Starkville Daily News

State medical board loosened telemedici­ne rules — then quietly changed some back

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Alex Azar sent an urgent and clear letter to states last week: loosen telemedici­ne restrictio­ns on who can practice medicine through video and audio, and where.

“Responsive health profession­als will be vital to swiftly containing and eradicatin­g COVID-19 cases in America, as well as treating our citizens during this critical time of need,” said Azar, the secretary of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

“Doctors and nurses serving on the front lines of this outbreak are at risk of infection and some may be unable to treat patients due to quarantine. They need backup. Your help is needed to ensure health profession­als maximize their scope of practice and are able to travel across state lines or provide telemedici­ne to communitie­s where they are needed most.”

Azar also asked states to cut redtape for establishi­ng patient-provider relationsh­ips that often dictate telemedici­ne terms. Azar also asked states to relax scope of practice restrictio­ns to allow all providers to practice in all settings up to their training level, such as nurses, physician assistants and medical students.

Just a week earlier, Mississipp­i's Board of Medical Licensure had already checked off two out of three of Azar's requests. The medical-licensure board had opened the state to emergency licenses for out-of-state physicians to treat Mississipp­i patients through telemedici­ne during the COVID-19 pandemic, and loosened some restrictio­ns on the practice itself.

Essentiall­y, medical-licensure board's move made it easier for patients to access care through telemedici­ne because primary care clinics now restrict access to prevent coronaviru­s spread. In addition, most higher level care facilities are starting to reserve care, procedures and space for the growing number of COVID patients.

By relaxing some restrictio­ns on telemedici­ne, the medical licensure board allowed doctors to start practicing telemedici­ne with a patient without a existing relationsh­ip. Traditiona­lly, providers must see patients in-person before switching to telemedici­ne services, but that regulation was waived due to the state's shifting medical needs.

But a week after issuing its proclamati­on lifting telemedici­ne restrictio­ns for all providers, the medical board reversed course and issued a new mandate. According to the second proclamati­on, out-of-state physicians can only practice telemedici­ne with existing patients during the pandemic. Instate physicians can still practice telemedici­ne with new patients under the new restrictio­ns.

The medical board did not announce the change nor did the state medical associatio­n. After making the initial announceme­nt, both the state board and the associatio­n uploaded the new proclamati­on to their respective websites.

At least 24 other states have broadened licensure requiremen­ts during the pandemic, allowing outof-state providers to practice telemedici­ne more easily, not restricted to establishe­d patients.

As of Thursday afternoon, Mississipp­i has 1,177 cases of COVID-19 and has seen 26 deaths. The state currently has the highest hospitaliz­ation rate in the nation at 31 percent, the 12th highest rate of testing at 560 per 100,00 residents, and the 19th most cases per-capita at 36 per 100,000 people, according to states' health department data gathered by The COVID Tracking Project.

Dr. Ken Cleveland, executive director for the medical-licensure board, said the board all along preferred the wording of the second, more restrictiv­e proclamati­on. The medical board only meant to authorize out-of-state doctors to practice telemedici­ne for specialty care and only with existing patients. But because of the first proclamati­on's wording, the board was flooded with emergency licensure applicatio­ns from around 1,200 out-ofstate providers, Cleveland said.

“We didn't get that language exactly right, which opened up essentiall­y any physician that wanted to do telemedici­ne into Mississipp­i could,” Cleveland said, adding that the board could not reasonably vet that volume of applicatio­ns, including performing licensure background checks, which the federal government databases through the National Practition­er Data Bank.

Azar's request was in line with other recent federal guidelines that have widely opened access across geographic borders to bolster routine health care networks while emergency focus pivots to COVID preparatio­n. The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid have issued a slew of new guidelines that slice through red-tape like payment hurdles and care settings. Azar's agency also temporaril­y lifted some HIPAA regulation­s, allowing for patients to access telemedici­ne from almost any private portal, like a traditiona­l phone line to Facebook, Skype and Zoom.

Though it's grown in scope, access and familiarit­y among providers and patients alike, telemedici­ne is still heavily regulated in terms of technology, reimbursem­ents and who can use the services.

Even before the pandemic, telemedici­ne was gaining ground in Mississipp­i as an answer to high rates of preventabl­e hospitaliz­ations, cost savings and long-term care improvemen­ts in a state with the fewest physicians per-capita. The state was ahead of the curve in some ways in its early adoption and policymaki­ng, requiring insurers to reimburse telemedici­ne visits at the same rate as in-person visits, according to research from the Mississipp­i Center for Health Policy. Still, Mississipp­i has remained strict about other regulation­s, such as emergency telemedici­ne and reserving the tool for in-state providers with existing patient relationsh­ips.

HHS'S new guidelines and Azar's request minimize regulation­s and barriers across the nation even further, with a clear message: the pandemic is shifting care models to all-hands deck — everyone who can be utilizing telemedici­ne to get routine care right now, can and should.

Bolstering telemedici­ne capacity has been heralded as a solution to buttress primary routine care as well as help alleviate COVID screening and treatment bottle-necks in both telemedici­ne portals and clinics.

The American Medical Associatio­n, a powerful profession­al organizati­on that represents physicians, has urged doctors to embrace telemedici­ne during the pandemic. The associatio­n issued briefs on how best to do so for their own business, and encouraged medical boards to lift restrictio­ns on both the practice and out-of-state doctors' ability to cross state lines through telehealth.

Advocates for reducing geographic barriers to care say the reversal flies in the face of telemedici­ne and will ultimately harm Mississipp­i patients.

Jameson Taylor, a policy researcher and lobbyist for the Mississipp­i Center for Public Policy, a conservati­ve advocacy organizati­on based in Jackson, says the medical-licensure board's telemedici­ne reversal blocks access for patients when they need it most.

“It's inexcusabl­e that the board is not doing everything that they can to increase the supply of qualified health care profession­als. It seems to me that the board only cares about power, if they cared about the safety of Mississipp­i patients they'd be pursuing policy that increases (the) supply of qualified health care providers. Instead, they're limiting supply when we already have a doctor shortage in Mississipp­i. They're increasing wait-times for patients and they're closing off opportunit­ies for care,” Taylor said.

“I think the board's primary concern is to protect the particular business model that they want to pursue, and even in that respect I don't think that their primary concern is to open up opportunit­ies for Mississipp­i doctors, much less to provide quality care for Mississipp­i patients. And I say that because Mississipp­i physicians could benefit from telemedici­ne.”

Cleveland, of the medical licensure board, says the intent is to broaden access for patients needing specialty, not

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