Friday, August 13, 2010

Improving Access to Home and Community-Based Services - Information Bulletin # 319 (8/2010)

by Steve Gold

Nearly five years ago, Congress amended Medicaid by adding Section 1915(i), intending to increase community-based services instead of institutional Medicaid services by permitting greater flexibility than Waivers permit. Unfortunately, only a few states took advantage of this.

In enacting the Affordable Care Act in 2010, Congress made a number of additional changes which are extremely important to the disability community.  However, unless your State opts to take advantage of these changes, they will not happen. These amendments take away many excuses the States have used in the past.

On August 6, 2010, CMS wrote a "Dear State Medicaid Director" encouraging States to take advantage of the ACA 2010 amendments. Here are the changes:

1.  The ACA strengthened Section 1915 ( i ) to remove the requirement that   individuals had to meet an institutional level of care in order to   qualify for home and community-based services.  Unlike eligibility for   Medicaid Waivers which require a person meet an institutional level of   care, the 2010 amendments permit your state to provide community-based   services for people who are not otherwise eligible for institutional   care.  Heh - makes sense to provide services before a person loses more   ADLs.

2.  Another big change is that the Affordable Care Act amended this   Section to permit States to provide community-based services to persons   with chronic mental illnesses and/or substance use disorders.    Services for this population are defined extremely broadly.  This is   long overdue and will help a portion of the disability community that   has been shortchanged too long.

3.  States now have the option to provide thee community-based services to   persons whose incomes are 300% of the SSI income benefit.

4.  Benefits can be targeted either to specific population groups without   violating Medicaid's comparability requirements.  Alternatively, States   could target by functional needs.  This permits States to have multiple   programs, each targeted at specific populations, e.g., one for persons   with physical needs and another benefit package targeted at persons   with chronic mental illnesses. It permits your State to define   populations' needs with great precision and specifics.

5.  Services can be narrowly defined, e.g., personal care or home health   aide, instead of the Waiver package of services.  There goes a big   excuse States have used with Waivers, i.e., they had to provide a broad  range of services to everyone on the Waiver.

6.  States have the option to offer consumers "self-direction." In the   8/6/10 Dear State Medicaid Director letter, it states that "CMS urges   all States to afford participants the opportunity to direct some or all   of their HCBS.  Self-direction permits participants to plan and  purchase their HCBS under their direction and control or through an   authorized representative." Well, how about that?

These changes become effective October 1, 2010. 

You and your State Medicaid officials have to begin this process now!  Let's not let this slip away.  There could be great financial savings if these provisions are used creatively.

Steve Gold, The Disability Odyssey continues

Back issues of other Information Bulletins are available online at http://www.stevegoldada.com with a searchable Archive at this site divided into different subjects. 

To contact Steve Gold directly, write to stevegoldada@cs.com or call 215-627-7100.
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Steve Gold, The Disability Odyssey continues

Back issues of other Information Bulletins are available online at http://www.stevegoldada.com
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