Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

State gets OK to use Medicaid money

- ANDY DAVIS

LITTLE ROCK — Arkansas received federal approval Wednesday to use $55 million in Medicaid money to give bonus payments of up to $500 a week to workers in nursing homes and other long-term care settings as well as to those workers who care for elderly or disabled people at home.

At the request of Gov. Asa Hutchinson, an advisory panel also recommende­d using up to $80 million in federal coronaviru­s response money to provide similar payments to workers in hospitals as well as nonclinica­l staff, such as janitors and cafeteria workers, in hospitals, nursing homes and other facilities.

The money would come from the $1.25 billion the state expects to receive from the $2 trillion Coronaviru­s Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act passed by Congress last month.

Larry Walther, secretary of Arkansas’ Department of Finance and Administra­tion, said the state received half of its CARES allocation — or $625 million — Wednesday and expects to receive guidance this week from the U.S. Department of the Treasury on how the money can be spent.

The state CARES Act Steering Committee also recommende­d using $73.5 million of the federal money to reimburse the state for buying masks and protective medical gear for health care workers using money from its budget stabilizat­ion trust fund and a covid-19 rainy day fund created by the Legislatur­e during a special session last month.

Both recommenda­tions by the state steering committee — appointed by Hutchinson last month —were contingent on confirmati­on the payments for hospital workers and support staff will be allowed under federal rules.

“This is something we want to have first in the pipeline so we’re ready to go whenever we get the authority

from Treasury to start releasing some of those funds,” Hutchinson said during the steering committee meeting.

From Tuesday morning to Wednesday evening, the state’s death toll from the virus rose two, to 34, as the number of cases rose by 101, to 1,599. The state’s first case was reported March 11.

PAYMENT DETAILS

The Medicaid payments will include $500 a week for full-time nurses, nurse aides, respirator­y therapists and other care workers who aren’t physicians at nursing homes and other facilities where a resident has tested positive for the virus.

Employees working 2039 hours a week will receive $250 and those working less than that but at least one hour a week would receive $125.

At facilities where no residents have tested positive, full-time workers will receive bonuses of $250 a week and those working 20-39 hours will receive $125.

The proposal for coronaviru­s relief money would provide the same bonuses for hospital workers, with the $500-per-week bonuses going to staff at hospitals where at least one covid-19 patient is receiving treatment.

Janitors and other support staff at both hospitals and nursing homes would receive bonuses equal to half of what direct care workers receive.

All of the bonuses would be for eight weeks, starting retroactiv­ely from last week and extending until May 30.

The Medicaid payments, however, could be extended an additional 30 days if the state still had at least 1,000 active covid-19 cases. Of the cases identified in the state as of Wednesday evening, 1,056 were considered active.

Meanwhile, 509 people who had gotten the virus were considered to have recovered, meaning at least a week had passed since they fell ill and they hadn’t had a fever for at least three days.

REQUESTS PENDING

The Medicaid payment was initially part of a $116 million proposal including payments for small hospitals, clinics and foster parents and money cities could use to move homeless people out of shelters and into hotels or apartments to reduce the risk of transmissi­on.

The federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services has yet to approve those other components of the proposal, Hutchinson said.

Officials with the state Department of Human Services have said the federal government is providing most of the money, with the state’s share coming from money freed by an increase in the federal match rate for Medicaid under another federal coronaviru­s measure, the Families First Coronaviru­s Response Act. That law increased the federal government’s share of most expenses for Arkansas’ Medicaid program from about 71% to about 77%.

Human Services Secretary Cindy Gillespie said the Medicaid proposal’s bonus payments are for long-term care workers because Medicaid is the main payer for that type of care and the CARES Act includes other financial support for hospitals.

Trying to pay for the bonus payments for hospitals and support staff through the Medicaid program would have slowed approval for the long-term care worker bonuses, she said.

Rachel Bunch, director of the Arkansas Health Care Associatio­n, said many nursing homes have already offered incentives to employees to keep up their staffing levels in the midst of the pandemic.

“This will just really go above and beyond that for them,” she said.

She called the bonus payments “an act of acknowledg­ement of what our direct care providers do, doing so much to take care of those people that can’t take care of themselves.”

The Arkansas Hospital Associatio­n asked for the bonus payments to be extended to hospital workers, Bo Ryall, the associatio­n’s chief executive, said.

He said the state’s hospitals don’t have a manpower shortage, but he’s heard of some nurses leaving for states with larger coronaviru­s outbreaks.

“We’re concerned about our workforce seeking other opportunit­ies instead of staying here, because we will have patients,” Ryall said.

EXPANDING TESTING

Health care workers accounted for 215 of the state’s coronaviru­s cases as of Wednesday morning, and infections among residents or staff had been reported in 28 of the state’s nursing homes, Department of Health Secretary Nate Smith said.

The number of infections among nursing home residents increased five from a day earlier, to 98, and the numbers of workers at the facilities who tested positive increased by 17, to 88.

According to coroner reports, eight nursing home residents have died of their infections.

As the testing capacity of commercial laboratori­es has increased, Smith said the department has expanded its criteria to recommend testing for any patient with symptoms, as long as the health care provider has adequate testing supplies.

He said the department previously advised testing only hospitaliz­ed patients, patients who were elderly or had chronic health problems

or those who had contact with someone who tested positive or had traveled from an area with a large outbreak.

He said wider testing will be especially important as the state considers lifting some of the restrictio­ns it has imposed to slow the spread of the virus.

“As we move toward that post-peak relaxing of these restrictio­ns, we’re going to know with more detail, more granularit­y where we have cases and where we don’t,” Smith said.

The department’s own testing is focused mainly on outbreaks in prisons, nursing homes and other facilities.

But eventually it will need to “go to aggressive case management” and investigat­e every person who tests positive to see if that person may have spread the virus to someone else.

He said the department still doesn’t recommend testing in most cases for patients who don’t have symptoms since a negative result wouldn’t necessaril­y mean the person doesn’t have an infection.

PRISON CASES JUMP

Those who tested positive most recently included 42 inmates at the Central Arkansas Community Correction Center, bringing the number there who have tested positive to 59.

The number of staff members who have tested positive remained unchanged from a day earlier at 27.

Richard Richardson, a 60-year-old substance abuse counselor at the center, died of the virus last week.

At the Cummins Unit in Lincoln County, the number of inmates who have tested positive increased by two, to 46. Two workers at the East Arkansas Community Correction Center, which houses women, in West Memphis, have also tested positive.

The state’s latest virus deaths, meanwhile, included the first one of a Craighead County resident and the sixth of a Jefferson County resident, according to the Health Department.

The states other deaths include those of 10 people from Pulaski County, four from Cleburne County, two each from Crittenden, Faulkner and Van Buren counties and one each from Conway, Drew, Hempstead, Lawrence, Lee, Phillips and Saline counties.

Meanwhile, Jackson County was listed as having its first case on Tuesday morning.

Calhoun, Fulton and Montgomery counties remained the only other counties in the state without cases as of Wednesday evening.

In Pulaski County, the number of cases increased by 53, to 353, from Tuesday morning to Wednesday evening.

Among other counties with more than 100 cases, the number increased six, to 122, in Crittenden County; by two, to 107 in Jefferson County; and by three to 105, in Garland County.

 ?? (Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/ Stephen Swofford) ?? Gov. Asa Hutchinson puts on his mask after conducting the daily coronaviru­s update Wednesday at the state Capitol.
(Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/ Stephen Swofford) Gov. Asa Hutchinson puts on his mask after conducting the daily coronaviru­s update Wednesday at the state Capitol.

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