The Academy submitted comments in response to a House Ways and Means Committee Rural and Underserved Communities request for stakeholder recommendations on priority topics for consideration to address the health inequities that exist in rural and underserved areas.
Academy comments highlight the fact that adults residing in rural areas represent a vulnerable population with barriers to accessing hearing health care. In addition, hearing impairment prevalence is often associated with poverty, reduced educational attainment, and manual labor occupations—characteristics more prominent in rural communities.
Given the link between untreated hearing loss and increased risk of falls and swifter cognitive decline, Academy comments direct the Task Force to consider The Medicare Audiology Access and Services Act of 2019 (H.R. 4056/S.2446)—legislation that would remove the physician referral requirement in Medicare—streamlining patient access to care, as well as classifying audiologists as practitioners in Medicare so that these critical services could be provided through telepractice.
Related Posts
CMS Issues Final Rule to Improve Access, Accountability, and Transparency in Medicaid Managed Care
The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid (CMS) recently issued a final rule aimed at improving access to care, accountability and transparency for the more than 70…
April 2024 State Legislative Update
In early April, as 19 state legislatures concluded their sessions for the year, a flurry of legislative activity marked the landscape, particularly in audiology and…
Medicare Advantage Plans Now Required to Inform Beneficiaries of Hearing Benefits
On April 4, 2024, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) issued a final rule that updates the Medicare Advantage Program for 2025. In…