Las Vegas Review-Journal

End of COVID emergency will usher in changes across the US health system

- By Rachana Pradhan, Kaiser Health News Kaiser Health News is a nonprofit news service covering health issues. It is an editoriall­y independen­t program of the Kaiser Family Foundation, which is not affiliated with Kaiser Permanente.

The Biden administra­tion’s decision to end the COVID-19 public health emergency in May will institute sweeping changes across the health care system that go far beyond many people having to pay more for COVID tests. ¶ In response to the pandemic, the federal government in 2020 suspended many of its rules on how care is delivered. That transforme­d essentiall­y every corner of American health care — from hospitals and nursing homes to public health and treatment for people recovering from addiction. ¶ Now, as the government prepares to reverse some of those steps, here’s a glimpse at ways patients will be affected:

Training rules for nursing home staff get stricter

The end of the emergency means nursing homes will have to meet higher standards for training workers.

Advocates for nursing home residents are eager to see the old, tougher training requiremen­ts reinstated, but the industry says that move could worsen staffing shortages plaguing facilities nationwide.

In the early days of the pandemic, to help nursing homes function under the virus’s onslaught, the federal government relaxed training requiremen­ts. The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) instituted a national policy saying nursing homes needn’t follow regulation­s requiring nurse aides to undergo at least 75 hours of state-approved training. Normally, a nursing home couldn’t employ aides for more than four months unless they met those requiremen­ts.

Last year, CMS decided the relaxed training rules would no longer apply nationwide, but states and facilities could ask for permission to be held to the lower standards. As of this month, 17 states had such exemptions, according to CMS — Georgia, Indiana, Louisiana, Maryland, Massachuse­tts, Minnesota, Mississipp­i, New Jersey, New York, Oklahoma, Pennsylvan­ia, Rhode Island, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Vermont, and Washington — as did 356 individual nursing homes in Arizona, California, Delaware, Florida, Illinois, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Michigan, Nebraska, New Hampshire, North Carolina, Ohio, Oregon, Virginia, Wisconsin, and Washington, D.C.

Nurse aides often provide the most direct and labor-intensive care for residents, including bathing and other hygiene-related tasks, feeding, monitoring vital signs, and keeping rooms clean. Research has shown that nursing homes with staffing instabilit­y maintain a lower quality of care.

Advocates for nursing home residents are pleased the training exceptions will end but fear that the quality of care could neverthele­ss deteriorat­e. That’s because CMS has signaled that, after the looser standards expire, some of the hours that nurse aides logged during the pandemic could count toward their 75 hours of required training. On-the-job experience, however, is not necessaril­y a sound substitute for the training workers missed, advocates argue.

Adequate training of aides is crucial so “they know what they’re doing before they provide care, for their own good as well as for the residents,” said Toby Edelman, a senior policy attorney for the Center for Medicare Advocacy.

The American Health Care Associatio­n, the largest nursing home lobbying group, released a December survey finding that roughly 4 in 5 facilities were dealing with moderate to high levels of staff shortages.

Treatment threatened for those recovering from addiction

A looming rollback of broader access to buprenorph­ine, an important medication for people in recovery from opioid addiction, is alarming patients and doctors.

During the public health emergency, the Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion said providers could prescribe certain controlled substances virtually or over the phone without first conducting an in-person medical evaluation. One of those drugs, buprenorph­ine, is an opioid that can prevent debilitati­ng withdrawal symptoms for people trying to recover from addiction to other opioids. Research has shown using it more than halves the risk of overdose.

Amid a national epidemic of opioid addiction, if the expanded policy for buprenorph­ine ends, “thousands of people are going to die,” said Ryan Hampton, an activist who is in recovery.

The DEA in late February proposed regulation­s that would partly roll back the prescribin­g of controlled substances through telemedici­ne. A clinician could use telemedici­ne to order an initial 30-day supply of medication­s such as buprenorph­ine, Ambien, Valium and Xanax, but patients would need an in-person evaluation to get a refill.

For another group of drugs, including Adderall, Ritalin and oxycodone, the DEA proposal would institute tighter controls. Patients seeking those medication­s would need to see a doctor in person for an initial prescripti­on.

David Herzberg, a historian of drugs at the University at Buffalo, said the DEA’S approach reflects a fundamenta­l challenge in developing drug policy: meeting the needs of people who rely on a drug that can be abused without making that drug too readily available to others.

The DEA, he added, is “clearly seriously wrestling with this problem.”

Hospitals return to normal, somewhat

During the pandemic, CMS has tried to limit problems that could arise if there weren’t enough health care workers to treat patients — especially before there were COVID vaccines when workers were at greater risk of getting sick.

For example, CMS allowed hospitals to make broader use of nurse practition­ers and physician assistants when caring for Medicare patients. And new physicians not yet credential­ed to work at a particular hospital — for example, because governing bodies lacked time to conduct their reviews — could nonetheles­s practice there.

Other changes during the public health emergency were meant to shore up hospital capacity. Critical access hospitals, small hospitals located in rural areas, didn’t have to comply with federal rules for Medicare stating they were limited to 25 inpatient beds and patients’ stays could not exceed 96 hours, on average.

Once the emergency ends, those exceptions will disappear.

Hospitals are trying to persuade federal officials to maintain multiple COVIDERA policies beyond the emergency or work with Congress to change the law.

Surveillan­ce of infectious diseases splinters

The way state and local public health department­s monitor the spread of disease will change after the emergency ends, because the Department of Health and Human Services won’t be able to require labs to report COVID testing data.

Without a uniform, federal requiremen­t, how states and counties track the spread of the coronaviru­s will vary. In addition, though hospitals will still provide COVID data to the federal government, they may do so less frequently.

Public health department­s are still getting their arms around the scope of the changes, said Janet Hamilton, executive director of the Council of State and Territoria­l Epidemiolo­gists.

In some ways, the end of the emergency provides public health officials an opportunit­y to rethink COVID surveillan­ce. Compared with the pandemic’s early days, when at-home tests were unavailabl­e and people relied heavily on labs to determine whether they were infected, testing data from labs now reveals less about how the virus is spreading.

Public health officials don’t think “getting all test results from all lab tests is potentiall­y the right strategy anymore,” Hamilton said. Flu surveillan­ce provides a potential alternativ­e model: For influenza, public health department­s seek test results from a sampling of labs.

“We’re still trying to work out what’s the best, consistent strategy. And I don’t think we have that yet,” Hamilton said.

 ?? KHN ILLUSTRATI­ON ?? In response to the pandemic, the federal government in 2020 suspended many of its rules on how care is delivered. That transforme­d essentiall­y every corner of American health care — from hospitals and nursing homes to public health and treatment for people recovering from addiction.
KHN ILLUSTRATI­ON In response to the pandemic, the federal government in 2020 suspended many of its rules on how care is delivered. That transforme­d essentiall­y every corner of American health care — from hospitals and nursing homes to public health and treatment for people recovering from addiction.
 ?? RICK BOWMER / ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE (2022) ?? A nurse prepares for a COVID-19 test Dec. 20 outside the Salt Lake County Health Department in Salt Lake City. The declaratio­n of a COVID-19 public health emergency three years ago changed the lives of millions of Americans by offering increased health care coverage, beefed up food assistance and universal access to coronaviru­s vaccines and tests. Much of that is now coming to an end, with President Joe Biden’s administra­tion saying it plans to end the emergencie­s declared around the pandemic May 11.
RICK BOWMER / ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE (2022) A nurse prepares for a COVID-19 test Dec. 20 outside the Salt Lake County Health Department in Salt Lake City. The declaratio­n of a COVID-19 public health emergency three years ago changed the lives of millions of Americans by offering increased health care coverage, beefed up food assistance and universal access to coronaviru­s vaccines and tests. Much of that is now coming to an end, with President Joe Biden’s administra­tion saying it plans to end the emergencie­s declared around the pandemic May 11.

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