From the Delta variant vaccination front, AHIP informs us that
Today, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s (CDC) Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) met to discuss the safety, efficacy and clinical considerations for the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine in children aged 5-11 years. The committee unanimously voted (14-0) to recommend the vaccine with the following statement:
“The Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine is recommended for children 5-11 years of age in the U.S. population under the FDA’s Emergency Use Authorization (EUA).”
During the meeting, representatives from Pfizer and the CDC presented data that showed the vaccine to be immunogenic and safe, with majority of adverse events documented as injection site pain. Data from Pfizer showed no correlation of the vaccine with incidence of multisystem inflammatory syndrome MIS-C, and the CDC will continue to monitor the long-term effects of myocarditis in this population. The CDC also noted the disparities in COVID-19 disease epidemiology, that Black, Hispanic, and American Indian/Native Alaskan children are at greater risk for hospitalization and disease severity. * * *
Additionally, the American Academy of Pediatrics, American Academy of Family Physicians, National Association of Pediatric Nurse Practitioners, and the Pediatrics Infection Disease Society endorsed the COVID-19 vaccine’s administration in all eligible children as authorized by the FDA.
The Wall Street Journal adds that the CDC Director Dr. Rochelle Walensky has ratified the ACIP’s recommendation.
The endorsement * * * on Tuesday, was the last step before doctors, nurses and pharmacists could start giving the shots. Some sites could start administering the vaccine as early as Wednesday, though federal officials don’t expect vaccinations in the age group to be in full swing across the U.S. until next week.
Over 2/3rds of the vaccine eligible U.S. population (12 years and older) are fully vaccinated and a quarter of Americans over age 65 have received a booster according to today’s CDC update.
From the also busy Medicare front, the American Hospital Association tells us about three final Calendar Year 2022 rules released today:
— Hospital Outpatient Services (Part A): The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services late today issued a final rule that increases Medicare hospital outpatient prospective payment system rates by a net 2.0% in calendar year 2022 compared to 2021. In addition, as urged by AHA, CMS finalized its proposals to reverse two policies finalized in CY 2021. The first policy halts the elimination of the inpatient only list and adds back to the IPO list almost all of the services removed in 2021. The second reinstates several patient safety criteria for adding a procedure to the ambulatory surgical center covered procedures list that were in place in CY 2020 and prior. The rule also removes 255 of the 258 surgical procedures that had been added to the ASC CPL in 2021.
— Hospital Price Transparency: CMS also finalizes as proposed a number of modifications to the hospital price transparency rule, including significant increases to the civil monetary penalty for noncompliance. * * * Currently, the CMP is set at a maximum amount of $300/day. CMS will scale up the CMP based on a hospital’s bed count, with a minimum of $300/day for small hospitals (30 or fewer beds) and an additional $10/bed/day for larger hospitals with a daily cap of $5,500. CMS also will prohibit specific barriers to accessing the machine-readable files, including through automated searches and direct downloads. CMS provides updated clarifications on the price estimator tools for those hospitals that choose to use them to fulfill the shoppable service requirement, including allowing patients to manually input their insurance information and permitting broad disclaimers, as appropriate.
— Home Healthcare Services (Part A): The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services today released its calendar year 2022 final rule for the home health prospective payment system. The rule finalized a net update of 3.2% relative to CY 2021. This includes a 2.6% market basket increase ($465 million), a 0.7% increase for high-cost outlier cases ($125 million), and 0.1% decrease to rural payments as required by law (-$20 million).
— Physician Services (Part B): The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services late today released its calendar year 2022 final rule for the physician fee schedule. The rule cuts the conversion factor to $33.59 in CY 2022, as compared to $34.89 in CY 2021, which reflects the expiration of the CY 2021 3.75% payment increase, a 0.00% conversion factor update, and a budget neutrality adjustment. The rule also finalizes several policies to expand access to telehealth for mental health services, including, in certain instances, covering audio-only services. In addition, as urged by the AHA, CMS finalized a delayed implementation of the payment penalty phase of the Appropriate Use Criteria program to the later of Jan. 1, 2023, or the Jan. 1 that follows the end of the COVID-19 public health emergency. Currently, the penalty phase is set to begin Jan. 1, 2022. “The AHA applauds today’s ruling by CMS to delay the proposed enforcement of the Appropriate Use Criteria (AUC) program as well as to expand access to telehealth for behavioral health services,” said AHA Executive Vice President Stacey Hughes.
Speaking of telehealth, Healthcare Dive calls attention to its finding that ‘While women are more likely than men to visit doctors and consume healthcare services in general, telehealth seems to be uniquely attractive to women.” Moreover, [t]he data also suggests female physicians offer virtual care services at higher rates than their male counterparts.”
In the tidbits department, we find
- Healthcare Dive reports that “The median change in operating margins for hospitals fell 18.2% in September compared to August, according to the latest monthly report from Kaufman Hall, a hospital consultant group. Patient volumes declined in almost every key category, including emergency room visits and operating room minutes, potentially signaling that the rise in the delta variant caused some to once again defer care out of concern over contracting the coronavirus. Outpatient revenues declined, too, further underscoring this potential trend. Although fewer patients were admitted, patients were sicker and stayed longer. The average length of stay is also trending above pre-pandemic levels.”
- MedPage Today offers an interesting story on Chicago’s Rush Medical Center “journey to health equity” using social determinants of health data, among other tools.
- Federal Times reports that “The Partnership for Public Service held its annual Samuel J. Heyman Service to America awards Nov. 1, honoring nine federal employees and their associated teams out of 29 nominees for making a significant impact through their public service.” Congratulations to all of the nominees and thanks for your service to our country.