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Center for Medicare & Medicaid Services - New mandate to limit PA admissions


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Received this email today from NY State Society of PAs. The new proposal would no longer allow PAs to admit patients to a hospital. Please email your concerns to the address below.

Attention NYSSPA Members and Non-Members

The AAPA recently sent notification to all constituent chapters that “obscure language tucked into a 2,225-page regulatory rule from the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) threatens to disrupt the important role of PAs and other qualified licensed practitioners in the hospital admissions process by mandating new requirements that limit the ability of PAs and NPs to admit patients. The rule, contained in the fiscal year 2014 Policy and Payment Changes for Inpatient Stays in Acute-Care and Long-Term Care Hospitals (see section 412.3 Admissions on p. 1,896), scheduled to be published in the Federal Register on Aug. 19, prohibits physicians from delegating the authority to admit patients to hospitals. By removing this long-standing authority from the physician-PA team, CMS will cause access problems for patients who need to be hospitalized when no physician is physically present at the hospital. The problem will be exacerbated in hospitals in rural and other medically underserved communities. AAPA sent an official letter to Department of Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius expressing its serious concerns over the impact of the rule. This rule is especially perplexing in light of the fact that AAPA has been successfully working with CMS, the White House and Health and Human Services (HHS) over the past few months to eliminate unnecessary barriers to care. One positive outcome from this partnership was the elimination of the requirement that a physician be on site once every two weeks in certified rural health clinics staffed by PAs. Additionally, the new admissions requirements appear to run contrary to HHS Secretary Sebelius' leadership role in removing unnecessary HHS regulatory barriers to the provision of healthcare in rural and other medically underserved communities. AAPA is fully engaged in an effort to reverse this rule and is working with other stakeholders and organizations concerned with maintaining and increasing appropriate access to care for patients”. It is now time for you as a PA in New York to join PAs nationwide and express yourself to CMS on this issue by sending CMS your opinion, including personal examples of how this ruling would affect patient care. Your job could be affected so it is very important that the CMS hears from you and many, many other PAs. Also review the AAPA website for information and updates. If you are a hospital-based PA you should also send this to your hospital leadership so they can reach out to CMS via the e-mail address below as if this not reversed, it could be VERY detrimental to patient care, hospital throughput and physician and patient satisfaction. Send your opinion today to: IPPSadmissions@cms.hhs.gov

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