1 | A bill to be entitled |
2 | An act relating to the nursing home diversion program; |
3 | amending s. 409.912, F.S.; directing the Agency for Health |
4 | Care Administration to expand the nursing home diversion |
5 | program to include Medicaid recipients who meet certain |
6 | criteria; specifying locations for phased-in |
7 | implementation of the program; revising conditions for |
8 | enrollment in the program; providing for Medicaid |
9 | recipient choice with regard to contractors; requiring the |
10 | nursing home diversion contractor to provide an enrollee |
11 | with information regarding alternative service providers; |
12 | requiring certain enrollees to participate in the program; |
13 | requiring the program to combine funding for Medicaid |
14 | services provided to specified individuals; removing an |
15 | exception; excluding specified individuals from |
16 | participation in the program; revising provisions relating |
17 | to entities eligible to participate in the program; |
18 | requiring the Department of Elderly Affairs and the agency |
19 | to seek federal waivers to limit the number of nursing |
20 | home diversion contractors in additional locations; |
21 | directing the agency to impose certain requirements on |
22 | contractors in the program; requiring the Office of |
23 | Program Policy Analysis and Government Accountability, in |
24 | consultation with the Auditor General, to evaluate the |
25 | nursing home diversion contractors in the program; |
26 | removing an obsolete provision relating to an |
27 | appropriation for implementation of a pilot program; |
28 | amending s. 408.040, F.S.; removing a reporting |
29 | requirement, to conform; providing an effective date. |
30 |
|
31 | Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida: |
32 |
|
33 | Section 1. Subsection (5) of section 409.912, Florida |
34 | Statutes, is amended to read: |
35 | 409.912 Cost-effective purchasing of health care.-The |
36 | agency shall purchase goods and services for Medicaid recipients |
37 | in the most cost-effective manner consistent with the delivery |
38 | of quality medical care. To ensure that medical services are |
39 | effectively utilized, the agency may, in any case, require a |
40 | confirmation or second physician's opinion of the correct |
41 | diagnosis for purposes of authorizing future services under the |
42 | Medicaid program. This section does not restrict access to |
43 | emergency services or poststabilization care services as defined |
44 | in 42 C.F.R. part 438.114. Such confirmation or second opinion |
45 | shall be rendered in a manner approved by the agency. The agency |
46 | shall maximize the use of prepaid per capita and prepaid |
47 | aggregate fixed-sum basis services when appropriate and other |
48 | alternative service delivery and reimbursement methodologies, |
49 | including competitive bidding pursuant to s. 287.057, designed |
50 | to facilitate the cost-effective purchase of a case-managed |
51 | continuum of care. The agency shall also require providers to |
52 | minimize the exposure of recipients to the need for acute |
53 | inpatient, custodial, and other institutional care and the |
54 | inappropriate or unnecessary use of high-cost services. The |
55 | agency shall contract with a vendor to monitor and evaluate the |
56 | clinical practice patterns of providers in order to identify |
57 | trends that are outside the normal practice patterns of a |
58 | provider's professional peers or the national guidelines of a |
59 | provider's professional association. The vendor must be able to |
60 | provide information and counseling to a provider whose practice |
61 | patterns are outside the norms, in consultation with the agency, |
62 | to improve patient care and reduce inappropriate utilization. |
63 | The agency may mandate prior authorization, drug therapy |
64 | management, or disease management participation for certain |
65 | populations of Medicaid beneficiaries, certain drug classes, or |
66 | particular drugs to prevent fraud, abuse, overuse, and possible |
67 | dangerous drug interactions. The Pharmaceutical and Therapeutics |
68 | Committee shall make recommendations to the agency on drugs for |
69 | which prior authorization is required. The agency shall inform |
70 | the Pharmaceutical and Therapeutics Committee of its decisions |
71 | regarding drugs subject to prior authorization. The agency is |
72 | authorized to limit the entities it contracts with or enrolls as |
73 | Medicaid providers by developing a provider network through |
74 | provider credentialing. The agency may competitively bid single- |
75 | source-provider contracts if procurement of goods or services |
76 | results in demonstrated cost savings to the state without |
77 | limiting access to care. The agency may limit its network based |
78 | on the assessment of beneficiary access to care, provider |
79 | availability, provider quality standards, time and distance |
80 | standards for access to care, the cultural competence of the |
81 | provider network, demographic characteristics of Medicaid |
82 | beneficiaries, practice and provider-to-beneficiary standards, |
83 | appointment wait times, beneficiary use of services, provider |
84 | turnover, provider profiling, provider licensure history, |
85 | previous program integrity investigations and findings, peer |
86 | review, provider Medicaid policy and billing compliance records, |
87 | clinical and medical record audits, and other factors. Providers |
88 | shall not be entitled to enrollment in the Medicaid provider |
89 | network. The agency shall determine instances in which allowing |
90 | Medicaid beneficiaries to purchase durable medical equipment and |
91 | other goods is less expensive to the Medicaid program than long- |
92 | term rental of the equipment or goods. The agency may establish |
93 | rules to facilitate purchases in lieu of long-term rentals in |
94 | order to protect against fraud and abuse in the Medicaid program |
95 | as defined in s. 409.913. The agency may seek federal waivers |
96 | necessary to administer these policies. |
97 | (5) The Agency for Health Care Administration, in |
98 | partnership with the Department of Elderly Affairs, shall expand |
99 | the nursing home diversion program into create an integrated, |
100 | fixed-payment delivery program for all Medicaid recipients who |
101 | meet nursing home admission criteria and are 60 years of age or |
102 | older and or dually eligible for Medicare and Medicaid. The |
103 | Agency for Health Care Administration shall implement the |
104 | integrated program initially in on a pilot basis in two Areas 5, |
105 | 6, and 7 of the state. The program shall be implemented in Areas |
106 | 8, 9, 10, and 11 in 2013 and in Areas 1, 2, 3, and 4 in 2014. |
107 | All Medicaid recipients shall be given a choice of nursing home |
108 | diversion contractors in each area. In order to ensure enrollee |
109 | choice, when an enrollee is determined to be likely to require |
110 | the level of care provided in a hospital or nursing home, the |
111 | enrollee shall be informed by the nursing home diversion |
112 | contractor of any feasible alternatives available and given the |
113 | choice of either institutional or home and community-based |
114 | services pilot areas shall be Area 7 and Area 11 of the Agency |
115 | for Health Care Administration. Enrollment in the pilot areas |
116 | shall be on a voluntary basis and in accordance with approved |
117 | federal waivers and this section. The agency and its program |
118 | contractors and providers shall not enroll any individual in the |
119 | integrated program because the individual or the person legally |
120 | responsible for the individual fails to choose to enroll in the |
121 | integrated program. Enrollment in the integrated program shall |
122 | be exclusively by affirmative choice of the eligible individual |
123 | or by the person legally responsible for the individual. The |
124 | integrated program must transfer all Medicaid services for |
125 | eligible elderly individuals who choose to participate into an |
126 | integrated-care management model designed to serve Medicaid |
127 | recipients in the community. The integrated program must combine |
128 | all funding for Medicaid services provided to individuals who |
129 | are 60 years of age or older and or dually eligible for Medicare |
130 | and Medicaid into the integrated program, including funds for |
131 | Medicaid home and community-based waiver services; all Medicaid |
132 | services authorized in ss. 409.905 and 409.906, including |
133 | excluding funds for Medicaid nursing home services unless the |
134 | agency is able to demonstrate how the integration of the funds |
135 | will improve coordinated care for these services in a less |
136 | costly manner; and Medicare coinsurance and deductibles for |
137 | persons dually eligible for Medicaid and Medicare as prescribed |
138 | in s. 409.908(13). |
139 | (a) Individuals who are 60 years of age or older, or |
140 | dually eligible for Medicare and Medicaid, and enrolled in |
141 | developmental disabilities waiver program, the family and |
142 | supported-living waiver program, the project AIDS care waiver |
143 | program, the traumatic brain injury and spinal cord injury |
144 | waiver program, the consumer-directed care waiver program, and |
145 | the program of all-inclusive care for the elderly program, and |
146 | residents of institutional care facilities for the |
147 | developmentally disabled, must be excluded from the integrated |
148 | program. |
149 | (b) Managed care entities who meet or exceed the agency's |
150 | minimum standards are eligible to operate the integrated |
151 | program. Entities eligible to participate include managed care |
152 | organizations licensed under chapter 641, including entities |
153 | eligible to participate in the nursing home diversion program |
154 | contractors, other qualified providers as defined in s. |
155 | 430.703(6) and (7). The Department of Elderly Affairs and the |
156 | agency shall comply with s. 430.705(3) prior to approval of any |
157 | additional contractors, community care for the elderly lead |
158 | agencies, and other state-certified community service networks |
159 | that meet comparable standards as defined by the agency, in |
160 | consultation with the Department of Elderly Affairs and the |
161 | Office of Insurance Regulation, to be financially solvent and |
162 | able to take on financial risk for managed care. Community |
163 | service networks that are certified pursuant to the comparable |
164 | standards defined by the agency are not required to be licensed |
165 | under chapter 641. Managed care entities who operate the |
166 | integrated program shall be subject to s. 408.7056. Eligible |
167 | entities shall choose to serve enrollees who are dually eligible |
168 | for Medicare and Medicaid, enrollees who are 60 years of age or |
169 | older, or both. |
170 | (c) The agency must ensure that the capitation-rate- |
171 | setting methodology for the integrated program is actuarially |
172 | sound and reflects the intent to provide quality care in the |
173 | least restrictive setting. The agency must also require nursing |
174 | home diversion contractors integrated-program providers to |
175 | develop a credentialing system for service providers and to |
176 | contract with all Gold Seal nursing homes, where feasible, and |
177 | exclude, where feasible, chronically poor-performing facilities |
178 | and providers as defined by the agency. The integrated program |
179 | must develop and maintain an informal provider grievance system |
180 | that addresses provider payment and contract problems. The |
181 | agency shall also establish a formal grievance system to address |
182 | those issues that were not resolved through the informal |
183 | grievance system. The integrated program must provide that if |
184 | the recipient resides in a noncontracted residential facility |
185 | licensed under chapter 400 or chapter 429 at the time of |
186 | enrollment in the integrated program and the recipient's needs |
187 | cannot be met in a less restrictive environment, the recipient |
188 | must be permitted to continue to reside in the noncontracted |
189 | facility as long as the recipient desires. The integrated |
190 | program must also provide that, in the absence of a contract |
191 | between the nursing home diversion contractor integrated-program |
192 | provider and the residential facility licensed under chapter 400 |
193 | or chapter 429, current Medicaid rates must prevail. The nursing |
194 | home diversion contractor integrated-program provider must |
195 | ensure that electronic nursing home claims that contain |
196 | sufficient information for processing are paid within 10 |
197 | business days after receipt. Alternately, the nursing home |
198 | diversion contractor integrated-program provider may establish a |
199 | capitated payment mechanism to prospectively pay nursing homes |
200 | at the beginning of each month. The agency and the Department of |
201 | Elderly Affairs must jointly develop procedures to manage the |
202 | services provided through the integrated program in order to |
203 | ensure quality and recipient choice. |
204 | (d) The Office of Program Policy Analysis and Government |
205 | Accountability, in consultation with the Auditor General, shall |
206 | comprehensively evaluate the pilot project for the integrated, |
207 | fixed-payment delivery program for Medicaid recipients created |
208 | under this subsection. The evaluation shall begin as soon as |
209 | Medicaid recipients are enrolled in the managed care pilot |
210 | program plans and shall continue for 24 months thereafter. The |
211 | evaluation must include assessments of each nursing home |
212 | diversion contractor managed care plan in the integrated program |
213 | with regard to cost savings; consumer education, choice, and |
214 | access to services; coordination of care; and quality of care. |
215 | The evaluation must describe administrative or legal barriers to |
216 | the implementation and operation of the pilot program and |
217 | include recommendations regarding statewide expansion of the |
218 | pilot program. The office shall submit its evaluation report to |
219 | the Governor, the President of the Senate, and the Speaker of |
220 | the House of Representatives no later than December 31, 2014 |
221 | 2009. |
222 | (e) The agency may seek federal waivers or Medicaid state |
223 | plan amendments and adopt rules as necessary to administer the |
224 | integrated program. The agency may implement the approved |
225 | federal waivers and other provisions as specified in this |
226 | subsection. |
227 | (f) The implementation of the integrated, fixed-payment |
228 | delivery program created under this subsection is subject to an |
229 | appropriation in the General Appropriations Act. |
230 | Section 2. Paragraph (e) of subsection (1) of section |
231 | 408.040, Florida Statutes, is redesignated as paragraph (d), and |
232 | present paragraph (d) of that subsection is amended to read: |
233 | 408.040 Conditions and monitoring.- |
234 | (1) |
235 | (d) If a nursing home is located in a county in which a |
236 | long-term care community diversion pilot project has been |
237 | implemented under s. 430.705 or in a county in which an |
238 | integrated, fixed-payment delivery program for Medicaid |
239 | recipients who are 60 years of age or older or dually eligible |
240 | for Medicare and Medicaid has been implemented under s. |
241 | 409.912(5), the nursing home may request a reduction in the |
242 | percentage of annual patient days used by residents who are |
243 | eligible for care under Title XIX of the Social Security Act, |
244 | which is a condition of the nursing home's certificate of need. |
245 | The agency shall automatically grant the nursing home's request |
246 | if the reduction is not more than 15 percent of the nursing |
247 | home's annual Medicaid-patient-days condition. A nursing home |
248 | may submit only one request every 2 years for an automatic |
249 | reduction. A requesting nursing home must notify the agency in |
250 | writing at least 60 days in advance of its intent to reduce its |
251 | annual Medicaid-patient-days condition by not more than 15 |
252 | percent. The agency must acknowledge the request in writing and |
253 | must change its records to reflect the revised certificate-of- |
254 | need condition. This paragraph expires June 30, 2011. |
255 | Section 3. This act shall take effect July 1, 2011. |