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Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services State Implementation of Money Follows the Person: A National Perspective Jeff Clopein, M.A., Project Officer Money Follows the Person Demonstration Grant Program Center for Medicaid, CHIP and Survey & Certification Disabled and Elderly Health Programs Group Division of Advocacy and Special Initiatives 1 Jeff Clopein

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Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services. State Implementation of Money Follows the Person: A National Perspective Jeff Clopein, M.A ., Project Officer Money Follows the Person Demonstration Grant Program Center for Medicaid, CHIP and Survey & Certification - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Centers  for Medicare & Medicaid Services

Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services

State Implementation of Money Follows the Person: A National Perspective

Jeff Clopein, M.A., Project OfficerMoney Follows the Person Demonstration Grant Program

Center for Medicaid, CHIP and Survey & CertificationDisabled and Elderly Health Programs GroupDivision of Advocacy and Special Initiatives

1Jeff Clopein

Page 2: Centers  for Medicare & Medicaid Services

What’s this program called the MFP?

Jeff Clopein 2

Principal Aims::• Reduce reliance on institutional care• Develop community-based long-term care

opportunities• Enable people with disabilities to participate fully

in their communities

Page 3: Centers  for Medicare & Medicaid Services

MFP FACTS

• 30 grantees (29 States and DC)-started in 2007• As a result of the Planning Grant opportunity & the Money Follows the Person Rebalancing

Demonstration Grant opportunity, 15 States have provided notice for intent to apply for a MFP Rebalancing Demonstration Grant by January 7, 2011.

• The following States are in the process of developing the Draft Operational Protocol as the major product of the MFP grant application: Rhode Island, Massachusetts, Maine, West Virginia, Tennessee, Florida, Alabama, Mississippi, Minnesota, New Mexico, Colorado, Utah, Nevada and Idaho , and American Samoa.

• The extension of the MFP Demonstration Program through 2016 offers States substantial resources and additional program flexibilities to remove barriers and improve people's access to community supports and independent living arrangements

• Size of awards– Total awards to date: $1.44 billion/Total budget 4.0 billion– Wide range of state commitments, from $5.4 million to $142 million

• Each state is implementing two programs– Transition program– Rebalancing program Jeff Clopein 3

Page 4: Centers  for Medicare & Medicaid Services

Deficit Reduction Act of 2005 (DRA)

• The MFP Rebalancing Demonstration Program was authorized by Congress in section 6071 of the Deficit Reduction Act of 2005 (DRA) and was designed to provide assistance to States to balance their long-term care systems and help Medicaid enrollees transition from institutions to the community.

• The MFP Demonstration Program reflects a growing consensus that long-term supports must be transformed from being institutionally-based and provider-driven to "person-centered" consumer directed and community-based. Congress initially authorized up to $1.75 billion in Federal funds through fiscal year (FY) 2011 to:

1) Increase the use of HCBS and reduce the use of institutionally-based services;

2) Eliminate barriers and mechanisms in State law, State Medicaid plans, or State budgets that prevent or restrict the flexible use of Medicaid funds to enable Medicaid-eligible individuals to receive long-term care in the settings of their choice;

3) Strengthen the ability of Medicaid programs to assure continued provision of HCBS to those individuals who choose to transition from institutions; and,

4) Ensure that procedures are in place to provide quality assurance and continuous quality improvement of HCBS.

Ronald Hendler 4

Page 5: Centers  for Medicare & Medicaid Services

MFP Funding

• On July 26, 2010, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) issued a new MFP grant solicitation to encourage states not yet part of the Money Follows the Person Rebalancing (MFP) Demonstration to apply for grant funds. The Affordable Care Act included an extension of the MFP demonstration program for an additional 5 years (the funding was scheduled to expire at the end of FY 2011).

• The extension of the MFP Demonstration Program through 2016 offers States substantial resources and additional program flexibilities to remove barriers and improve people's access to community supports and independent living arrangements

Ronald Hendler 5

Page 6: Centers  for Medicare & Medicaid Services

MFP FACTSProgram Statutory Requirements:• Participants must be Medicaid beneficiaries in institutional care for at least

6 months(recent policy change to 90 days/3months effective May 17, 2010)

– Nursing homes, hospitals, intermediate care facilities for the mentally retarded (ICF-MR), institutions for mental diseases (IMD); Medicaid Eligible on the last day institutionalized whom have at least the last day in the institution covered by Medicaid reimbursement for the inpatient day.

– A person needs only one day (last day of the 90 days) on Medicaid and 90 consecutive days in the IMD, Hospital, ICF-MR, or nursing home (eligible institutions). The patients must transition to an eligible residence

• Transition to “qualified” residence -Home, apartment, or group home with 4 or fewer people. -Lease with the participant or family, lockable egress and access, and living, sleeping, cooking and bathing areas. As of December 2009, almost 6,000 individuals have returned to the community as a result of these demonstrations.

Jeff Clopein 6

Page 7: Centers  for Medicare & Medicaid Services

MFP Services

• MFP Services– Eligible for 1 year – 365 days– Package of home and community-based services (HCBS)

• Qualified HCBS• Demonstration HCBS• Supplemental Services

• Continuity of services -Qualified HCBS continues after MFP eligibility ends based on beneficiary eligibility

• Enhanced matching funds – Qualified HCBS– Demonstration HCBS

Ronald Hendler 7

Page 8: Centers  for Medicare & Medicaid Services

MFP a “Laboratory” for Innovative Long-term Care Services for State Programs

• MFP Demonstration Services- Expanding the Menu: These are optional services that States can choose to cover but have not done so yet under their HCBS waivers or state Medicaid plan. These are a few of the demonstration services which receive the enhanced FMAP and were developed by States specifically for the demo:

– 24-Hour Nurse Helpline, – 24/7 In-home Monitoring– Telemedicine– Intense Transitional Management– Social habilitation/community integration counseling – Consumer/family/caregiver education on HCBS – Intensive home modification & assistive technology– Transition Service (start up costs) – Behavioral Crisis management services

These services are defined in ways that are not found in existing waivers in the amount, scope, duration and frequency of existing waiver services in those States.

Jeff Clopein 8

Page 9: Centers  for Medicare & Medicaid Services

MFP a “Laboratory” for Innovative Long-term Care Services for State Programs

• MFP Supplemental Services: These one-time or limited-duration services are associated with transitioning to the community and normally would not be covered by Medicaid.

• Housing coordination• Trial visits• Rent deposits, Security deposits, • Household goods, Household set-up, Moving expenses• Housecleaning, Food stocking Housing cost subsidy• Roommate location services• Problem solving services• Vehicle repair, Utility deposits, Payoff of existing debt (HUD public housing; utility companies)• Storage charges, Lock and key replacement• Internet installation,• Peer counseling and facilitation services, • Services proposed by the state that are essential for successful transition to the community• Not covered by Medicaid • Only available during the 12 month demonstration period• Explain billable unit and the rate• Describe any medical necessity criteria • Describe provider qualifications

Jeff Clopein 9

Page 10: Centers  for Medicare & Medicaid Services

MFP has been a catalyst for State and Federal Infrastructure Development

– MFP has led to the development of:• Working relationships between departments, divisions and services

at the State Level and Federal Level. Bringing service systems from multiple populations together in many cases for the first time.

• Integration of systems of long-term care access, information systems and addressing individuals with multiple diagnosis

Jeff Clopein 10

Page 11: Centers  for Medicare & Medicaid Services

Introduced national individual performance indicators for participant satisfaction of Home & Community Based Services

and Quality of Life

• Quality of Life Survey-Using individual performance indicators to assess services and satisfaction

– Using that data to improve the quality of services, the types of services and the quality of the performance of the service delivery system

– Quality of Life Survey being administered to every MFP participant three intervals:

– before leaving institution

– 1 year later

– 2 years after leaving institution

Jeff Clopein 11

Page 12: Centers  for Medicare & Medicaid Services

Introducing national individual performance indicators for Participant Satisfaction of Home & Community Based

Services and Quality of Life

The survey includes questions concerning the participants:– Living situation– Access to personal care– Choice and control– Respect and dignity– Community integration and inclusion and

Satisfaction – Health status

What the program wants to learn?– How do MFP participants fair in the community.– Which types of individuals do better in the community; and

is Quality of Life associated with program characteristics.

Jeff Clopein 12

Page 13: Centers  for Medicare & Medicaid Services

Program Benchmarks

• The Program holds States accountable for rebalancing though the demonstration by the establishment of benchmarks for each demonstration year such as:– The projected number of eligible individuals transitioned from an

inpatient facility to a qualified residence.– Increase in qualified expenditures for HCBS.– Utilization rates for a screening, identification, and assessment

process for persons who are candidates for transitioning to the community.

– Progress directed by the State to achieve flexible financing strategies, such as global or pooled financing or other budget transfer strategies that allow “money to follow the person”.

– Increases in available and accessible supportive services (i.e., including the use of “one-time” transition services, purchase and adaptation of medical equipment, housing and transportation services beyond those used for MFP transition participants).

Jeff Clopein 13

Page 14: Centers  for Medicare & Medicaid Services

MFP a National Perspective

The MFP Program is helping to rebalance and redesign the long-term care system:• Creating Innovative Long-term Care Services for State Programs through expanding the

Menu of long-term care services through demonstration and supplemental services• Developing State and Federal Infrastructure for sustainability of the program• Introducing national individual performance indicators for consumer satisfaction of Home

& Community Based Services using MFP Quality of Life data • Collecting and analyzing Maintenance of Effort & the Rebalancing Fund Data.• Requiring Program Benchmarks to measure program progress and success

CMS also is investing in national programs that will interconnect with the MFP program and provide a laboratory for piloting and implementing these innovations.

– HCBS Taxonomy Project will help collect and analyze HCBS data for improved decision making.

– Development of national indicators of a balanced long-term care system through the National Balancing Indicator Contract and Grantees

– Looking forward to the future of long-term care HITECH as an opportunity for measuring and improving quality. \

Jeff Clopein 14

Page 15: Centers  for Medicare & Medicaid Services

Additional Information

• MFP Technical Assistance Website– http://mfp-tac.com/– http://www.cms.gov/CommunityServices/20_

MFP.asp#TopOfPage

• CMS Contact Information:

Jeff Clopein, Project Officer– 410-786-7252– [email protected]

Jeff Clopein 15

Page 16: Centers  for Medicare & Medicaid Services

Jeff Clopein 16

Page 17: Centers  for Medicare & Medicaid Services

Balancing Incentive Program

Effie R. George, Ph.D.

17

Page 18: Centers  for Medicare & Medicaid Services

Established by the Affordable Care Act Section 10202

Goal is to provide financial incentives to increase access to community-based services

Required structural changes

Balancing Incentive Program

Page 19: Centers  for Medicare & Medicaid Services

Balancing Incentive Program

States in which 25-50 percent are for non-institutionally-based LTSS - eligible 2% enhanced FMAP

States in which less than 25 percent are for non-institutionally based LTSS, are eligible for 5 percent enhanced FMAP

Page 20: Centers  for Medicare & Medicaid Services

Balancing Incentive Program

Required structural changes

NWD/SEP System

Conflict-free case management

Core standardized assessment instruments

Page 21: Centers  for Medicare & Medicaid Services

Balancing Incentive Program

Enhanced FMAP begins 10/1/2011 – 9/30/2015 

Cap of 3 billion dollars 

CMS will release formal guidance early summer 2011