The Department of Health and Human Services should fully reinstate its June COVID-19 Provider Relief Fund reporting requirements, AHA said again today in a letter to the agency. On Oct. 22, the department partially restored the requirements, but not the ability of hospitals to calculate lost revenue on a monthly basis or use a budgeted-to-actual comparison. AHA also expressed concern that the reporting requirements do not adequately account for fluctuations in Medicaid revenue or COVID-19-related capital purchases with useful lives of more than 12 months, and continued to urge the agency to allow fund distributions to follow COVID-19 patients within a hospital system.  
 
“Absent changes to the policies above, many hospitals, including many rural hospitals and those serving high numbers of low-income, elderly and severely ill patients, particularly in vulnerable communities, remain in the position of unfairly having to return substantial PRF funds to HHS,” AHA said.

Related News Articles

Headline
The Food and Drug Administration Aug. 22 granted emergency use authorization for two new combined COVID-19 and influenza tests. The Nano-Check Influenza-COVID-…
Headline
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's COVID-19 data tracker shows an 18.1% test positivity rate for the week ending Aug. 10, the highest it has been…
Headline
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Aug. 13 issued an advisory alerting of an uptick of cases of parvovirus B19 across the U.S. Parvovirus B19 is a…
Blog
The RAND Corporation recently released the fifth iteration of its biannual hospital price report. The AHA has previously highlighted significant flaws with…
Headline
Adults age 65 and older are encouraged to receive an updated dosage of the COVID-19 vaccine, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention announced April 25…
Headline
The Pfizer and Moderna COVID-19 vaccines can cause myocarditis, but do not appear to cause infertility, Guillain-Barré syndrome, Bell’s palsy, thrombosis with…