State Lawmakers Talk Election Fraud, Integrity

On this episode of The Legislature Today, 90 bills to-date have been introduced this year between the Senate and the House about election laws. Briana Heaney spoke with Del. Josh Holstein, R-Boone, and Sen. Jack Woodrum, R-Summers, to get their perspective.

On this episode of The Legislature Today, 90 bills to-date have been introduced this year between the Senate and the House about election laws.

We’ve heard a lot since the 2020 general election about potential voter fraud, although numerous courts have ruled there was no election fraud that would have changed the outcome of that election. Secretary of State Mac Warner has also said there was also no major election fraud in West Virginia. He has prosecuted a handful of people for election violations in the last few years.

Briana Heaney spoke with Del. Josh Holstein, R-Boone, and Sen. Jack Woodrum, R-Summers, to get their perspective.

In the House, eight bills advanced from third reading to the Senate. Two of the proposals help further protect the environment and one takes telehealth a step further with a proactive technological approach to medical care. Randy Yohe has the story.

In the Senate, the chamber approved five bills, sending them to the House for consideration. The Senate advanced 12 other bills. Briana Heaney has more.

Finally, advocates and recovery experts filled the Capitol rotunda on Monday to educate lawmakers about substance use disorder. Emily Rice has the story.

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The Legislature Today is West Virginia’s only television/radio simulcast devoted to covering the state’s 60-day regular legislative session.

Watch or listen to new episodes Monday through Friday at 6 p.m. on West Virginia Public Broadcasting.

Child Behavioral Telehealth Services Coming To W.Va. Underserved Rural Areas 

Already underway in the Summers County community of Hinton, a prototype program is offering mental health support for pediatric patients with diagnoses including depression, anxiety and ADHD disorder.

A prototype program is offering mental health support for pediatric patients in the Summers County community of Hinton. Diagnosis and treatments include depression, anxiety and ADHD disorder.

The new program is a collaboration between Appalachian Regional Healthcare and Marshall Health Network. On appointment days, patients visit a rural health clinic, and are connected virtually to a psychiatric mental health nurse practitioner (PMHNP). In addition to conducting initial psychiatric evaluations and follow-up appointments, the PMHNP also prescribes and evaluates psychopharmacologic treatments alongside a collaborating psychiatrist.

Dr. Susan Flesher is the Department of Pediatrics Chair at Marshall University’s Joan C. Edwards School of Medicine. She said psychiatric care is the perfect place for rural telehealth.

“It’s a little bit hard for us sometimes to think about a child coming in to look in an ear or listen to a heart,” Flesher said. “Those things take more technology on telehealth. With the care that we’re talking about, it’s a matter of talking with the child, the family, figuring out what the issues are, what the concerns are, doing some screening tests, providing therapy, medications, whatever the case may be. It’s perfectly suited to telehealth.”

Flesher said the program offers access to specific medical professionals that otherwise would not be readily available. 

There is a real shortage of psychiatrists and mental health nurse practitioners in rural areas,” Flesher said. “This is a service that they otherwise would not be receiving, or would have to travel a long distance to receive.”

Flesher said the Hinton program is a first step of an anticipated child mental telehealth network.

“We are in talks with some other places to expand this,” she said. “We don’t have signed contracts in place yet so I’m not necessarily free to speak, but we are definitely trying to provide this service where it is so very much needed, and there seems to be a lot of interest.”

The program is accepting new patients by referral. For more information, contact the Summers County ARH Rural Health Clinic at 304-466-2918.

WVU Researchers Seek Participants For Telehealth Study

A study will measure the effectiveness of telehealth as a means for patients to remain at home while managing their care.

Researchers at West Virginia University (WVU) are enrolling participants in an extended telehealth pilot program.

The project is a collaboration of the WVU Health Affairs Institute and West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources, Bureau for Medical Services.

The program is an expansion of previous telehealth pilot work and will provide telehealth care to beneficiaries of Home and Community-Based Services.

Participants will have the opportunity to receive six months of telehealth services in their homes for free. 

“With our telehealth program, one component of it is remote patient monitoring, monitoring of vital signs,” Associate Professor in WVU’s School of Public Health, Steven Davis, said. “They’re transmitted remotely.”

Participants will also receive a call from a nurse a couple of times a month to discuss their well-being.

Davis said telehealth can be a positive addition to existing health care.

“We would rather coordinate with their primary care providers to catch things early on so that they’re going to a lower level of care versus more costly care,” he said.

People living in West Virginia often need to go back to the hospital or are not able to live at home due to a variety of physical and mental health issues, according to Davis.

Telehealth can assist in monitoring these conditions closely to prevent unnecessary hospital visits or delays needing 24-hour care outside of the home.

To be eligible to participate, individuals must be a Medicaid Aged and Disabled Waiver, Intellectual/Developmental Disabilities Waiver, or Traumatic Brain Injury Waiver member.

Individuals interested in participating in the Extended Telehealth Pilot should complete a short interest form available on the Health Affairs Institute website at healthaffairsinstitute.org.

Appalachia Health News is a project of West Virginia Public Broadcasting with support from Charleston Area Medical Center and Marshall Health.

Southern W.Va. Health Care System Gets Money To Expand Telehealth

A health care system serving six southern West Virginia counties received more than $900,000 to enhance its telehealth services.

Southern West Virginia Health System, also known as Lincoln Primary Care Center Inc., was awarded $967,304 from the Federal Communications Commission on Wednesday through a newly created COVID-19 telehealth program.

The FCC received $200 million through the Coronavirus Aid, Relief and Economic Security Act in March to help providers across the country enhance their remote services. It reports that this last round of allocations was the FCC’s seventh. On May 13, the agency also awarded Wirt County Health Services Association Inc. with $274,432. 

Based in Lincoln County, Southern West Virginia Health System also serves parts of Boone, Cabell, Kanawha, Logan and Mingo counties.

Like other providers throughout the state, CEO Lisa Leach said the organization has moved many of its services to video conferencing and telephone, to allow for social distancing during the coronavirus pandemic. 

“It really gives us an opportunity to try to continue to meet the needs of our patients,” Leach said. “You know, the frail, the elderly… and obviously during these pandemic times it helps with emergencies, so that we can continue to provide care.”

Leach said the money will allow Southern West Virginia Health System to purchase 23 mobile telehealth carts, which will hold video conferencing equipment and supplies for checking vitals, and the necessary software. 

There’s only so much patients can do from the comfort of their own homes, when it comes to checking their own vitals, like blood pressure. 

With the video conferencing carts, which Leach called “virtual exam rooms,” patients will have access to supplies allowing them to perform these functions themselves. Patients will be able to use the carts from designated rooms at a clinic, or outside the clinic, under a tent, allowing for a face-to-face appointment with a physician, minus the physical contact.

Before now, getting paid for virtual appointments was difficult. But the U.S. Centers for Medicare and Medicaid have started reimbursing health care providers for telehealth options during this public health crisis.

Leach said this could help beyond the pandemic as well, as long as insurers continue to reimburse her organization for telehealth services.

“We have those at-risk patients,” Leach said Wednesday. “Whether it’s a 90-year-old woman who needs help getting into a car coming here, or maybe it’s a 65-year-old woman who just had a heart attack and has other multiple issues, it’s difficult for her to come to us. So, we want to continue to use telehealth.”

But throughout the state and much of the state’s southern counties, many West Virginians still struggle with reliable broadband access. According to Leach, the FCC money doesn’t help much with that.

“For those folks, they’re going to have to go to a different location,” she said. “I wish this could fix that. But we can’t change broadband.”

Leach said it might be about a month and a half before they’re able to purchase the necessary supplies and begin offering the expanded telehealth services. 

Emily Allen is a Report for America corps member.

 

Staying Home Doesn’t Mean You Can’t Stay Healthy – Experts Promote Telehealth During Coronavirus

Medical experts have spent years promoting telehealth as an option for rural areas with little access to in-person care.

Now, after West Virginia Gov. Jim Justice issued a “stay home” order that took effect on Tuesday, March 24, some medical providers are offering telehealth as a way to keep more people healthy at home during the coronavirus. 

Dr. Jennifer Mallow at WVU Medicine describes telehealth as “the use of communication and information technology to share information.”

“We can provide clinical care,” Mallow said. “We can provide education, we can provide public health, we can provide administrative services at a distance.”

Telehealth spans several methods and types of technology, most prominently phone and video conferencing.

Mallow and Dr. Steve Davis, a WVU associate professor, are working on a pilot to provide telehealth options to patients with traumatic brain injuries, disabilities and the elderly.  

Davis said he foresees elements of the project helping those who are particularly vulnerable to the coronavirus.

“The patient can [stay] at home, because we don’t want them to come in and be exposed, or expose other people, to COVID-19,” Davis said.

Virtual Urgent Care Visits, Free Of Charge

WVU Medicine is offering video urgent care appointments at no cost, for anyone more than five years old who is experiencing symptoms potentially related to the coronavirus. The WVU-owned Ruby Memorial Hospital in Morgantown also has been operating a 24-hour phone line, at 304-598-6000, option 4, since mid-March.

On Thursday, March 26, WVU reported going from six to 538 video visits in the course of three weeks. Their phone appointments experienced a similar spike, from 20 to 671 in the same length of time. 

In Kanawha County, the Charleston Area Medical Center is opening up its 24/7 Care app for urgent video appointments to the public.

“As a nation, as a world actually, you’re trying to flatten the curve and get ahead of this virus,” said Rebecca Harless with CAMC’s ambulatory services. 

Normally, Harless said an urgent care visit at CAMC would cost $49 out of pocket. Right now, anyone who may be displaying coronavirus symptoms can use a “COVID” coupon to get a free appointment.

“They’re able to speak to a provider, one of our employee providers, and understand where they fall, where their symptoms fall in that algorithm of, you know, ‘Am I okay to stay home?’” Harless said. “A lot of people are really scared out there right now.

Rather than everyone flood the hospitals and clinics at once, West Virginia Commissioner for Public Health Dr. Cathy Slemp recommends people stay at home if they are experiencing symptoms at a non-life-threatening level. 

“If you are waiting for test results, or you are thinking you might have this, or you know you have it, you want to treat it as if you do,” Slemp said at the governor’s March 24 press briefing. “So what you do is, first, you want to stay home. If you need to go to the grocery story, someone else goes for you. At the pharmacy, you don’t want to be around other folks.”

Efforts To Loosen Federal Restrictions On Reimbursement

Slemp told the press on Wednesday she and the West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources are working on educating providers throughout the state about telehealth, and what options providers have for implementation.

Traditionally, getting paid for telehealth has been a challenge. Regulations from the federal Department of Health and Human Services, which regulates Medicare for people 65 years old and up, only reimburse telehealth services when there’s an available video option.

This makes it difficult for most providers to offer phone-only services, which could aid elderly patients living in rural areas without reliable broadband access.

The West Virginia Bureau for Medical Services, which oversees Medicaid for low-income people and families, normally enforces the same requirement for telehealth.

According to Commissioner Cindy Beane, the state already allows Medicaid to reimburse phone and audio-only appointments, to keep more people at home.

“Truly, we’re in an emergency. We’re waiving all your normal things that you have to worry about, as providers,” Beane said. “Especially when we know that the person’s sick, we don’t want them going to the ER. We want you to call, and route them the appropriate way.”

The coronavirus response bill that passed the Senate on Thursday, March 26, gives federal officials the authority to waive the video-only requirement. 

The U.S. Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services already announced on March 17 it temporarily waiving certain HIPAA requirements, such as restrictions that forbidding patients and providers from using “everyday communications technologies” such as Skype and Facetime, and other restrictions barring certain patients from taking their calls in-home, versus an approved facility. 

The Struggle With Broadband

“Broadband, I mean, is an issue, pandemic or no pandemic for us,” said Williamson Health and Wellness chronic care director Amy Reed.

The Williamson Health and Wellness Center in Mingo County is a federally qualified health center that offers patients a range of services including behavioral, dental and pediatric. It recently began offering and promoting video and phone appointments to its patients who are technologically able, as Medicare and Medicaid allow.

Reed said she and others at Williamson Health have noticed the development making a difference for some.

“We know that our population, the patients that we serve, are more vulnerable, they’re more at risk,” she said. 

The U.S. Census estimated in 2018 almost 19 percent of the Mingo County population was over 65 years old. That same year, the U.S. Census estimated almost 20 percent of the entire state was over 65. 

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reports people older than 65, and those with pre-existing health conditions like HIV and asthma, are at a higher risk for catching the coronavirus than others. 

“So, it’s made a huge difference in being able to provide them what they need, and not send them to the hospital, not send them to the emergency rooms,” Reed said. “We’re actually able to look at them and have those conversations.” 

Reed says she wishes telemedicine was something she could offer to every patient year-round, due to the age, health needs and lack of transportation of the population they serve. But she’s worried the waivers won’t remain in place after the pandemic ends, and that these services won’t be allowed to continue. 

Reed also said the health center would have more requirements to meet, as a federally qualified health center offering several types of practice, than other primary care providers in the state. 

“There’s a huge risk just because, you know, you get your patients dependent on that, they see that it’s there. ‘Oh, you’re doing it now, why can’t you do it later?’” Reed said.

Davis at WVU said he hopes once the pandemic subsides, some of the changes in federal regulations will remain in place. 

“As we look at sustainability,” Davis said, “one of my hopes is that, one of the good things about the COVID-19 is that we’ll come out of it and will realize, ‘ah, we can use telehealth for all of these things, and we ought to be paying for it.’”

Marshall Health through Marshall University is partnering with the Mountain Health Network in Cabell County to develop telehealth options for residents there. 

Mon Health in and around Monongalia County is collaborating on services with CAMC. As of Friday, March 27, Mon Health announced that entails virtual video visits for primary care, psychiatry, behavioral health and urology with plans to expand into neurology, obstetrics and cardiology appointments. 

This service requires reliable internet access and is for patients with minor medical conditions. Mon Health said Friday they are waiving associated patient fees for this service. 

Emily Allen is a Report for America corps member. 

 

Delegates Pass Telemedicine Bill to Help Rural Areas

Delegates have approved a bill that its sponsors hope will expand access to mental and behavioral health medications.

House Bill 2509 allows physicians to prescribe certain controlled substances through telemedicine technologies – like over a video call. Doctors are currently prohibited from prescribing certain types of medications over telemedicine systems, including narcotics like oxycodone and morphine—drugs that have been abused in recent years in the state.

Cabell County Delegate Matthew Rohrbach says while curbing the state’s opioid epidemic is a major focus for lawmakers, this specific bill does not affect those efforts. It still prohibits doctors from prescribing opioids, but would allow prescriptions for behavioral or mental health issues.

“We have a tremendous problem with access to mental health providers, particularly for our pediatric population,” Rohrbach explained, “So, ADHD is the main thing that this is gonna seek to close, so kids that have ADHD can be treated via telehealth to get their aderol and other prescriptions for such, so this is not to allow pill mills; this is really to extend for our mental health providers a way to service our clients in rural areas.”

House bill 2509 passed 95 to 4 Monday. It now heads to the Senate for further consideration.

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