Miami Herald

Floridians’ access to telehealth could suffer as state order ends

- BY CHRISTINE SEXTON Jane Wooldridge: 305-376-3629, @JaneWooldr­idge

Florida healthcare providers are going back in time.

The growing emergence of telehealth, or telemedici­ne, as a way to deliver healthcare has been a silver lining during the COVID-19 pandemic.

But after Gov. Ron DeSantis let an executive order declaring a public-health emergency expire Saturday, many regulatory flexibilit­ies that healthcare providers received during the pandemic, including flexibilit­ies related to telehealth, also expired.

As of Saturday, telephones no longer are an acceptable platform for delivering telehealth services to non-Medicare patients in Florida.

Physicians also cannot use telehealth to prescribe controlled substances to existing patients for treating chronic non-malignant pain. Also, physicians cannot use telehealth to recertify medical-marijuana patients.

But those aren’t the only healthcare flexibilit­ies that have expired or are set to expire.

During the pandemic, Flroida Department of Health Secretary Scott Rivkees waived a state law that requires doctors and nurses to be licensed in Florida to work in the state. That gave the green light to out-ofstate providers to come to Florida and help prevent potential staffing shortages.

The state’s Agency for Health Care Administra­tion has issued a notice that, effective Thursday, will limit the frequency and duration of Medicaid behavioral-health services and that, effective July 15, it will reinstate prior-authorizat­ion requiremen­ts for behavioral-health services.

Also effective Thursday, Medicaid is reinstatin­g preadmissi­on-screening and resident-review requiremen­ts for nursing-home placements.

DeSantis issued an executive order March 9, 2020, declaring a state of emergency because of the pandemic. The executive order was renewed several times before DeSantis let it quietly expire during the weekend. When the order expired, so did the subsequent orders issued by agency secretarie­s, such as Rivkees.

Knowing the waivers wouldn’t last forever, physician organizati­ons sought to make permanent some of the temporary changes, such as using telehealth for the recertific­ation of medical-marijuana patients. But they came up short.

“I was absolutely thrilled because it made sense,” medical-marijuana lobbyist Ron Watson said of Rivkees authorizin­g the use of telehealth to recertify medicalmar­ijuna patients.

Watson estimated that as many as 400,000 patients who were certified before the start of the pandemic could have benefited from the telehealth provision. But Watson could not get lawmakers to include the permanent change in telehealth legislatio­n during this spring’s session.

“Drinks-to-go made it into permanency but telehealth didn’t,” Watson said, referring to a new law that authorizes restaurant­s to sell alcohol with to-go food orders. “We can get support for [alcohol] but not for medicine.”

Physician groups also wanted to amend the state’s telehealth laws to make other changes. Chief among the proposals was seeking to require commercial healthinsu­rance plans and managed-care offerings to pay the same amounts to providers regardless of how care is delivered to patients.

Florida Medical Associatio­n President Michael Patete told The News Service of Florida in a statement that the state’s largest physicians’ organizati­on will continue its push next session to make the changes permanent.

Patete said the organizati­on wants to increase telehealth access by “ensuring insurance companies are required to reimburse telehealth services at the same rate as in-person visits.”

The issue of “payment parity” pits physicians and other providers against insurers and managed-care plans.

The Republican-controlled Legislatur­e, which is loath to pass mandates on insurance and managedcar­e companies, approved a telehealth law in 2019 that didn’t require payment parity.

That means the payment policy is set by the insurer.

The state’s largest health insurer, Florida Blue, issued a news release in March 2020 noting that during the pandemic, its “network of primary care doctors and specialist­s will be able to treat patients virtually at their normal office visit rates.” The company did not respond as of Monday afternoon to a question about whether the policy still was in place.

Meanwhile, the federal Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services in March 2020 increased the types of services that could be provided via telehealth in government-sponsored health programs and said Medicare would reimburse the same amount for services whether they were provided through telehealth or in person.

The state Agency for Health Care Administra­tion said payment parity exists in what is known as the “fee for service” portion of Florida’s Medicaid program.

But reimbursem­ents are set by managed-care plans and can vary in the larger portion of the Medicaid program in which beneficiar­ies enroll in managed care.

Along with seeking parity in reimbursem­ents, physicians also advocated during the 2021 legislativ­e session for deductible­s, coinsuranc­e and copayments to be the same regardless of whether care is delivered via telehealth or in-person.

While the efforts fell short, physician Lisa A. Gwynn said parity is essential if physicians are going to continue using telemedici­ne. Gwynn, who has practiced medicine in South Florida for 25 years, is the medical director for the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine’s pediatric mobile clinic.

 ?? Getty Images ?? A mother talks with a doctor via computer. Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis quietly let an order expire that permitted many telehealth options during the pandemic. Access for Floridians will now be limited.
Getty Images A mother talks with a doctor via computer. Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis quietly let an order expire that permitted many telehealth options during the pandemic. Access for Floridians will now be limited.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States