Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

With virus bill, Medicare gets telemedici­ne option

- Ricardo Alonso-Zaldivar EVAN VUCCI/AP

WASHINGTON – The coronaviru­s legislatio­n signed by President Donald Trump on Friday would let Medicare expand the use of telemedici­ne in outbreak areas, potentiall­y reducing infection risks for vulnerable seniors.

Coverage of telemedici­ne is now limited primarily to residents of rural areas facing long road trips for treatment from specialist­s. The bill would allow the government to waive those restrictio­ns to help deal with the public health emergency created by the coronaviru­s outbreak.

It also could open the way for more lasting changes in Medicare’s coverage of virtual health care, including Skyping with the doctor or using devices that beam over measuremen­ts such as heart rate.

“Telehealth is really instrument­al in containing and treating disease, particular­ly in a public health emergency,” said Megan O’Reilly, a lobbyist with AARP, the advocacy group for older people, which pushed for the telemedici­ne provisions. “For older Americans, this can help keep them safe.”

Scientists tracking the global respirator­y disease outbreak have documented that coronaviru­s takes a higher toll on older people, on patients with multiple chronic conditions, and on those with compromise­d immune systems. Death rates are higher among older patients, while younger people are more likely to get a milder form of the illness.

To be clear, seniors who suspect they may have COVID-19 – the illness caused by the coronaviru­s – will still have to get tested physically, whether at a clinic or their doctor’s office.

Telemedici­ne cannot take the place of a swab of the throat to collect a sample for scientific testing. But it can help doctors make special arrangemen­ts to safely receive a patient who is sick and suspects the virus may be involved.

Perhaps even more importantl­y, telemedici­ne would offer a way for Medicare recipients in outbreak areas to take care of ongoing medical issues without having to go to the doctor’s office and risk coming into contact with someone who is sick. Many seniors have several doctors’ appointmen­ts every month.

Like the rest of the $8.3 billion coronaviru­s response bill, the telemedici­ne provisions were the result of a bipartisan effort by Democratic and Republican lawmakers in both chambers of Congress.

“This will give seniors greater access to their health care providers without leaving home,” said Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., a longtime telemedici­ne advocate who helped shoehorn the provisions into the coronaviru­s bill.

Seema Verma, head of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, has said she wants to find ways to focus government assistance on the people deemed most vulnerable. But her agency has not yet said how it would use its newly granted waiver authority.

To protect seniors from scams, the legislatio­n requires that the doctor’s office billing for a telehealth visit have an establishe­d, ongoing relationsh­ip with the patient.

AARP’s O’Reilly said if telemedici­ne shows its worth in the coronaviru­s outbreak, that could lead to permanent changes making it more widely available to seniors.

 ??  ?? President Donald Trump signs the coronaviru­s bill, as Department of Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar looks on Friday.
President Donald Trump signs the coronaviru­s bill, as Department of Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar looks on Friday.

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