- Telehealth Study Recruiting Veterans Now
- USDA Delivers Immediate Relief to Farmers, Ranchers and Rural Communities Impacted by Recent Disasters
- Submit Nominations for Partnership for Quality Measurement (PQM) Committees
- Unleashing Prosperity Through Deregulation of the Medicare Program (Executive Order 14192) - Request for Information
- Dr. Mehmet Oz Shares Vision for CMS
- CMS Refocuses on its Core Mission and Preserving the State-Federal Medicaid Partnership
- Social Factors Help Explain Worse Cardiovascular Health among Adults in Rural Vs. Urban Communities
- Reducing Barriers to Participation in Population-Based Total Cost of Care (PB-TCOC) Models and Supporting Primary and Specialty Care Transformation: Request for Input
- Secretary Kennedy Renews Public Health Emergency Declaration to Address National Opioid Crisis
- Secretary Kennedy Renews Public Health Emergency Declaration to Address National Opioid Crisis
- 2025 Marketplace Integrity and Affordability Proposed Rule
- Rural America Faces Growing Shortage of Eye Surgeons
- NRHA Continues Partnership to Advance Rural Oral Health
- Comments Requested on Mobile Crisis Team Services: An Implementation Toolkit Draft
- Q&A: What Are the Challenges and Opportunities of Small-Town Philanthropy?
The NACHC Survey Shows a Huge Loss of the Health Center Workforce
Fighting a global pandemic on the frontlines of underserved communities has decimated the health center workforce with unprecedented rates of attrition. A new survey by the National Association of Community Health Centers (NACHC) reveals that 68% of health centers report a loss of workforce of up to 25 % in the last six months alone. Health centers are losing nurses more than any other staff, a trend that has brought into focus a worsening national crisis and an immediate challenge to future pandemic readiness. “The future of the Community Health Center workforce and our readiness to meet public health challenges is uncertain,” said Rachel Gonzales-Hanson, interim President and CEO of NACHC. “We must immediately invest in policies that will retain current health center staff, broaden the pipeline for the future workforce, and foster creative strategies at the community level for short and long-term solutions.” Read the entire press release from NACHC or download the report.
Primary Care Investment Could Improve Outcomes, Lower Costs
Investing in primary care as a preventative measure is associated with improved medical care quality, fewer hospital visits, and lower spending overall, a study has found. If all California providers spent as much on primary care as the highest investing health systems, they could avoid 25,000 acute hospital stays and 89,000 emergency department visits while saving $2.4 billion in healthcare spending a year, according to a study funded by the California Health Care Foundation, Covered California and the Milbank Memorial Fund. Read more.
87% of U.S. Children Hospitalized During COVID Surge Unvaccinated
Most children from 5 to 11 years old hospitalized with COVID-19 during the U.S. surge driven by the Omicron variant were unvaccinated, per a Centers for Disease Control and Prevention study published Tuesday. The study of children hospitalized in the U.S. from Dec. 19 to Feb. 28 found the hospitalization rate was 2.1 times higher for those unvaccinated than their vaccinated peers. Read more.
Reactions are Mixed Regarding the Lifting of the Public Transportation Mask Mandate
While many people are cheering the lifting of the masking requirement for public transportation, others are fearful that the lax rules now could lead to more cases of COVID-19 infections. Those who face higher risks say they are especially nervous. In interviews, older Americans, people with compromised immune systems, parents with young children, and low-income workers who rely on public transportation worried that they would now be at even greater risk with every bus ride or plane trip.
The CDC Launches New Forecasting Center for Infectious Diseases
An initial $200 million in funding from the 2021 coronavirus relief package is supporting the development of a forecasting center for infectious diseases at the Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). The center has awarded $21 million to academic institutions to develop modeling and forecasting methods. Read more.
The FDA Authorizes First COVID-19 Breathalyzer Test
The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) announced last Thursday that A COVID-19 breathalyzer test with the ability to provide diagnostic results in three minutes has won FDA emergency use authorization. The test, made by Frisco, Texas-based InspectIR Systems, is authorized for those 18 and older and in settings where samples are both collected and analyzed, such as doctor’s offices, hospitals, or mobile testing sites. The device is about the size of a piece of carry-on luggage, the FDA said and works by detecting chemical compounds in breath samples associated with SARS-CoV-2 infection.
The HRSA Grants Webinars Begin in May
The 2022 Healthy Grants Workshop web series is for current HRSA award recipients and will offer multiple presentations on how to successfully manage your HRSA award. In addition to presentations by HRSA’s Office of Federal Assistance Management, this year’s workshop will feature presentations by the Grants Quality Service Management Office and the Office of the Inspector General. Other HRSA bureaus and offices will also be present, including the Office of Civil Rights, Diversity, and Inclusion and the Office of Information Technology.
The Federal Trade Commission Provides Opportunity to Weigh in on Impact of Pharmacy Benefit Managers Practices
The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) recently announced it is soliciting public input on the ways that practices by large, vertically integrated pharmacy benefit managers (PBMs) are impacting prescription drug affordability and access. The Request for Information (RFI) covers a wide range of issues, including contract terms, rebates, fees, pricing policies, steering methods, conflicts of interest, and consolidation. NACHC’s long template and short template letters raise a concern about PBMs’ unfair and anti-competitive business practices that impede health centers’ ability to serve the most vulnerable patients. The templates also discuss how PBMs target 340B covered entities and institute discriminatory practices pickpocketing 340B savings. Comments are due by May 25 on regulations.gov.
Pennie Creates a Self-Attestation Form and Launches in PA
Consumers must verify sources of income for some types of coverage. Pennie has created a Self-Attestation Form for consumers with no documentation available. The document requires projected yearly annual income for consumers to receive financial assistance to pay for health coverage. The attestation acknowledges that consumers provide financial information to be used for the determination of eligibility, must report income changes within 30 days, and understand that if they receive too much Advance Premium Tax Credit (APTC) during the benefit year, they may have to pay some or all of the excess back to the IRS when federal income taxes are filed for the benefit year. Documents can be submitted via email, fax or mail.
The No Surprises Act Is in Full Effect
Consumers have new billing protections when getting emergency care, non-emergency care from out-of-network providers at in-network facilities, and air ambulance services from out-of-network providers. Through the No Surprises Act, new rules aimed to protect consumers, excessive out-of-pocket costs are restricted, and emergency services must continue to be covered without any prior authorization, regardless of whether or not a provider or facility is in-network. Previously, if consumers had health coverage and got care from an out-of-network provider, their health plan usually would not cover the entire out-of-network cost. This left many with higher costs than if they had been seen by an in-network provider. This is especially common in an emergency, where consumers might not be able to choose the provider. Even if a consumer goes to an in-network hospital, they might get care from out-of-network providers at that facility. For more, view this article