New bipartisan legislation has been introduced in the U.S. House of Representatives that would allow qualified physician group practices to furnish telehealth services in skilled nursing homes under the Medicare program. The Reducing Unnecessary Senior Hospitalization Act (RUSH) Act of 2018 seeks to reduce unnecessary hospitalizations by allowing for the use of technology in skilled nursing facilities to treat patients in place rather than transferring them to the hospital. The legislation allows the Medicare program to selectively enter into value-based arrangements with qualified physician group practices furnishing a combination of telehealth and on-site first responders. With a telehealth connection to an emergency physician, an on-site first responder equipped with mobile diagnostics would coordinate treatment for patients with acute care needs. The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services would also have the authority to determine the reimbursement level for these services. The anticipated savings will be shared between the physician group practice, Medicare and skilled nursing facilities. Provision highlights:

  • Participating skilled nursing homes will receive a 12.5 percent share of the cost savings
  • Encourages use of two-way video conferencing for SNFs in urban areas;
  • Provide SNFs an increased facility fee, that adequately covers the cost of having the technology and administering telehealth services;
  • Allows a “patient’s home” to be included as an eligible originating site; and
  • Expand eligibility of reimbursement to other long-term and post-acute care professionals that can administer chronic care management in the community using store-and-forward telehealth and remote patient monitoring.

Let your current US Representative know that you support the RUSH Act.

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Rachel Monger, JD, LACHA is President/CEO. Rachel joined LeadingAge Kansas in 2011 as the Director of Government Affairs and has been a powerful voice for our membership ever since. Rachel is a Kansas licensed attorney and adult care home administrator. She received her bachelor’s degree from Bard College at Simon’s Rock in Great Barrington, MA, and her Juris Doctorate from the University of Kansas School of Law. Over the years, Rachel has served in many volunteer roles in her community and in the state of Kansas to support senior needs, aging services education, and community mental health services. She is also a member of the Board of Governors for the Kansas Health Care Stabilization Fund. As an award-winning trial lawyer, turned award-winning senior care advocate, she has spent nearly two decades passionately supporting quality of care and quality of life for Kansas seniors. When not at work, Rachel loves reading, crafting, volunteering with her church, and spending time with her partner Steven. You can reach Rachel directly at 785.670.8046.