) reports New York City’s academic hospital systems are each losing $350 million to $450 million a month as they respond to a surge of COVID-19 patients. Meanwhile, independent and smaller hospital systems are facing dire financial pressures and could be unable to make payroll soon.

Report: New York Getting Less Coronavirus Funding Than Other States. Some states “are getting significantly more funding to fight the coronavirus per case compared to other, harder-hit states, according to a new analysis released Friday,” The Hill (4/11, Axelrod) reported. Analysis from Kaiser Health “found that states like Minnesota, Nebraska and Montana are getting more than $300,000 per reported COVID-19 case, while New York, the hardest-hit state, is receiving roughly $12,000 per case.” Florida, “which is also grappling with a serious outbreak, is getting $132,000 per case.”


 

 

COVID-19 Update April 9, 2020


.
April 9, 2020 Latest COVID-19 Statistics

• 799 – The number of deaths from the coronavirus in New York on April 8 – the highest daily total yet.
• 63% – The percentage of victims statewide who are 70 years old or older.
• 159,937 – People who have tested positive for the coronavirus in New York, as of the morning of April 9.
• 18,279 – The number of people currently hospitalized with the coronavirus in New York, as of April 9, with 4,925 in intensive care units. “We’re projecting that we’re reaching a plateau,” Gov. Andrew Cuomo said on April 7.
• 200 – The total number of new hospitalizations, on April 8, the lowest in weeks.
• 84 – The total number of new intensive care patients on April 8, part of a broad downward trend.
• 13,366 – The number of COVID-19 patients who have since been discharged from New York hospitals, as of April 6.
• 391,549 – The number of people who have been tested for coronavirus in New York, as of the morning of April 9.43% of the tests, or 170,826, have been conducted in New York City.
• 62 – The number of counties in New York that have a positive test for COVID-19 – all of them. Seneca County, the last to report a case, had its first case on March 30.
• 40 – The number of days that New York expects its New York State on PAUSE executive order to be into effect – for now. Cuomo enacted the order limiting events, mandating social distancing and closing nonessential business on March 20, and has extended it until at least April 29.
• $1,000 – The maximum fine for violating the state’s protocol of keeping a 6-foot distance from people while in public, raised on April 6 up from $500.

Notes from the Governor’s briefing:

• 18 days of NY PAUSE / 39 days since first COVID case in NY / 80 days
since first COVID case in US
• Current trend is below all projected models: 90,000 bed capacity,
18,279 beds occupied, currently.
• Numbers showing that the social distancing measures are flattening the
curve, so far.
• Hospitalizations, ICU admissions and intubations is continuing to
decrease.
• “We are flattening the curve by our efforts and actions.”
• 799 lives lost yesterday, according to state. Media reports that NYC
issued 824 as the total numbers for NYC-only deaths yesterday.
• State total, according to state is 7,067 deaths.
• State bringing in additional funeral directors to help.
• State plans to open more testing sites in downstate minority
communities (SUNY Albany, DOH and Northwell collaborative effort).
• Governor on past Federal legislation:
– Not $6B in Medicaid funding, actual about $1.3B, and disqualified
about 1.3 of NYS Medicaid recipients.
• Mental Health is a growing problem (domestic violence cases rising)
• State watching Rockland, Nassau, and Suffolk as new hotspots.


Racial Disparities in Deaths from COVID-19
Gov. Cuomo on Wednesday vowed to ramp up coronavirus testing in minority communities and investigate the racial disparities in deaths from COVID-19, the disease caused by the virus. He noted that black New Yorkers comprise 28 percent of deaths in New York City and 18 percent of deaths in New York state, despite being 22 percent and 9 percent of the population, respectively.

Hispanics, meanwhile, are 29 percent of the population in New York City and 11 percent of the population statewide, but represent 34 percent and 14 percent of deaths, respectively.

Experts have pointed to underlying conditions that are more likely to affect minority communities and lack of access to medical care has factors which account for the differences. Cuomo vowed to step up testing in majority-nonwhite communities, adding that there should also be more research into whether the number of Latino and African American public workers “who don’t have a choice but to go out every day and drive the train” were putting those communities at particular risk.

Cuomo said he would ask Havidan Rodriguez, president of the University of Albany SUNY, to head an effort to collect more comprehensive data on the spread of the virus in minority communities.


CMS OKs $34B for Providers with Accelerated/Advance Payment Program in One Week
CMS has delivered near $34 billion in the past week to the healthcare providers on the frontlines battling the 2019 Novel Coronavirus (COVID-19). The funds have been provided through the expansion of the Accelerated and Advance Payment Program to ensure providers and suppliers have the resources needed to combat the pandemic.

The streamlined process implemented by CMS for COVID-19 has reduced processing times for a request of an accelerated or advance payment to between four to six days, down from the previous timeframe of three to four weeks.  In a little over a week, CMS has received over 25,000 requests from health care providers and suppliers for accelerated and advance payments and have already approved over 17,000 of those requests in the last week.

The payments are available to Part A providers, including hospitals, and Part B suppliers, including doctors, non-physician practitioners and durable medical equipment (DME) suppliers. While most of these providers and suppliers can receive three months of their Medicare reimbursements, certain providers can receive up to six months.

The advance and accelerated payments are a loan that providers must pay back. CMS will begin to apply claims payments to offset the accelerated/advance payments 120 days after disbursement. Part A providers and Part B suppliers will have up to 210 days to complete repayment of accelerated and advance payments, respectively.

It is important to note, this funding is separate from the $100 billion provided in the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security (CARES) Act. The CARES Act appropriation is a payment that does not need to be repaid. The Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) will be providing additional information on how healthcare providers and suppliers can access CARES Act funds in the coming weeks.

The fact sheet on the accelerated/advance payment process and how to submit a request can be found here: Fact Sheet Providers can also contact their Medicare Administrative Contractor for any questions.


UnitedHealth Group Accelerates Nearly $2 Billion in Payments and Support to Health Care Providers to Help with COVID-19 Financial Challenges
UnitedHealth Group, through UnitedHealthcare and Optum, has announced it is taking steps immediately to accelerate payments and other financial support to health care providers in the U.S. to help address the short-term financial pressure caused by the COVID-19 emergency.

UnitedHealth Group’s move to accelerate claim payments to medical and behavioral care providers applies to UnitedHealthcare’s fully insured commercial, Medicare Advantage and Medicaid businesses. Other financial support currently includes the provision for up to $125 million in small business loans to clinical operators with whom OptumHealth is partnered.

The decision to accelerate claims and incentive payments builds on previously adopted measures taken by the company to streamline processes for health care professionals and facilities, as well as to help members more easily access the care they need. This includes:

·       Suspension of prior authorization requirements to a post-acute care setting

·       Suspension of prior authorization requirements when a member transfers to a new provider

·       Extension of timely filing deadlines for claims during the COVID-19 public health emergency period for Medicare Advantage, Medicaid, and Individual and Group Market health plans

·       Implementation of provisional credentialing to make it easier for out-of-network care providers who are licensed independent practitioners to participate in one or more of our networks

Physicians should go to www.UHCprovider.com for specifics on UnitedHealthcare policies and guidelines.


Communities of Color at Higher Risk for Health and Economic Challenges Due to COVID-19
The COVID-19 outbreak presents potential health and financial challenges for families, which may disproportionately affect communities of color and compound underlying health and economic disparities. A new KFF brief analyzes data on underlying health conditions, health coverage and health care access, and social and economic factors by race and ethnicity to provide insight into how the health and financial impacts of COVID-19 may vary across racial/ethnic groups. (KFF news release)


Nursing Homes Have Ventilators That Hospitals Desperately Need
As the number of COVID-19 patients climbs and health officials hunt for ventilators to treat them, nursing homes across the  U.S. have a cache ― about 8,200 of the lifesaving machines, according to data from CMS. Most of the machines are in use, often by people who’ve suffered a brain injury or stroke. Some of those residents are in a vegetative state and have remained on a ventilator for years. State officials are working to consolidate ventilators where they are most urgently needed. But so far, the supply in nursing homes has not drawn the same attention. (KHN, Los Angeles Times)


Less than 2% of COVID-19 Cases Involve Children
Less than 2% of U.S. COVID-19 coronavirus cases have been in children, with infants more likely to be hospitalized than older children, researchers found. From February 12 to April 2, individuals under age 18 accounted for 1.7% of the nearly 150,000 overall U.S. COVID-19 cases with data on age — far fewer than might be expected from their representation in the population as a whole (24%), reported Lucy McNamara, PhD, of the CDC’s COVID-19 Response Team, and colleagues in an early Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report release.

The findings are similar to data from China, which indicated more severe COVID-19 cases, or those requiring hospitalization, tended to be in younger children, and prevalence decreased as children got older.

Of the pediatric cases, over half were from New York, 15% from New Jersey, and just under 30% from other jurisdictions. They added the first pediatric U.S. case was reported to CDC on March 2. Median age of patients was 11, and nearly a third of cases occurred in teens ages 15-17, with 27% of cases among children ages 10-14, and 15% apiece among children ages 5 to 9, and infants younger than age 1.

Data on hospitalizations was available for 745 pediatric cases, with the authors estimating a range of 5.7% to 20% of cases were hospitalized, with an estimated range of 0.58% to 2% admitted to an ICU. These figures were lower than adults ages 18-64, who had an estimated 10%-33% of patients hospitalized.

Infants accounted for the largest proportion of hospitalized children, ranging from 15% to 62% of pediatric COVID-19 admissions. Of 95 children younger than age 1, 59 were hospitalized and 5 were admitted to an ICU. Children ages 1-17 had a lower estimated range of hospitalization, from 4.1%-14%.

They added, clinicians should “maintain a high degree of suspicion” for infection in children and monitor the progression of illness, especially among those with underlying conditions.

“Because persons with asymptomatic and mild disease, including children, are likely playing a role in transmission and spread of COVID-19 in the community, social distancing and everyday preventive behaviors are recommended for persons of all ages to slow the spread of the virus,” McNamara and colleagues wrote. Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report Source Reference: CDC COVID-19 Response Team “Coronavirus Disease 2019 in Children — United States, February 12–April 2, 2020″ MMWR 2020; Published April 6, 2020.


 

 

COVID-19 Update – April 8, 2020

Health Care Workers Needed to Volunteer in NYC!


NY Statistics for COVID-19
New York State accounts for 36% of the country’s 337,971 COVID-19 cases, according to data as of Monday morning from Johns Hopkins University. About three-quarters of New York State residents are concerned the coronavirus crisis will cause them serious financial problems, according to a new poll released Monday.

The virus has led to closure of nonessential businesses in the state. The state’s Department of Labor processed more than 369,000 initial unemployment applications in the week that ended March 28, representing a 2,674% increase compared with the same week last year. (WSJ, April 8)


Notes from Governor Cuomo’s COVID-19 Briefing:

-NY PAUSE and social distancing have been working to flatten the curve for the
moment. The Governor said stopping such measures could change numbers
and result in an increase in cases.
– Number of patients hospitalized is down, 3-day average trend down, large
hospital systems reporting higher levels of releases than intakes.
– Have managed to increase capacity and share equipment among hospitals.
The Governor said if hospitalization rate continues to decrease, the system
should be able to stabilize over the next couple of weeks and reduce the need
for overflow systems.
– Must continue social distancing to achieve this.
BAD NEWS: Highest single death toll, 779 people, seen overnight. Number
of deaths will continue to rise as those hospitalized for a longer amount of time
pass.
– For perspective, the Governor said 2,753 lives were lost in 9/11 and 6,268
have passed from COVID-19.
– Flags will be set at half-staff in honor of the lives lost.
– Need to learn and develop a “new normal” through public health preparedness
and increasing hospital capacity. Additionally, have found new ways of using
technology (celebrated the development of a virtual court system, telehealth,
working from home, and online education).
– Still have to develop a testing capacity. Those who are negative or developed
antibodies will be able to return to work from this testing.
– Will be conducting more testing in minority populations to better understand
disparities. Research and testing to be conducted by SUNY Albany’s Dr. Havidan
Rodriguez and DOH/Northwell Health. The Governor said this will begin soon.
– Will be issuing an additional $600 payment to all unemployed NYers; the State
expects to be reimbursed by the Federal government at some point.
– Unemployment benefits will be expanded for an additional 13 weeks
(totaling 39 weeks).
– By executive order, absentee ballots will be allowed for the June 23rd primaries.
– Mercury Medical donated 2,400 BiPap machines, which were flown to NY from
Florida for free courtesy of Jet Blue. He also thanked Oregon, Washington, and
California for helping with ventilators.
– Commended the efforts of public health workers and first responders.
– Will be starting new social media campaign, “Who Are You Staying Home For?”
– Examples include healthcare workers, public health, family members.
– Social distancing violation fines have been doubled, as previously mentioned.
– PASSOVER: Wished the Jewish community a Happy Passover,
noted previous anti-Semitic events from earlier in the year. Used Passover
as an example for how to improve, explaining that it is based on analyzing the past
and determining the future.

NEWS SUMMARY

1. President Donald Trump said the U.S. may end funding to the World Health Organization. Trump later clarified that his administration has not yet decided to end funding for the agency but will be looking into it. The U.S. has provided $893 million during WHO’s current two-year funding period, nearly 15 percent of its total funding, according to the organization’s website, cited by STAT. 

2. Black people appear to be dying from COVID-19 at disproportionately high rates across the U.S., though many states and officials haven’t been tracking or reporting racial data, USA Today reports. Emerging studies found that black people accounted for 29 percent of confirmed cases and 41 percent of deaths in Illinois as of April 6, despite only making up 15 percent of Illinois’ population, according to STAT. Similar trends appear in Michigan and Wisconsin.

The White House, civil rights groups and lawmakers have urged federal health officials to publish racial data as deaths soar in cities with significant black populations, such as Detroit, New Orleans and New York, according to USA Today.

3. Ventilators may be being overused for COVID-19 patients, some physicians say, according to STAT. Many critical care physicians are reevaluating the widespread use of ventilators after observing that some COVID-19 patients with fatally low blood oxygen levels aren’t gasping for air. That, as well as noting that these patients’ hearts are not racing and their brains don’t show signs of oxygen deficiency, is making some physicians suspect that blood oxygen levels might be misleading care for COVID-19 patients and perhaps numerous patients could instead be treated with less intensive respiratory support.

4. The Drug Enforcement Administration will increase production quotas for several drugs in high demand amid the pandemic, according to an April 7 announcement. The agency is increasing quotas for pharmaceutical manufacturers producing medications in high demand, as well as increasing imports of necessary medications for patients on ventilators.

5. New York City reported 731 COVID-19 deaths in one day, along with an ‘unusually high’ increase in related cases and hospitalizations between April 6-7. The spike is due to both a lag in reports from labs and a large transfer of data from patients hospitalized before April 6. New data from New York state also revealed that 61 percent of 5,489 COVID-19 deaths in the state were among men, and 86 percent of the deaths were among individuals with underlying illnesses. Additionally, 63 percent of deaths were among those 70 years and older.

6. General Motors will build 30,000 ventilators for the national stockpile under a $489.4 million contract with the federal government. The company will deliver the first 6,123 ventilators by June 1, according to the contract invoked under the Defense Production Act.

(Becker’s Hospital Review, April 8)

Worldwide, 1,446,242 COVID-19 cases and 83,424 deaths have been reported, while 308,146 people have recovered from the illness as of 8:30 a.m. CDT April 8.


A Breakdown of Six of the Most Promising COVID-19 Treatments
Hundreds of drugs are being tested to treat COVID-19, the disease caused by the novel coronavirus. Below are six of the most promising treatments, according to Business Insider:

  1. Remdesivir— Gilead’s drug, already tested on other viruses, remdesivir has been a front-runner as a possible COVID-19 treatment. The World Health Organization has called it “the most promising candidate,” and there are five active clinical trials testing its effectiveness against COVID-19 taking place in China, the U.S. and South Korea, according to Business Insider.
  2. Kaletra— Kaletra is an HIV drug made by AbbVie. Although a study published March 18 in the New England Journal of Medicine said Kaletra didn’t show benefits in COVID-19 patients, the WHO said it will conduct a global study on four experimental treatments, including Kaletra, according to Business Insider.
  3. Actemra and Kevzara— Actemra, made by Roche, and Kevzara, made by Regeneron and Sanofi, are both classified as IL-6 inhibitors and may work by stopping a biological mechanism that causes overactive inflammatory responses in patients’ lungs, according to Business Insider. Both drugs are being tested in late-stage clinical trials.
  4. Convalescent plasma— Convalescent plasma is blood plasma taken from COVID-19 patients who have recovered from the disease. That plasma contains antibodies that could help sick patients and boost their immune response, according to Business Insider. So far, two trials have shown promising results.
  5. Chloroquine and hydroxychloroquine— Chloroquine and hydroxychloroquine are both antimalarial drugs. President Donald Trump has expressed hope for chloroquine’s potential in treating COVID-19. The scientific community has not yet definitively confirmed its clinical effectiveness for this virus.
  6. Avigan— Avigan is a flu drug made by Japan-based Fujifilm Toyama Chemical. A trial conducted in China showed Avigan helped patients recover seven days faster than patients on another antiviral drug called arbidol, and it also reduced the frequency of symptoms like coughing and fever, according to Business Insider. However, the drug is not approved in the U.S.  Read the full article here. (Becker’s Hospital Review, April 8)

Worldwide, 1,446,242 COVID-19 cases and 83,424 deaths have been reported, while 308,146 people have recovered from the illness as of 8:30 a.m. CDT April 8. (Becker’s Hospital Review, April 8)


The Four Benchmarks Needed to End Social Distancing
Until there is a vaccine or effective treatment against COVID-19, states should direct efforts toward four major criteria that will help determine local progress, according to a report cited by The New York Times.

The report was written by Scott Gottlieb, MD, former FDA commissioner; Caitlin Rivers, PhD, assistant professor at Baltimore-based Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security; Mark McClellan, MD, PhD, director of the Robert J. Margolis Center for Health Policy and professor at Durham, N.C.-based Duke University; Lauren Silvis, former FDA chief of staff; and Dr. Crystal Watson, senior scholar and assistant professor at Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security. 

Criteria that will determine if and when areas can come out of lockdown:

  1. Hospitals must be able to safely treat all patients needing hospitalization without resorting to crisis standards of care. This is the first standard to meet and the focus of most health officials, according to the authors. Currently, there’s no reason to believe any area meets this criteria, and many local outbreaks aren’t predicted to peak for weeks.
  2. A state needs to be able to test at least everyone with symptoms. Nationwide, about 750,000 tests would be needed a week, and that’s not including areas with major outbreaks. On a smaller scale, states would need to test every person who may be infected and receive the results in a timely manner. The third requirement cannot be achieved until the second occurs.
  3. The state can monitor confirmed cases and contacts. A robust system of contact-tracing and isolation is the only thing that can prevent outbreaks and sequential lockdowns, the authors write. Scaling up some areas’ public health systems to handle such a task would take significant time and money, NYT notes. Other countries have used cellphone-tracking technology to determine who people have been near, but it’s unclear if the U.S. would allow such a tactic.
  4. Cases must continue to decrease for 14 days. It can take up to two weeks for COVID-19 symptoms to emerge, so if the number of cases drops steadily for that much time, officials can be reasonably sure suppression has been achieved, or that every infected person is infecting fewer than one other. (Becker’s Hospital Review, April 8)

NYC First Responders: Dwindling PPE and Many Out Sick
New York City’s first responders — paramedics, EMTs, firefighters, and police officers — continue to man the front lines of the COVID-19 epidemic, despite dwindling amounts of protective equipment and an increasing proportion of their workforce out sick. They are struggling to avoid getting sick, while working increasingly demanding shifts and managing call volume surges. Vincent Variale, president of the Uniformed EMS Union Local 3261 in New York, said that normal medical call volume is about 4,000 calls a day. Now, EMS providers are responding to more than 6,500 calls daily. They’re also managing longer workdays, rationing protective gear, and following guidelines that continue to change as hospitals overcrowd with patients.

Last week, for instance, New York City enacted new guidelines for patients in cardiac arrest. If paramedics and EMTs cannot save a patient who is in cardiac arrest in the field, they are being instructed not to take them to the hospital. In New York, this shortage of masks has prompted instructions to firefighters that they use N95 masks only during procedures that might generate aerosols, including intubation, asthma treatment, and cardiac arrest care. (Medpage, April 8)


Comfort Will Be Able to Treat 500 COVID-19 Patients
Gov. Cuomo told reporters on Tuesday the Comfort will be able to treat up to 500 COVID-19 patients, about half of its original expected capacity. The governor said the shift from non-COVID-19 patients to coronavirus cases led to the elimination of 500 beds. The military-run hospitals at the Javits Center and onboard the USNS Comfort remain mostly empty — so far treating only 110 patients between them.


Hospitals: “Fed Gov. Seizing Medical Supplies, Leaving Doctors in Dark”
The Los Angeles Times (4/7) reports that although the President “has directed states and hospitals to secure what supplies they can, the federal government is quietly seizing orders, leaving medical providers across the country in the dark about where the material is going and how they can get what they need to deal with the coronavirus pandemic.” Hospital and clinic officials in seven states “described the seizures in interviews over the past week.”

The Federal Emergency Management Agency “is not publicly reporting the acquisitions, despite the outlay of millions of dollars of taxpayer money, nor has the administration detailed how it decides which supplies to seize and where to reroute them.”


Researchers Say Diabetes Does Not Increase Risk of Coronavirus Infection but is Tied to Higher Mortality Among the Infected
Healio (4/7) reports researchers examined data from China and Italy and concluded that while “adults with diabetes are no more likely to contract” coronavirus “than people without diabetes,” they “could be up to twice as likely to die from complications” tied to the infection.

The researchers wrote a letter to the Journal of Endocrinological Investigation sharing their findings. Gian P. Fadini, MD, PhD, an associate professor of endocrinology at the University of Padova in Italy and one of the letter’s authors, said, “Diabetes does not increase the risk of new coronavirus infection, but it can worsen the outcome of COVID-19. People with diabetes can be reassured they are not at higher risk for becoming infected, but they have to pay additional attention to symptoms and signs of disease progression.”


MEDICAL ECONOMICS

WC Board Extends Formulary Deadline for Prescription Renewals to Jan 1, 2021
In response to widespread health care industry challenges due to COVID-19, the Chair of the New York State Workers’ Compensation Board (Board) has modified the New York Workers’ Compensation Drug Formulary (NY WC Formulary) regulation (12 NYCRR 441.3(a)(2)) to extend the deadline by which all health care providers must obtain prior authorization for renewals of non-formulary medications from June 5, 2020, to January 1, 2021.

The six-month extension to January 1, 2021 will:

· Reduce the impact that the COVID-19 emergency may have on health care providers’ ability to implement the requirement.

· Provide more time to health care providers to ensure that prescription renewals are consistent with the NY WC Formulary.

· Ensure that the current health crisis does not negatively affect injured workers, especially those who are on certain medications that are non-formulary agents.

This extension also aligns with the expected implementation of the first phase of the Board’s Business Information System (BIS) Project. In the first phase, the Board will roll out a new web-based portal through which providers can request and manage prior authorization and variance requests related to treating injured workers, taking common forms (MG-1, MG-2, and C4-Auths) and related processes online.

The new portal will promote greater access for health care providers, quicker response times for prior authorization requests, and greater system reliability – resulting in the improved delivery of care to injured workers. For more information, please visit the Board’s website at wcb.ny.gov.


CMS OKs $34B for Providers with Accelerated/Advance Payment in One Week
CMS has delivered near $34 billion in the past week to the healthcare providers on the frontlines battling the 2019 Novel Coronavirus (COVID-19). The funds have been provided through the expansion of the Accelerated and Advance Payment Program to ensure providers and suppliers have the resources needed to combat the pandemic.

The streamlined process implemented by CMS for COVID-19 has reduced processing times for a request of an accelerated or advance payment to between four to six days, down from the previous timeframe of three to four weeks.  In a little over a week, CMS has received over 25,000 requests from health care providers and suppliers for accelerated and advance payments and have already approved over 17,000 of those requests in the last week.

The payments are available to Part A providers, including hospitals, and Part B suppliers, including doctors, non-physician practitioners and durable medical equipment (DME) suppliers. While most of these providers and suppliers can receive three months of their Medicare reimbursements, certain providers can receive up to six months.

The advance and accelerated payments are a loan that providers must pay back. CMS will begin to apply claims payments to offset the accelerated/advance payments 120 days after disbursement. Part A providers and Part B suppliers will have up to 210 days to complete repayment of accelerated and advance payments, respectively.

It is important to note, this funding is separate from the $100 billion provided in the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security (CARES) Act. The CARES Act appropriation is a payment that does not need to be repaid. The Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) will be providing additional information on how healthcare providers and suppliers can access CARES Act funds in the coming weeks.

The fact sheet on the accelerated/advance payment process and how to submit a request can be found here: Fact Sheet Providers can also contact their Medicare Administrative Contractor for any questions.


CMS Office Hours on COVID-19
You are invited to CMS “Office Hours” on COVID-19, Thursday, April 9th from 5:00 – 6:00 PM EST, the next in a series of opportunities for hospitals, health systems, and providers to ask questions of agency officials regarding CMS’s temporary actions that empower local hospitals and healthcare systems to:

·        Increase Hospital Capacity – CMS Hospitals Without Walls;

·        Rapidly Expand the Healthcare Workforce;

·        Put Patients Over Paperwork; and

·        Further Promote Telehealth in Medicare

We encourage you to submit questions in advance to partnership@cms.hhs.gov, including “Office Hours” in the subject line. There will also be live Q&A.

Dial-in details below. Conference lines are limited, so we highly encourage you to join via audio webcast, either on your computer or smartphone web browser. You are welcome to share this invitation with your colleagues and membership.

Toll-Free Attendee Dial In: 833-614-0820

Event Plus Passcode: 1881716


 

 

COVID-19 Update April 7, 2020

Latest COVID-19 Statistics
NYS Health COVID-19 Tracker
https://covid19tracker.health.ny.gov/views/NYS-COVID19-Tracker/NYSDOHCOVID-19Tracker-Map?%3Aembed=yes&%3Atoolbar=no&%3Atabs=n


Dr. Fauci: “Good Signs from New York”
While Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, was quick to caution that the U.S. still has much work to do amid this public health emergency, he pointed to “good signs” from New York, citing data saying the numbers of hospitalizations, ICU admissions and requirements for intubations over the last three days have started to level off. “You never even begin to think about claiming victory prematurely, but that’s the first thing you see when you start to see the turnaround.” Dr. Fauci stressed the importance of continued mitigation and social distancing.


NYS DOH Deaths: Majority of 4700 Deaths Were Males with Underlying Illnesses
The majority of New York’s more than 4,700 deaths due to coronavirus were among men, and 86% of all deaths were among people who had underlying illnesses, such as hypertension and diabetes, new state data showed.

The statistics released late Monday offered the latest glimpse into how the rapidly spreading virus has impacted New Yorkers and made the state the epicenter for COVID-19 in the nation.

  • Of the 4,758 deaths in New York since the first one March 14, 61% were men and 39% were women, the state Department of Health reported on its new data portal.
  • In addition, 63% of the deaths were among those age 70 and older. Just 7% of the cases were those who were 49 and younger.
  • And 4,089 of those who died had at least one other chronic disease, the records showed:
  • The leading underlying illness was hypertension, which showed up in 55% of the deaths. Next was diabetes, which was diagnosed in 1,755 deaths, or about 37% of the cases. Other top illnesses found in those who died from coronavirus were hyperlipidemia; coronary artery disease; renal disease and dementia, which was apparent in about 16% of cases.

Less Than 2% of COVID-19 Cases Involve Children
Less than 2% of U.S. COVID-19 coronavirus cases have been in children, with infants more likely to be hospitalized than older children, researchers found.

From February 12 to April 2, individuals under age 18 accounted for 1.7% of the nearly 150,000 overall U.S. COVID-19 cases with data on age — far fewer than might be expected from their representation in the population as a whole (24%), reported Lucy McNamara, PhD, of the CDC’s COVID-19 Response Team, and colleagues in an early Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report release.

Fewer children reported “typical” symptoms of fever, cough, or shortness of breath compared to adults, the analysis also found.

As well, hospitalization rates among children were much lower than in adults, though hospitalization was more common among both infants and children with underlying conditions, such as asthma.


MEDICAL ECONOMICS

Statistics from Health Metrics: April 9 Will Be High Point for Deaths in NY
According to the University of Washington’s Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation, “New York’s high point for deaths in a single day of 878 will arrive April 9,” daily deaths will return to zero by May 8, and the state’s total death toll will be 15,618. New York’s high point for deaths in a single day of 878 will arrive April 9, according to the university’s Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation, which is funded by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. Deaths in the state will total 873 on April 12 before beginning a steady decline.


Getting Paid for Virtual Encounters
CMS previously only reimbursed for virtual encounters in designated rural environments and the patients had to be physically present in a healthcare facility during the interaction. With the COVID-19 pandemic impact, CMS re-emphasized the programs initiated during the 2019 and 2020 Medicare Physician Fee Schedule Final Rules and expanded its prior telehealth reimbursement rules. For a straightforward three-minute read, the following is a good guide to getting paid.


SBA Loans Available for Physicians
Here is a link to an AMA Q&A on the SBA loan/grant program and other pools of funds potentially available for physicians under the recent CARES Act.


MSSNY Joins Others: Urges HHS to Fund One Month of Physician Payments
MSSNY joined AMA, State and Specialties Sign on to HHS Urging CARES Act fund to cover at least one month of payments to physician practices.


MSSNY Quick Chat: Paycheck Protection Program, Economic Injury Disaster Loans and Emergency Grants, and Small Business Debt Relief
PPP is just getting started and has limits. Important to make application ASAP! The landscape is changing daily. Latest info here.


New Video Available on Medicare Coverage and Payment of Virtual Services
CMS released a video providing answers to common questions about the Medicare telehealth services benefit. CMS is expanding this benefit on a temporary and emergency basis under the 1135 waiver authority and Coronavirus Preparedness and Response Supplemental Appropriations Act.


Five Takeaways: OIG’s New Report on Hospitals’ COVID-19 Challenges
HS’ Office of Inspector General released a report April 6 that details the challenges hospitals are confronting due to COVID-19, how they are responding, and what they are asking of the government to better meet their needs during the coronavirus crisis.

The OIG conducted brief telephone interviews March 23-27 with administrators from 323 hospitals across 46 states, the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico, which were part of a random sample. Hospital administrators shared the following challenges their organizations face in response to COVID-19, as well as how they would like the government to respond:

  1. Challenge: Severe shortages of testing supplies and extended waits for results.Hospitals reported frequently waiting seven days or longer for test results, which results in several “rule-out” cases that strain existing challenges with staffing, bed availability and shortages of personal protective equipment. According to one hospital, 24 hours is typically considered a long turnaround time for virus testing.

Hospitals’ ask: Hospitals expressed a need for greater coordination from the federal government around testing kits and supplies to provide “equitable distribution of supplies throughout the country,” according to the report. Hospitals also asked for the government to provide testing kits, take steps to ensure that supply chains can provide hospitals with a sufficient supply of tests, and expedite results by allowing more entities to produce and conduct tests.

  1. Challenge: Widespread shortages of PPE.Hospital administrators reported higher than normal use of PPE contributed to shortages, as well as a disrupted supply chain. One administrator said their hospital’s purchaser reported delays of three to six months for key supplies, including N95 masks. At the time of their interview, some hospital administrators noted that they had not received supplies from the federal stockpile, or that the supplies they had received were insufficient in quantity or quality. Several hospitals reported sharp price increases for supplies, including one administrator who cited a mask that previously cost 50 cents is now $6.

Some hospitals have turned to nontraditional sources of medical equipment and supplies, such as online retailers, home supply stores, paint stores, auto body shops and beauty salons. Staff have even assembled their own equipment from office supplies. Hospitals have also implemented conservation strategies, including reusing PPE (which is typically intended for single use) and limiting provider-patient interactions. As one administrator told the OIG: “We are throwing all of our PPE best practices out the window.”

Hospitals’ ask: Hospitals asked for the government’s support in obtaining a range of supplies and equipment, noting that they were in competition with other providers for limited supplies. Government intervention and coordination, they said, could help reconcile this problem. They also want the government to loosen restrictions around the transfer or gifting of equipment and supplies.

  1. Challenge: Difficulty maintaining adequate staffing and supporting staff. Hospitals cited need for specialized staff, concerns that staff exposure to the virus will exacerbate shortages and overwork, and concerns about the emotional toll that staff face.

Some administrators said their hospitals were training certain medical staff, like anesthesiologists, hospitalists and nurses, to help care for patients on ventilators. Those with partnerships with large health systems also said they can deploy medical staff to other hospitals in the system that may be experiencing a shortage. Hospitals are also offering support to staff, including childcare, grocery services, hotel accommodations and mental health services.

Hospitals’ ask: Hospitals want the government to enable reassignment of licensed professionals and realignment of duties within the hospital and throughout their healthcare networks; provide flexibility with respect to licensed professionals practicing across state lines; and provide relief from regulations that restrict the practice of contracted staff or physicians based on business relationships.

  1. Challenge: Decreased revenue, increased costs and gaps in reimbursement. Hospitals have essentially stopped elective procedures and many other services, which accounts for a substantial portion of hospitals’ revenue. At the same time, costs have increased as hospitals prepare for a potential surge of patients by purchasing extra equipment, remodeling rooms for negative pressure, or setting up drive-thru clinics and tents. Furthering this problem is gaps in reimbursement, such as reimbursement for telehealth services that doesn’t cover the hospitals’ costs. Hospitals also reported difficulty in getting reimbursed for treating patients in nontraditional spaces due to a lack of qualifying billing codes for care in these locations.

Hospitals’ ask: Hospitals of all types reported need for financial assistance, with some expressing need for assistance in a matter of weeks to avoid insolvency. Hospitals told the OIG they want the government to expedite Medicare payments by dropping the 14-day wait period and to offer loans and grants. [Editor’s note: CMS has adjusted Medicare payment policies to expedite payment and extend 100 percent reimbursement for six months, among other changes, which are detailed here.]

  1. Challenge: Changing and/or inconsistent guidance from authorities.Hospitals said fluctuating guidance from officials and agencies at the federal, state and local level has contributed to confusion, fear and distrust among staff and the public. One administrator pointed to CDC guidance on the use of face masks, which differed from the guidance issued at the state level. “It’s difficult when a doctor or nurse shows you legitimate information from legitimate sources and they’re contradictory,” one administrator told the OIG.

Hospitals’ ask: Hospitals said the federal government could play a central role in messaging and communications to mitigate what they perceive as conflicting or inconsistent guidance across levels of government. Specifically, hospitals want the government to provide evidence-based guidance, reliable predictive models and data, and a single place to find information they need. (Becker’s Hospital Review, 4/7)

 

 

COVID Update April 6, 2020

Latest COVID-19 Statistics
The state reported 130,689 confirmed cases and 4,758 deaths as of Monday morning, including 72,181 cases in New York City, 15,616 in Nassau County, 14,294 in Westchester County, 13,487 in Suffolk County, 5,703 in Rockland County, 3,397 in Orange County, 1,189 in Dutchess County, 1,023 in Erie County, 574 in Monroe County and 372 in Ulster County.

As of Monday morning, New York City reported 2,475 deaths (here is the breakdown of deaths by borough) and 22,276 confirmed cases in Queens, 18,215 in Brooklyn, 13,397 in the Bronx, 9,624 in Manhattan, and 3,780 in Staten Island. More numbers can be found here. City & State (April 6)

NYS DOH Tracker
https://covid19tracker.health.ny.gov/views/NYS-COVID19-Tracker/NYSDOHCOVID-19Tracker-DailyTracker?%3Aembed=yes&%3Atoolbar=no&%3Atabs=n

Latest National COVID-19 Statistics
More than 10,000 people have now died from COVID-19 in the U.S., as the pandemic’s horrible toll hit another milestone. The U.S. is reporting more COVID-19 cases than any country in the world, with nearly 350,000 people testing positive for the coronavirus, according to a COVID-19 dashboard created by the Johns Hopkins Whiting School of Engineering, which reports coronavirus numbers in near real time.


Gov. Cuomo: Clips from Press Conference
GENERAL COVID-19:

   – Federal gov’t might increase hydroxychloroquine and zithromax supply
and the State can then lift the 14-day limit on the drugs.
– Anecdotal evidence suggests the treatments have been positive.
– Governor has not heard reports of NYC plans to temporarily bury COVID
victims in City Parks. NY Post reported it earlier this morning.
– State is releasing 802 ventilators to the downstate area.  Surge and
-Flex program is focused on needs, and not wants.
– In response to reports of Orthodox Jewish communities continuing to
gather in large numbers for wedding and funerals, Gov stated that the
social distancing rule should be enforced:  “None of us has the right to
be reckless.”
– On ventilator usage, Governor stated that the state is currently
utilizing all back-up plans. Governor states that the hospital system
is “over-capacity.”
– State of California, in addition to Washington released ventilators.
No specifics given.
– At close of presser, Gov stated that we are not currently in need of
ventilators, which contrasts the statement that the state is currently
employing contingency plans due to ventilator usage.

Notes from the Governor’s briefing:
– Number of deaths effectively flat for past two days.
– Total hospitalizations, ICU admittance, intubations are all down.
– State looking at whether or not we’re in the apex, and if we’ll deal
with a peak or a plateau of case numbers.
– Dataset over past few weeks charts a lower bed count than earlier
models projected.  Malatras credits the social distancing actions with
putting downward pressure on the number of needed beds.
– Governor states that social distancing is working
– If we’re plateauing, we’re doing so at a high-level, and the
healthcare system is “red-line” stress.
– Surge and Flex program (inter-hospital / hospital system coordination)
continues, move 802 ventilators.
– Javits Center coming up to functionality now – relief for
hospitals.
– USNS Comfort: Governor requesting that the ship be used for COVID
use.  Non-COVID cases declined.  Gov wants it as relief valve for
downstate hospital system.  Gov calling President this afternoon.
– Federal Beds: Northwell Health will help manage, and US Military
personnel are staffing.

NEWS:
-Governor extending NY Pause until April 29.
– Governor is increasing maximum fine for violations of State social
distancing protocol.
– $500 maximum increased to $1,000.  “Not about the money, it’s
about the compliance.”
– State setting up COVID-19 First Responders Fund – help with costs
associated with continuing to work through the pandemic: Childcare…
– DOH will run the fund.
– Governor thanked Blackstone for a $10M donation.
– Headspace app will partner with NY to provide free services.


NYS COVID-19 Volunteer and Donation Assistance Program
Please use the following form to offer any donated goods, services, or space for use in New York’s response to the COVID-19 public health emergency.

All health care professionals offering their medical services should complete a separate survey found here. Anyone offering to sell goods should complete a separate procurement form found here. For offers of donated goods, services, or spaces, please click the next button at the bottom of this page to continue.

The U.S. COVID-19 case count is the highest in the world, with 337,971 cases as of 10:30 a.m. CDT April 6. Nationwide, 9,654 Americans have died from the virus, while 17,582 have recovered.

Worldwide, 1,289,380 COVID-19 cases and 70,590 deaths have been reported, while 270,372 people have recovered from the illness as of 10:30 a.m. CDT April 6.


New Video Available on Medicare Coverage and Payment of Virtual Services
CMS released a video providing answers to common questions about the Medicare telehealth services benefit. CMS is expanding this benefit on a temporary and emergency basis under the 1135 waiver authority and Coronavirus Preparedness and Response Supplemental Appropriations Act. Video


Survey: 73% of US Physicians Can’t Easily Test for COVID-19
About 73 percent of U.S. physicians reported being unable to test patients for COVID-19 quickly and easily, according to a recent Doximity survey. Researchers analyzed data from a survey sent to Doximity members, an online professional network consisting of about 70 percent of U.S. physicians. The survey, sent to registered physicians via email between March 21 and March 24, was completed by 2,615 physicians.


Medical Practices Shift to Telemedicine as COVID-19 Closes Offices
Now that patients have been cautioned to stay away from the hospital and the doctor’s office unless it’s essential during the current pandemic, health care providers are turning to virtual visits as a way to keep their offices up and running. But independent doctors and smaller practices have been on their own to find affordable options that could keep them connected to patients—and earning money.

The expansion of telemedicine could be a lifeline for smaller medical practices as they face looming rent, payroll and utility bills while the stream of patients seeking routine care is cut off.

“The first priority is taking care of patients,” said Dr. Inderpal Chhabra, a primary care doctor at the office Lefferts Medical Associates in New Hyde Park, Queens. “At the end of the day, we’re small-business owners also and have responsibility for our employees.”

In mid-March Chhabra realized he would have to close his office. He had treated several patients he suspected would test positive for Covid-19 and was worried that the respiratory disease might spread to his staff and other patients if he kept the doors open.

He wanted to continue providing treatment but hadn’t used telemedicine software in the past. He began researching options and chatting with several hundred doctors in a WhatsApp forum. He settled on Rochester-based company Doxy.me, which has designed a telehealth tool that doesn’t require patients to download an app.

“I’m just talking to a patient as if they’re in my own office,” Chhabra said. Chhabra said he pays Doxy $29 a month.

There are some medical services that only can be provided in person, however. Chhabra can’t take a patient’s blood pressure, check their lungs or do a full physical remotely, for example. He has had patients use their own blood-pressure cuff during a video visit to get that reading.

Chhabra still isn’t clear how he will be paid for the virtual visits. He said he is billing private insurance companies for them but won’t know whether they approve payment for about 60 to 90 days.

Medicare and Medicaid have said they will pay for telemedicine.

During the Covid-19 emergency, Medicare will pay for virtual office visits, mental health counseling and preventive screenings. The federal government is also allowing doctors to use their license across state lines, which makes physicians able to treat patients remotely in more places.

Dr. Arthur Fougner, president of the Medical Society of the State of New York and an OB/GYN at Northwell Health, said the society’s members have reported using telemedicine companies including Doxy and DrFirst. But, he said, the relaxed regulations also allow doctors to use regular consumer apps, such as Skype, FaceTime and WhatsApp, to conduct the calls.

The federal Office for Civil Rights at the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, which enforces violations of the health privacy law, said it would not impose financial penalties for HIPAA violations if telehealth services were provided in good faith during the Covid-19 emergency.

“You’re putting social distancing ahead of any kind of legal issue,” Fougner said. “We need to keep people at home.” Crain’s Health Plus.

Gov Cuomo on TV

 

 

 

COVID-19 Update – April 2, 2020


New York State Statistics April 2
By the numbers: The state reported 92,381 confirmed cases and 2,373 deaths as of Thursday morning, including 51,809 cases in New York City,  11,567 in Westchester County, 10,587 in Nassau County, 8,746 in Suffolk County, 3,751 in Rockland County, 1,993 in Orange County, 667 in Dutchess County, 617 in Erie County, 420 in Monroe County and 253 in Albany County.

As of Wednesday night, New York City reported 1,374 deaths (deaths by borough) and 15,217 confirmed cases in Queens, 12,274 in Brooklyn, 8,607 cases in the Bronx, 7,022 in Manhattan, and 2,552 in Staten Island. More numbers here.


MSSNY President Dr. Fougner’s Press Statement re Ventilator Shortage
Based on information from Governor Cuomo’s press briefings, along with communications from our member physicians, hospitals in New York are getting to the point where ventilators as lifeboats are reaching capacity. At this point, the most difficult decisions facing physicians will have to be made. Already, some emergency physicians are reporting being told the equivalent of ‘Use your best judgement. You’re on your own.’ For sure, we will be seeing increasing depression and PTSD that will eclipse today’s physician burnout.

In 2015, NY State DOH’s Task Force on Life and Health published Guidelines on Ventilator Allocation. While DOH is reviewing the situation in light of COVID19, we suggest that our medical centers and health systems use this document as a framework to inform policy decisions. Additionally, each institution should empower its ethics committee to have in place a system to respond urgently to requests for guidance when the need arises so that no physician need bear this terrible burden alone.


Eight Things to Know About Drugs Touted as Coronavirus Game Changers
Two decades-old drugs designed to treat malaria, called chloroquine and hydroxychloroquine, have been touted by the Trump administration as “game changers” in the U.S. response to the coronavirus pandemic.

Eight things to know about them:

  1. Chloroquine and hydroxychloroquine were approved in 1949 to treat malaria, but today are used commonly to treat autoimmune diseases such as lupus and rheumatoid arthritis.
  2. Hydroxychloroquine is a safer, more commonly used version of chloroquine.
  3. Both drugs have shown to be somewhat effective in treating COVID-19 in preliminary trials, but there is no peer-reviewed clinical data showing this.
  4. The FDA granted emergency use authorization for both drugs March 28 to allow COVID-19 patients to be treated with them.
  5. The FDA has warned against taking chloroquine products without a prescription. A man died after taking chloroquine meant for his pet fish.
  6. Several state pharmacy boards have passed emergency rules restricting prescription of chloroquine and hydroxychloroquine in response to reports that some physicians and pharmacists were stockpiling the drugs for themselves and their families.
  7. Blue Cross Blue Shield of North Carolina said it would cover both chloroquine and hydroxychloroquine for use in treating COVID-19.
  8. Sandoz has donated 30 million doses of hydroxychloroquine to the strategic national stockpile, and Bayer has donated 1 million doses of chloroquine.
    (Becker’s Hosp Review, April 2)

Justice Department Will Send Seized Medical Supplies to New York, New Jersey
Hundreds of thousands of hoarded medical supplies, including 192,000 n95 respirator masks, are being sent to coronavirus hot spots New York and New Jersey, the Department of Justice and Department of Human and Health Services announced today.

The FBI located the supplies on March 30, as part of its work under the department’s Covid-19 Hoarding and Price Gouging Task Force announced last week. HHS was then alerted and activated the Defense Production Act to seize the supplies and put them under U.S. government control.

Along with the n95 respirator masks, the FBI also discovered 598,000 medical gloves, 130,000 surgical masks and other supplies like gowns, disinfectant towels, hand sanitizers and disinfectant sprays, materials the Justice Department said are being distributed to states.

“If you are amassing critical medical equipment for the purpose of selling it at exorbitant prices, you can expect a knock at your door,” Attorney General William Barr said in a statement. “The Department of Justice’s COVID-19 Hoarding and Price Gouging Task Force is working tirelessly around the clock with all our law enforcement partners to ensure that bad actors cannot illicitly profit from the COVID-19 pandemic facing our nation.” (Politico, April 2, 12:37)


Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) Information Sheet: Borrowers
The Paycheck Protection Program (“PPP”) authorizes up to $349 billion in forgivable loans to small businesses to pay their employees during the COVID-19 crisis. All loan terms will be the same for everyone. The loan amounts will be forgiven as long as:

  • The loan proceeds are used to cover payroll costs, and most mortgage interest, rent, and utility costs over the 8-week period after the loan is made; and
  • Employee and compensation levels are maintained. Payroll costs are capped at $100,000 on an annualized basis for each employee. Due to likely high subscription, it is anticipated that not more than 25% of the forgiven amount may be for non-payroll costs. Loan payments will be deferred for 6 months

What do I need to apply? You will need to complete the Paycheck Protection Program loan application and submit the application with the required documentation to an approved lender that is available to process your application by June 30, 2020.

Click HERE for the application.


10 K Disaster Grant: Does Not Impact Qualification for Forgivable Loan) 75% Reserved; File Now! Do NOT Wait
Apply for a COVID-19 Economic Injury Disaster Loan NOW! https://covid19relief.sba.gov/#/

In response to the Coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic, small business owners in all U.S. states, Washington D.C., and territories are eligible to apply for an Economic Injury Disaster Loan advance of up to $10,000. To apply for a COVID-19 Economic Injury Disaster Loan, https://covid19relief.sba.gov/#/

The SBA’s Economic Injury Disaster Loan program provides small businesses with working capital loans of up to $2 million that can provide vital economic support to small businesses to help overcome the temporary loss of revenue they are experiencing. The loan advance will provide economic relief to businesses that are currently experiencing a temporary loss of revenue. Funds will be made available within three days of a successful application, and this loan advance will not have to be repaid.  DO NOT WAIT!


White House Expected to Recommend All Wear Cloth Masks
The White House is expected to announce a new policy, based on guidance from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, that would urge Americans to wear cloth masks in an effort to prevent coronavirus spread, according to a federal official familiar with the policy.


Lessons from The Front Lines: COVID-19
CMS Administrator Seema Verma, FDA Commissioner Stephen Hahn, MD, and the White House Coronavirus Task Force, invites MSSNY members to the next call in the new CMS series for physicians: Lessons from The Front Lines: COVID-19. The call will take place on Friday, April 3rd from 12:30 – 2 PM EST and the topic of discussion is: COVID-19 Flexibilities. Please join us to share your ideas, strategies, and insights with one another. Please see dial-in details below. Conference lines are limited, so we highly encourage you to join via audio webcast, either on your computer or smartphone web browser.

Participant Dial-In: (877) 251-0301

Access Code: 2674453

Webcast Streaming: https://protect2.fireeye.com/url?k=4be5adfc-17b0a42c-4be59cc3-0cc47a6a52de-f8b939daf2762cc0&u=https://engage.vevent.com/rt/cms2/index.jsp?seid=1794


CAIPA Foundation “CAIPA Task Force on COVID-19” Donation and Supplies Drive
CAIPA, CAIPA MSO and CAIPA Foundation greatly appreciate your support and donations during this challenging time.

The Task Force Committee and Leadership sincerely ask for your continued support to this donation drive effort due to the increasing and pressing needs of our frontline healthcare providers.  For your information, in the past weeks, we have already delivered protective supplies to our partner hospitals, including NY Presbyterian-Queen, NYU Langone Brooklyn, Maimonides Medical Center, Northwell Health, Stony Brook University Hospital, NYP-Brooklyn Methodist Hospital, The Brooklyn Hospital Center and Interfaith Hospital to help ease the needs of our frontline heroes who are fighting COVID-19 for our communities.

We want to assure you that the monetary donations and protective suppliers received will be put to the best use for our partner hospitals in the communities throughout the city, which we jointly take good care of our patient population. The money and supplies will also be used to support CAIPA’s initiatives in assisting our staff and provider-members in our fight against COVID-19.

CAIPA has dedicated a webpage, “CAIPA Task Force on COVID-19”, on CAIPA.net https://www.caipa.net/caipa/caipa-task-force-on-covid-19/, where you can see our weekly update, media activities, donation report, educational materials, and resources to keep you, our providers and community posted on the progress and milestones that we achieved so far on this campaign. 

FOR MONETARY DONATIONS:

Please kindly make check payable to:
CAIPA FOUNDATION, INC.
202 CANAL ST STE 500
NEW YORK, NY 10013

Or use PAYPAL and pay to acct@caipa.net.

FOR PROTECTIVE SUPPLIES:

Please kindly contact Task Force Project Lead Lisha Xiang at lxiang@caipa.net,  who will make arrangements to be delivered to the following locations:

  • Manhattan: 202 Canal St., Suite 500, New York, NY 10013 (entrance on Mulberry St.)
  • Brooklyn: 5721 6th Ave., Brooklyn, NY 11220
  • Queens: 136-33 37th Ave., Flushing, NY 11354

Thank you again for your support and commitment to this meaningful cause.


 

 

COVID-19 Update April 1, 2020


.
As New York physicians continue to fight on the front lines of the COVID-19 pandemic, our first priority is–and always has been–the health and well-being of our patients. But we can’t be thrown into this war zone without adequate tools. It is imperative that we are provided with the best available defense, including Personal Protection Equipment (PPE) and workplace practices and policies to reduce disease transmission. Unfortunately, despite everyone’s best efforts to facilitate the availability, we continue to hear far too many disturbing reports from physicians about inadequate PPE availability in the hospitals and office settings where they are delivering patient care.  This is shameful and must be addressed.

“In addition, physicians must retain the right to speak out about conditions that we perceive as endangering ourselves, our patients, and our colleagues’ well-being without fear of repercussion. Our patients’ welfare is our priority and we must retain our freedom to advocate for them, including expressing concerns regarding conditions and safety.”

Art Fougner, MD
President, Medical Society of the State of New York


New York State Statistics April 1, 2020
The coronavirus has infected more than 76,000 people in the New York State as of Wednesday morning.

The state’s new cases on Tuesday made New York the coronavirus epicenter of the world, surpassing China’s Hubei province, which reported 67,801 confirmed cases since the virus emerged there in December. Gov. Cuomo said 10,929 people have been hospitalized with the coronavirus, including 2,710 ICU patients.

Globally, the coronavirus has infected more than 873,767 and has killed at least 43,288 people, according to Johns Hopkins University data. In the U.S., the coronavirus has infected at least 189,633 people and has killed at least 4,081.

With 43,139 confirmed cases, New York City accounts for more than half of all cases in New York state.


Physicians, Share Your Experiences with MSSNY!
Do you have a story re your COVID-19 experiences to share with other New York physicians? We want to hear from you! Email to csouthard@mssny.org


NYSDOH Webinar Update for Healthcare Workers TOMORROW, April 2 @ 1-2 PM
Please join the NYS Department of Health Thursday, April 2nd at 1-2 PM for a COVID-19 update for healthcare providers. To accommodate the large number of participants, our webinar will be streaming via YouTube Live. For audio only, please dial in 844-512-2950.


Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) Information Sheet: Borrowers
The Paycheck Protection Program (“PPP”) authorizes up to $349 billion in forgivable loans to small businesses to pay their employees during the COVID-19 crisis. All loan terms will be the same for everyone. The loan amounts will be forgiven as long as:

• The loan proceeds are used to cover payroll costs, and most mortgage interest, rent, and utility costs over the 8-week period after the loan is made; and

• Employee and compensation levels are maintained. Payroll costs are capped at $100,000 on an annualized basis for each employee. Due to likely high subscription, it is anticipated that not more than 25% of the forgiven amount may be for non-payroll costs. Loan payments will be deferred for 6 months.

What do I need to apply? You will need to complete the Paycheck Protection Program loan application and submit the application with the required documentation to an approved lender that is available to process your application by June 30, 2020.

Click here for the application.


10 K Disaster Grant: Does Not Impact Qualification for Forgivable Loan) 75% Reserved; File Now! Do NOT Wait

Apply for a COVID-19 Economic Injury Disaster Loan NOW! 

In response to the Coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic, small business owners in all U.S. states, Washington D.C., and territories are eligible to apply for an Economic Injury Disaster Loan advance of up to $10,000. To apply for a COVID-19 Economic Injury Disaster Loan, https://covid19relief.sba.gov/#/

The SBA’s Economic Injury Disaster Loan program provides small businesses with working capital loans of up to $2 million that can provide vital economic support to small businesses to help overcome the temporary loss of revenue they are experiencing. The loan advance will provide economic relief to businesses that are currently experiencing a temporary loss of revenue. Funds will be made available within three days of a successful application, and this loan advance will not have to be repaid.  DO NOT WAIT!


Use of Telehealth Including Telephonic Services During State of Emergency
The intent of this document is to provide additional information regarding the broad expansion for the ability of all Medicaid providers in all situations to use a wide variety of communication methods to deliver services remotely during the COVID-19 State of Emergency, to the extent it is appropriate for the care of the member. This document is intended to accompany previously issued guidance regarding telehealth and telephonic communication services during the COVID-19 State of Emergency issued via Medicaid Updates beginning in March 2020, which are available on the Department of Health website here.


Medical Staff with Duncan Doughnuts
The New York Mets & Dunkin Donuts delivered coffee and donuts to the
staff at North Shore University Hospital (Photo by The New York Mets).

 

COVID-19 Update – March 31


MSSNY Urges NY State Legislature to Reject Problematic Proposals Advanced by the Medicaid Redesign Team

Statement attributable to:
Art Fougner, MD

President, Medical Society of the State of New York

“As the Legislature and Governor work to finalize a State Budget in the next 2 days amid the extraordinary crisis we are facing in our health care system right now due to the coronavirus outbreak, we strongly urge the State Legislature to reject problematic proposals that had been advanced by the Medicaid Redesign Team.

“These problematic proposals include imposing enormous new costs on the nearly 17,000 physicians participating in the Excess Medical Malpractice Insurance Program, and changes to scope of practice for numerous health care practitioners including nurse anesthetists, pharmacists and nurse practitioners.  The Excess program provides a critical additional layer of malpractice insurance for New York physicians who already incur the highest liability costs in the country.

“While we realize that the COVID-19 pandemic requires an ‘all hands-on deck’ approach, we would also urge that the temporary changes to the scopes of practices of numerous health care practitioners revert to the previous status as soon as possible. It is imperative to maintain stability as well as patient safety in our health care system as we manage this current crisis and its aftermath.”


Gov. Asking Hospitals to Adopt “Statewide “Approach” to Optimize Capacity
New York is asking hospitals to adopt a statewide approach to the coronavirus pandemic to prevent overcrowding, staffing strains and equipment shortages seen at New York City facilities in recent days. Gov. Andrew Cuomo, who previewed the coordinated approach on Monday, said he has asked private and public hospitals across New York to share staff, patient loads and medical equipment so the state can optimize its capacity to respond to the virus before it reaches its apex in the coming weeks.

The coordinated effort will initially send nurses, doctors and other medical professionals from upstate facilities to New York City, which has become the new epicenter for Covid-19, Cuomo said. It will also allow for transfers of patients, staff and supplies among all hospitals in the state, as well as new temporary federal health facilities. The governor said the state Department of Health will lead a central coordinating team with Westchester, New York City and Long Island hospitals, as well as the Greater New York Hospital Association and Healthcare Association of New York State.


Gov. Announces 60-Day Deferment for Malpractice Payments
Governor Cuomo announced on Friday that, for a 60-day period, consumers and small businesses experiencing financial hardship due to COVID-19 may defer paying premiums for property and casualty insurance, including medical malpractice, auto, homeowners, renters and workers compensation. No late fees will be assessed and no negative data will be reported to credit bureaus during this time, and late payments will be payable over a one-year period. https://www.governor.ny.gov/news/amid-ongoing-covid-19-pandemic-governor-cuomo-announces-completion-first-1000-bed-temporary


13 NY Medical Schools Allow Early Graduation during Pandemic
Thirteen medical schools in New York state intend to allow students to graduate early to join the fight against COVID-19, the disease caused by the novel coronavirus, Associated Medical Schools of New York President and CEO Jo Wiederhorn told The Wall Street Journal.

The medical schools in New York City, Long Island and Westchester County include New York University’s medical school, which is allowing students to graduate a few months early to begin working in NYU’s internal medicine or emergency medicine departments amid the pandemic.

They also include Valhalla-based New York Medical College, one of the nation’s largest private health sciences colleges. For the past month, Chancellor and CEO Edward Halperin, MD, has been in contact with hospital and health officials, and more than 400 New York Medical College students have been placed at local facilities, such as Westchester Medical Center, the Journal reported.

“Any good doctor learns really fast when you get thrown into a situation,” Dr. Halperin told the newspaper. “Would it have been better if they had more time? Yes. But extraordinary times call for extraordinary solutions.” (Becker’s Hospital, March 31)


NYS DOH: Physicians, Take these Precautions
Based on the NYS Department of Health webinar on March 13, 2020 physicians should take the following precautions:

  • Triage patients over the phone or via telehealth so that your office can be prepared and avoid exposure to other patients, it is also recommended that you suspend walk-ins. Please be aware, as noted below, that the NYS DFS and DOH have taken a number of steps to ensure that physicians will be paid for telehealth and telephone visits with patients.
  • Advise any patient to self-quarantine/self-isolate until COVID-19 is ruled out. Patients who have been exposed to the virus or traveled to affected international locations must continue quarantine for 14 days even if their test is negative.
  • Notify the county health Department of any patient you advise to self-quarantine, even if the patient is considered low risk. A list of county health departments can be found at: https://www.health.ny.gov/contact/contact_information/ For location of testing sites, please contact the county department of health.
  • Keep plenty of ear-loop face masks on hand for physicians and staff. If you need more masks or other PPE equipment in response to COVID-19, please contact your county Emergency Management Office (EMO) and indicate that you are having difficulty obtaining PPE and request their assistance in acquiring these items.

CMS Adds 85 More Medicare Services Covered under Telehealth
CMS on March 30 issued various regulatory changes to further support hospitals’, physicians’ and other healthcare organizations’ capabilities during the COVID-19 pandemic, including expanding Medicare coverage of telehealth visits.

On March 17, the Trump administration announced CMS will temporarily pay clinicians to provide telehealth services for beneficiaries during the pandemic. CMS is now expanding Medicare coverage of 85 additional services provided via telehealth, including emergency department visits and initial nursing facility and discharge visits.

Here are the 85 additional services, and their respective codes, that CMS will cover when provided via telehealth through the duration of the pandemic:

  1. 77427: radiation management
    2. 90853: group psychotherapy
    3. 90953: end stage renal disease, one visit per month, ages 2 and younger
    4. 90959: end stage renal disease, one visit per month, ages 12-19
    5. 90962: end stage renal disease, one visit per month, ages 20 and older
    6. 92057: speech/hearing therapy
    7. 92521: evaluation of speech fluency
    8. 92522: evaluation speech production
    9. 92523: speech sound language comprehension
    10. 92524: behavioral quality voice analysis
    11. 96130: psychological test evaluation phys/qhp 1st
    12. 96131: psychological test evaluation phys/qhp ea
    13. 96132: neuropsychological testing evaluation phys/qhp 1st
    14. 96133: neuropsychological testing evaluation phys/qhp ea
    15. 96136: psychological and neurological testing phy/qhp 1s
    16. 96137: psychological and neurological testing phy/qhp ea
    17. 96138: psychological and neurological tech phy/qhp ea
    18. 96139: psychological and neurological testing tech ea
    19. 97110: therapeutic exercises
    20. 97112: neuromuscular re-education
    21. 97116: gait training therapy
    22. 97161: physical therapy evaluation low complexity, 20 min
    23. 97162: physical therapy evaluation moderate complexity, 30 min
    24. 97163: physical therapy evaluation high complexity, 45 min
    25. 97164: physical therapy re-evaluation establish plan care
    26. 97165: occupational therapy evaluation low complexity, 30 min
    27. 97166: occupational therapy evaluation moderate complexity, 45 min
    28. 97167: occupational therapy evaluation high complexity, 60 min
    29. 97168: occupational therapy re-evaluation establish plan care
    30. 97535: self care management training
    31. 97750: physical performance test
    32. 97755: assistive technology assessment
    33. 97760: orthotic management and training 1st en
    34. 97761: prosthetic training 1st enc
    35. 99217: observation care discharge
    36. 99218: initial observation care
    37. 99219: initial observation care
    38. 99220: initial observation care
    39. 99221: initial hospital care
    40. 99222: initial hospital care
    41. 99223: initial hospital care
    42. 99234: observation/hospital same date
    43. 99235: observation/hospital same date
    44. 99236: observation/hospital same date
    45. 99238: hospital discharge day
    46. 99239: hospital discharge day
    47. 99281: emergency department visit
    48. 99282: emergency department visit
    49. 99283: emergency department visit
    50. 99284: emergency department visit
    51. 99285: emergency department visit
    52. 99291: critical care first hour
    53. 99292: critical care additional 30 mins
    54. 99304: nursing facility care initial
    55. 99305: nursing facility care initial
    56. 99306: nursing facility care initial
    57. 99315: nursing facility discharge day
    58. 99316: nursing facility discharge day
    59. 99327: domiciliary or rest home visit new patient
    60. 99328: domiciliary or rest home visit new patient
    61. 99334: domiciliary or rest home visit established patient
    62. 99335: domiciliary or rest home visit established patient
    63. 99336: domiciliary or rest home visit established patient
    64. 99337: domiciliary or rest home visit established patient
    65. 99341: home visit new patient
    66. 99342: home visit new patient
    67. 99343: home visit new patient
    68. 99344: home visit new patient
    69. 99345: home visit new patient
    70. 99347: home visit established patient
    71. 99348: home visit established patient
    72. 99349: home visit established patient
    73. 99350: home visit established patient
    74. 99468: neonatal critical care initial
    75. 99469: neonatal critical care subsequent
    76. 99471: pediatric critical care initial
    77. 99472: pediatric critical care subsequent
    78. 99473: self measurement of blood pressure at home education/training
    79. 99475: pediatric critical care ages 2-5 initial
    80. 99476: pediatric critical care ages 2-5 subsequent
    81. 99477: initial day of hospital care for neonatal care
    82. 99478: ic low-birthweight infant < 1500 gm subsequent
    83. 99479: ic low-birthweight infant < 1500-2500 g subsequent
    84. 99480: ic infant pbw 2501-5000 g subsequent
    85. 99483: assessment and care plan cognitive impairment

Click here to view the full list of services payable under Medicare when provided via telehealth. (Becker’s Hospital Review, March 31)


Stakeholders on Budget Watch After Medicaid Redesign Proposals
As health care providers, insurers and advocates await Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s budget, concerns over Medicaid redesign recommendations may be more heightened than ever.

Though long-term care is slated for the largest number of potential cuts—$715 million—physicians and community health centers are among the groups concerned.

Dr. Art Fougner, president of the Medical Society of the State of New York, said in a statement that, as the Legislature and the governor work to finalize a budget during the Covid-19 pandemic, the society urges them to “reject problematic proposals” advanced by the Medicaid redesign team. insurance for local physicians who incur high liability costs compared to the rest of the country.

“It is imperative to maintain stability as well as patient safety in our health care system as we manage this current crisis and its aftermath,” Fougner said.

Community health centers are also concerned. They say the Medicaid redesign recommendation—valued at $125 million in savings—that would shift the Medicaid pharmacy benefit from managed care to fee for service would result in a loss of 340b rebate revenue to community health centers and hospitals.

As for long-term care providers and advocates, their message has gotten even stronger during the coronavirus outbreak.

Bryan O’Malley, executive director of the Consumer Directed Personal Assistance Association of New York State, told Crain’s he thinks the cuts make even less sense now than they did just weeks ago.

The scope of the cuts—in combination with elderly and disabled enrollees facing long-term isolation due to Covid-19—is “appalling and devastating,” he said. (Crain’s Pulse 3/1)


Emergency Adoption of Amendment to 12 NYCRR 355.9 making a COVID-19 Diagnosis a Serious Health Condition
The Chair of NYS Workers Compensation Board announced the the board has adopted, on an emergency basis, an amendment to clarify that employees may take family leave to care for a family member diagnosed with the COVID-19 virus. The amendment is to section 355.9 of Title 12 NYCRR. A Notice of Emergency Adoption will be published in the April 15, 2020 edition of the State Register. This emergency rulemaking is effective for 90 days upon filing March 27, 2020. (March 31, 2020)


Small Business & Non-Profit Relief | Rep. Joseph Morelle
If you are a government contractor, there are a number of ways that Congress has provided relief and protection for your business. Agencies will be able to modify terms and conditions of a contract and to reimburse contractors at a billing rate of up to 40 hours per week of any paid leave, including sick leave. https://morelle.house.gov/coronavirus/smallbusiness


CAIPA Foundation “CAIPA Task Force on COVID-19” Donation and Supplies Drive
CAIPA, CAIPA MSO and CAIPAFoundation greatly appreciate your support and donations during this challenging time.

The Task Force Committee and Leadership sincerely ask for your continued support to this donation drive effort due to the increasing and pressing needs of our frontline healthcare providers.  For your information, in the past weeks, we have already delivered protective supplies to our partner hospitals, including NY Presbyterian-Queen, NYU Langone Brooklyn, Maimonides Medical Center, Northwell Health, Stony Brook University Hospital, NYP-Brooklyn Methodist Hospital, The Brooklyn Hospital Center and Interfaith Hospital to help ease the needs of our frontline heroes who are fighting COVID-19 for our communities.

We want to assure you that the monetary donations and protective suppliers received will be put to the best use for our partner hospitals in the communities throughout the city, which we jointly take good care of our patient population. The money and supplies will also be used to support CAIPA’s initiatives in assisting our staff and provider-members in our fight against COVID-19.

CAIPA has dedicated a webpage, “CAIPA Task Force on COVID-19”, on CAIPA.net , where you can see our weekly update, media activities, donation report, educational materials, and resources to keep you, our providers and community posted on the progress and milestones that we achieved so far on this campaign. 

FOR MONETARY DONATIONS:

Please kindly make check payable to:
CAIPA FOUNDATION, INC.
202 CANAL ST STE 500
NEW YORK, NY 10013

Or use PAYPAL and pay to acct@caipa.net.

FOR PROTECTIVE SUPPLIES:

Please kindly contact Task Force Project Lead Lisha Xiang at lxiang@caipa.net,  who will make arrangements to be delivered to the following locations:

·                Manhattan: 202 Canal St., Suite 500, New York, NY 10013 (entrance on Mulberry St.)
·                Brooklyn: 5721 6th Ave., Brooklyn, NY 11220
·                Queens: 136-33 37th Ave., Flushing, NY 11354

Thank you again for your support and commitment to this meaningful cause.


AMA summary of the CARES Act
Small businesses, including physician practices, with no more than 500 employees are eligible to apply for the Small Business Administration’s (SBA) section 7(a) Payroll Protection Program. The AMA is in the process of developing more in-depth resources for physicians on Medicare advance payments, SBA loans, and medical liability that will be available soon. The attached summary is available online at: https://www.ama-assn.org/system/files/2020-03/summary-H.R.%20748-cares-act.pdf.

Andrew Saul, Commissioner of Social Security, reminds the public that Social Security and Supplemental Security Income (SSI) benefit payments will continue to be paid on time during the COVID-19 pandemic.  The agency also reminds everyone to be aware of scammers who try to take advantage of the pandemic to trick people into providing personal information or payment via retail gift cards, wire transfers, internet currency, or by mailing cash, to maintain Social Security benefit payments or receive economic impact payments from the Department of the Treasury.

For more information, please visit https://www.ssa.gov/news/press/releases/.

COVID-19 Economics

Emergency SBA Financing: CARES Act


With $349 Billion in Emergency Small Business Capital Cleared, SBA and Treasury Begin Unprecedented Public-Private Mobilization Effort to Distribute Funds


Social Security Benefits Will be Paid on Time and Other Updates Related to the COVID-19 Pandemic


Stimulus Package Passed by Congress Provided Several Programs to Aid Physicians Through this Crisis
As reported in an AMA summary of the $ 2 trillion stimulus package enacted into law last Friday, here are some of the key provisions to benefit physicians:

Small business loans. Small businesses, including physician practices, with no more than 500 employees are eligible to apply for the Small Business Administration’s (SBA) section 7(a) Payroll Protection Program. For more information how physicians can access this program, click here.

This allows a small business to apply to an SBA-approved lender for a loan of up to 250% of the business’ average monthly payroll costs to cover 8 weeks of payroll as well as help with other expenses like rent, mortgage payments, and utilities. The maximum loan amount is $10 million. Sole-proprietors, independent contractors, and other self-employed individuals are eligible.

A loan can be forgiven based on maintaining employee and salary levels. For any portion of the loan that is not forgiven, the terms include a maximum term of 10 years, a maximum interest rate of four percent. Small businesses and organizations will be able to apply if they were harmed by COVID-19 between February 15, 2020 and June 30, 2020. This program is retroactive to February 15, 2020andare available through June 30, 2020.

Emergency loans.  Moreover, there was also Authorization for $10 billion in “emergency” Economic Injury Disaster Loan (EIDL) to eligible entities with not more than 500 employees. Allows an eligible entity that has applied for an EIDL loan to request an advance on that loan, of not more than $10,000, which the SBA must distribute within 3 days. Advance payments may be used for providing paid sick leave to employees, maintaining payroll, meeting increased costs to obtain materials, making rent or mortgage payments, and repaying obligations that cannot be met due to revenue losses

Financial support for hospitals, physicians, and others. Provides $100 billion through the Public Health and Social Services Emergency Fund to provide immediate financial relief by covering non-reimbursable expenses attributable to COVID-19. Health care entities, including physician practices, that provide health care, diagnoses, or testing are eligible. Non-reimbursable expenses attributable to COVID-19 qualify for funding.

Examples include increased staffing or training, personal protective equipment, and lost revenue. HHS is instructed to review applications and make payments on a rolling basis to get money into the health system as quickly as possible. HHS is given significant flexibility in determining how the funds are allocated and is expected to release guidance on the application process shortly.


Business Loan Forgiveness Included in CARES Act
Within the Coronavirus Aid, Recovery and Economic Security (CARES) Act that President Trump signed yesterday is a $350 billion Paycheck Protection Program that will allow businesses and nonprofits with fewer than 500 employees to apply for loans up to $10 million each to cover losses caused by the COVID-19 pandemic. 

What makes this relief even more significant is the possibility for loan forgiveness, which is available to employers who retain their workforce levels through the crisis. If you follow the guidelines carefully, you can essentially convert your business loan to a grant – even if you’ve already laid off employees.

Loan Forgiveness Requirements

Loans may be forgiven if businesses use the money to pay for payroll costs, salaries, benefits, mortgage interest, rent and/or utilities.  The forgiven amount would be equal to the amount actually paid for these expenses during the eight weeks following disbursement of the loan. Additional wages paid to tipped employees under Section 3(m)(2)(A) of the Fair Labor Standard Acts may also be forgiven.

Forgiveness will be scaled back if the business has a reduction in employees, salaries or wages. Reductions in workforce, salaries and wages that occur from February 15, 2020 to April 26, 2020 will be disregarded for purposes of reducing the forgiveness amount, as long as the reductions are eliminated by June 30, 2020.

For purposes of the loan forgiveness, a reduction in workforce and salary or wages will be calculated as follows:

  • Workforce reductions will be calculated by the initial forgiven amount multiplied by the quotient of average full-time equivalents (FTEs) during the eight-week period, divided by the average FTEs for the period from February 15, 2019 through June 30, 2019 or January 1, 2020 through February 29, 2020, as determined by the loan recipient.
  • Salary or wage reductions will be determined by the amount of any salary or wage decrease in excess of 25 percent of the total salary or wages during the most recent full quarter such employee was employed before the eight-week period. Only employees who did not receive, during any single pay period during 2019, wages or salary at an annualized rate of pay in excess of $100,000 are included in this calculation.

Advance Medicare Payments to Help Physicians Through this Period
Moreover, CMS announced over the weekend a process for physicians to receive 100% of predicted Medicare payments for a 3-month period ( Fact Sheet: Advanced Payment Program During COVID-19 Emergency).  Here is a recommended process for applying for these advanced payments shared with MSSNY by a medical practice, as well as some of the particulars of this program:
Process:

1. Go to your National Government Services (NGS) website and fill in, sign, and submit an Accelerated / Advance Payment request form for your practice.

2. Can request up to 100% of Medicare payment for a 3-month period.

3. Check box 2 (“Delay in provider/supplier billing process of an isolated temporary nature beyond the provider’s/supplier’s normal billing cycle and not attributable to other third-party payers or private patients.”); and

3. State that the request is for an accelerated/advance payment due to the COVID-19 pandemic

4. Will receive payment within 7 calendar days from the request.

5. Recoupment will begin 120 days after payment issuance date.

 Eligibility:

1.     Have billed Medicare for claims within 180 days immediately prior to the date of signature on the provider’s/supplier’s request form,

2.     Not be in bankruptcy,

3.     Not be under active medical review or program integrity investigation, and

4.     Not have any outstanding delinquent Medicare overpayments.

For further information, contact Regina McNally, VP of MSSNY’s Socio-Economic

Division at 516-488-6100 ext.332 or email rmcnally@mssny.org.


Request for Accelerated/Advance Payment


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

COVID-19 Update March 30, 2020


.
March 30 is National Doctors Day: We Salute Our Physicians Today and Everyday

Thank You flyer to doctors

Today, National Doctors Day, we take a moment to salute our physician heroes for their tireless commitment to the health of all New Yorkers. We are especially proud of our physicians during this time of national crisis, but heroes–our physicians–need support.

From what we are hearing from the front, in order to do the job that they’re being called on to do, physicians require the necessary equipment, especially the recommended Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) to continue to serve our patients in need. Please take a moment to remember those who risk it all to take care of you.

New Yorkers are all stronger together.

Art Fougner, MD
MSSNY President


Latest New York Coronavirus Statistics

  • 59,513– People who have tested positive for coronavirus in New York, as of March 29.
  • 57% – The percentage of those positive tests – 33,768 – in New York City.
  • 143,532 – The number of positive tests for coronavirus across the United States, as of March 30. 42% of U.S. cases are in New York.
  • 965 – The number of people who have died of coronavirus in New York state, as of the morning of March 29. The New York Times, compiling city and state figures, reported that the death toll now exceeds 1,000 in New York state.
  • 50% – The percentage of victims, at least in New York City, who are 75 years old or older.
  • 6,481– The number of people hospitalized for COVID-19 in New York, as of March 27. 1,583 of them are in the intensive car unit.
  • 140,000 – The number of hospital beds Cuomo expects New York will need at the apex of COVID-19 in the state. As of March 27, the state had a capacity of just 53,000.
  • 50% – How much Cuomo is mandating hospitals to increase their capacity – and asking them to go further, increasing capacity by 100% and doubling the number of hospital beds available.
  • 30,000 – How many ventilators Cuomo says New York will need at the apex of COVID-19, with 15,000 just for New York City.
  • 400 – The amount of ventilators the federal government, through FEMA, sent to New York on March 24. After complaints, the government sent 4,000 more.
  • 76,000 – The number of health care workers – including retirees and students – who have signed up to volunteer as part of New York’s surge health care workforce, as of March 29.
  • $1 billion – How much the New York state government had spent fighting coronavirus, as of March 25, with Cuomo expecting to spend “several billion dollars when we’re done.”

Stimulus Package Passed by Congress Provided Several Programs to Aid Physicians Through this Crisis
As reported in an AMA summary of the $ 2 trillion stimulus package enacted into law last Friday, here are some of the key provisions to benefit physicians:

Small business loans. Small businesses, including physician practices, with no more than 500 employees are eligible to apply for the Small Business Administration’s (SBA) section 7(a) Payroll Protection Program. For more information how physicians can access this program, click here.

This allows a small business to apply to an SBA-approved lender for a loan of up to 250% of the business’ average monthly payroll costs to cover 8 weeks of payroll as well as help with other expenses like rent, mortgage payments, and utilities. The maximum loan amount is $10 million. Sole-proprietors, independent contractors, and other self-employed individuals are eligible.

A loan can be forgiven based on maintaining employee and salary levels. For any portion of the loan that is not forgiven, the terms include a maximum term of 10 years, a maximum interest rate of four percent. Small businesses and organizations will be able to apply if they were harmed by COVID-19 between February 15, 2020 and June 30, 2020. This program is retroactive to February 15, 2020andare available through June 30, 2020.

Emergency loans.  Moreover, there was also Authorization for $10 billion in “emergency” Economic Injury Disaster Loan (EIDL) to eligible entities with not more than 500 employees. Allows an eligible entity that has applied for an EIDL loan to request an advance on that loan, of not more than $10,000, which the SBA must distribute within 3 days. Advance payments may be used for providing paid sick leave to employees, maintaining payroll, meeting increased costs to obtain materials, making rent or mortgage payments, and repaying obligations that cannot be met due to revenue losses

Financial support for hospitals, physicians, and others. Provides $100 billion through the Public Health and Social Services Emergency Fund to provide immediate financial relief by covering non-reimbursable expenses attributable to COVID-19. Health care entities, including physician practices, that provide health care, diagnoses, or testing are eligible. Non-reimbursable expenses attributable to COVID-19 qualify for funding.

Examples include increased staffing or training, personal protective equipment, and lost revenue. HHS is instructed to review applications and make payments on a rolling basis to get money into the health system as quickly as possible. HHS is given significant flexibility in determining how the funds are allocated and is expected to release guidance on the application process shortly.


Advance Medicare Payments to Help Physicians Through this Period
Moreover, CMS announced over the weekend a process for physicians to receive 100% of predicted Medicare payments for a 3-month period (Fact Sheet: Advanced Payment Program During COVID-19 Emergency).  Here is a recommended process for applying for these advanced payments shared with MSSNY by a medical practice, as well as some of the particulars of this program:
Process:

1. Go to your National Government Services (NGS) website and fill in, sign, and submit an Accelerated / Advance Payment request form for your practice.

2. Can request up to 100% of Medicare payment for a 3-month period.

3. Check box 2 (“Delay in provider/supplier billing process of an isolated temporary nature beyond the provider’s/supplier’s normal billing cycle and not attributable to other third-party payers or private patients.”); and

3. State that the request is for an accelerated/advance payment due to the COVID-19 pandemic

4. Will receive payment within 7 calendar days from the request.

5. Recoupment will begin 120 days after payment issuance date.

 Eligibility:

1.     Have billed Medicare for claims within 180 days immediately prior to the date of signature on the provider’s/supplier’s request form,

2.     Not be in bankruptcy,

3.     Not be under active medical review or program integrity investigation, and

4.     Not have any outstanding delinquent Medicare overpayments.

For further information, contact Regina McNally, VP of MSSNY’s Socio-Economic

Division at 516-488-6100 ext.332 or email rmcnally@mssny.org.

 

1 25 26 27 28