How States Led the Way Toward a Health Care Personal Option During the Pandemic
by AFP: West Virginia was quick to the draw during the COVID-19 pandemic when it came to meeting the health care needs of its residents.
How States Led the Way Toward a Health Care Personal Option During the Pandemic
The state’s rural and mountainous geography makes it difficult for many patients to find and access care. So, West Virginia came up with a solution: Remove, at least temporarily, restrictions on the practice of telehealth, allowing more residents to see their doctors remotely using a smartphone, tablet, or computer.
The plan helped isolated patients and those with limited mobility access care. Then, last month, West Virginia enacted a law to permanently expand telehealth services, an important policy reform pushed for by Americans for Prosperity-West Virginia.
Now, states across the country are taking a similar approach to help their residents better access care.
State lawmakers moved fast to make quality care more accessible
A new article Governing reports that last year, all 50 states suspended their restrictions on telehealth, and several have since expanded telehealth permanently through legislation.
Some went even further. Arkansas, Utah, and Virginia enacted laws reforming their scope-of-practice laws, restrictions which forbid qualified advanced practice registered nurses from delivering care without physician supervision.
These scope-of-practice restrictions didn’t make patients safer. They reduced access to care.
What spurred this flurry of legislation across the country? In large part, the pandemic made health care access a more pressing concern.
Lawmakers learned an important lesson from the pandemic
“The pandemic has demonstrated the wisdom of removing barriers between patients and [health providers] and elevated it to a whole new level,” Dean Clancy, senior health policy fellow with Americans for Prosperity, told Governing. “What it all adds up to is what we hope will be a transformation of American health care that’s permanently freer and better for everyone.”
Restrictions on telehealth and nurse practitioners were severe impediments to health care access before the pandemic, of course. But when hospitals began to reach their breaking points during the height of the health crisis, states were forced to act.
Twenty states suspended their certificate-of-need laws, restrictions that forbade providers from expanding their facilities, purchasing new equipment, and offering new services without government permission.
SevHow States Led the Way Toward a Health Care Personal Option During the Pandemiceral states, including Tennessee and Montana, are now in the process of reforming their CON laws through legislation.
These reforms provided states the flexibility they needed to treat COVID patients. Permanent reforms will help patients long after the health crisis is over.
Lawmakers can do more to expand access
Despite the immense success of state-level efforts to make care more accessible, some lawmakers are still claiming that additional federal involvement in medicine is needed, particularly in the form of a public-option health care program and drug price controls.
These are bad ideas that belie the lesson most states learned over the past year. Removing government roadblocks, not erecting them, helped us navigate this health crisis.
Instead of a public option, lawmakers should give patients a personal option, which would reduce costs, promote price transparency, and give Americans more choice over their own health care.
To that end, Congress could:
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Americans for Prosperity is urging lawmakers to give Americans a personal option in their health, but your voice is needed, too.
Tags: Americans for Prosperity, How States, Led the Way, Toward a Health Care, Personal Option, During the Pandemic To share or post to your site, click on "Post Link". Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and "Like" Facebook Page - Thanks!
The plan helped isolated patients and those with limited mobility access care. Then, last month, West Virginia enacted a law to permanently expand telehealth services, an important policy reform pushed for by Americans for Prosperity-West Virginia.
Now, states across the country are taking a similar approach to help their residents better access care.
State lawmakers moved fast to make quality care more accessible
A new article Governing reports that last year, all 50 states suspended their restrictions on telehealth, and several have since expanded telehealth permanently through legislation.
Some went even further. Arkansas, Utah, and Virginia enacted laws reforming their scope-of-practice laws, restrictions which forbid qualified advanced practice registered nurses from delivering care without physician supervision.
These scope-of-practice restrictions didn’t make patients safer. They reduced access to care.
What spurred this flurry of legislation across the country? In large part, the pandemic made health care access a more pressing concern.
Lawmakers learned an important lesson from the pandemic
“The pandemic has demonstrated the wisdom of removing barriers between patients and [health providers] and elevated it to a whole new level,” Dean Clancy, senior health policy fellow with Americans for Prosperity, told Governing. “What it all adds up to is what we hope will be a transformation of American health care that’s permanently freer and better for everyone.”
Restrictions on telehealth and nurse practitioners were severe impediments to health care access before the pandemic, of course. But when hospitals began to reach their breaking points during the height of the health crisis, states were forced to act.
Twenty states suspended their certificate-of-need laws, restrictions that forbade providers from expanding their facilities, purchasing new equipment, and offering new services without government permission.
SevHow States Led the Way Toward a Health Care Personal Option During the Pandemiceral states, including Tennessee and Montana, are now in the process of reforming their CON laws through legislation.
These reforms provided states the flexibility they needed to treat COVID patients. Permanent reforms will help patients long after the health crisis is over.
Lawmakers can do more to expand access
Despite the immense success of state-level efforts to make care more accessible, some lawmakers are still claiming that additional federal involvement in medicine is needed, particularly in the form of a public-option health care program and drug price controls.
These are bad ideas that belie the lesson most states learned over the past year. Removing government roadblocks, not erecting them, helped us navigate this health crisis.
Instead of a public option, lawmakers should give patients a personal option, which would reduce costs, promote price transparency, and give Americans more choice over their own health care.
To that end, Congress could:
- Expand tax-free health savings accounts, allowing more Americans to put money away for care and save on each expense. Lawmakers could offer directly funded HSAs for those who need additional assistance.
- Remove restrictions on health reimbursement arrangements, which would give more Americans access to portable health care.
- Allow more Americans to use short-term renewable insurance plans, which are generally less expensive than traditional plans.
--------------------------------
Americans for Prosperity is urging lawmakers to give Americans a personal option in their health, but your voice is needed, too.
Tags: Americans for Prosperity, How States, Led the Way, Toward a Health Care, Personal Option, During the Pandemic To share or post to your site, click on "Post Link". Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and "Like" Facebook Page - Thanks!
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