CARES Act takes bold action during the public health emergency (PHE) related to COVID-19 to assist patients and providers in rural areas that are being hard-hit by the pandemic.
Increases Access to Capital for Rural Providers
Allows rural providers to seek relief through Small Business Administration
programs, including the Paycheck Protection Program loans that can be forgiven, debt relief and economic injury disaster loans;
Provides Funding for Rural Health Centers and Programs
Provides $1.32 billion in supplemental funding to community health centers (CHCs), including those providing care in rural areas;
Extends mandatory funding for programs crucial to rural areas:
Community health centers;
National Health Service Corps (NHSC); and
Teaching Health Center Graduate Medical Education Program (THCGME).
Increases Payments to Rural Providers
Suspends the Medicare sequester to increase payments for rural hospitals and providers by 2%;
Increases Medicare payment to a hospital for a COVID-19 admission by 20%, helping certain rural hospitals;
Increases Medicare payments for physician services by not applying a geographic adjustment that hurts rural areas;
Delays reductions in the portion of Medicaid payments to hospitals for treating low-income and uninsured patients;
Prevents reductions in payment for durable medical equipment, including oxygen and wheelchairs, that disproportionately hurt rural suppliers;
Prevents reductions in payments to clinical laboratories to ensure patients can get needed testing.
Increases Rural Telehealth Use and Infrastructure
Allows Medicare beneficiaries to receive care in their home from a remote physician;
Enables Community Health Centers and Rural Health Clinics to provide remote care to beneficiaries in their home;
Allows beneficiaries on home dialysis to receive all required visits in their home from a remote nephrologist;
Enables home health agencies to use technology, including remote monitoring, to deliver needed care;
Allows physicians and nurse practitioners to recertify hospice care for beneficiaries via telehealth;
Reauthorizes Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) grant programs that promote the use of telehealth technologies for health care delivery, education and health information services, including in rural areas;
Extends HRSA rural health care services outreach, rural health network development and provider quality improvement grant programs to strengthen rural community health by focusing on quality improvement, increasing health care access, coordination of care and integration of services.
Increases Flexibility to Improve Rural Health Care
Waives Medicare requirements to enable hospitals to efficiently transfer patients to an appropriate post-acute facility setting, freeing-up needed hospital beds;
Enables Medicare beneficiaries to fill a prescription for up to 90-days to ensure they have an adequate supply of needed medications.
Offers Flexibility for Providers to Improve the Rural Response
Establishes a Ready Reserve Corps to ensure there are enough trained doctors and nurses to respond to COVID-19 and other PHEs, including in rural areas;
Makes clear that doctors who provide volunteer medical services during the PHE related to COVID-19 have liability protections so that they can provide care to those who need it, including in rural areas;
Allows the Secretary of Health and Human Services to reassign members of the NHSC to sites close to the one to which they were originally assigned, with the member’s voluntary agreement, in order to respond to the PHE related to COVID-19.
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