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AMA president calls for greater reliance on science in COVID-19 fight
The president of the American Medical Association is calling on politicians and the media to rely on science and evidence to help the public through the COVID-19 pandemic.
“We live in a time when misinformation, falsehoods, and outright lies spread like viruses online, through social media and even, at times, in the media at large,” Patrice A. Harris, MD, said during an April 7 address. “We have witnessed a concerning shift over the last several decades where policy decisions seem to be driven by ideology and politics instead of facts and evidence. The result is a growing mistrust in American institutions, in science, and in the counsel of leading experts whose lives are dedicated to the pursuit of evidence and reason.”
To that end, she called on everyone – from politicians to the general public – to trust the scientific evidence.
Dr. Harris noted that the scientific data on COVID-19 have already yielded important lessons about who is more likely to be affected and how easily the virus can spread. The data also point to the effectiveness of stay-at-home and shelter-in-place orders. “This is our best chance to slow the spread of the virus,” she said, adding that the enhanced emphasis on hand washing and other hygiene practices “may seem ‘simplistic,’ but they are, in fact, based in science and evidence.”
And, as the pandemic continues, Dr. Harris said that now is the time to rely on science. She said the AMA “calls on all elected officials to affirm science, evidence, and fact in their words and actions,” and she urged that the government’s scientific institutions be led by experts who are “protected from political influence.”
It is incumbent upon everyone to actively work to contain and stop the spread of misinformation related to COVID-19, she said. “We must ensure the war is against the virus and not against science,” Dr. Harris said.
The president of the American Medical Association is calling on politicians and the media to rely on science and evidence to help the public through the COVID-19 pandemic.
“We live in a time when misinformation, falsehoods, and outright lies spread like viruses online, through social media and even, at times, in the media at large,” Patrice A. Harris, MD, said during an April 7 address. “We have witnessed a concerning shift over the last several decades where policy decisions seem to be driven by ideology and politics instead of facts and evidence. The result is a growing mistrust in American institutions, in science, and in the counsel of leading experts whose lives are dedicated to the pursuit of evidence and reason.”
To that end, she called on everyone – from politicians to the general public – to trust the scientific evidence.
Dr. Harris noted that the scientific data on COVID-19 have already yielded important lessons about who is more likely to be affected and how easily the virus can spread. The data also point to the effectiveness of stay-at-home and shelter-in-place orders. “This is our best chance to slow the spread of the virus,” she said, adding that the enhanced emphasis on hand washing and other hygiene practices “may seem ‘simplistic,’ but they are, in fact, based in science and evidence.”
And, as the pandemic continues, Dr. Harris said that now is the time to rely on science. She said the AMA “calls on all elected officials to affirm science, evidence, and fact in their words and actions,” and she urged that the government’s scientific institutions be led by experts who are “protected from political influence.”
It is incumbent upon everyone to actively work to contain and stop the spread of misinformation related to COVID-19, she said. “We must ensure the war is against the virus and not against science,” Dr. Harris said.
The president of the American Medical Association is calling on politicians and the media to rely on science and evidence to help the public through the COVID-19 pandemic.
“We live in a time when misinformation, falsehoods, and outright lies spread like viruses online, through social media and even, at times, in the media at large,” Patrice A. Harris, MD, said during an April 7 address. “We have witnessed a concerning shift over the last several decades where policy decisions seem to be driven by ideology and politics instead of facts and evidence. The result is a growing mistrust in American institutions, in science, and in the counsel of leading experts whose lives are dedicated to the pursuit of evidence and reason.”
To that end, she called on everyone – from politicians to the general public – to trust the scientific evidence.
Dr. Harris noted that the scientific data on COVID-19 have already yielded important lessons about who is more likely to be affected and how easily the virus can spread. The data also point to the effectiveness of stay-at-home and shelter-in-place orders. “This is our best chance to slow the spread of the virus,” she said, adding that the enhanced emphasis on hand washing and other hygiene practices “may seem ‘simplistic,’ but they are, in fact, based in science and evidence.”
And, as the pandemic continues, Dr. Harris said that now is the time to rely on science. She said the AMA “calls on all elected officials to affirm science, evidence, and fact in their words and actions,” and she urged that the government’s scientific institutions be led by experts who are “protected from political influence.”
It is incumbent upon everyone to actively work to contain and stop the spread of misinformation related to COVID-19, she said. “We must ensure the war is against the virus and not against science,” Dr. Harris said.
FDA calls for market removal of ranitidine
A problem with
both branded and generic over-the-counter and prescription forms, from the market.The NDMA contamination does not stem from a manufacturing concern, but rather the levels have been found to increase over time depending on how the ranitidine is stored.
In particular, the FDA found through product testing that the NDMA impurity developed over time when the ranitidine was stored above room temperature.
“The testing also showed that the older a ranitidine product is, or the longer the length of time since it was manufactured, the greater the level of NDMA,” FDA said in a statement announcing the call for product withdrawal.
The FDA has been investigating NDMA contamination since September 2019 when the agency first announced the contamination in ranitidine. Manufacturers have been withdrawing their products from the market since the first reports of contamination surfaced. Despite these recalls, there were still ranitidine products on the market, according to an FDA spokesperson, necessitating the further action taken by the agency.
In addition to products being removed from the market, FDA is asking consumers to discard any ranitidine products they may have.
“There are still questions about how the impurity is formed in ranitidine over time during storage,” Janet Woodcock, MD, director of the FDA Center for Drug Evaluation and Research, said during an April 1 conference call with reporters announcing the withdrawal request. “For example, what impact does the drug packaging have on the development or the specific formulation have on the development of NDMA.”
She said the issue may be fixable over time, and the agency is open to reformulations that demonstrate that ranitidine is stable over time and under various storage conditions.
Dr. Woodcock stressed that the products at the point of manufacture do not have unacceptable levels of NDMA.
“This is a market withdrawal, this is not a recall because technically the products are okay. They met all their specs,” she said. “It is only when they are subjected generally to heat stress do they manifest higher levels” of NDMA.
“Clearly, we can’t have products on the market that if they are stored under conditions consumers might store them under that they would become unacceptable.”
Dr. Woodcock said FDA is not withdrawing approvals for the products, but manufacturers would need to show the product remains stable under normal storage conditions.
This article was updated 4/7/20.
A problem with
both branded and generic over-the-counter and prescription forms, from the market.The NDMA contamination does not stem from a manufacturing concern, but rather the levels have been found to increase over time depending on how the ranitidine is stored.
In particular, the FDA found through product testing that the NDMA impurity developed over time when the ranitidine was stored above room temperature.
“The testing also showed that the older a ranitidine product is, or the longer the length of time since it was manufactured, the greater the level of NDMA,” FDA said in a statement announcing the call for product withdrawal.
The FDA has been investigating NDMA contamination since September 2019 when the agency first announced the contamination in ranitidine. Manufacturers have been withdrawing their products from the market since the first reports of contamination surfaced. Despite these recalls, there were still ranitidine products on the market, according to an FDA spokesperson, necessitating the further action taken by the agency.
In addition to products being removed from the market, FDA is asking consumers to discard any ranitidine products they may have.
“There are still questions about how the impurity is formed in ranitidine over time during storage,” Janet Woodcock, MD, director of the FDA Center for Drug Evaluation and Research, said during an April 1 conference call with reporters announcing the withdrawal request. “For example, what impact does the drug packaging have on the development or the specific formulation have on the development of NDMA.”
She said the issue may be fixable over time, and the agency is open to reformulations that demonstrate that ranitidine is stable over time and under various storage conditions.
Dr. Woodcock stressed that the products at the point of manufacture do not have unacceptable levels of NDMA.
“This is a market withdrawal, this is not a recall because technically the products are okay. They met all their specs,” she said. “It is only when they are subjected generally to heat stress do they manifest higher levels” of NDMA.
“Clearly, we can’t have products on the market that if they are stored under conditions consumers might store them under that they would become unacceptable.”
Dr. Woodcock said FDA is not withdrawing approvals for the products, but manufacturers would need to show the product remains stable under normal storage conditions.
This article was updated 4/7/20.
A problem with
both branded and generic over-the-counter and prescription forms, from the market.The NDMA contamination does not stem from a manufacturing concern, but rather the levels have been found to increase over time depending on how the ranitidine is stored.
In particular, the FDA found through product testing that the NDMA impurity developed over time when the ranitidine was stored above room temperature.
“The testing also showed that the older a ranitidine product is, or the longer the length of time since it was manufactured, the greater the level of NDMA,” FDA said in a statement announcing the call for product withdrawal.
The FDA has been investigating NDMA contamination since September 2019 when the agency first announced the contamination in ranitidine. Manufacturers have been withdrawing their products from the market since the first reports of contamination surfaced. Despite these recalls, there were still ranitidine products on the market, according to an FDA spokesperson, necessitating the further action taken by the agency.
In addition to products being removed from the market, FDA is asking consumers to discard any ranitidine products they may have.
“There are still questions about how the impurity is formed in ranitidine over time during storage,” Janet Woodcock, MD, director of the FDA Center for Drug Evaluation and Research, said during an April 1 conference call with reporters announcing the withdrawal request. “For example, what impact does the drug packaging have on the development or the specific formulation have on the development of NDMA.”
She said the issue may be fixable over time, and the agency is open to reformulations that demonstrate that ranitidine is stable over time and under various storage conditions.
Dr. Woodcock stressed that the products at the point of manufacture do not have unacceptable levels of NDMA.
“This is a market withdrawal, this is not a recall because technically the products are okay. They met all their specs,” she said. “It is only when they are subjected generally to heat stress do they manifest higher levels” of NDMA.
“Clearly, we can’t have products on the market that if they are stored under conditions consumers might store them under that they would become unacceptable.”
Dr. Woodcock said FDA is not withdrawing approvals for the products, but manufacturers would need to show the product remains stable under normal storage conditions.
This article was updated 4/7/20.
FDA calls for market removal of ranitidine
A problem with
both branded and generic over-the-counter and prescription forms, from the market.The NDMA contamination does not stem from a manufacturing concern, but rather the levels have been found to increase over time depending on how the ranitidine is stored.
In particular, the FDA found through product testing that the NDMA impurity developed over time when the ranitidine was stored above room temperature.
“The testing also showed that the older a ranitidine product is, or the longer the length of time since it was manufactured, the greater the level of NDMA,” FDA said in a statement announcing the call for product withdrawal.
The FDA has been investigating NDMA contamination since September 2019 when the agency first announced the contamination in ranitidine. Manufacturers have been withdrawing their products from the market since the first reports of contamination surfaced. Despite these recalls, there were still ranitidine products on the market, according to an FDA spokesperson, necessitating the further action taken by the agency.
In addition to products being removed from the market, FDA is asking consumers to discard any ranitidine products they may have.
“There are still questions about how the impurity is formed in ranitidine over time during storage,” Janet Woodcock, MD, director of the FDA Center for Drug Evaluation and Research, said during an April 1 conference call with reporters announcing the withdrawal request. “For example, what impact does the drug packaging have on the development or the specific formulation have on the development of NDMA.”
She said the issue may be fixable over time, and the agency is open to reformulations that demonstrate that ranitidine is stable over time and under various storage conditions.
Dr. Woodcock stressed that the products at the point of manufacture do not have unacceptable levels of NDMA.
“This is a market withdrawal, this is not a recall because technically the products are okay. They met all their specs,” she said. “It is only when they are subjected generally to heat stress do they manifest higher levels” of NDMA.
“Clearly, we can’t have products on the market that if they are stored under conditions consumers might store them under that they would become unacceptable.”
Dr. Woodcock said FDA is not withdrawing approvals for the products, but manufacturers would need to show the product remains stable under normal storage conditions.
This article was updated 4/7/20.
A problem with
both branded and generic over-the-counter and prescription forms, from the market.The NDMA contamination does not stem from a manufacturing concern, but rather the levels have been found to increase over time depending on how the ranitidine is stored.
In particular, the FDA found through product testing that the NDMA impurity developed over time when the ranitidine was stored above room temperature.
“The testing also showed that the older a ranitidine product is, or the longer the length of time since it was manufactured, the greater the level of NDMA,” FDA said in a statement announcing the call for product withdrawal.
The FDA has been investigating NDMA contamination since September 2019 when the agency first announced the contamination in ranitidine. Manufacturers have been withdrawing their products from the market since the first reports of contamination surfaced. Despite these recalls, there were still ranitidine products on the market, according to an FDA spokesperson, necessitating the further action taken by the agency.
In addition to products being removed from the market, FDA is asking consumers to discard any ranitidine products they may have.
“There are still questions about how the impurity is formed in ranitidine over time during storage,” Janet Woodcock, MD, director of the FDA Center for Drug Evaluation and Research, said during an April 1 conference call with reporters announcing the withdrawal request. “For example, what impact does the drug packaging have on the development or the specific formulation have on the development of NDMA.”
She said the issue may be fixable over time, and the agency is open to reformulations that demonstrate that ranitidine is stable over time and under various storage conditions.
Dr. Woodcock stressed that the products at the point of manufacture do not have unacceptable levels of NDMA.
“This is a market withdrawal, this is not a recall because technically the products are okay. They met all their specs,” she said. “It is only when they are subjected generally to heat stress do they manifest higher levels” of NDMA.
“Clearly, we can’t have products on the market that if they are stored under conditions consumers might store them under that they would become unacceptable.”
Dr. Woodcock said FDA is not withdrawing approvals for the products, but manufacturers would need to show the product remains stable under normal storage conditions.
This article was updated 4/7/20.
A problem with
both branded and generic over-the-counter and prescription forms, from the market.The NDMA contamination does not stem from a manufacturing concern, but rather the levels have been found to increase over time depending on how the ranitidine is stored.
In particular, the FDA found through product testing that the NDMA impurity developed over time when the ranitidine was stored above room temperature.
“The testing also showed that the older a ranitidine product is, or the longer the length of time since it was manufactured, the greater the level of NDMA,” FDA said in a statement announcing the call for product withdrawal.
The FDA has been investigating NDMA contamination since September 2019 when the agency first announced the contamination in ranitidine. Manufacturers have been withdrawing their products from the market since the first reports of contamination surfaced. Despite these recalls, there were still ranitidine products on the market, according to an FDA spokesperson, necessitating the further action taken by the agency.
In addition to products being removed from the market, FDA is asking consumers to discard any ranitidine products they may have.
“There are still questions about how the impurity is formed in ranitidine over time during storage,” Janet Woodcock, MD, director of the FDA Center for Drug Evaluation and Research, said during an April 1 conference call with reporters announcing the withdrawal request. “For example, what impact does the drug packaging have on the development or the specific formulation have on the development of NDMA.”
She said the issue may be fixable over time, and the agency is open to reformulations that demonstrate that ranitidine is stable over time and under various storage conditions.
Dr. Woodcock stressed that the products at the point of manufacture do not have unacceptable levels of NDMA.
“This is a market withdrawal, this is not a recall because technically the products are okay. They met all their specs,” she said. “It is only when they are subjected generally to heat stress do they manifest higher levels” of NDMA.
“Clearly, we can’t have products on the market that if they are stored under conditions consumers might store them under that they would become unacceptable.”
Dr. Woodcock said FDA is not withdrawing approvals for the products, but manufacturers would need to show the product remains stable under normal storage conditions.
This article was updated 4/7/20.
CMS implements temporary regulatory changes to aid COVID-19 response
The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services has announced a wide range of temporary regulatory moves aimed at helping hospitals and health systems handle the surge of COVID-19 patients.
“We are waiving a wide and unprecedented range of regulatory requirements to equip the American health care system with maximum flexibility to deal with an influx of cases,” CMS Administrator Seema Verma said during a March 30 conference call with reporters. “Many health care systems may not need these waivers and they shouldn’t use them if the situation doesn’t warrant it. But the flexibilities are there if it does. At a time of crisis, no regulatory barriers should stand in the way of patient care.”
Among the changes is an expansion of the venues in which health care systems and hospitals can provide services.
Federal regulations call for hospitals to provide services within their own buildings, raising concerns as to whether there will be enough capacity to handle the anticipated COVID-19 caseload.
“Under CMS’s temporary new rules, hospitals will be able to transfer patients to outside facilities, such as ambulatory surgery centers, inpatient rehabilitation hospitals, hotels, and dormitories, while still receiving hospital payments under Medicare,” CMS stated in a fact sheet highlighting the regulatory changes. “For example, a health care system can use a hotel to take care of patients needing less intensive care while using inpatient beds for COVID-19 patients.”
With these waivers, hospital systems will not have to rely on the Federal Emergency Management Agency to set up temporary hospitals and can move ahead using available community resources to help deal with the expected surge, Ms. Verma said.
These regulatory changes will be effect for the duration of the public health emergency, according to Ms. Verma.
Ambulatory surgery centers will have the option to contract with local health care systems to provide hospital services or they can enroll and bill as hospitals during the emergency, the fact sheet noted. They will be able to perform hospital services such as cancer procedures, trauma surgeries, and other essential surgeries.
CMS also is waiving the limit on the number of beds a doctor-owned hospital can have.
Additionally, for Medicare patients who may be homebound, CMS will now pay for a laboratory technician to make a home visit to collect a specimen for COVID-19 testing, and hospitals will be able to conduct testing in homes or other community-based settings under certain circumstances.
CMS also is taking actions aimed at expanding the health care workforce.
For instance, the agency is issuing a “blanket waiver” that allows hospitals to provide benefits to medical staff, including multiple daily meals, laundry service for personal clothing, or child care services while the staff is at the hospital providing patient care, according to the fact sheet.
Teaching hospitals will also receive more flexibility in using residents to provide health care services under the virtual direction of a teaching physician, who may be available through audio/video technology.
CMS also is temporarily eliminating paperwork requirements, and allowed greater use of verbal orders, to allow clinicians to spend more time on direct patient care.
On the device/equipment side, Medicare will cover respiratory-related devices and equipment “for any medical reason determined by clinicians,” according to the fact sheet, rather than only under certain circumstances.
And on the telehealth side, CMS is expanding the number of services that it will pay for via telehealth by more than 80, including emergency department visits, initial nursing facility and discharge visits, and home visits, which must be provided by a clinician that is allowed to provide telehealth. CMS will allow the use of commonly available interactive apps with audio and video, as well as audio-only phones.
The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services has announced a wide range of temporary regulatory moves aimed at helping hospitals and health systems handle the surge of COVID-19 patients.
“We are waiving a wide and unprecedented range of regulatory requirements to equip the American health care system with maximum flexibility to deal with an influx of cases,” CMS Administrator Seema Verma said during a March 30 conference call with reporters. “Many health care systems may not need these waivers and they shouldn’t use them if the situation doesn’t warrant it. But the flexibilities are there if it does. At a time of crisis, no regulatory barriers should stand in the way of patient care.”
Among the changes is an expansion of the venues in which health care systems and hospitals can provide services.
Federal regulations call for hospitals to provide services within their own buildings, raising concerns as to whether there will be enough capacity to handle the anticipated COVID-19 caseload.
“Under CMS’s temporary new rules, hospitals will be able to transfer patients to outside facilities, such as ambulatory surgery centers, inpatient rehabilitation hospitals, hotels, and dormitories, while still receiving hospital payments under Medicare,” CMS stated in a fact sheet highlighting the regulatory changes. “For example, a health care system can use a hotel to take care of patients needing less intensive care while using inpatient beds for COVID-19 patients.”
With these waivers, hospital systems will not have to rely on the Federal Emergency Management Agency to set up temporary hospitals and can move ahead using available community resources to help deal with the expected surge, Ms. Verma said.
These regulatory changes will be effect for the duration of the public health emergency, according to Ms. Verma.
Ambulatory surgery centers will have the option to contract with local health care systems to provide hospital services or they can enroll and bill as hospitals during the emergency, the fact sheet noted. They will be able to perform hospital services such as cancer procedures, trauma surgeries, and other essential surgeries.
CMS also is waiving the limit on the number of beds a doctor-owned hospital can have.
Additionally, for Medicare patients who may be homebound, CMS will now pay for a laboratory technician to make a home visit to collect a specimen for COVID-19 testing, and hospitals will be able to conduct testing in homes or other community-based settings under certain circumstances.
CMS also is taking actions aimed at expanding the health care workforce.
For instance, the agency is issuing a “blanket waiver” that allows hospitals to provide benefits to medical staff, including multiple daily meals, laundry service for personal clothing, or child care services while the staff is at the hospital providing patient care, according to the fact sheet.
Teaching hospitals will also receive more flexibility in using residents to provide health care services under the virtual direction of a teaching physician, who may be available through audio/video technology.
CMS also is temporarily eliminating paperwork requirements, and allowed greater use of verbal orders, to allow clinicians to spend more time on direct patient care.
On the device/equipment side, Medicare will cover respiratory-related devices and equipment “for any medical reason determined by clinicians,” according to the fact sheet, rather than only under certain circumstances.
And on the telehealth side, CMS is expanding the number of services that it will pay for via telehealth by more than 80, including emergency department visits, initial nursing facility and discharge visits, and home visits, which must be provided by a clinician that is allowed to provide telehealth. CMS will allow the use of commonly available interactive apps with audio and video, as well as audio-only phones.
The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services has announced a wide range of temporary regulatory moves aimed at helping hospitals and health systems handle the surge of COVID-19 patients.
“We are waiving a wide and unprecedented range of regulatory requirements to equip the American health care system with maximum flexibility to deal with an influx of cases,” CMS Administrator Seema Verma said during a March 30 conference call with reporters. “Many health care systems may not need these waivers and they shouldn’t use them if the situation doesn’t warrant it. But the flexibilities are there if it does. At a time of crisis, no regulatory barriers should stand in the way of patient care.”
Among the changes is an expansion of the venues in which health care systems and hospitals can provide services.
Federal regulations call for hospitals to provide services within their own buildings, raising concerns as to whether there will be enough capacity to handle the anticipated COVID-19 caseload.
“Under CMS’s temporary new rules, hospitals will be able to transfer patients to outside facilities, such as ambulatory surgery centers, inpatient rehabilitation hospitals, hotels, and dormitories, while still receiving hospital payments under Medicare,” CMS stated in a fact sheet highlighting the regulatory changes. “For example, a health care system can use a hotel to take care of patients needing less intensive care while using inpatient beds for COVID-19 patients.”
With these waivers, hospital systems will not have to rely on the Federal Emergency Management Agency to set up temporary hospitals and can move ahead using available community resources to help deal with the expected surge, Ms. Verma said.
These regulatory changes will be effect for the duration of the public health emergency, according to Ms. Verma.
Ambulatory surgery centers will have the option to contract with local health care systems to provide hospital services or they can enroll and bill as hospitals during the emergency, the fact sheet noted. They will be able to perform hospital services such as cancer procedures, trauma surgeries, and other essential surgeries.
CMS also is waiving the limit on the number of beds a doctor-owned hospital can have.
Additionally, for Medicare patients who may be homebound, CMS will now pay for a laboratory technician to make a home visit to collect a specimen for COVID-19 testing, and hospitals will be able to conduct testing in homes or other community-based settings under certain circumstances.
CMS also is taking actions aimed at expanding the health care workforce.
For instance, the agency is issuing a “blanket waiver” that allows hospitals to provide benefits to medical staff, including multiple daily meals, laundry service for personal clothing, or child care services while the staff is at the hospital providing patient care, according to the fact sheet.
Teaching hospitals will also receive more flexibility in using residents to provide health care services under the virtual direction of a teaching physician, who may be available through audio/video technology.
CMS also is temporarily eliminating paperwork requirements, and allowed greater use of verbal orders, to allow clinicians to spend more time on direct patient care.
On the device/equipment side, Medicare will cover respiratory-related devices and equipment “for any medical reason determined by clinicians,” according to the fact sheet, rather than only under certain circumstances.
And on the telehealth side, CMS is expanding the number of services that it will pay for via telehealth by more than 80, including emergency department visits, initial nursing facility and discharge visits, and home visits, which must be provided by a clinician that is allowed to provide telehealth. CMS will allow the use of commonly available interactive apps with audio and video, as well as audio-only phones.
White House expands seniors’ telehealth for COVID-19
“Medicare can pay for office, hospital, and other visits furnished via telehealth across the country and including in patients’ places of residence, starting March 6, 2020,” the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services said in a fact sheet issued March 17.
Some of the existing benefits were previously limited to rural communities.
“These services can also be provided in a variety of settings, including nursing homes, hospital outpatient departments, and more,” said CMS Administrator Seema Verma during a March 17 White House press briefing on administration actions to contain the spread of COVID-19.
That means that seniors can continue to receive their routine care without having to leave the home and risk infection, or they can get medical guidance if they have mild symptoms, which would help mitigate the spread to others.
“This shift is very important for clinicians and providers who, over the coming weeks, will face considerable strain on their time and resources,” Dr. Verma said. “[It] allows the health care system to prioritize care for those who have more needs or who are in dire need, and it also preserves protective equipment.”
A range of providers will be able to deliver telehealth services, including doctors, nurse practitioners, clinical psychologists, and licensed clinical social workers. Visits using telehealth services will be considered the same as in-person visits and will be paid as if the patient were seen in the office.
This expansion of Medicare telehealth services will continue for the duration of the COVID-19 public health emergency.
“In addition, the [Health & Human Services’] office of inspector general is providing flexibility for health care providers to reduce or waive cost-sharing for telehealth visits paid by federal health care programs,” the fact sheet states.Key to the expansion is that it will cover the entire United States and will not be limited to rural areas.
Dr. Verma also noted that the administration “will be temporarily suspending certain HIPAA requirements so that doctors can provide telehealth with their own phones.”
She added that state Medicaid agencies can expand their telehealth services without the approval of CMS during this emergency.
AGA has released a guide to commercial telehealth COVID-19 coding policies (http://ow.ly/8CIH30qsU0B) that supplements their guide to public payors.
“Medicare can pay for office, hospital, and other visits furnished via telehealth across the country and including in patients’ places of residence, starting March 6, 2020,” the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services said in a fact sheet issued March 17.
Some of the existing benefits were previously limited to rural communities.
“These services can also be provided in a variety of settings, including nursing homes, hospital outpatient departments, and more,” said CMS Administrator Seema Verma during a March 17 White House press briefing on administration actions to contain the spread of COVID-19.
That means that seniors can continue to receive their routine care without having to leave the home and risk infection, or they can get medical guidance if they have mild symptoms, which would help mitigate the spread to others.
“This shift is very important for clinicians and providers who, over the coming weeks, will face considerable strain on their time and resources,” Dr. Verma said. “[It] allows the health care system to prioritize care for those who have more needs or who are in dire need, and it also preserves protective equipment.”
A range of providers will be able to deliver telehealth services, including doctors, nurse practitioners, clinical psychologists, and licensed clinical social workers. Visits using telehealth services will be considered the same as in-person visits and will be paid as if the patient were seen in the office.
This expansion of Medicare telehealth services will continue for the duration of the COVID-19 public health emergency.
“In addition, the [Health & Human Services’] office of inspector general is providing flexibility for health care providers to reduce or waive cost-sharing for telehealth visits paid by federal health care programs,” the fact sheet states.Key to the expansion is that it will cover the entire United States and will not be limited to rural areas.
Dr. Verma also noted that the administration “will be temporarily suspending certain HIPAA requirements so that doctors can provide telehealth with their own phones.”
She added that state Medicaid agencies can expand their telehealth services without the approval of CMS during this emergency.
AGA has released a guide to commercial telehealth COVID-19 coding policies (http://ow.ly/8CIH30qsU0B) that supplements their guide to public payors.
“Medicare can pay for office, hospital, and other visits furnished via telehealth across the country and including in patients’ places of residence, starting March 6, 2020,” the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services said in a fact sheet issued March 17.
Some of the existing benefits were previously limited to rural communities.
“These services can also be provided in a variety of settings, including nursing homes, hospital outpatient departments, and more,” said CMS Administrator Seema Verma during a March 17 White House press briefing on administration actions to contain the spread of COVID-19.
That means that seniors can continue to receive their routine care without having to leave the home and risk infection, or they can get medical guidance if they have mild symptoms, which would help mitigate the spread to others.
“This shift is very important for clinicians and providers who, over the coming weeks, will face considerable strain on their time and resources,” Dr. Verma said. “[It] allows the health care system to prioritize care for those who have more needs or who are in dire need, and it also preserves protective equipment.”
A range of providers will be able to deliver telehealth services, including doctors, nurse practitioners, clinical psychologists, and licensed clinical social workers. Visits using telehealth services will be considered the same as in-person visits and will be paid as if the patient were seen in the office.
This expansion of Medicare telehealth services will continue for the duration of the COVID-19 public health emergency.
“In addition, the [Health & Human Services’] office of inspector general is providing flexibility for health care providers to reduce or waive cost-sharing for telehealth visits paid by federal health care programs,” the fact sheet states.Key to the expansion is that it will cover the entire United States and will not be limited to rural areas.
Dr. Verma also noted that the administration “will be temporarily suspending certain HIPAA requirements so that doctors can provide telehealth with their own phones.”
She added that state Medicaid agencies can expand their telehealth services without the approval of CMS during this emergency.
AGA has released a guide to commercial telehealth COVID-19 coding policies (http://ow.ly/8CIH30qsU0B) that supplements their guide to public payors.
FDA to allow alternative respiratory devices to treat COVID-19
document issued March 22.
“Whenever possible, health care facilities should use FDA-cleared conventional/standard full-featured ventilators when necessary to support patients with respiratory failure, or a device subject to an Emergency Use Authorization (EUA), if any,” FDA stated in a guidance“However, to help ensure the availability of the greatest possible number of devices for this purpose, ... FDA does not intend to object to limited modifications to indications, claims, functionality, or to the hardware, software, or materials of FDA-cleared devices used to support patients with respiratory failure or respiratory insufficiency, without prior submission of a premarket notification” for the duration of the declared national emergency related to the COVID-19 pandemic.
FDA Commissioner Stephen Hahn, MD, said in a statement that the agency is doing everything it can to support patients, health care professionals, and others during this pandemic.
“One of the most impactful steps we can take is to help with access and availability to life-saving medical treatments,” he said. “Our policy issued today demonstrates our ability to react and adapt quickly during this pandemic and help very ill patients access the lifesaving ventilator support they need. To do that, we are providing maximum regulatory flexibility to facilitate an increase in ventilator inventory, while still providing crucial FDA oversight. We believe this action will immediately increase ventilator availability.”
The document identified examples of where modifications would not create undue risk, including the use of powered emergency ventilators and anesthesia gas machines for patients needing mechanical ventilation; the use of ventilators outside of their cleared environment; the use of devices used to treat patients with sleep apnea, such as CPAPs and BiPAPs, to treat respiratory insufficiency when appropriate design mitigations are in place to minimize aerosolization; and the use of oxygen concentrators for primary supply when medically necessary and clinically appropriate.
The agency also is allowing for changes to the hardware, software, and materials to FDA-cleared ventilators and anesthesia gas machines, such as modifications to motors, batteries, or other electrical components; material changes to components in the gas pathways or with other patient tissue contact; the introduction of filtration to minimize aerosolization; and other hardware and software modifications.
FDA is also allowing for products to be used past their indicated shelf life.
document issued March 22.
“Whenever possible, health care facilities should use FDA-cleared conventional/standard full-featured ventilators when necessary to support patients with respiratory failure, or a device subject to an Emergency Use Authorization (EUA), if any,” FDA stated in a guidance“However, to help ensure the availability of the greatest possible number of devices for this purpose, ... FDA does not intend to object to limited modifications to indications, claims, functionality, or to the hardware, software, or materials of FDA-cleared devices used to support patients with respiratory failure or respiratory insufficiency, without prior submission of a premarket notification” for the duration of the declared national emergency related to the COVID-19 pandemic.
FDA Commissioner Stephen Hahn, MD, said in a statement that the agency is doing everything it can to support patients, health care professionals, and others during this pandemic.
“One of the most impactful steps we can take is to help with access and availability to life-saving medical treatments,” he said. “Our policy issued today demonstrates our ability to react and adapt quickly during this pandemic and help very ill patients access the lifesaving ventilator support they need. To do that, we are providing maximum regulatory flexibility to facilitate an increase in ventilator inventory, while still providing crucial FDA oversight. We believe this action will immediately increase ventilator availability.”
The document identified examples of where modifications would not create undue risk, including the use of powered emergency ventilators and anesthesia gas machines for patients needing mechanical ventilation; the use of ventilators outside of their cleared environment; the use of devices used to treat patients with sleep apnea, such as CPAPs and BiPAPs, to treat respiratory insufficiency when appropriate design mitigations are in place to minimize aerosolization; and the use of oxygen concentrators for primary supply when medically necessary and clinically appropriate.
The agency also is allowing for changes to the hardware, software, and materials to FDA-cleared ventilators and anesthesia gas machines, such as modifications to motors, batteries, or other electrical components; material changes to components in the gas pathways or with other patient tissue contact; the introduction of filtration to minimize aerosolization; and other hardware and software modifications.
FDA is also allowing for products to be used past their indicated shelf life.
document issued March 22.
“Whenever possible, health care facilities should use FDA-cleared conventional/standard full-featured ventilators when necessary to support patients with respiratory failure, or a device subject to an Emergency Use Authorization (EUA), if any,” FDA stated in a guidance“However, to help ensure the availability of the greatest possible number of devices for this purpose, ... FDA does not intend to object to limited modifications to indications, claims, functionality, or to the hardware, software, or materials of FDA-cleared devices used to support patients with respiratory failure or respiratory insufficiency, without prior submission of a premarket notification” for the duration of the declared national emergency related to the COVID-19 pandemic.
FDA Commissioner Stephen Hahn, MD, said in a statement that the agency is doing everything it can to support patients, health care professionals, and others during this pandemic.
“One of the most impactful steps we can take is to help with access and availability to life-saving medical treatments,” he said. “Our policy issued today demonstrates our ability to react and adapt quickly during this pandemic and help very ill patients access the lifesaving ventilator support they need. To do that, we are providing maximum regulatory flexibility to facilitate an increase in ventilator inventory, while still providing crucial FDA oversight. We believe this action will immediately increase ventilator availability.”
The document identified examples of where modifications would not create undue risk, including the use of powered emergency ventilators and anesthesia gas machines for patients needing mechanical ventilation; the use of ventilators outside of their cleared environment; the use of devices used to treat patients with sleep apnea, such as CPAPs and BiPAPs, to treat respiratory insufficiency when appropriate design mitigations are in place to minimize aerosolization; and the use of oxygen concentrators for primary supply when medically necessary and clinically appropriate.
The agency also is allowing for changes to the hardware, software, and materials to FDA-cleared ventilators and anesthesia gas machines, such as modifications to motors, batteries, or other electrical components; material changes to components in the gas pathways or with other patient tissue contact; the introduction of filtration to minimize aerosolization; and other hardware and software modifications.
FDA is also allowing for products to be used past their indicated shelf life.
Three COVID-19 rapid diagnostic tests get FDA thumbs-up
The first authorization, announced by the agency on March 21, was for the Xpert Xpress SARS-CoV-2 test, a rapid molecular diagnostic test for qualitative detection of SARS-CoV-2, the virus causing COVID-19.
The test, manufactured by Cepheid, has a detection time of 45 minutes and has been designed to operate on any of the company’s more than 23,000 automated GeneXpert Systems worldwide, according to a statement from the company.
The agency said in its EUA approval document the test is for a “qualitative detection of nucleic acid from the SARS-CoV-2 in nasopharyngeal swab and/or nasal wash/aspirate specimens collected from patients who are suspected of having COVID-19 infection.” Positive results are indicative of an infection but do not rule out other potential infections, it noted.
The company plans to roll out the test by March 30, according to the FDA.
Cepheid said in a statement that it has almost 5,000 GeneXpert systems in the United States that are capable of point-of-care testing and ready for use in hospitals. “Our automated systems do not require users to have specialty training to perform testing – they are capable of running 24/7, with many systems already doing so today,” Warren Kocmond, the company’s president, said in the statement.
FDA Commissioner Stephen Hahn, MD said in a statement that the authorization marked “an important step in expanding the availability of testing and, importantly, rapid results. Point-of-care testing means that results are delivered to the patient in the patient-care settings, like hospitals, urgent care centers, and emergency rooms, instead of samples being sent to a laboratory. With today’s authorization, there is now an option for testing at the point of care, which enables patient access to more immediate results.”
On March 23, the agency issued an emergency use authorization to bioMerieux subsidiary BioFire Defense LLC for its BIOFIRE COVID-19 test, which detects SARS-CoV-2 from a nasopharyngeal swab in about 45 minutes.
The test was developed with funding from the U.S. Department of Defense.
“Positive results are indicative of the presence of SARS-CoV-2 RNA; clinical correlation with patient history and other diagnostic information is necessary to determine patient infection status,” the agency said in its approval document. It again noted that positive results did not rule out bacterial infection or coinfection with other viruses.
Also on March 23, the agency issued an EUA to Mesa Biotech for its Accula SARS-CoV-2 test, which gives COVID-19 diagnostic results in 30 minutes.
The test is indicated for “qualitative, visual detection of nucleic acid from the SARS-CoV-2 in throat swab and nasal swab specimens combined, collected from patients suspected of COVID-19 by their health care provider,” according to the FDA approval document. “The SARS-CoV-2 nucleic acid is generally detectable in throat and nasal swab specimens during the acute phase of infection. Positive results are indicative of the presence of SARS-CoV-2 nucleic acid; clinical correlation with patient history and other diagnostic information is necessary to determine patient infection status. Positive results do not rule out bacterial infection or coinfection with other viruses.”
Mesa Biotech said in a statement that the test is designed for point-of-care use, including at temporary screening facilities, physician office labs, urgent care, and long-term nursing facilities.
“Our test will provide a highly accessible means for health care professionals to access laboratory quality results close in their office to aid in the decision to isolate, treat, or dismiss potential carriers of the virus,” Hong Cai, the CEO and cofounder of Mesa Biotech, said in a statement. “The potential to reduce the growing strain on our nation’s hospitals is tremendous.”
In separate letters to the three companies notifying them of the authorizations, the FDA said the emergency use of the products met the criteria for issuances of authorization because the SARS-CoV-2 can cause a serious or life-threatening disease or condition; it was “reasonable to believe
that [the] product may be effective in diagnosing COVID-19; and there is no “adequate, approved, and available alternative” to the emergency use of the three products.
The first authorization, announced by the agency on March 21, was for the Xpert Xpress SARS-CoV-2 test, a rapid molecular diagnostic test for qualitative detection of SARS-CoV-2, the virus causing COVID-19.
The test, manufactured by Cepheid, has a detection time of 45 minutes and has been designed to operate on any of the company’s more than 23,000 automated GeneXpert Systems worldwide, according to a statement from the company.
The agency said in its EUA approval document the test is for a “qualitative detection of nucleic acid from the SARS-CoV-2 in nasopharyngeal swab and/or nasal wash/aspirate specimens collected from patients who are suspected of having COVID-19 infection.” Positive results are indicative of an infection but do not rule out other potential infections, it noted.
The company plans to roll out the test by March 30, according to the FDA.
Cepheid said in a statement that it has almost 5,000 GeneXpert systems in the United States that are capable of point-of-care testing and ready for use in hospitals. “Our automated systems do not require users to have specialty training to perform testing – they are capable of running 24/7, with many systems already doing so today,” Warren Kocmond, the company’s president, said in the statement.
FDA Commissioner Stephen Hahn, MD said in a statement that the authorization marked “an important step in expanding the availability of testing and, importantly, rapid results. Point-of-care testing means that results are delivered to the patient in the patient-care settings, like hospitals, urgent care centers, and emergency rooms, instead of samples being sent to a laboratory. With today’s authorization, there is now an option for testing at the point of care, which enables patient access to more immediate results.”
On March 23, the agency issued an emergency use authorization to bioMerieux subsidiary BioFire Defense LLC for its BIOFIRE COVID-19 test, which detects SARS-CoV-2 from a nasopharyngeal swab in about 45 minutes.
The test was developed with funding from the U.S. Department of Defense.
“Positive results are indicative of the presence of SARS-CoV-2 RNA; clinical correlation with patient history and other diagnostic information is necessary to determine patient infection status,” the agency said in its approval document. It again noted that positive results did not rule out bacterial infection or coinfection with other viruses.
Also on March 23, the agency issued an EUA to Mesa Biotech for its Accula SARS-CoV-2 test, which gives COVID-19 diagnostic results in 30 minutes.
The test is indicated for “qualitative, visual detection of nucleic acid from the SARS-CoV-2 in throat swab and nasal swab specimens combined, collected from patients suspected of COVID-19 by their health care provider,” according to the FDA approval document. “The SARS-CoV-2 nucleic acid is generally detectable in throat and nasal swab specimens during the acute phase of infection. Positive results are indicative of the presence of SARS-CoV-2 nucleic acid; clinical correlation with patient history and other diagnostic information is necessary to determine patient infection status. Positive results do not rule out bacterial infection or coinfection with other viruses.”
Mesa Biotech said in a statement that the test is designed for point-of-care use, including at temporary screening facilities, physician office labs, urgent care, and long-term nursing facilities.
“Our test will provide a highly accessible means for health care professionals to access laboratory quality results close in their office to aid in the decision to isolate, treat, or dismiss potential carriers of the virus,” Hong Cai, the CEO and cofounder of Mesa Biotech, said in a statement. “The potential to reduce the growing strain on our nation’s hospitals is tremendous.”
In separate letters to the three companies notifying them of the authorizations, the FDA said the emergency use of the products met the criteria for issuances of authorization because the SARS-CoV-2 can cause a serious or life-threatening disease or condition; it was “reasonable to believe
that [the] product may be effective in diagnosing COVID-19; and there is no “adequate, approved, and available alternative” to the emergency use of the three products.
The first authorization, announced by the agency on March 21, was for the Xpert Xpress SARS-CoV-2 test, a rapid molecular diagnostic test for qualitative detection of SARS-CoV-2, the virus causing COVID-19.
The test, manufactured by Cepheid, has a detection time of 45 minutes and has been designed to operate on any of the company’s more than 23,000 automated GeneXpert Systems worldwide, according to a statement from the company.
The agency said in its EUA approval document the test is for a “qualitative detection of nucleic acid from the SARS-CoV-2 in nasopharyngeal swab and/or nasal wash/aspirate specimens collected from patients who are suspected of having COVID-19 infection.” Positive results are indicative of an infection but do not rule out other potential infections, it noted.
The company plans to roll out the test by March 30, according to the FDA.
Cepheid said in a statement that it has almost 5,000 GeneXpert systems in the United States that are capable of point-of-care testing and ready for use in hospitals. “Our automated systems do not require users to have specialty training to perform testing – they are capable of running 24/7, with many systems already doing so today,” Warren Kocmond, the company’s president, said in the statement.
FDA Commissioner Stephen Hahn, MD said in a statement that the authorization marked “an important step in expanding the availability of testing and, importantly, rapid results. Point-of-care testing means that results are delivered to the patient in the patient-care settings, like hospitals, urgent care centers, and emergency rooms, instead of samples being sent to a laboratory. With today’s authorization, there is now an option for testing at the point of care, which enables patient access to more immediate results.”
On March 23, the agency issued an emergency use authorization to bioMerieux subsidiary BioFire Defense LLC for its BIOFIRE COVID-19 test, which detects SARS-CoV-2 from a nasopharyngeal swab in about 45 minutes.
The test was developed with funding from the U.S. Department of Defense.
“Positive results are indicative of the presence of SARS-CoV-2 RNA; clinical correlation with patient history and other diagnostic information is necessary to determine patient infection status,” the agency said in its approval document. It again noted that positive results did not rule out bacterial infection or coinfection with other viruses.
Also on March 23, the agency issued an EUA to Mesa Biotech for its Accula SARS-CoV-2 test, which gives COVID-19 diagnostic results in 30 minutes.
The test is indicated for “qualitative, visual detection of nucleic acid from the SARS-CoV-2 in throat swab and nasal swab specimens combined, collected from patients suspected of COVID-19 by their health care provider,” according to the FDA approval document. “The SARS-CoV-2 nucleic acid is generally detectable in throat and nasal swab specimens during the acute phase of infection. Positive results are indicative of the presence of SARS-CoV-2 nucleic acid; clinical correlation with patient history and other diagnostic information is necessary to determine patient infection status. Positive results do not rule out bacterial infection or coinfection with other viruses.”
Mesa Biotech said in a statement that the test is designed for point-of-care use, including at temporary screening facilities, physician office labs, urgent care, and long-term nursing facilities.
“Our test will provide a highly accessible means for health care professionals to access laboratory quality results close in their office to aid in the decision to isolate, treat, or dismiss potential carriers of the virus,” Hong Cai, the CEO and cofounder of Mesa Biotech, said in a statement. “The potential to reduce the growing strain on our nation’s hospitals is tremendous.”
In separate letters to the three companies notifying them of the authorizations, the FDA said the emergency use of the products met the criteria for issuances of authorization because the SARS-CoV-2 can cause a serious or life-threatening disease or condition; it was “reasonable to believe
that [the] product may be effective in diagnosing COVID-19; and there is no “adequate, approved, and available alternative” to the emergency use of the three products.
Feds tout drug candidates to treat COVID-19
Therapeutics could be available in the near term to help treat COVID-19 patients, according to President Donald Trump.
During a March 19 press briefing, the president highlighted two drugs that could be put into play in the battle against the virus.
The first product is hydroxychloroquine (Plaquenil), a drug used to treat malaria and severe arthritis, is showing promise as a possible treatment for COVID-19.
“The nice part is it’s been around for a long time, so we know that if things go as planned, it’s not going to kill anybody,” President Trump said. “When you go with a brand-new drug, you don’t know that that’s going to happen,” adding that it has shown “very, very encouraging” results as a potential treatment for COVID-19.
He said this drug will be made available “almost immediately.” During the press conference, Food and Drug Administration Commissioner Stephen M. Hahn, MD, suggested the drug would be made available in the context of a large pragmatic clinical trial, enabling the FDA to collect data on it and make a long-term decision on its viability to treat COVID-19.
Dr. Hahn also pointed to the Gilead drug remdesivir – a drug originally developed to fight Ebola and currently undergoing clinical trials – as another possible candidate for a near-term therapeutic to help treat patients while vaccine development occurs.
Dr. Hahn noted that, while the agency is striving to provide regulatory flexibility, safety is paramount. “Let me make one thing clear: FDA’s responsibility to the American people is to ensure that products are safe and effective and that we are continuing to do that.”
He noted that if these and other experimental drugs show promise, physicians can request them under “compassionate use” provisions.
“We have criteria for that, and very speedy approval for that,” Dr. Hahn said. “The important thing about compassionate use ... this is even beyond ‘right to try.’ [We] get to collect the information about that.”
He noted that the FDA is looking at other drugs that are approved for other indications. The examinations of existing therapies are meant to be a bridge as companies work to develop new therapeutics as well as vaccines.
Dr. Hahn also highlighted a cross-agency effort on convalescent plasma, which uses the plasma from a patient who has recovered from COVID-19 infection to help patients fight the virus. “This is a possible treatment; this is not a proven treatment, “ Dr. Hahn said.
Takeda is working on an immunoglobulin treatment based on its intravenous immunoglobulin product Gammagard Liquid.
Julie Kim, president of plasma-derived therapies at Takeda, said the company should be able to go straight into testing efficacy of this approach, given the known safety profile of the treatment. She made the comments during a March 18 press briefing hosted by Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America (PhRMA). Ms. Kim did caution that this would not be a mass market kind of treatment, as supply would depend on plasma donations from individuals who have fully recovered from a COVID-19 infection. She estimated that the treatment could be available to a targeted group of high-risk patients in 9-18 months.
PhRMA president and CEO Stephen Ubl said the industry is “literally working around the clock” on four key areas: development of new diagnostics, identification of potential existing treatments to make available through trials and compassionate use, development of novel therapies, and development of a vaccine.
There are more than 80 clinical trials underway on existing treatments that could have approval to treat COVID-19 in a matter of months, he said.
Mikael Dolsten, MD, PhD, chief scientific officer at Pfizer, said that the company is working with Germany-based BioNTech SE to develop an mRNA-based vaccine for COVID-19, with testing expected to begin in Germany, China, and the United States by the end of April. The company also is screening antiviral compounds that were previously in development against other coronavirus diseases.
Clement Lewin, PhD, associate vice president of R&D strategy for vaccines at Sanofi, said the company has partnered with Regeneron to launch a trial of sarilumab (Kevzara), a drug approved to treat moderate to severe rheumatoid arthritis, to help treat COVID-19.
Meanwhile, Lilly Chief Scientific Officer Daniel Skovronsky, MD, PhD, noted that his company is collaborating with AbCellera to develop therapeutics using monoclonal antibodies isolated from one of the first U.S. patients who recovered from COVID-19. He said the goal is to begin testing within the next 4 months.
Separately, World Health Organization Director General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus announced during a March 18 press conference that it is spearheading a large international study examining a number of different treatments in what has been dubbed the SOLIDARITY trial. Argentina, Bahrain, Canada, France, Iran, Norway, South Africa, Spain, Switzerland, and Thailand have signed on to be a part of the trial, with more countries expected to participate.
“I continue to be inspired by the many demonstrations of solidarity from all over the world,” he said. “These and other efforts give me hope that together, we can and will prevail. This virus is presenting us with an unprecedented threat. But it’s also an unprecedented opportunity to come together as one against a common enemy, an enemy against humanity.”
Therapeutics could be available in the near term to help treat COVID-19 patients, according to President Donald Trump.
During a March 19 press briefing, the president highlighted two drugs that could be put into play in the battle against the virus.
The first product is hydroxychloroquine (Plaquenil), a drug used to treat malaria and severe arthritis, is showing promise as a possible treatment for COVID-19.
“The nice part is it’s been around for a long time, so we know that if things go as planned, it’s not going to kill anybody,” President Trump said. “When you go with a brand-new drug, you don’t know that that’s going to happen,” adding that it has shown “very, very encouraging” results as a potential treatment for COVID-19.
He said this drug will be made available “almost immediately.” During the press conference, Food and Drug Administration Commissioner Stephen M. Hahn, MD, suggested the drug would be made available in the context of a large pragmatic clinical trial, enabling the FDA to collect data on it and make a long-term decision on its viability to treat COVID-19.
Dr. Hahn also pointed to the Gilead drug remdesivir – a drug originally developed to fight Ebola and currently undergoing clinical trials – as another possible candidate for a near-term therapeutic to help treat patients while vaccine development occurs.
Dr. Hahn noted that, while the agency is striving to provide regulatory flexibility, safety is paramount. “Let me make one thing clear: FDA’s responsibility to the American people is to ensure that products are safe and effective and that we are continuing to do that.”
He noted that if these and other experimental drugs show promise, physicians can request them under “compassionate use” provisions.
“We have criteria for that, and very speedy approval for that,” Dr. Hahn said. “The important thing about compassionate use ... this is even beyond ‘right to try.’ [We] get to collect the information about that.”
He noted that the FDA is looking at other drugs that are approved for other indications. The examinations of existing therapies are meant to be a bridge as companies work to develop new therapeutics as well as vaccines.
Dr. Hahn also highlighted a cross-agency effort on convalescent plasma, which uses the plasma from a patient who has recovered from COVID-19 infection to help patients fight the virus. “This is a possible treatment; this is not a proven treatment, “ Dr. Hahn said.
Takeda is working on an immunoglobulin treatment based on its intravenous immunoglobulin product Gammagard Liquid.
Julie Kim, president of plasma-derived therapies at Takeda, said the company should be able to go straight into testing efficacy of this approach, given the known safety profile of the treatment. She made the comments during a March 18 press briefing hosted by Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America (PhRMA). Ms. Kim did caution that this would not be a mass market kind of treatment, as supply would depend on plasma donations from individuals who have fully recovered from a COVID-19 infection. She estimated that the treatment could be available to a targeted group of high-risk patients in 9-18 months.
PhRMA president and CEO Stephen Ubl said the industry is “literally working around the clock” on four key areas: development of new diagnostics, identification of potential existing treatments to make available through trials and compassionate use, development of novel therapies, and development of a vaccine.
There are more than 80 clinical trials underway on existing treatments that could have approval to treat COVID-19 in a matter of months, he said.
Mikael Dolsten, MD, PhD, chief scientific officer at Pfizer, said that the company is working with Germany-based BioNTech SE to develop an mRNA-based vaccine for COVID-19, with testing expected to begin in Germany, China, and the United States by the end of April. The company also is screening antiviral compounds that were previously in development against other coronavirus diseases.
Clement Lewin, PhD, associate vice president of R&D strategy for vaccines at Sanofi, said the company has partnered with Regeneron to launch a trial of sarilumab (Kevzara), a drug approved to treat moderate to severe rheumatoid arthritis, to help treat COVID-19.
Meanwhile, Lilly Chief Scientific Officer Daniel Skovronsky, MD, PhD, noted that his company is collaborating with AbCellera to develop therapeutics using monoclonal antibodies isolated from one of the first U.S. patients who recovered from COVID-19. He said the goal is to begin testing within the next 4 months.
Separately, World Health Organization Director General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus announced during a March 18 press conference that it is spearheading a large international study examining a number of different treatments in what has been dubbed the SOLIDARITY trial. Argentina, Bahrain, Canada, France, Iran, Norway, South Africa, Spain, Switzerland, and Thailand have signed on to be a part of the trial, with more countries expected to participate.
“I continue to be inspired by the many demonstrations of solidarity from all over the world,” he said. “These and other efforts give me hope that together, we can and will prevail. This virus is presenting us with an unprecedented threat. But it’s also an unprecedented opportunity to come together as one against a common enemy, an enemy against humanity.”
Therapeutics could be available in the near term to help treat COVID-19 patients, according to President Donald Trump.
During a March 19 press briefing, the president highlighted two drugs that could be put into play in the battle against the virus.
The first product is hydroxychloroquine (Plaquenil), a drug used to treat malaria and severe arthritis, is showing promise as a possible treatment for COVID-19.
“The nice part is it’s been around for a long time, so we know that if things go as planned, it’s not going to kill anybody,” President Trump said. “When you go with a brand-new drug, you don’t know that that’s going to happen,” adding that it has shown “very, very encouraging” results as a potential treatment for COVID-19.
He said this drug will be made available “almost immediately.” During the press conference, Food and Drug Administration Commissioner Stephen M. Hahn, MD, suggested the drug would be made available in the context of a large pragmatic clinical trial, enabling the FDA to collect data on it and make a long-term decision on its viability to treat COVID-19.
Dr. Hahn also pointed to the Gilead drug remdesivir – a drug originally developed to fight Ebola and currently undergoing clinical trials – as another possible candidate for a near-term therapeutic to help treat patients while vaccine development occurs.
Dr. Hahn noted that, while the agency is striving to provide regulatory flexibility, safety is paramount. “Let me make one thing clear: FDA’s responsibility to the American people is to ensure that products are safe and effective and that we are continuing to do that.”
He noted that if these and other experimental drugs show promise, physicians can request them under “compassionate use” provisions.
“We have criteria for that, and very speedy approval for that,” Dr. Hahn said. “The important thing about compassionate use ... this is even beyond ‘right to try.’ [We] get to collect the information about that.”
He noted that the FDA is looking at other drugs that are approved for other indications. The examinations of existing therapies are meant to be a bridge as companies work to develop new therapeutics as well as vaccines.
Dr. Hahn also highlighted a cross-agency effort on convalescent plasma, which uses the plasma from a patient who has recovered from COVID-19 infection to help patients fight the virus. “This is a possible treatment; this is not a proven treatment, “ Dr. Hahn said.
Takeda is working on an immunoglobulin treatment based on its intravenous immunoglobulin product Gammagard Liquid.
Julie Kim, president of plasma-derived therapies at Takeda, said the company should be able to go straight into testing efficacy of this approach, given the known safety profile of the treatment. She made the comments during a March 18 press briefing hosted by Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America (PhRMA). Ms. Kim did caution that this would not be a mass market kind of treatment, as supply would depend on plasma donations from individuals who have fully recovered from a COVID-19 infection. She estimated that the treatment could be available to a targeted group of high-risk patients in 9-18 months.
PhRMA president and CEO Stephen Ubl said the industry is “literally working around the clock” on four key areas: development of new diagnostics, identification of potential existing treatments to make available through trials and compassionate use, development of novel therapies, and development of a vaccine.
There are more than 80 clinical trials underway on existing treatments that could have approval to treat COVID-19 in a matter of months, he said.
Mikael Dolsten, MD, PhD, chief scientific officer at Pfizer, said that the company is working with Germany-based BioNTech SE to develop an mRNA-based vaccine for COVID-19, with testing expected to begin in Germany, China, and the United States by the end of April. The company also is screening antiviral compounds that were previously in development against other coronavirus diseases.
Clement Lewin, PhD, associate vice president of R&D strategy for vaccines at Sanofi, said the company has partnered with Regeneron to launch a trial of sarilumab (Kevzara), a drug approved to treat moderate to severe rheumatoid arthritis, to help treat COVID-19.
Meanwhile, Lilly Chief Scientific Officer Daniel Skovronsky, MD, PhD, noted that his company is collaborating with AbCellera to develop therapeutics using monoclonal antibodies isolated from one of the first U.S. patients who recovered from COVID-19. He said the goal is to begin testing within the next 4 months.
Separately, World Health Organization Director General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus announced during a March 18 press conference that it is spearheading a large international study examining a number of different treatments in what has been dubbed the SOLIDARITY trial. Argentina, Bahrain, Canada, France, Iran, Norway, South Africa, Spain, Switzerland, and Thailand have signed on to be a part of the trial, with more countries expected to participate.
“I continue to be inspired by the many demonstrations of solidarity from all over the world,” he said. “These and other efforts give me hope that together, we can and will prevail. This virus is presenting us with an unprecedented threat. But it’s also an unprecedented opportunity to come together as one against a common enemy, an enemy against humanity.”
White House expands Medicare telehealth services amid COVID-19
“Medicare can pay for office, hospital, and other visits furnished via telehealth across the country and including in patients’ places of residence, starting March 6, 2020,” the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services said in a fact sheet issued March 17.
Some of the existing benefits were previously limited to rural communities.
“Medicare beneficiaries across the nation, no matter where they live, will now be able to receive a wide range of services via telehealth without ever having to leave home,” CMS Administrator Seema Verma said during a March 17 White House press briefing on administration actions to contain the spread of COVID-19. “These services can also be provided in a variety of settings, including nursing homes, hospital outpatient departments, and more.”
That means that seniors can continue to receive their routine care without having to leave the home and risk infection, or they can get medical guidance if they have mild symptoms, which would help mitigate the spread to others.
“This shift is very important for clinicians and providers who, over the coming weeks, will face considerable strain on their time and resources,” Dr. Verma said. “[It] allows the health care system to prioritize care for those who have more needs or who are in dire need, and it also preserves protective equipment.”
A range of providers will be able to deliver telehealth services, including doctors, nurse practitioners, clinical psychologists, and licensed clinical social workers. Visits using the telehealth services will be considered the same as in-person visits and will be paid as if the patient were seen in the office.
This expansion of Medicare telehealth services will continue for the duration of the COVID-19 public health emergency.
“In addition, the [Health and Human Services’] office of inspector general is providing flexibility for health care providers to reduce or waive cost-sharing for telehealth visits paid by federal health care programs,” the fact sheet states. CMS also said it will not conduct audits to ensure that an established relationship exists between the provider and the patient – a prior requirement for telehealth billing – during this public health emergency.
Billing for virtual check-ins, which are essentially brief conversations that may not require a full visit to the physician office, needs an established relationship between the practice and the patient. Likewise, for e-visits, which include non–face-to-face communications through online patient portals, billing can occur only when there is an established patient relationship.
Key to the expansion is that it will cover the entire United States and will not be limited to rural areas.
Dr. Verma also noted that the administration “will be temporarily suspending certain HIPAA requirements so that doctors can provide telehealth with their own phones.”
She noted this was all a part of mitigation efforts to limit the spread of COVID-19.
“As we are encouraging Americans to stay home whenever possible, we don’t want our Medicare policies getting in the way,” she said, adding that state Medicaid agencies can expand their telehealth services without the approval of CMS during this emergency.
“Medicare can pay for office, hospital, and other visits furnished via telehealth across the country and including in patients’ places of residence, starting March 6, 2020,” the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services said in a fact sheet issued March 17.
Some of the existing benefits were previously limited to rural communities.
“Medicare beneficiaries across the nation, no matter where they live, will now be able to receive a wide range of services via telehealth without ever having to leave home,” CMS Administrator Seema Verma said during a March 17 White House press briefing on administration actions to contain the spread of COVID-19. “These services can also be provided in a variety of settings, including nursing homes, hospital outpatient departments, and more.”
That means that seniors can continue to receive their routine care without having to leave the home and risk infection, or they can get medical guidance if they have mild symptoms, which would help mitigate the spread to others.
“This shift is very important for clinicians and providers who, over the coming weeks, will face considerable strain on their time and resources,” Dr. Verma said. “[It] allows the health care system to prioritize care for those who have more needs or who are in dire need, and it also preserves protective equipment.”
A range of providers will be able to deliver telehealth services, including doctors, nurse practitioners, clinical psychologists, and licensed clinical social workers. Visits using the telehealth services will be considered the same as in-person visits and will be paid as if the patient were seen in the office.
This expansion of Medicare telehealth services will continue for the duration of the COVID-19 public health emergency.
“In addition, the [Health and Human Services’] office of inspector general is providing flexibility for health care providers to reduce or waive cost-sharing for telehealth visits paid by federal health care programs,” the fact sheet states. CMS also said it will not conduct audits to ensure that an established relationship exists between the provider and the patient – a prior requirement for telehealth billing – during this public health emergency.
Billing for virtual check-ins, which are essentially brief conversations that may not require a full visit to the physician office, needs an established relationship between the practice and the patient. Likewise, for e-visits, which include non–face-to-face communications through online patient portals, billing can occur only when there is an established patient relationship.
Key to the expansion is that it will cover the entire United States and will not be limited to rural areas.
Dr. Verma also noted that the administration “will be temporarily suspending certain HIPAA requirements so that doctors can provide telehealth with their own phones.”
She noted this was all a part of mitigation efforts to limit the spread of COVID-19.
“As we are encouraging Americans to stay home whenever possible, we don’t want our Medicare policies getting in the way,” she said, adding that state Medicaid agencies can expand their telehealth services without the approval of CMS during this emergency.
“Medicare can pay for office, hospital, and other visits furnished via telehealth across the country and including in patients’ places of residence, starting March 6, 2020,” the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services said in a fact sheet issued March 17.
Some of the existing benefits were previously limited to rural communities.
“Medicare beneficiaries across the nation, no matter where they live, will now be able to receive a wide range of services via telehealth without ever having to leave home,” CMS Administrator Seema Verma said during a March 17 White House press briefing on administration actions to contain the spread of COVID-19. “These services can also be provided in a variety of settings, including nursing homes, hospital outpatient departments, and more.”
That means that seniors can continue to receive their routine care without having to leave the home and risk infection, or they can get medical guidance if they have mild symptoms, which would help mitigate the spread to others.
“This shift is very important for clinicians and providers who, over the coming weeks, will face considerable strain on their time and resources,” Dr. Verma said. “[It] allows the health care system to prioritize care for those who have more needs or who are in dire need, and it also preserves protective equipment.”
A range of providers will be able to deliver telehealth services, including doctors, nurse practitioners, clinical psychologists, and licensed clinical social workers. Visits using the telehealth services will be considered the same as in-person visits and will be paid as if the patient were seen in the office.
This expansion of Medicare telehealth services will continue for the duration of the COVID-19 public health emergency.
“In addition, the [Health and Human Services’] office of inspector general is providing flexibility for health care providers to reduce or waive cost-sharing for telehealth visits paid by federal health care programs,” the fact sheet states. CMS also said it will not conduct audits to ensure that an established relationship exists between the provider and the patient – a prior requirement for telehealth billing – during this public health emergency.
Billing for virtual check-ins, which are essentially brief conversations that may not require a full visit to the physician office, needs an established relationship between the practice and the patient. Likewise, for e-visits, which include non–face-to-face communications through online patient portals, billing can occur only when there is an established patient relationship.
Key to the expansion is that it will cover the entire United States and will not be limited to rural areas.
Dr. Verma also noted that the administration “will be temporarily suspending certain HIPAA requirements so that doctors can provide telehealth with their own phones.”
She noted this was all a part of mitigation efforts to limit the spread of COVID-19.
“As we are encouraging Americans to stay home whenever possible, we don’t want our Medicare policies getting in the way,” she said, adding that state Medicaid agencies can expand their telehealth services without the approval of CMS during this emergency.
FDA provides flexibility to improve COVID-19 test availability
First, the FDA is giving states more flexibility to approve and implement testing for COVID-19.
“States can set up a system in which they take responsibility for authorizing such tests and the laboratories will not engage with the FDA,” agency Commissioner Stephen Hahn, MD, said in a March 16 statement announcing the policy updates. “Laboratories developing tests in these states can engage directly with the appropriate state authorities, instead of with the FDA.”
A copy of the updated guidance document can be found here.
Dr. Hahn added that laboratories working within this authority granted to states will not have to pursue an emergency use authorization (EUA). New York state was previously granted a waiver to allow for more state oversight over the introduction of diagnostic testing.
Second, the FDA is expanding guidance issued on Feb. 29 on who can develop diagnostic tests. Originally, the Feb. 29 guidance was aimed at labs certified to perform high-complexity testing consistent with requirements outlined in the Clinical Laboratory Improvement Amendments.
“Under the update published today, the agency does not intend to object to commercial manufacturers distributing and labs using new commercially developed tests prior to the FDA granting an EUA, under certain circumstances,” Commissioner Hahn said, adding that a number of commercial manufacturers are developing tests for the coronavirus with the intent of submitting an EUA request.
“During this public health emergency, the FDA does not intend to object to the distribution and use of these tests for specimen testing for a reasonable period of time after the manufacturer’s validation of the test while the manufacturer is preparing its EUA request,” he added.
The updated guidance also provides recommendations for test developers working on serologic tests for COVID-19.
During a March 16 conference call with reporters, Commissioner Hahn said the flexibility would add a “significant number of tests and we believe this will be a surge to meet the demand that we expect to see, although it is somewhat difficult” to quantify the number of tests this new flexibility will bring to the market.
First, the FDA is giving states more flexibility to approve and implement testing for COVID-19.
“States can set up a system in which they take responsibility for authorizing such tests and the laboratories will not engage with the FDA,” agency Commissioner Stephen Hahn, MD, said in a March 16 statement announcing the policy updates. “Laboratories developing tests in these states can engage directly with the appropriate state authorities, instead of with the FDA.”
A copy of the updated guidance document can be found here.
Dr. Hahn added that laboratories working within this authority granted to states will not have to pursue an emergency use authorization (EUA). New York state was previously granted a waiver to allow for more state oversight over the introduction of diagnostic testing.
Second, the FDA is expanding guidance issued on Feb. 29 on who can develop diagnostic tests. Originally, the Feb. 29 guidance was aimed at labs certified to perform high-complexity testing consistent with requirements outlined in the Clinical Laboratory Improvement Amendments.
“Under the update published today, the agency does not intend to object to commercial manufacturers distributing and labs using new commercially developed tests prior to the FDA granting an EUA, under certain circumstances,” Commissioner Hahn said, adding that a number of commercial manufacturers are developing tests for the coronavirus with the intent of submitting an EUA request.
“During this public health emergency, the FDA does not intend to object to the distribution and use of these tests for specimen testing for a reasonable period of time after the manufacturer’s validation of the test while the manufacturer is preparing its EUA request,” he added.
The updated guidance also provides recommendations for test developers working on serologic tests for COVID-19.
During a March 16 conference call with reporters, Commissioner Hahn said the flexibility would add a “significant number of tests and we believe this will be a surge to meet the demand that we expect to see, although it is somewhat difficult” to quantify the number of tests this new flexibility will bring to the market.
First, the FDA is giving states more flexibility to approve and implement testing for COVID-19.
“States can set up a system in which they take responsibility for authorizing such tests and the laboratories will not engage with the FDA,” agency Commissioner Stephen Hahn, MD, said in a March 16 statement announcing the policy updates. “Laboratories developing tests in these states can engage directly with the appropriate state authorities, instead of with the FDA.”
A copy of the updated guidance document can be found here.
Dr. Hahn added that laboratories working within this authority granted to states will not have to pursue an emergency use authorization (EUA). New York state was previously granted a waiver to allow for more state oversight over the introduction of diagnostic testing.
Second, the FDA is expanding guidance issued on Feb. 29 on who can develop diagnostic tests. Originally, the Feb. 29 guidance was aimed at labs certified to perform high-complexity testing consistent with requirements outlined in the Clinical Laboratory Improvement Amendments.
“Under the update published today, the agency does not intend to object to commercial manufacturers distributing and labs using new commercially developed tests prior to the FDA granting an EUA, under certain circumstances,” Commissioner Hahn said, adding that a number of commercial manufacturers are developing tests for the coronavirus with the intent of submitting an EUA request.
“During this public health emergency, the FDA does not intend to object to the distribution and use of these tests for specimen testing for a reasonable period of time after the manufacturer’s validation of the test while the manufacturer is preparing its EUA request,” he added.
The updated guidance also provides recommendations for test developers working on serologic tests for COVID-19.
During a March 16 conference call with reporters, Commissioner Hahn said the flexibility would add a “significant number of tests and we believe this will be a surge to meet the demand that we expect to see, although it is somewhat difficult” to quantify the number of tests this new flexibility will bring to the market.