FCC Extends Application Deadline for Rural Healthcare Connect Program to June 1

The FCC has extended the application deadline for the Rural Healthcare Connect Program from April 1 to June 1. All rural FQHCs are encouraged to apply, as they are guaranteed to receive a 65% flat discount on an array of communications services, including internet access, dark fiber, business data, traditional digital service line (DSL), and private carriage services.

Americans are Drowning in Medical Debt

Americans owe at least $195 billion of medical debt, despite 90% of the population having some kind of health coverage, according to new research from the Peterson Center on Healthcare and the Kaiser Family Foundation. People are spending down their savings and skimping on food, clothing, and household items to pay their medical bills. About 16 million people, or 6% of U.S. adults, owe more than $1,000 in medical bills, and 3 million people owe more than $10,000. The financial burden falls disproportionately on people with disabilities, those in generally poor health, Black Americans, and people living in the South or in non-Medicaid expansion states, per the research.

U.S. Funeral Assistance for COVID Tops $2 Billion

The federal government has provided more than $2 billion to help cover funeral costs for more than 300,000 families of people who died from COVID-19, the Federal Emergency Management Agency announced Tuesday as it launches a new campaign to raise awareness about the aid to eligible families. More than 965,000 people have died in the U.S. from the virus. The COVID-19 Funeral Assistance program provides up to $9,000 per funeral and covers COVID-19 related deaths since January 20, 2020. The average amount awarded per death is $6,500, according to FEMA.

Feds Set to Cut Monoclonal Antibody Supplies to States

Amid a congressional standoff over COVID funding, the federal government will delay buying “hundreds of thousands” of monoclonal antibody treatments and instead cut state allocations of the drug by 30% starting next week to stretch supplies, senior Biden administration officials said Tuesday. This is the first time administration officials are threatening pain in the form of cutbacks to the states if Congress doesn’t approve new COVID-19 response funding.

Municipalities are Tracking COVID through Wastewater

Did you know that data from wastewater can spot rises in COVID-19 infections and identify hot spots before they show up through positive tests? Pittsburgh and other municipalities are using this method for the real-time assessment of COVID-19 infection rates to augment the lagging indicators of reported cases and hospitalizations. Read more at Bloomberg here.

Free At-Home COVID-19 Tests Still Available

The Biden Administration continues to remind Americans that every U.S. household can order four more free at-home COVID-19 tests from the US Postal Service website here. In order to close gaps in COVID-19 equity across the commonwealth, the PA Department of Health is also providing OTC COVID-19 rapid tests at no cost and is seeking partners to help distribute tests in high-need communities. Partners can request tests via an online form. Any questions for the COVID-19 Testing Team may also be submitted using this form. Participating organizations must:

·    Be able to receive delivery of and store tests on-site

·    Determine test pick up times/dates, and local distribution strategy

·    Communicate test availability to local vulnerable populations

Test quantity allocated is dependent on the Pennsylvania Department of Health’s supply on hand and submitting a request does not guarantee fulfillment. Priority will be given to sites that can access high-need populations and request fulfillment is limited to two requests per month.

Celebrating One Year with the American Rescue Plan

The American Rescue Plan Act of 2021 (ARP), also known as the COVID-19 relief package, was signed into law on March 11, 2021, and included significant savings for Pennsylvanians seeking marketplace coverage and those already enrolled in coverage through Pennie. The law increased the amount of financial assistance available to Pennsylvanians to provide relief for those struggling with the pandemic and the economic repercussions. The ARP included an increase in the eligibility for, and the amount of, premium tax credits for Pennsylvanians at all income levels during the 2021 and 2022 plan years, including those historically shut out of assistance due to earning more than 400% of the Federal Poverty Level. In some cases, lower-income enrollees had their premiums eliminated completely. Pennsylvania taxpayers and their spouses who were eligible to receive unemployment compensation in 2021, were eligible for the maximum levels of financial assistance through Pennie, including advance premium tax credits and cost-sharing reductions (CSR) to significantly reduce the cost of health coverage and care. Many of these households were able to enroll in a silver plan in their area with a $0 premium for the remainder of 2021 and 2022. More than 374,000 enrolled in Pennie marketplace insurance coverage during the 2022 Open Enrollment Period with significant savings; overall coverage increased by 11% due to the ARP. On average, Americans saved $800 per person last year and thousands per family because of the ARP affordability measures.

Former PA Health Secretary is Named USA Today Woman of the Year

 

Former Pennsylvania Health Secretary Administrator Rachel Levine has been named one of USA Today’s Women of the Year. Levine currently serves as the assistant secretary for health with the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) as well as the head of the U.S. Public Health Service Commissioned Corps. She is the first openly transgender four-star officer in the nation as well as the first female four-star officer in the U.S. Public Health Service Commissioned Corps. USA Today notes that she is “the nation’s highest-ranking openly transgender official.” Levine served as Pennsylvania’s top-ranking health official from 2017 to 2021. Pres. Joe Biden nominated her to HHS last January and she was confirmed as the nation’s assistant secretary of health by the Senate in March 2021.