Rural Health Information Hub Latest News

Pennsylvania Senators Renew Bipartisan Push to Let Nurse Practitioners Care for Patients Without Being Tethered to Doctors

A bipartisan pair of Pennsylvania senators plan to renew their long quest to let nurse practitioners care for patients without contractual tethers to doctors, and an advocate says the state’s experience with the COVID-19 pandemic may help them. Sens. Camera Bartolotta and Lisa Boscola — a Washington County Republican and a Northampton County Democrat — said they will refile a bill that eradicates the requirement nurse practitioners have collaboration agreements with two doctors. They called them “archaic restrictions” that “no longer reflect modern medicine.” Instead, their bill will call for practitioners to fulfill a three-year, 3,600-hour physician collaboration period. After that, they would be free to provide care independently in their specific areas of expertise.

Join the Pathways to Prevention Workshop: Improving Rural Health Through Telehealth-Guided Provider-to-Provider Communication

  The National Institutes of Health, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and Health Resources and Services Administration hosted a workshop to find and fill research gaps on the use of provider-to-provider telehealth to improve health outcomes in rural areas. Here, you’ll find the panel’s final report and recommendations.

CMS is Making Efforts to Improve Access to Specialty Care

The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) issued new guidance to clarify that state Medicaid and CHIP programs will be able to pay specialists directly when a beneficiary’s primary healthcare provider asks for advice. The aim is to help improve access to specialty care, particularly mental health care services.  Citing FORHP-supported research, CMS  notes that, “Rural areas face the most significant provider shortage challenges; more than 60 percent of nonmetropolitan counties do not have a psychiatrist and almost half of the nonmetropolitan counties do not have a psychologist.”  Up to now, providers referring a patient to specialty care were required to coordinate payment through separate agreements with the treating practitioner.  The new policy gives state-level Medicaid and CHIP agencies the flexibility to reimburse consulting practitioners directly.  Importantly, these consultations can occur when the beneficiary is not physically present. To be covered under Medicaid or CHIP, both the treating practitioner and the consulting practitioner must be enrolled in Medicaid or CHIP. For consultations that cross state lines, consulting practitioners must be enrolled in Medicaid or CHIP providers in the state in which the beneficiary resides. For more information, see the State Health Official Letter available on Medicaid.gov.

Is Being There Enough? Read About Postgraduate Nurse Practitioner Residencies in Rural Primary Care Studies

 Researchers interviewed administrators and participants in 20 rural nurse practitioner residency programs to determine the effect of federal- and state-based programs on rural placement post-training.  Though nurse practitioners make up one-quarter of the rural primary care workforce, few studies have investigated factors supporting their transition from training to practice.

Deadline Extended: HHS is Seeking Feedback on Tribal Consultation Policy

HHS extended the deadline for submitting comments on the updated draft HHS Tribal Consultation Policy to January 27, 2023. The updated draft addresses comments and recommendations received during the first round of consultation in spring 2021, as well as the input of the Secretary’s Tribal Advisory Committee (STAC) Tribal Consultation Policy Workgroup. Comments on the updated draft may be submitted to consultation@hhs.gov. Please see the Dear Tribal Leader Letter, linked above, outlining the major recommendations and changes in the updated draft. Also, please see the clean and redline version of the updated draft to facilitate the commenting process. – New Deadline, January 27.

Finding Doctors Offering Medicare through Paid Telehealth Indicator

 The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) added a telehealth indicator on Medicare Care Compare, the site that allows consumers to search for doctors, clinicians, groups, and facilities accepting Medicare beneficiaries.  Last year, CMS reported a 30-fold increase in telehealth services.  The new indicator helps beneficiaries and caregivers more easily find clinicians who provide telehealth services.

New Awards Given to Train Doctors in Underserved Areas

 The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) awarded the first round of Medicare-funded residency slots to 100 teaching hospitals across 30 states, the District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico, effective July 1, 2023.  The graduate medical education slots prioritize hospitals located in Health Professional Shortage Areas, and the majority are allocated for primary care – including obstetrics/gynecology – and mental health specialties.  CMS is set to create 200 new positions every year over the next five years.  The application period for the second round of 200 residency slots will open in January 2023 and close on March 31, 2023.

Health Care Providers Must Comply with Pennsylvania’s New Blood Lead Test Law

A new state law regarding blood lead tests for young children went into effect on Tuesday. The state Health Department gave notice in the Pennsylvania Bulletin regarding how Act 150 of 2022 is to be implemented by healthcare providers. The law requires that doctors should order blood tests for pregnant moms and young children if they determine that the women or children are at risk of lead exposure. The notice said a health care provider will consider possible lead exposure by evaluating risk factors in accordance with recommendations from the federal Centers for Disease Control (CDC) and American Academy of Pediatrics for children 24 months of age or under and the CDC and American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists guidelines for pregnant women.

The Average American Life Expectancy Falls…Again

Average American life expectancy fell from 77 to 76.4 years last year, bringing U.S. figures back to where they were in 1996, according to new federal data. For American men, life expectancy fell by more than eight months, and for women, the loss was about seven months, the study found. Life expectancy, which is a measure of death rates, dropped in every age category over age 1. Though the rate of decline in life expectancy wasn’t as dramatic as in 2020, the fall-off in 2021 was worse because it came on top of that year’s 17% decline. The latest decline came as other wealthy countries saw a rebound after the first year of the pandemic. The race gap reversed somewhat in 2021 as white people lost more ground than people of color, though they still live longer on average. Read more.