Each news article below shows only part of the news story. To view the full story, click on Read More below the story.
By Hoven Consulting – WiAHC’s lobbying firm
On September 14, Marquette Law School released a new statewide political poll. Please fond below an overview of the poll’s key findings:
NOTE: Joan Beglinger ended her gubernatorial campaign on September 6, 2022 and endorsed Republican candidate Tim Michels. However, her name will remain on the November general election ballot.
The September poll also asked respondents if they approved or disapproved of how Governor Evers is handling his job. The poll found the following:
The poll also asked respondents if they have a favorable or unfavorable opinion of Lt. Governor Mandela Barnes and U.S. Senator Ron Johnson. The poll found the following:
The Legislative Council Study Committee on Uniform Death Reporting Standards held its second meeting on Wednesday, August 17 at the Capitol building in Madison. Senator Joan Ballweg (R-Markesan) and Representative Jesse James (R-Altoona) serve as Senate and Assembly co-chairs, respectively, and heard from various presenters, which are summarized below.
The committee heard from the Dane County chief medical examiner, who discussed staffing concerns, particularly the shortage of coroners and medical examiners in Wisconsin. She also mentioned the challenge of having high caseloads.
Then, representatives from the Wisconsin Funeral Directors Association and the Funeral Service & Cremation Alliance of Wisconsin made a joint presentation to the committee. Both presenters discussed their involvement in completing death records. In particular, they described that they receive information about the cause of death from physicians or – in certain cases – medical examiners or coroners. They noted several problems: (1) experiencing delays in receiving cause of death information from physicians, even though they are required to provide this information within five days and (2) difficulty in reading the information provided by physicians, as this is often sent via fax.
Representatives from the National Center for Fatality Review & Prevention showed committee members their case reporting system, a web-based standardized case report tool that is available to all states. It allows local and state government users to enter data and create standardized reports with respect to fetal, infant and child death data. Some committee members expressed concern that people outside of local and state government who are working on these issues are not able to access this website (or “dashboard”). National Center staff responded that this dashboard is new, as it was rolled out during the COVID-19 pandemic. Co-Chair Ballweg asked if they could provide dashboard access to local/non-profit partners who work on these issues.
The presenter from the Colorado Department of Public Health discussed her agency’s work on developing a child suicide death reporting form. In particular, she discussed how they offered “mini-grants” to coroner/medical examiner offices in the state to assist them with the processing of these forms.
Michael Staley, of the Utah Department of Health and Human Services, discussed how collecting suicide data is easier in Utah since they have a very centralized system. Specifically, any death in Utah under the purview of a medical examiner gets reported to a central office in Salt Lake City. In Utah, his agency also has the authority to request nearly any kind of state and local record related to death. In addition, he discussed the interview his agency performs with the next of kin in the case of suicide deaths – he referred to such an interview as a “psychological autopsy.” Generally, they try to perform such interviews about two weeks after a death but definitely no longer than 12 months after a death.
After the presenters were finished, committee members discussed several issues. The discussion focused on fatality-related data – standardization of data, the confidentiality of data and format of data submitted to government agencies. In particular, it was mentioned that in the case of other states, counties share fatality data when states have laws in place that explicitly allow for that. There have been unsuccessful attempts to move such legislation in Wisconsin in previous years. The data format discussion focused on how smaller entities – including hospices, funeral homes, hospitals, and law enforcement agencies – still fill out forms by hand and fax forms, instead of sending such data to county public health departments in an electronic format. It was noted that this is a big problem.
A list of committee members, the full meeting agenda, as well as written presentations may be viewed on the legislature’s website.
This study committee’s next meeting was initially scheduled to occur on October 4. However, Co-Chair Ballweg mentioned during the meeting that she is going to try to reschedule that meeting date. Once it is scheduled, the next meeting date will be posted on the committee’s page on the legislature’s website. Once again, the full meeting will likely be streamed live on www.wiseye.org.
On Thursday, September 8, 2022, the legislature’s Joint Finance Committee (JFC) on Thursday voted 16-0 to modify a plan to spend $31 million in funds from an opioid lawsuit settlement. DHS initially submitted a spending proposal to JFC in July 2022, but an anonymous JFC member objected, resulting in the September 8 committee meeting and vote.
The committee’s changes to the DHS plan include:
Register for webinars to learn more about HCBS. During this webinar we will discuss:
October 4, 2022, 2:30 Eastern
October 18, 2022, 2:30 Eastern
November 1, 2022, 2:30 Eastern
November 15, 2022, 2:30 Eastern
November 29, 2022, 2:30 Eastern
December 13, 2022, 2:30 Eastern
If you were not yet aware, we would like to remined you about WiAHC’s Legislative Key Contact Program, which can be a highly effective grassroots advocacy tool to help build and nurture strong on-going relationships between WiAHC members and lawmakers in Wisconsin. Ultimately, the program can help us help shape new policies important to our members.
The program is now live on the WiAHC website and members can easily and quickly sign-up as a Key Contact. With the campaign season winding down, and the 2023-24 legislative session right around the corner, it’s more important than ever for WiAHC to have a robust Key Contact Program. It is essential to raising our profile in the State Capitol and beyond.
As a Key Contact, you can help influence the legislative process by cultivating relationships with elected officials. By taking advantage of existing relationships and making new contact with members of the Wisconsin Legislature (as well as the Wisconsin Congressional Delegation), you can help us educate lawmakers on industry issues and influence legislation.
But the program will not succeed without strong member participation, so please take a few moments to read more about it – and learn how simple it is to “enlist” and participate as a Key Contact. The time commitment is minimal and your responsibility as a key contact depends on your level of comfort and willingness to engage.
Remember, lawmakers are often eager to hear input from their constituents, and as an expert in the home health care field, you can make a real difference in the policy process as a Key Contact. CLICK HERE to sign-up by filling out and submitting a brief online survey.
WiAHC is happy to remind members about and provide links to the latest articles and information on the home health care industry from Home Health Care News and other publications:
· Home Health Job Growth Improving, But Outpaced By Other Health Care Settings
Home Health Care News - By Robert Holly | August 19, 2022
Workers are steadily rejoining the home health care field, new data confirms. Their return comes after many retired or switched to other jobs during the COVID-19 pandemic. According to the latest labor brief from health care research and consulting firm Altarum, upwards of 1.57 million workers were employed in home health care in July 2022. Altarum’s analysis is based on U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics data. Read more…
· Medicare Beneficiaries Overwhelmingly Against Proposed Home Health Payment Cuts
Home Health Care News - By Andrew Donlan | August 18, 2022
It has been well documented how home health providers and advocacy organizations feel about the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services’ (CMS) home health proposed payment rule for CY 2023. What has not been, up to this point, is how Medicare beneficiaries feel about it. That changed Wednesday, as a poll conducted by Morning Consult – on behalf of the Partnership for Quality Home Healthcare (PQHH) – was released. Read more…
· Congress Isn’t Done with Messy Health Care Fights
Axios – By Victoria Knight | August 17, 2022
The Inflation Reduction Act is law. But that doesn't mean major health care interests are done testing their lobbying clout. Many are already lining up for year-end relief from Medicare payment cuts, regulatory changes and inflation woes. The big picture: Year-end spending bills often contain health care "extenders" that delay cuts to hospitals that treat the poorest patients or keep money flowing to community health centers. But lawmakers may be hard-pressed to justify the price tag this time, and are seeing an unusual assortment of appeals for help. Read more…
· Hundreds Of Stakeholders Voice Concerns As Home Health Proposed Rule Commenting Period Ends
Home Health Care News - By Joyce Famakinwa | August 16, 2022
The public comment window for the home health proposed payment rule closed on Tuesday. Overall, industry stakeholders had submitted 691 comments to the U.S. Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) as of Tuesday morning. From the start, home health stakeholders took issue with CMS’ methodology for determining whether the Patient-Driven Groupings Model (PDGM) led to budget-neutral spending in 2020. Read More…
Home Health Care News, which is part of the Aging Media Network, is a leading source for news and information covering the home health industry.
The Wisconsin Department of Health Services (DHS) is investing American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA) funds to create a statewide home and community-based services (HCBS) grant program. The ARPA HCBS Grants offer an exciting opportunity for entities active in the state's Medicaid HCBS system to apply for $25,000 to $2 million in grant funds.
The program goal is to disburse grants across all Medicaid HCBS programs, distribute funds geographically across the state in both rural and urban areas, and support diverse organizations and populations served. Grant funding will strengthen the HCBS system and support quality and innovation in the delivery of HCBS in Wisconsin.
For example, grants may be used to:
By the National Association for Home Care and Hospice
On August 18, 2022, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) issued extensive materials providing guidance related to the planned phase-out of various waivers, regulations, enforcement discretion, and sub-regulatory guidance that were utilized to ensure access to care and give health care providers the flexibilities needed to respond to COVID-19 Public Health Emergency (PHE). According to the documents — issued under the rubric “Creating a Roadmap for the End of the COVID-19 Public Health Emergency” (Roadmap) — most of these waivers and broad flexibilities will terminate at the eventual end of the PHE, as they were intended to address the acute and extraordinary circumstances of a rapidly evolving pandemic and not replace existing requirements.
As previously indicated by Administration officials, to minimize any disruptions including potential coverage losses following the end of the PHE, the materials state that HHS Secretary Becerra will give states and the health care community writ large 60 days’ notice before ending the PHE. In the meantime, CMS is encouraging health care providers to prepare for the end of these flexibilities as soon as possible and to begin moving forward to reestablishing previous health and safety standards and billing practices. Even though providers will receive 60 days’ notice before the ending of the PHE, they should begin preparing for the end of the waivers now. In order to come into compliance with the conditions of participation at the end of the PHE, it may take some providers a significant amount of time. Therefore, NAHC recommends that providers utilizing any of the PHE waivers assess the need for continued use of the waiver(s) and begin transitioning away from utilization, as possible. If it is not possible to stop utilizing the waivers, providers should develop a plan for tapering use, if possible.
While the COVID-19 PHE remains in effect CMS will use its Pandemic Plan as a guidebook for evaluating all existing flexibilities, while developing a comprehensive long-term approach for the health care system based on recovery and resiliency. Given the importance of this effort, CMS’ strategic plan includes a cross-cutting initiative to address the current PHE and ensure that CMS has a roadmap to support a health care system that is more resilient and better prepared to adapt to future disasters and emergencies. This work complements the work already underway to ensure as many eligible individuals as possible maintain a source of coverage, whether through Medicaid/CHIP, Marketplace, employer coverage, or Medicare.
As part of its Roadmap CMS has issued provider-specific guidance that details plans for the phase out of various waivers and flexibilities. NAHC previously posed questions to CMS regarding some of the waivers and flexibilities and had hoped answers to those questions would be found in this most recent Roadmap. However, NAHC has continuing questions and concerns. Below are links to two documents that address home health and hospice waivers and flexibilities:
WiAHC Signs on as Supporting Organization
Earlier this month, the National Association for Home Care & Hospice (NAHC) submitted its formal comments on the CY 2023 Medicare home health services Proposed Rule, which includes 2023 payment rates, along with a variety of other changes affecting the value-based purchasing demonstration program and the collection of quality-of-care data. It’s estimated the proposal would slash aggregate home health payments by 4.2%, or $810 million, next year. The Wisconsin Association for Home Health Care (WiAHC) officially signed-on to the comments as a supporting organization.
“The proposed rule is the most impacting of policy actions by CMS (Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services) in years,” said William A. Dombi, President of NAHC. “The proposed payment rate cut of 7.69 percent would send 51.5 percent of all home health agencies into financial deficit in 2023. That would place over three million of the most vulnerable Medicare patients and the five million of Medicaid, VA, and Medicare Advantage patients they serve in real jeopardy of losing care. Medicare would also lose the value that home health services brings to health care overall, likely increasing care costs through extended hospitalizations and higher use of institutional care to fill in the gaps,” added Dombi.
The comments submitted by NAHC argue that:
CLICK HERE to review the full text of NAHC’s comments on the proposed rule.
Bipartisan legislation, the Preserving Access to Home Health Act of 2022 (S. 4605/H.R. 8581), is currently pending in the United States Senate and House of Representatives, would suspend any payment rate reductions, thereby allowing CMS additional time to reconsider its proposed actions. GO HERE to tell your members of Congress to support this critical legislation!
The Legislative Council Study Committee on Occupational Licenses held its first hearing on August 2, 2022, at the Capitol building in Madison. The committee first received an overview from the Legislative Council Staff, then a briefing from the Legislative Fiscal Bureau, a briefing from the National Conference of State Legislatures (NCSL), and finally by the Wisconsin Department of Safety and Professional Services (DSPS).
Many of the questions for NCSL centered on the licensing process, interstate compacts, universal licensing, and reciprocal licensing. Questions for DSPS centered on staffing, the time required for licensure, issues with applications, legal reviews (crimes and ordinance violations) and additional barriers to timely and efficient license.
Following the testimony, study committee members discussed the following items:
This committee’s next meeting will occur on September 27, 2022, in Madison. For more information about this committee, please visit the committee’s website.
The following is a summary of the results of the August 9 primary election:
· New Marquette Law School Poll Released on August 17
On August 17, Marquette Law School released a new statewide political poll. The following poll findings may be of interest.
Gubernatorial Race
This poll, which was conducted from August 10-15 – after the August 9 primary election – asked Wisconsin voters their preference for governor:
The August poll also asked respondents if they approved or disapproved of how Governor Evers is handling his job. His approval rating was 47%, his disapproval rating is 45%, and 8% did not have an opinion.
U.S. Senate Race
This poll asked Wisconsin voters about their preferred candidate for this year’s U.S. Senate race. The poll found the following:
Issue Polling
The August poll also asked questions regarding various issues. One of the questions asked whether the state is headed in the right direction or not. The poll found the following:
This poll also asked how Wisconsinites felt about certain topics. Allowed responses: very concerned, somewhat concerned, not too concerned, and don’t know.
Grassroots advocacy is the most powerful tool WiAHC has at its disposal to shape public policy – and building relationships with lawmakers is the most important aspect of grassroots advocacy. In effort to capitalize on our greatest advocacy resource – our membership – WiAHC has established our Coffee Conversations with Legislators advocacy program.
The initiative is designed to help connect members with their local legislators. Under the program, the WiAHC Government Affairs Team will set-up in-district meetings between WiAHC members and state lawmakers who represent them in the Legislature. These meetings, which can be located at your facility, or a local coffee shop provide a tremendous opportunity for WiAHC members to build or strengthen their relationships with local legislators and to educate them on home health care and on policy issues important to home health care professionals and their patients.
WiAHC encourages all members to participate in this critical grassroots advocacy program. Please click here for more information on the program. If you’re interested in participating in the program, contact the WiAHC office at wiahc@badgerbay.co.
Jayne Thill (left), WiAHC Board of Directors and Legislative Committee member, presents WiAHC Champion of Home Health care Award to Rep. Donna Rozar (R-Marshfield).
The Wisconsin Association for Home Health Care (WiAHC) was thrilled to present Rep. Donna Rozar (R-Marshfield) with the organization’s 2022 Champion of Home Health Care legislative award for her leadership on policies to advance home health care in Wisconsin and strengthen the delivery of patient care provided by home health professionals. The award was recently presented to Rozar by WiACH member Jayne Thill at the COMPASSUS office in Marshfield, WI,
“Representative Rozar was an extraordinary advocate for home health care during the 2021-22 legislative session. As a nurse practitioner, she understands the value of home health care for patients who often recover faster and with fewer complications at home than in a hospital,“ said Thill, who serves on the WiAHC Board of Directors. “Her responsiveness to initiatives important to the home health care industry and her leadership on policies to strengthen Wisconsin’s health care workforce is highly commendable, and we were happy to present her with this award to thank her for her efforts.”
The Champion of Home Health Care award is presented at the end of each two-year legislative session to state lawmakers who exemplify WiAHC’s mission of promoting, protecting, and advancing the highest quality health care at home for Wisconsin patients. In 2022, WiAHC is presenting the award to only four legislators, including Rozar. These lawmakers exhibited an exceptional commitment to supporting home health care based on several factors, including voting record, sponsorship of legislation and responsiveness to critical home health issues during the 2021-22 session.
Rozar, who was first elected to the Wisconsin Assembly in 2020, represents the 69th Assembly District, which includes portions of Clark, Marathon, and Wood Counties, including the City of Marshfield. She serves as the Vice-Chair of the Assembly Small Business Development Committee and sits on the Health Committee and the Aging and Long-Term Care Committee.
Please find below the full list of state lawmakers who received recognition from WiAHC for their support of key initiatives during the 2021-22 legislative session to advance the state’s home health care industry. Legislators who displayed exceptional support of WiAHC were recognized as a Champion of Home Health Care. Legislators who displayed general support were recognized as a Friend of Home Health Care.
563 Carter Court, Suite BKimberly, WI 54136Phone: 920-560-5632 | Fax: 920-882-3655wiahc@badgerbay.co