Medicare telehealth flexibilities and the Acute Hospital at Home waiver program – critical programs for the home health industry kept alive by short-term extensions – received reason for hope on Tuesday when lawmakers proposed a three-year funding package that would include provisions for these programs.
The $1.2 trillion, three-bill bipartisan funding package comes ahead of the Jan. 30 deadline to fully fund the government and would extend both acute hospital care at home waiver flexibilities and extend certain Medicare telehealth flexibilities.
Lack of Medicare telehealth flexibilities limits home health providers’ potential patient pool and adds administrative burden, experts have told Home Health Care News. The bill package would extend these flexibilities through Dec. 31, 2027.
The hospital-at-home waiver program, meanwhile, offers home health agencies a mechanism to partner with the broader health care system. The series of short-term extensions supporting the waiver program has created uncertainty, giving some health systems pause about participating, and contributed to the closure of Inbound Health, a hospital-at-home enablement platform that secured over $50 million in investor funding. The funding package would extend the waiver program through Sept. 30, 2030.
The bipartisan funding package that would extend both programs is a good sign, according to Alexis Apple, deputy executive director of the telehealth advocacy group ATA Action and the ATA’s vice president of federal affairs.
“We’ve seen before that even strong, bipartisan proposals can face unexpected hurdles late in the process, which is why it’s important not to take any outcome for granted when it comes to Congressional legislation,” Apple said in a statement. “We are optimistic this legislation can move forward, as it includes a number of strong bipartisan priorities and is not tied to the more partisan homeland security funding debate currently underway.”
Medicare telehealth policies and the hospital-at-home waiver program have both received bipartisan support – but failed to receive permanency due to political dysfunction, Kyle Zebley, CEO of the American Telemedicine Association, has previously told HHCN.
“Despite our broad-based bipartisan support, despite the administration saying up and down how supportive they are, despite the fact that there is no opponent, Congress is so dysfunctional, the federal government is so incapable of acting, that we are going to be a victim of that dysfunction,” Zebley said about telehealth flexibilities lapsing during the record 43-day government shutdown.
The new package does not provide a permanent solution to either telehealth flexibilities or the hospital-at-home program, but is a “significant win,” Apple said.
“We are urging strong, swift action now, and we will continue pressing until this package is enacted,” Apple said. “We are counting on our bipartisan, bicameral telehealth policy champions in Congress, and the continued strong support by President Trump and throughout his administration, to pass this landmark legislation that would effectively enact years-long extensions to these critical telehealth provisions and ensure continued access to telehealth services for patients and providers without disruption.”
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