CMS Compliance Group

CMS Ending COVID-19 PHE-related Blanket Waivers

On April 7, 2022, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) released a new QSO Memo, “Update to COVID-19 Emergency Declaration Blanket Waivers for Specific Providers.” The new Memo states that CMS has continued to review the need for existing emergency blanket waivers throughout the pandemic, and now plans to end multiple waivers in two groups (first group ends in 30 days / second in 60 days). This is not the first time CMS has ended waivers, and while COVID-19 isn’t a exactly thing of the past, the Agency now believes that several additional waivers need to be terminated.

The Real Impetus Behind The Waivers Ending

In prior guidance published in a November 12, 2021 QSO Memo, CMS has noted that due to the “limited insight” that it had into nursing homes because State Agencies were not performing on-site surveys, it had concerns with multiple high-risk areas, including weight loss, pressure ulcers, abuse or neglect, loss of function/mobility, depression, inappropriate use of antipsychotic medications and nurse competency. As such, it directed surveyors to take a hard look at these areas when they were doing on-site surveys.

CMS also directed State Agencies to use a risk-based prioritization of surveys, and to survey providers with a history of/ allegations of abuse or neglect, staff competency issues, quality of care issues (including pressure ulcers and falls), staffing issues, infection control, and violations of transfer/discharge requirements before others. So, the first providers to get recertification surveys would be the ones with a bigger potential for issues in those areas.

Guess what the result has been? Surprise – Since “normal” survey & certification activities resumed late in 2020, surveyors are finding issues in these areas when performing surveys. The new April 7, 2022 QSO Memo states the following:

“While the waivers of regulatory requirements have provided flexibility in how nursing homes may operate, they have also removed the minimum standards for quality that help ensure residents’ health and safety are protected. Findings from onsite surveys have revealed significant concerns with resident care that are unrelated to infection control (e.g. abuse, weight loss, depression, pressure ulcers, etc.) We are concerned that the waiver of certain regulatory requirements has contributed to these outcomes and raises the risk of other issues.”

 So, surveyors have been finding what they were looking for, which gives you a direction for your own internal efforts, but also resulted in the plan to terminate the emergency waivers. Let’s look at what’s changing moving forward:

Waivers Ending in 30 Days (May 7, 2022)

Just a reminder – May 7 is a Saturday, so have things ready to go by Friday.

Waivers Ending in 60 Days (June 6, 2022)

June 6 is a Monday, so plan ahead to make sure everything is ready to go for that date. Many of these waivers were added to the list of blanket waivers in April 2020, so CMS will be terminating them two years later.

Physical Environment/Life Safety Waivers Ending:
Care-Related Waivers Ending:

There is extensive guidance in the QSO Memo about nurse aides, so it would be good to read through. Here are some of the highlights:

Read CMS QSO-22-15-NH & NLTC & LSC dated April 7, 2022 here. The list of blanket waivers is maintained on the CMS Current Emergencies webpage, along with other COVID-19 PHE guidance.


CMSCG Survey Tip

CMS has indicated key areas of focus for survey – make sure you have reviewed associated systems in your own facility.

Need help? Prepare for your upcoming survey with a CMSCG Mock Survey. CMS Compliance Group‘s interdisciplinary team of compliance and quality improvement consultants helps you identify areas where you may have potential exposure so you can implement corrective actions ahead of your next survey. Take advantage of the depth of our team to address all departments, or chat with us to plan a modified mock survey for targeted assistance. Contact CMSCG for more details.

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