Telehealth Grant to Address Disparities

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

CONTACT:                                          Gina Cella
gcella@americantelemed.org
781-799-3137

AMERICAN TELEMEDICINE ASSOCIATION RECEIVES GRANT FROM PETERSON HEALTH TECHNOLOGY INSTITUTE TO ENHANCE WORK IN USING TELEHEALTH TO ADDRESS DISPARITIES

WASHINGTON, DC, SEPTEMBER 24, 2024 – The American Telemedicine Association (ATA) today announced the organization has received a grant from the Peterson Health Technology Institute (PHTI) to enhance its US Digital Infrastructure Disparities Score (DIS) and heat map tools with additional data sets and visualization tools, to highlight key infrastructure gaps and identify specific interventions that support actionable, measurable, and accountable deployment.

The Disparities Score and heat map tools, developed by the ATA CEO’s Advisory Group on Using Telehealth to Eliminate Healthcare Disparities and Inequities, will enable data-informed decisions and targeted allocation of resources to improve access to digital services and reduce disparities. The score is a composite measure and can be viewed at a ZIP code or county level. The premise of the map is to highlight key infrastructure gaps and support stakeholders in understanding how and where to invest scarce resources to improve access to digital services.

“Beyond the ability to just view broadband connectivity in a region, our Disparities Score and heat map tools are materially different, with composite representation of broadband access, plus connection speeds, connection modalities, and data affordability,” said Ann Mond Johnson, CEO of the ATA.

“This critical funding will be used to enhance these tools by incorporating additional data sets, developing enhanced data visualization tools, and improving the design interface and user experience.

Teleheatlh Grant to Address Disparities

We are grateful to the Peterson Health Technology Institute for their generous support of our work, to enable data-informed decisions pertaining to the allocation of resources to reduce disparities.”

The Disparities Advisory Group is co-chaired by Kristi Henderson, DNP, Yasmine Winkler and Ron Wyatt, MD, and facilitated by David Smith, CEO of Third Horizon Strategies.

# # #

About the Peterson Health Technology Institute

The Peterson Health Technology Institute (PHTI) provides independent evaluations of innovative healthcare technologies to improve health and lower costs. Through its rigorous, evidence-based research, PHTI analyzes the clinical benefits and economic impact of digital health solutions, as well as their effects on health equity, privacy, and security. These evaluations inform decisions for providers, patients, payers, and investors, accelerating the adoption of high-value technology in healthcare. PHTI was founded in 2023 by the Peterson Center on Healthcare. For more information, please visit PHTI.org.

About the ATA

As the only organization completely focused on advancing telehealth, the American Telemedicine Association is committed to ensuring that everyone has access to safe, affordable, and appropriate care when and where they need it, enabling the system to do more good for more people. The ATA represents a broad and inclusive member network of leading healthcare delivery systems, academic institutions, technology solution providers and payers, as well as partner organizations and alliances, working to advance industry adoption of telehealth, promote responsible policy, advocate for government and market normalization, and provide education and resources to help integrate virtual care into emerging value-based delivery models. 

Advocacy Continues on Capitol Hill

ROAD TO THE TELEHEALTH “SUPER BOWL”: ATA ACTION CAPITOL HILL DRIVE

WASHINGTON, DC, JUNE 12, 2024 – ATA Action, the American Telemedicine Association’s affiliated trade association focused on advocacy, hosted its 2nd annual Hill Day, bringing nearly two dozen ATA Action members to Capitol Hill for meetings with Congressional leaders to discuss top federal telehealth policy priorities. ATA Action members underscored the ATA and ATA Action playbook for comprehensive, permanent telehealth reform, including passage of the CONNECT for Health Act  (H.R. 4189S. 2016), the Telehealth Modernization Act (HR 7623S.3967) and the Advancing Access to Telehealth Act (HR 7711).

“This well-timed Hill Day accomplished our goal, to keep telehealth access front-and-center in the minds of our Congressional champions and underscore the urgent need for Congress to act now to give patients and providers certainty about the continued availability of telehealth services,” said Kyle Zebley, senior vice president, public policy, the ATA and executive director, ATA Action. “We continue to hammer home the fact that access to telehealth is essential for delivering safe, effective, quality care to all individuals, including those in rural and underserved communities, as part of a modernized healthcare system.

“As we continue to seek permanent access to virtual care services, we remain grateful to the unwavering bipartisan, bicameral support for appropriate and necessary policies to ensure citizens have access to often life-saving telehealth services, when and where they need it. But the clock is ticking. We need Congress to act now, so that appropriate telehealth policies are implemented in a timely manner without arbitrary and unnecessary barriers to care such as in-person, brick-and-mortar, or geographic requirements,” Zebley added. “We are also eager to see our Senate champions act on these important telehealth policies.”

ATA Action members participating in Hill Day included a diverse range of organizations advocating for telehealth. Members of ATA Action’s Patient Voices for Telehealth Coalition also joined Hill Day meetings.

About ATA ActionTelemedicine Advocacy

ATA Action recognizes that telehealth and virtual care have the potential to transform the healthcare delivery system by improving patient outcomes, enhancing the safety and effectiveness of care, addressing health disparities, and reducing costs. ATA Action is a registered 501c6 entity and an affiliated trade organization of the American Telemedicine Association (ATA).

#     #     #

CONTACT:

Gina Cella
gcella@americantelemed.org
t: 781-799-3137

ATA Partners with West Health Institute

ATA West Health<br />
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

CONTACT:

 

Gina Cella
gcella@americantelemed.org
t: 781-799-3137

AMERICAN TELEMEDICINE ASSOCIATION JOINS WEST HEALTH INSTITUTE’S COLLABORATIVE FOR TELEHEALTH AND AGING

WASHINGTON, DC, JUNE 11, 2024 – The American Telemedicine Association (ATA) today announced it has joined the Collaborative for Telehealth and Aging (C4TA), an initiative led by the West Health Institute (WHI). The ATA will serve as an Advisor to the C4TA, which is committed to accelerating the adoption of telehealth to meet the needs of seniors. WHI is a non-profit medical research organization dedicated to lowering healthcare costs and engaged in applied medical research and improving healthcare delivery for older Americans.

“The ATA has long been a proponent of using telehealth and virtual care technologies to better care for our aging population, not just to live longer, but to live better, to support our caregivers and improve our healthcare system to benefit all stages of life,” said Ann Mond Johnson, CEO, the ATA. “We are pleased to join the C4TA to accelerate the adoption of telehealth to meet the needs of seniors and enable individuals to remain vital, engaged and independent through their later years, and create a better health system for everyone.”

C4TA was established in 2021 by West Health, the University of Virginia, and the Mid-Atlantic Telehealth Resource Center to gather experts from health systems, academic institutions, member organizations, and non-profit foundations focused on aging to develop and provide guidelines implementation tools for using telehealth with older adults.

“We are proud to welcome the American Telemedicine Association among the more than 35 national organizations joining our mission to enhance telehealth services for older adults,” says Dr. Zia Agha, Chief Medical Officer of West Health Institute. “Together, alongside experts in geriatrics, telehealth, and patient advocacy, collaborative members have established vital principles and guidelines to ensure equitable, accessible, and integrated remote care options. This collaboration underscores our shared commitment to improving the well-being of older adults across the nation.”

The ATA’s Healthy Aging Collaborative is a member forum focused on identifying and pursuing opportunities to make an impact on the daily life of our aging population through policy guidance and the use of technologies to ease the burden of communications, social isolation, and whole person care management. The ATA Healthy Aging Collaborative hosts quarterly webinars, providing insights and education for the broader community. The group recently published a report, Leveraging Telehealth to Support Caregivers and Those They Care For.

About the ATA

As the only organization completely focused on advancing telehealth, the American Telemedicine Association is committed to ensuring that everyone has access to safe, affordable, and appropriate care when and where they need it, enabling the system to do more good for more people. The ATA represents a broad and inclusive member network of leading healthcare delivery systems, academic institutions, technology solution providers and payers, as well as partner organizations and alliances, working to advance industry adoption of telehealth, promote responsible policy, advocate for government and market normalization, and provide education and resources to help integrate virtual care into emerging value-based delivery models.

#  #  #

The Right Way to Use AI in Healthcare

by Tim Rowan, Editor Emeritus

For better or worse, healthcare has begun the inevitable adoption of Artificial Intelligence. Before you consider adopting AI technology, know that there is a wrong way and a right way to use AI in healthcare. In a companion article this week, we describe the criticism insurance companies are getting for deploying AI in healthcare to harm patients. As a balance, here is a review of a product that we find to be using AI in healthcare to help both patients and Home Health Agencies.

The Problem 

Home Health referral documents from physicians or hospitals can consist of more than 100 electronically transmitted pages. Some agencies report occasional packets exceeding 1,000 pages, often in a variety of data formats. Some are standard data formats, such as a face sheet, but most are unstructured, consisting of images or narrations, sometimes in paragraphs, sometimes in incomplete sentences. Worse, patient data interoperability can be limited by unstructured data.Too Much Paperwork

More often than not, most of these pages are never read. Thoroughly interpreting that much data is nearly impossible for a human. Consequently, nurses too often approach an admission evaluation visit with an incomplete picture of a patient. The result can be gaps in care or treatment, inaccurate OASIS assessments, incomplete or poorly sequenced diagnosis codes, and improper care plans. These obstacles can impact both patient outcomes and agency revenue.

One Newly Available Solution for the Right Way to use AI in Healthcare

We recently attended a product demonstration and followed it up with updated descriptions to learn details about new product developments. Over the next three months, Select Data, in full disclosure one of our sponsors, will be introducing an AI-powered suite of products that has been designed over many years of development to support clinical, data driven decision-making. One by one, it addresses the problems described above.

The new system, SmartCare, empowers clinicians to harness previously hidden insights while reducing bias and cognitive overload. It enables them to steer their decisions with enhanced precision while maintaining their pivotal role in patient care, eliminating one of the common reasons many Home Health administrators hesitate to invite AI into agency processes. It does, however, make the care team’s job easier and facilitates better decision-making.

  • AI can read those 100 to 1,000 page referral documents in minutes, where a human may require days. The Power of AI with SmartCare
  • SmartCare uses AI to synthesize relevant medical history to provide a care snapshot highlighting the key diagnosis, focus and considerations for care, and recommended OASIS clinical discipline. It highlights any areas for clarification needed from physician or admitting nurse.
  • Clinicians can search and index specific words in unstructured data, such as narratives, to instantly identify any detail of a patient’s condition in an easy-to-read interface. Nurses approach the initial OASIS visit armed with all of a referring clinician’s relevant care findings.
  • Recommendations for diagnostic codes strictly follow Medicare PDGM guidelines.

Suite of Tools

1 – RISE stand for Rapid Intake Summary & Evaluation. This component of the suite summarizes all clinical data from referral sources and your EHR. It compiles this data to provide clinically relevant diagnoses, focus of care, and recommendations for skilled disciplines. This is the part of the tool that reads referral documents and supports informed decision-making. The advantages we detected go a bit beyond the technical.

When clinicians, reviewers, coders, and office staff all have access to the same patient information, it would seem that communication among disciplines would improve and that care coordination would be enhanced. It also seems logical that continued experiences of advanced access to previously hard-to-find physician comments would gradually break through the AI fear barrier reported by so many clinicians and other professionals. Select Data will provide us with actual client experiences to verify our assumptions once they have been compiled.

Right AI Healthcare Select Data

2 – ACE, or Admission Clinical Evaluation is SmartCare’s clinical support summary tool. It deploys AI to understand accepted OASIS assessment criteria. It then uses this knowledge to extract assessment and narrative data from nursing and therapy evaluations. With streamlined, pertinent data at the point of care, the entire care team has the same patient data. Having the same patient data enables more informed decision-making.

ACE links all patient data back to its source assessment. Doubt about the AI’s credibility should gradually diminish, even among the most AI-resistant users. Every analysis and recommendation is explained in clear language so that clinicians are likely to understand the rationale behind them. The goal is to replace every “I’m not going to let a machine tell me what to do” with “I’ll take this information into consideration with my human insights.”

Pricing

We are honoring Select Data’s request to allow them to build personalized price quotes to every prospective client. They will be represented at several state and national conferences this year. Alternatively, interested HHA representatives can contact EVP Ted Schulte at Ted.Schulte@SelectData.com

Tim Rowan, Editor Emeritus

Tim Rowan is a 30-year home care technology consultant who co-founded and served as Editor and principal writer of this publication for 25 years. He continues to occasionally contribute news and analysis articles under The Rowan Report’s new ownership. He also continues to work part-time as a Home Care recruiting and retention consultant. More information: RowanResources.com
Tim@RowanResources.com

©2024 by The Rowan Report, Peoria, AZ. All rights reserved. This article originally appeared in Healthcare at Home: The Rowan Report.homecaretechreport.com One copy may be printed for personal use: further reproduction by permission only. editor@homecaretechreport.com

The Wrong Way to Use AI in Healthcare

by Tim Rowan, Editor Emeritus

Lawsuits are beginning to pile up against insurance companies participating in the Medicare Advantage program. The complaint? The wrong way to use AI in healthcare is with faulty algorithms to approve or deny claims. While AI can be extremely helpful in streamlining administrative tasks — comparing physician notes with Home Health assessments and nursing notes or reading hospital discharge documents — it seems not to be any good at deciding whether to approve or deny care.

The Wrong Way to Use AI in Healthcare Example 1

The Minnesota case, November, 2023, UnitedHealth Group:

    • An elderly couple’s doctor deemed extended care medically necessary
    • UnitedHealth’s MA arm denied that care
    • Following their deaths, the couple’s family sued UnitedHealth, alleging:
      • Straight Medicare would have approved the extended care
      • United uses an AI model developed by NaviHealth called nH Predict to make coverage decisions
      • UnitedHealth Group acquired NaviHealth in 2020 and assigned it to its Optum division
      • nH Predict is known to be so inaccurate, 90% of its denials are overturned when appealed to the ALJ level
      • UnitedHealth Group announced in October, 2023 that its division that deploys nH Predict will longer use the NaviHealth brand name but will refer to that Optum division as “Home & Community Care.”

The family’s complaint stated, “The elderly are prematurely kicked out of care facilities nationwide or forced to deplete family savings to continue receiving necessary medical care, all because [UnitedHealth’s] AI model ‘disagrees’ with their real live doctors’ determinations.”

The Wrong Way to Use AI in Healthcare Example 2

The Class-Action case, December 2023, Humana:

    • A lawsuit was filed on December 12, 2023 in the U.S, District Court for the Western District of Kentucky
    • It was filed by the same Los Angeles law firm that filed the Minnesota case the previous month, Clarkson
    • The suit notes that Louisville-based Humana also uses nH Predict from NaviHealth
    • The plaintiffs claim, “Humana knows that the nH Predict AI Model predictions are highly inaccurate and are not based on patients’ medical needs but continues to use this system to deny patients’ coverage.”
    • The suit says Medicare Advantage patients who are hospitalized for three days usually are eligible to spend as many as 100 days getting follow-up care in a nursing home, but that Humana customers are rarely allowed to stay as long as 14 days.
    • A Humana representative said Humana their own employed physicians see AI recommendations but make final coverage decisions.

What Makes This Possible

According to experts we speak with, there are many ways to use data analytics. The insurance companies named in the lawsuits use predictive decision making. This way of analyzing data compares a patient to millions of others and deduces what treatment plan might be suitable for one patient, based on what was effective for most previous patients. Opponents of this method have called it “data supported guessing.”

A superior analysis method experts are coming to understand  is prescriptive decision making. This is taking all of the available historical and current data surrounding a patient and making a clinical decision specifically designed to that patient’s age, gender, co-morbidities, doctor recommendations, and treatment records.The Power of AI with SmartCare

Until recently, predictive analysis was the preferred method because of its resource efficiency. Examining the data of every individual patient used to be prohibitively labor-intensive, requiring hours of reading hospital records, physician notes, and claims. Today, however, AI tools are able to do that work in seconds, making prescriptive analytics and customized plans of care possible.

Fix May Be in the Works

In a February 6, 2024 memo to all Medicare Advantage Organizations and Medicare-Medicaid Plans, CMS explained the difference between predictive and prescriptive analytics. The memo said these plans may not make coverage determinations based on aggregated data but must look at each individual:

“For Medicare basic benefits, MA organizations must make medical necessity determinations in accordance with all medical necessity determination requirements, outlined at § 422.101(c)1 ; based on the circumstances of each specific individual, including the patient’s medical history, physician recommendations, and clinical notes; and in line with all fully established Traditional Medicare coverage criteria.”

In response to a request for clarification, the CMS memo laid out its rule in specific language:Wrong AI in Healthcare Prescriptive Analytics

An algorithm or software tool can be used to assist MA plans in making coverage determinations, but it is the responsibility of the MA organization to ensure that the algorithm or artificial intelligence complies with all applicable rules for how coverage determinations by MA organizations are made. For example, compliance is required with all of the rules at § 422.101(c) for making a determination of medical necessity, including that the MA organization base the decision on the individual patient’s circumstances, so an algorithm that determines coverage based on a larger data set instead of the individual patient’s medical history, the physician’s recommendations, or clinical notes would not be compliant with § 422.101(c).
(emphasis added)

“Therefore, the algorithm or software tool should only be used to ensure fidelity with the posted internal coverage criteria which has been made public under § 422.101(b)(6)(ii).”

In further responses to questions in the same memo, CMS made it clear MA plans must make the same coverage decision original Medicare would make. The only allowable exception is that plans may use their own criteria when Medicare Parts A and B coverage criteria “are not fully established.”

Knowledge of this CMS directive may give Home Health agencies one more arrow in their quiver when going to battle with powerful, profit-oriented insurance companies over harmful, illogical AI algorithm decisions.

For information on the right way to use AI in healthcare, see our complimentary article in this week’s issue.

 

Tim Rowan, Editor EmeritusTim Rowan is a 30-year home care technology consultant who co-founded and served as Editor and principal writer of this publication for 25 years. He continues to occasionally contribute news and analysis articles under The Rowan Report’s new ownership. He also continues to work part-time as a Home Care recruiting and retention consultant. More information: RowanResources.com
Tim@RowanResources.com

 ©2024 by The Rowan Report, Peoria, AZ. All rights reserved. This article originally appeared in Healthcare at Home: The Rowan Report.homecaretechreport.com One copy may be printed for personal use: further reproduction by permission only. editor@homecaretechreport.com

House Ways and Mean Unanimously Extends Telehealth Flexibilities

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

ATA ACTION APPLAUDS HOUSE WAYS AND MEANS COMMITTEE FOR UNANIMOUSLY ADVANCING A TWO-YEAR EXTENSION OF MANY CRITICAL TELEHEALTH FLEXIBILITIES

WASHINGTON, DC, MAY 8, 2024 – ATA Action, an affiliated trade organization of the American Telemedicine Association (ATA), applauds the House Ways and Means Committee for their proactive approach in unanimously advancing a two-year telehealth extension. This extension will maintain many of the current Medicare telehealth flexibilities through the end of calendar year 2026, demonstrating the Committee’s commitment to telehealth.

“While we prefer Medicare telehealth flexibilities be made permanent, we understand the dynamics and applaud the Committee for a two-year extension of many of the critical flexibilities without arbitrary and unnecessary guardrails such as in-person requirements,” said Kyle Zebley, Senior Vice President, Public Policy, the ATA and Executive Director, ATA Action. “This is a clear sign that our bipartisan telehealth supporters are at work, determined not to leave the American people without access to safe, effective, quality healthcare where and when they need it. But this is not over yet. There will be additional markups and other committees need to weigh in, as we continue to push for telehealth permanency.”

Specifically, ATA Action is supportive of the bill extending the following telehealth provisions:

  • Geographic and originating-site waivers
  • Ability for Federally Qualified Health Centers (FQHCs) and Rural Health Clinics (RHCs) to continue to furnish telehealth services
  • Expanded list of eligible Medicare providers, allowing Physical Therapists, Occupational Therapists, Speech Language Pathologies, and Audiologists to render telehealth services
  • Ability to offer audio-only services
  • Repeal of telemental health in-person requirement
  • Preservation of the Acute Hospital Care at Home Program through CY2029

“We hope this action by the Ways and Means Committee will push Congress to enact this legislation soon to provide certainty for patients and providers across the country and allow U.S. healthcare systems enough time to implement appropriate virtual tools, technologies, programs, and processes moving forward,” Zebley added. “We support additional telehealth priorities that have not yet been acted upon, including the remote prescribing of controlled substances, which were not included in the legislative proposal. We believe, if left omitted, this would lead to a tremendous gap in care.”

“ATA Action is available as a resource and looks forward to continuing to work with Congress to ensure that the appropriate telehealth policies are implemented in a timely manner without arbitrary and unnecessary barriers to care such as in-person, brick and mortar, or geographic requirements,” Zebley said.

About ATA Action

ATA Action recognizes that telehealth and virtual care have the potential to transform the healthcare delivery system by improving patient outcomes, enhancing the safety and effectiveness of care, addressing health disparities, and reducing costs. ATA Action is a registered 501c6 entity and an affiliated trade organization of the American Telemedicine Association (ATA).

#  #  #

CONTACT:

Gina Cella
gcella@americantelemed.org
t: 781-799-3137

© The Rowan Report. For information on publishing this or any other press release, please contact editor@therowanreport.com

Stakeholders React to DEA TeleHealth Rule

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE 

STAKEHOLDERS SEND LETTER TO DEA URGING ACTION ON TELEHEALTH RULE CRUCIAL FOR MENTAL HEALTH, SUBSTANCE USE DISORDERS

WASHINGTON, DC, APRIL 2, 2024 – The Alliance for Connected Care, the American Telemedicine AssociationATA Action, the Consumer Technology Association, the Healthcare Information and Management Systems Society, and the Partnership to Advance Virtual Care, co-leading the effort, submitted a letter to the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) requesting the expedited release of a revised proposed rule to permit and regulate the prescribing of controlled substances through telehealth. The letter was signed by 214 stakeholders. Current flexibilities allowing for the remote prescribing of controlled substances are set to expire at the end of this year, necessitating regulatory action to ensure their continuation.

Stakeholders praised the DEA for their leadership and actions taken to ensure continued patient access to care be delivered through telemedicine in advance of the final telemedicine regulations expiring at the end of this year. The letter also urged DEA to propose the updated rules immediately for the following reasons:

  • To ensure stakeholders have adequate time to provide feedback on any policy proposal.
  • If DEA were to create a special registration process for telehealth prescribers, as proposed by DEA and many stakeholders, substantial operational lead-time would be needed to implement the new process and comply with other potential operational requirements and guardrails.
  • A rulemaking late in the year that makes significant policy changes would affect the ability of patients and clinicians to make appointments and ensure consistent access to care.
  • There will be operational staff training needs for pharmacies and other parts of the healthcare delivery system to ensure patients uninterrupted access to needed medical treatments offered through telehealth.
  • DEA’s national leadership is needed to set a clear path forward for the nation and to encourage more consistent definitions and aligned requirements from state regulatory bodies – to encourage care in our most underserved areas, without geographic barriers limiting access to care.

To read a full copy of the stakeholder letter: Stakeholder Letter Urging DEA to Issue a Proposed Rule on Remote Prescribing of Controlled Substances

#     #     #

MEDIA CONTACTS:

Gina Cella, American Telemedicine Association
gcella@americantelemed.org
t: 781-799-3137

Rikki Cheung, Alliance for Connected Carerikki.cheung@connectwithcare.org t: 972-302-3279

Jim Fellinger, Consumer Technology Association
jfellinger@cta.tech

Rachel Stauffer, Partnership to Advance Virtual Carerstauffer@mcdermottplus.comt: 202-204-1460

Albe Zakes, HIMSSalbe.zakes@himss.orgt: 312-912-6757

Access to Care at Home in Underserved Communities

by Kristin Rowan, Editor

The U.S. House Ways and Means Committee held a hearing on March 12, 2024 to address the need for access to care-at-home services in rural and underserved communities. The advisory board heard from several witnesses including two care at home patients, a medical doctor, the founder and CEO of Cadence, and a professor of Health Care Policy and Medicine at Harvard Medical School.

Committee Chairman Jason Smith (MO) said, in his opening statement, “Where someone lives, works or raises a family should not be a barrier to getting top of the line health care. One of our priorities on this Committee is helping every American get health care in their community.”

With the Medicare telehealth and Hospital at Home programs scheduled to expire at the end of this year, Smith is urging the committee to see the profound impact that lack of access to healthcare would have on patients in rural and underserved communities. He want on to say that the “tired approaches…have not made a meaningful impact for enough patients.”

Cutting edge technology and new approaches to make Americans healthier and increase access to care in rural areas are needed. Smith recommends examining provider reimbursement and adding patient and taxpayer protections to “ensure access, demonstrate value, and prevent waste, fraud, and abuse.”

Read Chairman Smith’s opening statement here. Watch the witness statements at the hearing here.

The American Telemedicine Association and ATA Action expressed appreciation to the Committee in a press release issued just after the hearing. “We are grateful to the House Committee on Ways and Means for examining the opportunities in moving care into the home in order to benefit patients, particularly those in rural and underserved communities,” said Kyle Zebley, Senior Vice President, Public Policy, the ATA and Executive Director, ATA Action.

Read the full press release from the American Telemedicine Association and ATA Action here.

# # #

Kristin Rowan

Kristin Rowan has been working at Healthcare at Home: The Rowan Report since 2008. She has a master’s degree in business administration and marketing and runs Girard Marketing Group, a multi-faceted boutique marketing firm specializing in event planning, sales, and marketing strategy. She has recently taken on the role of Editor of The Rowan Report and will add her voice to current Home Care topics as well as marketing tips for home care agencies. Connect with Kristin directly kristin@girardmarketinggroup.com or www.girardmarketinggroup.com

©2024 by The Rowan Report, Peoria, AZ. All rights reserved. This article originally appeared in Healthcare at Home: The Rowan Report.One copy may be printed for personal use: further reproduction by permission only. editor@therowanreport.com