2022 -- H 7756 | |
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LC005032 | |
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STATE OF RHODE ISLAND | |
IN GENERAL ASSEMBLY | |
JANUARY SESSION, A.D. 2022 | |
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A N A C T | |
RELATING TO HUMAN SERVICES -- MEDICAL ASSISTANCE -- LONG-TERM CARE | |
SERVICE AND FINANCE REFORM | |
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Introduced By: Representatives Donovan, Cassar, Ajello, Bennett, Azzinaro, Kislak, J | |
Date Introduced: March 02, 2022 | |
Referred To: House Finance | |
It is enacted by the General Assembly as follows: | |
1 | SECTION 1. Section 40-8.9-9 of the General Laws in Chapter 40-8.9 entitled "Medical |
2 | Assistance - Long-Term Care Service and Finance Reform" is hereby amended to read as follows: |
3 | 40-8.9-9. Long-term-care rebalancing system reform goal. |
4 | (a) Notwithstanding any other provision of state law, the executive office of health and |
5 | human services is authorized and directed to apply for, and obtain, any necessary waiver(s), waiver |
6 | amendment(s), and/or state-plan amendments from the Secretary of the United States Department |
7 | of Health and Human Services, and to promulgate rules necessary to adopt an affirmative plan of |
8 | program design and implementation that addresses the goal of allocating a minimum of fifty percent |
9 | (50%) of Medicaid long-term-care funding for persons aged sixty-five (65) and over and adults |
10 | with disabilities, in addition to services for persons with developmental disabilities, to home- and |
11 | community-based care; provided, further, the executive office shall report annually as part of its |
12 | budget submission, the percentage distribution between institutional care and home- and |
13 | community-based care by population and shall report current and projected waiting lists for long- |
14 | term-care and home- and community-based care services. The executive office is further authorized |
15 | and directed to prioritize investments in home- and community-based care and to maintain the |
16 | integrity and financial viability of all current long-term-care services while pursuing this goal. |
17 | (b) The reformed long-term-care system rebalancing goal is person-centered and |
18 | encourages individual self-determination, family involvement, interagency collaboration, and |
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1 | individual choice through the provision of highly specialized and individually tailored home-based |
2 | services. Additionally, individuals with severe behavioral, physical, or developmental disabilities |
3 | must have the opportunity to live safe and healthful lives through access to a wide range of |
4 | supportive services in an array of community-based settings, regardless of the complexity of their |
5 | medical condition, the severity of their disability, or the challenges of their behavior. Delivery of |
6 | services and supports in less-costly and less-restrictive community settings will enable children, |
7 | adolescents, and adults to be able to curtail, delay, or avoid lengthy stays in long-term-care |
8 | institutions, such as behavioral health residential-treatment facilities, long-term-care hospitals, |
9 | intermediate-care facilities, and/or skilled nursing facilities. |
10 | (c) Pursuant to federal authority procured under § 42-7.2-16, the executive office of health |
11 | and human services is directed and authorized to adopt a tiered set of criteria to be used to determine |
12 | eligibility for services. The criteria shall be developed in collaboration with the state's health and |
13 | human services departments and, to the extent feasible, any consumer group, advisory board, or |
14 | other entity designated for these purposes, and shall encompass eligibility determinations for long- |
15 | term-care services in nursing facilities, hospitals, and intermediate-care facilities for persons with |
16 | intellectual disabilities, as well as home- and community-based alternatives, and shall provide a |
17 | common standard of income eligibility for both institutional and home- and community-based care. |
18 | The executive office is authorized to adopt clinical and/or functional criteria for admission to a |
19 | nursing facility, hospital, or intermediate-care facility for persons with intellectual disabilities that |
20 | are more stringent than those employed for access to home- and community-based services. The |
21 | executive office is also authorized to promulgate rules that define the frequency of re-assessments |
22 | for services provided for under this section. Levels of care may be applied in accordance with the |
23 | following: |
24 | (1) The executive office shall continue to apply the level-of-care criteria in effect on June |
25 | 30, 2015, for any recipient determined eligible for and receiving Medicaid-funded long-term |
26 | services and supports in a nursing facility, hospital, or intermediate-care facility for persons with |
27 | intellectual disabilities on or before that date, unless: |
28 | (i) The recipient transitions to home- and community-based services because he or she |
29 | would no longer meet the level-of-care criteria in effect on June 30, 2015; or |
30 | (ii) The recipient chooses home- and community-based services over the nursing facility, |
31 | hospital, or intermediate-care facility for persons with intellectual disabilities. For the purposes of |
32 | this section, a failed community placement, as defined in regulations promulgated by the executive |
33 | office, shall be considered a condition of clinical eligibility for the highest level of care. The |
34 | executive office shall confer with the long-term-care ombudsperson with respect to the |
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1 | determination of a failed placement under the ombudsperson's jurisdiction. Should any Medicaid |
2 | recipient eligible for a nursing facility, hospital, or intermediate-care facility for persons with |
3 | intellectual disabilities as of June 30, 2015, receive a determination of a failed community |
4 | placement, the recipient shall have access to the highest level of care; furthermore, a recipient who |
5 | has experienced a failed community placement shall be transitioned back into his or her former |
6 | nursing home, hospital, or intermediate-care facility for persons with intellectual disabilities |
7 | whenever possible. Additionally, residents shall only be moved from a nursing home, hospital, or |
8 | intermediate-care facility for persons with intellectual disabilities in a manner consistent with |
9 | applicable state and federal laws. |
10 | (2) Any Medicaid recipient eligible for the highest level of care who voluntarily leaves a |
11 | nursing home, hospital, or intermediate-care facility for persons with intellectual disabilities shall |
12 | not be subject to any wait list for home- and community-based services. |
13 | (3) No nursing home, hospital, or intermediate-care facility for persons with intellectual |
14 | disabilities shall be denied payment for services rendered to a Medicaid recipient on the grounds |
15 | that the recipient does not meet level-of-care criteria unless and until the executive office has: |
16 | (i) Performed an individual assessment of the recipient at issue and provided written notice |
17 | to the nursing home, hospital, or intermediate-care facility for persons with intellectual disabilities |
18 | that the recipient does not meet level-of-care criteria; and |
19 | (ii) The recipient has either appealed that level-of-care determination and been |
20 | unsuccessful, or any appeal period available to the recipient regarding that level-of-care |
21 | determination has expired. |
22 | (d) The executive office is further authorized to consolidate all home- and community- |
23 | based services currently provided pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1396n into a single system of home- and |
24 | community-based services that include options for consumer direction and shared living. The |
25 | resulting single home- and community-based services system shall replace and supersede all 42 |
26 | U.S.C. § 1396n programs when fully implemented. Notwithstanding the foregoing, the resulting |
27 | single program home- and community-based services system shall include the continued funding |
28 | of assisted-living services at any assisted-living facility financed by the Rhode Island housing and |
29 | mortgage finance corporation prior to January 1, 2006, and shall be in accordance with chapter 66.8 |
30 | of title 42 as long as assisted-living services are a covered Medicaid benefit. |
31 | (e) The executive office is authorized to promulgate rules that permit certain optional |
32 | services including, but not limited to, homemaker services, home modifications, respite, and |
33 | physical therapy evaluations to be offered to persons at risk for Medicaid-funded long-term care |
34 | subject to availability of state-appropriated funding for these purposes. |
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1 | (f) To promote the expansion of home- and community-based service capacity, the |
2 | executive office is authorized to pursue payment methodology reforms that increase access to |
3 | homemaker, personal care (home health aide), assisted living, adult supportive-care homes, and |
4 | adult day services, as follows: |
5 | (1) Development of revised or new Medicaid certification standards that increase access to |
6 | service specialization and scheduling accommodations by using payment strategies designed to |
7 | achieve specific quality and health outcomes. |
8 | (2) Development of Medicaid certification standards for state-authorized providers of adult |
9 | day services, excluding providers of services authorized under § 40.1-24-1(3), assisted living, and |
10 | adult supportive care (as defined under chapter 17.24 of title 23) that establish for each, an acuity- |
11 | based, tiered service and payment methodology tied to: licensure authority; level of beneficiary |
12 | needs; the scope of services and supports provided; and specific quality and outcome measures. |
13 | The standards for adult day services for persons eligible for Medicaid-funded long-term |
14 | services may differ from those who do not meet the clinical/functional criteria set forth in § 40- |
15 | 8.10-3. |
16 | (3) As the state's Medicaid program seeks to assist more beneficiaries requiring long-term |
17 | services and supports in home- and community-based settings, the demand for home-care workers |
18 | has increased, and wages for these workers has not kept pace with neighboring states, leading to |
19 | high turnover and vacancy rates in the state's home-care industry, the executive office shall institute |
20 | a one-time increase in the base-payment rates for FY 2019, as described below, for home-care |
21 | service providers to promote increased access to and an adequate supply of highly trained home- |
22 | healthcare professionals, in amount to be determined by the appropriations process, for the purpose |
23 | of raising wages for personal care attendants and home health aides to be implemented by such |
24 | providers. |
25 | (i) A prospective base adjustment, effective not later than July 1, 2018, of ten percent (10%) |
26 | of the current base rate for home-care providers, home nursing care providers, and hospice |
27 | providers contracted with the executive office of health and human services and its subordinate |
28 | agencies to deliver Medicaid fee-for-service personal care attendant services. |
29 | (ii) A prospective base adjustment, effective not later than July 1, 2018, of twenty percent |
30 | (20%) of the current base rate for home-care providers, home nursing care providers, and hospice |
31 | providers contracted with the executive office of health and human services and its subordinate |
32 | agencies to deliver Medicaid fee-for-service skilled nursing and therapeutic services and hospice |
33 | care. |
34 | (iii) Effective upon passage of this section, hospice provider reimbursement, exclusively |
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1 | for room and board expenses for individuals residing in a skilled nursing facility, shall revert to the |
2 | rate methodology in effect on June 30, 2018, and these room and board expenses shall be exempted |
3 | from any and all annual rate increases to hospice providers as provided for in this section. |
4 | (iv) On the first of July in each year, beginning on July 1, 2019, the executive office of |
5 | health and human services will initiate an annual inflation increase to the base rate for home-care |
6 | providers, home nursing care providers, and hospice providers contracted with the executive office |
7 | and its subordinate agencies to deliver Medicaid fee-for-service personal care attendant services, |
8 | skilled nursing and therapeutic services and hospice care. The base rate increase shall be a |
9 | percentage amount equal to the New England Consumer Price Index card as determined by the |
10 | United States Department of Labor for medical care and for compliance with all federal and state |
11 | laws, regulations, and rules, and all national accreditation program requirements. |
12 | (g) As the state's Medicaid program seeks to assist more beneficiaries requiring long-term |
13 | services and supports in home- and community-based settings, the demand for home-care workers |
14 | has increased, and wages for these workers has not kept pace with neighboring states, leading to |
15 | high turnover and vacancy rates in the state's home-care industry. To promote increased access to |
16 | and an adequate supply of direct-care workers, the executive office shall institute a payment |
17 | methodology change, in Medicaid fee-for-service and managed care, for FY 2022, that shall be |
18 | passed through directly to the direct-care workers' wages who are employed by home nursing care |
19 | and home-care providers licensed by the Rhode Island department of health, as described below: |
20 | (1) Effective July 1, 2021, increase the existing shift differential modifier by $0.19 per |
21 | fifteen (15) minutes for personal care and combined personal care/homemaker. |
22 | (i) Employers must pass on one hundred percent (100%) of the shift differential modifier |
23 | increase per fifteen-minute (15) unit of service to the CNAs who rendered such services. This |
24 | compensation shall be provided in addition to the rate of compensation that the employee was |
25 | receiving as of June 30, 2021. For an employee hired after June 30, 2021, the agency shall use not |
26 | less than the lowest compensation paid to an employee of similar functions and duties as of June |
27 | 30, 2021, as the base compensation to which the increase is applied. |
28 | (ii) Employers must provide to EOHHS an annual compliance statement showing wages |
29 | as of June 30, 2021, amounts received from the increases outlined herein, and compliance with this |
30 | section by July 1, 2022. EOHHS may adopt any additional necessary regulations and processes to |
31 | oversee this subsection. |
32 | (2) Effective January 1, 2022, establish a new behavioral healthcare enhancement of $0.39 |
33 | per fifteen (15) minutes for personal care, combined personal care/homemaker, and homemaker |
34 | only for providers who have at least thirty percent (30%) of their direct-care workers (which |
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1 | includes certified nursing assistants (CNA) and homemakers) certified in behavioral healthcare |
2 | training. |
3 | (i) Employers must pass on one hundred percent (100%) of the behavioral healthcare |
4 | enhancement per fifteen (15) minute unit of service rendered by only those CNAs and homemakers |
5 | who have completed the thirty (30) hour behavioral health certificate training program offered by |
6 | Rhode Island College, or a training program that is prospectively determined to be compliant per |
7 | EOHHS, to those CNAs and homemakers. This compensation shall be provided in addition to the |
8 | rate of compensation that the employee was receiving as of December 31, 2021. For an employee |
9 | hired after December 31, 2021, the agency shall use not less than the lowest compensation paid to |
10 | an employee of similar functions and duties as of December 31, 2021, as the base compensation to |
11 | which the increase is applied. |
12 | (ii) By January 1, 2023, employers must provide to EOHHS an annual compliance |
13 | statement showing wages as of December 31, 2021, amounts received from the increases outlined |
14 | herein, and compliance with this section, including which behavioral healthcare training programs |
15 | were utilized. EOHHS may adopt any additional necessary regulations and processes to oversee |
16 | this subsection. |
17 | (h) The executive office shall implement a long-term-care-options counseling program to |
18 | provide individuals, or their representatives, or both, with long-term-care consultations that shall |
19 | include, at a minimum, information about: long-term-care options, sources, and methods of both |
20 | public and private payment for long-term-care services and an assessment of an individual's |
21 | functional capabilities and opportunities for maximizing independence. Each individual admitted |
22 | to, or seeking admission to, a long-term-care facility, regardless of the payment source, shall be |
23 | informed by the facility of the availability of the long-term-care-options counseling program and |
24 | shall be provided with long-term-care-options consultation if they so request. Each individual who |
25 | applies for Medicaid long-term-care services shall be provided with a long-term-care consultation. |
26 | (i) The executive office is also authorized, subject to availability of appropriation of |
27 | funding, and federal, Medicaid-matching funds, to pay for certain services and supports necessary |
28 | to transition or divert beneficiaries from institutional or restrictive settings and optimize their health |
29 | and safety when receiving care in a home or the community. The secretary is authorized to obtain |
30 | any state plan or waiver authorities required to maximize the federal funds available to support |
31 | expanded access to home- and community-transition and stabilization services; provided, however, |
32 | payments shall not exceed an annual or per-person amount. |
33 | (j) To ensure persons with long-term-care needs who remain living at home have adequate |
34 | resources to deal with housing maintenance and unanticipated housing-related costs, the secretary |
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1 | is authorized to develop higher resource eligibility limits for persons or obtain any state plan or |
2 | waiver authorities necessary to change the financial eligibility criteria for long-term services and |
3 | supports to enable beneficiaries receiving home and community waiver services to have the |
4 | resources to continue living in their own homes or rental units or other home-based settings. |
5 | (k) The executive office shall implement, no later than January 1, 2016, the following |
6 | home- and community-based service and payment reforms: |
7 | (1) [Deleted by P.L. 2021, ch. 162, art. 12, § 6.] |
8 | (2) Adult day services level of need criteria and acuity-based, tiered-payment |
9 | methodology; and |
10 | (3) Payment reforms that encourage home- and community-based providers to provide the |
11 | specialized services and accommodations beneficiaries need to avoid or delay institutional care. |
12 | (l) For federal fiscal year 2023, commencing on October 1, 2022, and ending September |
13 | 30, 2023, the executive office shall submit to the Secretary of the United States Department of |
14 | Health and Human Services, a state plan amendment to provide site patient encounter for mobile |
15 | dentistry that shall be increased to one hundred eighty dollars ($180), and shall include individuals |
16 | in community-based settings including group homes, assisted-living facilities, adult day health and |
17 | intellectual and developmental disabilities day programs. |
18 | (m) For federal fiscal year 2023, commencing on October 1, 2022, and ending September |
19 | 30, 2023, the executive office shall submit to the Secretary of the United States Department of |
20 | Health and Human Services a state plan amendment to provide chiropractic rates that shall be as |
21 | follows: |
22 | (1) Exam rate in the amount of one hundred fifteen dollars ($115); |
23 | (2) Manipulation rate in the amount of fifty-five dollars ($55.00); |
24 | (3) Physiotherapy and electric muscle stimulation rate in the amount of thirty-five dollars |
25 | ($35.00); and |
26 | (4) Therapeutic exercises rate in the amount of forty-five dollars ($45.00). |
27 | (l)(n) The secretary is authorized to seek any Medicaid section 1115 waiver or state-plan |
28 | amendments and take any administrative actions necessary to ensure timely adoption of any new |
29 | or amended rules, regulations, policies, or procedures and any system enhancements or changes, |
30 | for which appropriations have been authorized, that are necessary to facilitate implementation of |
31 | the requirements of this section by the dates established. The secretary shall reserve the discretion |
32 | to exercise the authority established under §§ 42-7.2-5(6)(v) and 42-7.2-6.1, in consultation with |
33 | the governor, to meet the legislative directives established herein. |
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1 | SECTION 2. This act shall take effect upon passage. |
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LC005032 | |
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EXPLANATION | |
BY THE LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL | |
OF | |
A N A C T | |
RELATING TO HUMAN SERVICES -- MEDICAL ASSISTANCE -- LONG-TERM CARE | |
SERVICE AND FINANCE REFORM | |
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1 | This act would require the EOHHS to submit to the Secretary of the US Department of |
2 | Health and Human Services, a state plan amendment to Medicaid dental and chiropractic rates as |
3 | follows: |
4 | (1) Mobile dentistry rate of one hundred eighty dollars ($180); and |
5 | (2) Chiropractic rates of one hundred fifteen dollars ($115) for exams, fifty-five dollars |
6 | ($55.00) for manipulation, thirty-five dollars ($35.00) for physiotherapy and electric muscle |
7 | simulation, and forty-five dollars ($45.00) for therapeutic exercises. |
8 | This act would take effect upon passage. |
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