AARP Hearing Center
Key takeaways
- Extension bumped to Jan. 30, not permanent.
- Two bills in the hopper could be a longer-term option.
- Pandemic changed perceptions of telemedicine for the better.
- Appointments help many disabled or homebound patients.
- Benefits include better management of chronic conditions.
A spending package that the president signed late Nov. 12 extends Medicare’s coverage of home telehealth services for 80 days until Jan. 30 as part of a deal to end the longest shutdown in the nation’s history.
The new law also will allow the government to reimburse doctors and other service providers who saw Medicare patients during the shutdown starting Oct. 1 after the enhanced telehealth services provisions had technically expired. A number of stakeholders, including AARP, are urging Congress to make these changes permanent.
As the shutdown entered its second month, AARP joined a letter from the Alliance for Connected Care that calls for Congress to provide a long-term telehealth fix for Medicare “to ensure stability and provide clarity for patients, providers, and the health care system as a whole.” More than 450 organizations signed onto the letter.
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The current “cycle of temporary fixes has resulted in patients and providers facing continued disruptions in care,” said the alliance, a coalition of health care and technology interests. Telehealth services, also known as telemedicine, use technology such as the internet, video conferencing and wireless communications to provide health services remotely, removing the need for some in-person visits.
The extended telehealth coverage under Medicare began in March 2020 to keep older adults from being exposed to COVID-19 in hospital and doctors’ waiting rooms. The service has been a boon for those who have difficulty getting to medical appointments, including older adults living in rural areas or with mobility problems.
Caregivers strapped for time to transport their loved ones also have benefited from the convenience.
“It’s probably the only good thing that came out of COVID, frankly, in terms of improving access because it’s been such a resounding success,” Nicholas Widmyer, director of federal affairs for the National Association of Community Health Centers based in Bethesda, Maryland, said earlier this year. An end to these services “would be a step backwards for a lot of our patients’ ability to access primary care.”
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