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SCOTUS turns down river dredge mining in ID without a permit; the White House weighs options after ruling on immunity-Democrats angry at partisan split; Tips to stay safe as July 4th heatwave envelops the Golden State; Prison reform proposal seeks federal funding to reduce the state prison population.

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Sentencing is delayed in former President Trump's New York felony conviction, Democrats vow a legislative overhaul of the Supreme Court, and the last female GOP Senators are voted out of the South Carolina Legislature.

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A new wildfire map shows where folks are most at risk of losing a home nationwide, rural North Carolina groups are promoting supportive and affordable housing for those in substance-abuse recovery and bookmobiles are rolling across rural California.

Medicare Telehealth Expansion Vital in COVID-19 Outbreak

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Friday, March 20, 2020   

CHARLESTON, W.Va. - With West Virginia reporting its first case of exposure to the new coronavirus this week, the use of telemedicine could be vital to keeping the state's older residents safe.

Stephen Davis, associate professor at the West Virginia University School of Public Health, is conducting a pilot program on telemedicine in the Mountain State. He says the Trump administration's expansion of telehealth for Medicare patients will help the state prevent high-risk individuals from being exposed to the virus in health-care environments.

"Telehealth will enable us to be able to deliver some type of health care without having to have some type of interaction with healthcare workers that, sadly, may be infected or become infected themselves," says Davis.

The new coronavirus seems to be hitting seniors especially hard. Davis says telehealth is crucial for West Virginia's aging population.

The U.S. Census Bureau estimates the number of West Virginians age 60 and over will increase 32% in the next 10 years.

Trump's announcement opens the telehealth doors to tens of millions of new Medicare patients, many in remote areas. Davis' pilot is measuring the effectiveness of telehealth in rural West Virginia.

He points out that previously, the federal government had regional restrictions on reimbursements for Medicare remote services.

"Certainly at the federal level with Medicare, historically there were restrictions with regard to you had to be located in a very rural area," says Davis. "And so, this was a significant barrier, historically, to being able to more broadly offer telehealth services."

The administration is also encouraging states to expand the use of telehealth in their Medicaid programs for lower-income people.

More than 40 million people are enrolled in Medicare, some 15% of the U.S. population.


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