Areas from volunteers to aide supervision affected. In addition to telehealth-related regulatory changes, Medicare also has issued information on blanket waivers that will affect hospices. 鈥淭丑别 Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services is taking historic and unprecedented steps to equip the American healthcare system with maximum flexibility to respond to the 2019 Novel Coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic,鈥 CMS said in a March 30 release. CMS will waive requirements in these areas for hospices: Something else to consider: 鈥淪ection 1135 of the Social Security Act gives the [Health and Human Services] Secretary broad waiver power during national or local emergencies to waive almost any requirement of the vast regulatory scheme (with or without an act of Congress),鈥 points out attorney Brian Daucher with Sheppard Mullin. 鈥淪o if providers have been unable to timely complete recertification, or have faced any other circum颅stances precluding full compliance, hospices should still continue to bill for rendered services,鈥 Daucher advises on the firm鈥檚 Hospice Law Blog. 鈥淚n short, hospices should do whatever is necessary in real time to care for their patients,鈥 Daucher suggests.鈥淩egulatory compliance should be followed where possible, but the inability to do so should not necessarily be deemed a reason not to provide services.鈥 Note: A three-page summary of CMS鈥 hospice COVID-19 鈥渇lexibilities鈥 is at .