Preserving Access to Ventilator Care in Pennsylvania
November 6, 2019 09:51 AM to All Senate Members
Circulated By

Senator Camera Bartolotta
R Senate District 46
Along With

Sen. Daniel Laughlin
R Senate District 49
Memo
Caring for patients who require ventilator and tracheostomy services is difficult and expensive. That is why only a limited number of nursing facilities offer this service throughout the Commonwealth. As Medicaid payments for this care have declined significantly over the past ten years, more and more providers have stated their intent to limit or entirely cease providing ventilator care in the future.
Undoubtedly, Pennsylvania is nearing an access to care crisis. If these facilities throughout the state begin to close their doors, families with loved ones requiring access to ventilator and tracheostomy care will be forced to move them into costly hospital beds or drive several hours to find a location accepting patients.
The cost of treating these patients in a hospital is more than four times the cost of treatment in a nursing facility. Besides being more expensive, patients receiving care in a hospital are less likely to successfully be weaned from their ventilators.
Individuals require this level of care for a variety of reasons such as trauma due to an auto accident, fall, stroke, or due to diagnosis of a degenerative disease (i.e. ALS, MS, or Alzheimer’s Disease). It is also worth noting that one in ten patients are under 40 years of age and nearly half are under 65. Ventilator care is not end-of-life care, nor is it always a permanent state. In fact, the specialized expertise of the skilled nursing providers often free patients of their dependence on a ventilator and even help them to return home.
This legislation will dedicate additional Medicaid funding to those facilities already demonstrating a significant commitment to caring for these medically vulnerable Pennsylvanians, while also creating an incentive for other facilities to expand geographic access to this critically important care.
Please consider cosponsoring this proposal and joining us in support of these medically-fragile Pennsylvanians and those who care for them.
Undoubtedly, Pennsylvania is nearing an access to care crisis. If these facilities throughout the state begin to close their doors, families with loved ones requiring access to ventilator and tracheostomy care will be forced to move them into costly hospital beds or drive several hours to find a location accepting patients.
The cost of treating these patients in a hospital is more than four times the cost of treatment in a nursing facility. Besides being more expensive, patients receiving care in a hospital are less likely to successfully be weaned from their ventilators.
Individuals require this level of care for a variety of reasons such as trauma due to an auto accident, fall, stroke, or due to diagnosis of a degenerative disease (i.e. ALS, MS, or Alzheimer’s Disease). It is also worth noting that one in ten patients are under 40 years of age and nearly half are under 65. Ventilator care is not end-of-life care, nor is it always a permanent state. In fact, the specialized expertise of the skilled nursing providers often free patients of their dependence on a ventilator and even help them to return home.
This legislation will dedicate additional Medicaid funding to those facilities already demonstrating a significant commitment to caring for these medically vulnerable Pennsylvanians, while also creating an incentive for other facilities to expand geographic access to this critically important care.
Please consider cosponsoring this proposal and joining us in support of these medically-fragile Pennsylvanians and those who care for them.
Legislation
Document - Introduced as SB 959
Last updated on November 6, 2019 09:52 AM
Preserving Access to Ventilator Care in Pennsylvania
November 6, 2019 09:51 AM to All Senate Members
Circulated By
BARTOLOTTA and LAUGHLIN
Memo
Caring for patients who require ventilator and tracheostomy services is difficult and expensive. That is why only a limited number of nursing facilities offer this service throughout the Commonwealth. As Medicaid payments for this care have declined significantly over the past ten years, more and more providers have stated their intent to limit or entirely cease providing ventilator care in the future.
Undoubtedly, Pennsylvania is nearing an access to care crisis. If these facilities throughout the state begin to close their doors, families with loved ones requiring access to ventilator and tracheostomy care will be forced to move them into costly hospital beds or drive several hours to find a location accepting patients.
The cost of treating these patients in a hospital is more than four times the cost of treatment in a nursing facility. Besides being more expensive, patients receiving care in a hospital are less likely to successfully be weaned from their ventilators.
Individuals require this level of care for a variety of reasons such as trauma due to an auto accident, fall, stroke, or due to diagnosis of a degenerative disease (i.e. ALS, MS, or Alzheimer’s Disease). It is also worth noting that one in ten patients are under 40 years of age and nearly half are under 65. Ventilator care is not end-of-life care, nor is it always a permanent state. In fact, the specialized expertise of the skilled nursing providers often free patients of their dependence on a ventilator and even help them to return home.
This legislation will dedicate additional Medicaid funding to those facilities already demonstrating a significant commitment to caring for these medically vulnerable Pennsylvanians, while also creating an incentive for other facilities to expand geographic access to this critically important care.
Please consider cosponsoring this proposal and joining us in support of these medically-fragile Pennsylvanians and those who care for them.
Undoubtedly, Pennsylvania is nearing an access to care crisis. If these facilities throughout the state begin to close their doors, families with loved ones requiring access to ventilator and tracheostomy care will be forced to move them into costly hospital beds or drive several hours to find a location accepting patients.
The cost of treating these patients in a hospital is more than four times the cost of treatment in a nursing facility. Besides being more expensive, patients receiving care in a hospital are less likely to successfully be weaned from their ventilators.
Individuals require this level of care for a variety of reasons such as trauma due to an auto accident, fall, stroke, or due to diagnosis of a degenerative disease (i.e. ALS, MS, or Alzheimer’s Disease). It is also worth noting that one in ten patients are under 40 years of age and nearly half are under 65. Ventilator care is not end-of-life care, nor is it always a permanent state. In fact, the specialized expertise of the skilled nursing providers often free patients of their dependence on a ventilator and even help them to return home.
This legislation will dedicate additional Medicaid funding to those facilities already demonstrating a significant commitment to caring for these medically vulnerable Pennsylvanians, while also creating an incentive for other facilities to expand geographic access to this critically important care.
Please consider cosponsoring this proposal and joining us in support of these medically-fragile Pennsylvanians and those who care for them.
Document
Introduced as SB 959
Last Updated
November 6, 2019 09:52 AM
Generated 03/21/2025 11:29 PM