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Monday Morning Medicaid Must Reads: October 1st, 2018

Helping you consider differing viewpoints. Before it’s illegal. 

 

Article 1:  

Jersey Community Hospital receives Small and Rural Award for quality improvement, RiverBender.com, 9/27/2018

Clay’s summary: Sometimes we forget that healthcare happens on the ground. Here’s an example of an IL hospital improving readmission rates.

Key Passage from the Article

Jersey Community Hospital’s all-cause readmission rate dropped from 16% to 7% with an estimated 63 readmissions prevented over a 12-month period and a total cost savings of $455,600.

“I’m happy that the high quality of care provided at JCH is being recognized for its consistency and reliability. I’m proud of the team here and they are deserving of this recognition” stated Jon Wade, CEO.

IHA President and CEO A.J. Wilhelmi recognized Jersey Community Hospital’s project team at the association’s annual Leadership Summit. Michael McNear, MD, Chief Medical Officer and Medical Group President, accepted the award on the team’s behalf.

IHA’s Institute for Innovations in Care and Quality spearheaded this effort to highlight the quality improvement work of IHA-member hospitals and health systems. The Institute is a strategic center actively engaged in implementing evidence-based quality and safety initiatives while creating innovative member programs to measurably strengthen the quality of healthcare across Illinois.

  

Read it here 


Article 2:   

NURSING HOME QUALITY: Continued Improvements Needed in CMS’s Data and Oversight, GAO, 9/6/2018

Clay’s summary: When was the last time you were in a nursing home? There is a wide spectrum of quality out there…

Key Passage from the Article

About 15,600 nursing homes participate in Medicare and Medicaid. To help ensure that residents receive quality care, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) collect data (such as nurse staffing levels) on these nursing homes.

We testified that CMS’s data showed mixed results—they showed an increase in consumer complaints along with improvements in the quality of care. We found that data issues (e.g., different states using different data collection methods) complicated CMS’s ability to assess whether the results reflected actual changes. We made recommendations to address these issues in the report on which this testimony is based.

  

Read it here 

 

 


 

Article 3:   

Amerigroup Ranked Among Top Medicaid Plans in Texas by NCQA, BusinessWire, 9/28/2018

Clay’s summary: It’s easy to forget that plans are staffed by people who care about people. They work hard to improve the quality of care delivered, and should get props when they do well. Yay, Amerigroup Texas!

Key Passage from the Article

“Amerigroup is pleased to be recognized by the NCQA as one of the highest performing Medicaid health plans in the state,” said Tisch Scott, plan president, Amerigroup Texas. “These ratings demonstrate that our consumers have timely access to care, and they’re receiving the right care at the right time. Quality is foundational to everything we do at Amerigroup, and we’re committed to building on our accomplishments to provide a better healthcare experience for all consumers.”

In recognizing Amerigroup, the NCQA evaluated the plan’s performance based on three areas — consumer satisfaction, prevention and treatment. Amerigroup received an overall score of 3.5 out of 5.

  

Read it here 

 


 

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Clay’s Weekly Medicaid RoundUp: Week of September 24th 2018

Soundtrack for today’s RoundUp pessimist readers- http://bit.ly/2xFHswE

For optimist readers- http://bit.ly/2xIBDi9

LET’S SHAKE IT UP A BIT- And do the fraud follies first this week..

FARRIS’S FANTASTIC FRAUD FOLLIES– And now for everybody’s favorite paragraph. Let’s start the ticker and see who wins this week’s award. Husband and wife duo John and Diane Sink of Cheyenne, Wyoming plead out this week to $6.2M in Medicaid fraud. Their charge? Bogus group counseling bills for sessions that included coloring, karaoke, eating at restaurants and shopping. Nagy Mohamed Abdelhamed of York, PA got popped this week for member fraud (we are seeing more of these- is it more frequent, or just less taboo to talk about?). Mr. Abdelhamed’s case appears egregious – he received $1,124 a month in social security disability bucks and collected $30k worth of Medicaid and SNAP benefits in 2018. Problem is, when he applied for Medicaid (in 2014) he only listed $1k in cash assets, no monthly income and no property. Well- he owned a gas station, a Mercedes Benz E350 and has loads of dough in the bank ($58k at time of writing). Timing? He sold the gas station for $172k in the same month he applied for Medicaid. Richard Quitoni of Middletown, NY was charged with a $200k Medicaid fraud. Mr. Q submitted false claims for cab rides for Medicaid bennies, including some doozies for $50 tolls (they’re not that high anywhere in the Big Apple). Mi Ran Yu of Anchorage, AK was sentenced to 8 months in the slammer this week. Her crime? Stealing $90k using false personal care assistant claims. Aleah Mohammed of Queens used her multi-location pharmacy biz to steal $7.9M by submitting false claims to Medicaid (and Medicare). The bogus scripts were either not dispensed to patients, prescribed as claimed or medically necessary. Sonjay Fonn and fiancée (they’re practicing for husband-wife fraud capers) Deborah Seeger of Cape Girardeau, MO stole $1.6M from Medicaid (and Medicare). This one’s fun- Sonjay did spinal fusion surgeries and ordered all his spinal implants from lovey’s DME company. Problem is, lovey got 50% commission on all sales. Lovey then took the Medicaid bucks and bought her handsome prince a yacht and construction projects. John Bradley of Oklahoma City got 8 weeks in jail for stealing $180k in Medicaid bucks. He submitted a slew of false claims for counseling his niece and nephews. Health Management Associates (the hospital chain, not the consulting firm) will pay $260M to resolve claims it paid kickbacks to docs so they could rip off Medicare and Medicaid by ordering unnecessary tests and increasing admits from the ED.

Mr. and Mrs. Sink, you win this week’s award with a respectable $6.2M Medicaid fraud! Taxpayers, you lose…Total tab in this paragraph is around $278M by my count. Work harder, taxpayers – someone has to pay for all this fraud!

 

OK, NOW SOME QUICK NEWS HITS- For all you fraud junkies, was that like eating dessert first?

MRS VERMA DEFENDS WORK REQUIREMENTS – Seema spoke at a conference in D.C. yesterday and let folks know CMS is maintaining its ground on this, despite all the pearl-clutching.

SHE ALSO LET MCOS KNOW A BIG OLE’ MICROSCOPE IS COMIN’- Clients (and anyone who has been around me the past few years) know I have been saying this is coming since the Mega Reg dropped. An MLR-audit is a natural conclusion of the MLR floor, and it will give CMS a simple way to take back cash.

OREGON CONSIDERING NON-COVERAGE OF NEXT-GEN SEQUENCING TESTS– These are tests used in cancer treatment. Medicare just covered it, but OR Medicaid is studying whether the tests are ready for prime-time just yet. The latest report from the OR Medicaid committee studying effectiveness has a clear non-coverage recommendation. Analysts are watching this one because it could be a model for other state Medicaid programs concerned about the costs of these tests.

That’s it for this week. As always, please send me a note with your thoughts to clay@mostlymedicaid.com or give me a buzz at 919.727.9231. Get outside (marvel at the changing of the seasons) and keep running the race (you know who you are).

 

FULL, FREE newsletter@ mostlymedicaid.com . News that didn’t make it and sources for those that did: twitter @mostlymedicaid . Trystero: Na auina mai e le Tama le Alo e laveai le lalolagi.

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Monday Morning Medicaid Must Reads: September 24th, 2018

Helping you consider differing viewpoints. Before it’s illegal. 

 

Article 1:  

Details of federal health care fraud probe show how massive the problem is, Bethany Blankley, The Hayride, July 24th, 2018

Clay’s summary: 601 defendants. $2B stolen. All from your paycheck. Work hard!

Key Passage from the Article

Less than a month after the largest federal health care fraud sting in American history, details of the operation show how massive the problem is. As part of the operation, more than 600 people were charged with committing more than $2 billion in fraud and taxpayer theft. “Health care fraud is a betrayal of vulnerable patients, and often it is theft from the taxpayer,” Attorney General Jeff Sessions said. “In many cases, doctors, nurses, and pharmacists take advantage of people suffering from drug addiction in order to line their pockets. These are despicable crimes.” The investigation was led by the Department of Justice (DOJ) and the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS). The joint action involved more than 1,000 federal, state, local, and tribal law enforcement officers. The 601 defendants include 165 doctors, nurses, pharmacists, and medical professionals in 29 states and the District of Columbia, who are accused of financially profiting from more than $2 billion in false health care billings. In addition to criminal charges, HHS announced that 2,700 individuals were excluded from government health care programs since July 2017. The multi-agency investigation targeted fraudulent schemes that billed Medicare, Medicaid, TRICARE (a health insurance program for U.S. military members, their families, and veterans), and private insurance companies for “medically unnecessary” services or services that were never rendered. Bills were submitted for payment for prescription drugs and compounded medications that were rarely or never purchased or distributed to beneficiaries. Some doctors and medical professionals also distributed opioids and other prescription narcotics unlawfully, according to DOJ.

 

  

Read it here 


Article 2:   

CMS Needs to Better Target Risks to Improve Oversight of Expenditures, GAO, August 6th, 2018

Clay’s summary: No one really cares. Just keep the money flowing or else we will call you bad names.

Key Passage from the Article

What GAO Found

The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), which oversees Medicaid, has various review processes in place to assure that expenditures reported by states are supported and consistent with Medicaid requirements. The agency also has processes to review that the correct federal matching rates were applied to expenditures receiving a higher than standard federal matching rate, which can include certain types of services and populations. These processes collectively have had a considerable federal financial benefit, with CMS resolving errors that reduced federal spending by over $5.1 billion in fiscal years 2014 through 2017.

However, GAO identified weaknesses in how CMS targets its resources to address risks when reviewing whether expenditures are supported and consistent with requirements. CMS devotes similar levels of staff resources to review expenditures despite differing levels of risk across states. For example, the number of staff reviewing California’s expenditures—which represent 15 percent of federal Medicaid spending—is similar to the number reviewing Arkansas’ expenditures, which represents 1 percent of federal Medicaid spending. CMS cancelled in-depth financial management reviews in 17 out of 51 instances over the last 5 years. These reviews target expenditures considered by CMS to be at risk of not meeting program requirements. CMS told GAO that resource constraints contributed to both weaknesses. However, the agency has not completed a comprehensive assessment of risk to (1) determine whether oversight resources are adequate and (2) focus on the most significant areas of risk. Absent such an assessment, CMS is missing an opportunity to identify errors in reported expenditures that could result in substantial savings to the Medicaid program.

GAO also found limitations in CMS’s processes for reviewing expenditures that receive a higher federal matching rate. Internal guidance for examining variances in these expenditures was unclear, and not all reviewers in the three CMS regional offices GAO reviewed were investigating significant variances in quarter-to-quarter expenditures. Review procedures for expenditures for individuals newly eligible for Medicaid under the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act were not tailored to different risk levels among states. For example, in its reviews of a sample of claims for this population, CMS reviewed claims for the same number of enrollees—30—in California as for Arkansas, even though California had 10 times the number of newly eligible enrollees as Arkansas. Without clear internal guidance and better targeting of risks in its review procedures for expenditures receiving higher matching rates, CMS may overpay states.

   

Read it here

 

 


 

Article 3:   

Research: Medicaid expansion serves as employment incentive for people with disabilities, Tim Carpenter, The Garden City Telegram, July 24, 2018

Correcting an injustice: HHS moves to stop unions from skimming from Medicaid, Chantal Lovell  & Vincent Vernuccio, Washington Examiner,  August 07, 2018

Clay’s summary: So more healthcare means people will be healthier to work? And its also evil to expect them to do so if they can? I’m confused…

Key Passage from the Article

Research involving the University of Kansas and partner organizations showed individuals who reported not working because of a disability declined in Medicaid expansion states. In 2013, data showed 41.3 percent of individuals with disabilities in expansion states were employed or self-employed. That number escalated to 47 percent in 2017. In the same period, the percentage of the population that reported not working because of disability dropped from 32 percent to 27 percent. Those trends weren’t present in non-expansion states. In effect, the KU Institute for Health and Disability Policy Studies viewed Medicaid expansion as an employment incentive for people with disabilities.

“The takeaway is that, over time, these changes are becoming more robust,” said Jean Hall, professor of applied behavioral science and director of the KU institute. “Our argument is that, over time, those who are better able to manage their health would have a better ability to be employed.” Thirty-two states and the District of Columbia have expanded Medicaid eligibility under a law obligating the federal government to pay no less than 90 percent of the cost of expanded services. In the five-state region that includes Kansas, only Colorado has expanded. Nebraska, Oklahoma, Missouri and Kansas have not. Colyer, who took over for Brownback in January and is seeking the GOP nomination for governor in the Aug. 7 primary, said he supported work requirements within the state’s Medicaid system and opposed expansion of eligibility for Medicaid coverage under the 2010 federal law.

“I’ve been fighting Obamacare and its skyrocketing premiums with shrinking benefits since before it passed,” Colyer said. “Medicaid expansion is not financially sustainable and it focuses on the wrong people.” Sheldon Weisgrau, with the pro-Medicaid expansion group Alliance for a Healthy Kansas, said research showed Ohio’s expanded system improved the health of participants so they could be part of the workforce. “The main reason people on Medicaid don’t work is they’re not healthy enough to work,” said Weisgrau, who disputed the idea expanded Medicaid was unsustainable. “In fact, it is helping the state budgets of most of the states that are participating.”..

 

Read it here

 


 

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Clay’s Weekly Medicaid RoundUp: Week of September 17th 2018

Soundtrack for today’s RoundUp pessimist readers- http://bit.ly/2O1xKhv

For optimist readers- http://bit.ly/2O1y5kh

 

IOWA PER-MEMBER MEDICAID COSTS TRIPLED IN SIX YEARS- Luddite MCO-bashers think it’s the MCOs’ fault. You guys may want to look at the impact of a little thing called taking the “expansion” money as well. The costs of the newly-eligibles surprised the heck out of all of us in every expansion state.

ONE REASON MAINE EXPANSION COULD GO THRU DESPITE LEPAGE’S PROTESTATIONS- It’s a state plan amendment, not a waiver. So the state is basically saying “can we please follow existing law” vs “can you give us permission to get an exception to the law.” Good catch by Michael Shepherd @ Bangor Daily. Roundup readers know all about Mr. LePage. After years of successfully blocking expansion, his agency finally submitted a request to CMS for it- with a catch. LePage sent it along with a memo that said – hey please don’t approve this thing.

SUPER SECRET OHIO PBM REPORT A DUD- Well it ended up being “heavily” redacted, anyway. A judge had considered releasing the report, rich with inside scoop on CVS drug pricing, in all its unredacted glory.

CMS APPROVES 6 NEW FINANCIAL EXPERIMENTS FOR 2019- The Big House approved a new set of APMs (Alternative Payment Models) for next year. MA ACOs, OH episode-based payments, TN retro-episodes, and 2 Washington MCO-based projects.

DEMS TRY TO SUBPOENA CMS DOCS ON WORK REQUIREMENTS– They say it hasn’t been thought-through enough, and inquiring minds in Congressional Lefty Land want to know (do you remember the old National Enquirer tag?). Two of our modern statesmen-luminaries, Elijah Cummings (D-MD) and Raja Krishnamoorthi (D-IL) are leading the subpoena charge. They claim the impact of work requirements on Americans is not being vetted, and they want to see projections, spreadsheets, etc. (keep in mind dear readers, they don’t really care- its all for the cameras. Cummings is set to easily be a part of the “Blue Wave” this November. And while Cummings will probably never lose in ultra-blue MD ((he took 75% of the vote last time)), Mr. K is not as safe and needs to appeal to his Big Healthcare industry buddies, who account for his largest campaign donors by far). Back to the story, though- if we can now subpoena CMS docs for policies impacting Americans that we don’t agree with (apply the “that” either to the policies or the Americans, reader choice), I would love to see the analysis done about 9 years ago on the impact of ACA on Americans. How many Americans with non-Medicaid coverage would lose their coverage? How many Americans would be priced out by absurd deductibles and premiums? How much will the taxes need to go up (i.e. the impact on taxpayers)?

 

CONGRATS AND WELCOME TO KEITH WISDOM- He’ll be the new CEO of Aetna Better Health in KS. Aetna was a recent winner in the MCO awards, and Keith will be the first Aetna KS CEO.

 

OREGON SOS ASKING FOR MONEY TO AUDIT MEDICAID – Sec. of State Richardson wants about $780k to staff up an audit team to figure out just what the heck is going on in the Medicaid program.

 

FARRIS’S FANTASTIC FRAUD FOLLIES– And now for everybody’s favorite paragraph. Let’s start the ticker and see who wins this week’s award- er, not so fast. Not enough time/ space this week, dear, dear fraudsters. Get your fix in the twitter feed. (There’s some big ones in there- I’d say at least $22M in total provider fraud, and a dee-lish $200k member! fraud).

 

That’s it for this week. As always, please send me a note with your thoughts to clay@mostlymedicaid.com or give me a buzz at 919.727.9231. Get outside (plant mums, soon) and keep running the race (you know who you are).

FULL, FREE newsletter@ mostlymedicaid.com . News that didn’t make it and sources for those that did: twitter @mostlymedicaid . Trystero: Otets poslal Syna, chtoby spasti mir.

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Monday Morning Medicaid Must Reads: September 17th, 2018

Helping you consider differing viewpoints. Before it’s illegal. 

 

Article 1:  

NC Medicaid guidelines limit what drugs doctors can use to fight opioid addiction, Nick Oshner, WBTV3, August 30th, 2018

Clay’s summary: Generic vs brand becomes an issue in the opioid crisis.

Key Passage from the Article

In North Carolina, doctors must prescribe either Suboxone or Sublocade to treat opioid addiction in new patients who are using Medicaid insurance. The requirements are listed on the state’s Medicaid formulary, which sets out preferred drugs and non-preferred drugs. Under the formulary for drugs to treat opioid addiction, doctors must first prescribe Suboxone or Sublocade before trying any other generic or pill form of the drug. But, doctors like Manos say there is no medical difference between the name brand drugs and the generic alternatives.

“If you have the active ingredient of buprenorphine in a product and it’s FDA regulated, then the generic is the equivalent to the name brand,” Manos explained.

The only real difference in the name brand and generic versions is price. Manos said the generic alternatives to Suboxone and Sublocation could be one-third to one-fourth of the cost of the name brand drug without rebates. “Does that tie your hands as a physician?” a WBTV reporter asked Manos of the requirement to prescribe only the name brand sublingual strip or injectable. “Well, of course, if they’re saying that you must use what’s on the formulary,” Manos said. “It’s just the way of medicine today.”

But the head of North Carolina’s Medicaid takes a different view. Dave Richard, Deputy Secretary for North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services, said the limits imposed by the state’s formulary is the best for patients and for taxpayers who fund the Medicaid program. Specifically, Richard told WBTV, the state uses a preferred drug list that is administered by the federal government that gives the state rebates on certain drugs. In the case of drugs that treat opioid addiction, the state gets a rebate on name brand drugs manufactured by Indivior. “Through the rebate process, we try to get the best deal for North Carolina for those drugs, which are appropriate for the use of the individuals,” Richard said…

 

  

Read it here 


Article 2:   

The Man Who Used To Run Medicaid Has A New Idea To Make It Better, Michela Tindera, Forbes, August 22, 2018

Clay’s summary: Wonder Andy he can do for these startups what he did for Optum?

Key Passage from the Article

Slavitt is back in the private sector and again focused on fixing America’s healthcare system, this time from outside the government. In the past year he’s founded and launched both a nonprofit (United States of Care) and a venture capital firm (Town Hall Ventures). Next up? The Medicaid Transformation Project, a plan to improve the way the 75 million Americans on Medicaid receive treatment at some of the country’s largest hospital systems. “When I left CMS, I launched an initiative in three critical areas to basically say, we want to change the way healthcare works in a decade,” says Slavitt. “I was 50 when I left. The question I ask myself is by the time I’m 60, what do I want to be different?” Slavitt is pulling together the CEOs of 17 hospital systems around the country to commit to improving care for their Medicaid patients over the next two years in at least four areas: behavioral health, women and infant care, substance use disorder as well as aiming to reduce the number of preventable emergency department visits. The participating hospital systems serve over half of the country’s Medicaid population across 21 states…

   

Read it here

 

 


 

Article 3:   

Medicaid Administrator Verma Blames Ballooning Costs on Structural Problems, Holly Kellum, The Epoch Times, August 24, 2018

Correcting an injustice: HHS moves to stop unions from skimming from Medicaid, Chantal Lovell  & Vincent Vernuccio, Washington Examiner,  August 07, 2018

Clay’s summary: You don’t say.

Key Passage from the Article

For “expansion” states, the federal government agreed to cover 100 percent of newly eligible patient costs from 2014 through 2016. In 2017, it agreed to cover 95 percent of their costs, and this year, will cover 94 percent. The match rate will decline to 90 percent starting in 2020, where it will remain indefinitely. There is no limit on how many people can enroll, so the government, both state and federal, will be left to pick up the tab, no matter how large. Verma said these new enrollees alone are estimated to cost the government $806 billion between 2016 and 2025. “I think that diverts the program from the most vulnerable populations,” she said. “We’ve always had program integrity efforts with the Medicaid program. Given the change with the match rate, and it’s not only the 90 percent, but it’s a completely open-ended entitlement, the incentives aren’t necessarily in place for states to focus on program integrity.” She said it’s also possible that states are taking advantage of this higher match rate. The federal government pays at least 50 percent of the cost for traditional Medicaid patients, but with a minimum 90 percent match rate for “expansion” enrollees, she said this creates an incentive for states to shift traditional Medicaid patients into the “expansion” population…

 

Read it here

 


 

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Clay’s Weekly Medicaid RoundUp: Week of September 10th 2018

Soundtrack for today’s RoundUp pessimist readers- http://bit.ly/2NInQkS

For optimist readers- http://bit.ly/2CUKwu5

4,353 ABLE-BODIED, WORKING AGE ARKANSANS DECIDE FREE HEALTCHARE IS NOT WORTH WORKING (OR VOLUNTEERING) 20 HOURS A WEEK- That’s how many AR Medicaid bennies got kicked off last week for failing to meet work requirements. Assuming pmpm of around $200 (typical for healthy, middle-aged Medicaid bennies), the state just saved $10,447,200 by giving the members a voice in whether the coverage was worth it to them. The flip side is 83-90% (depends on whether you count the denom of those subject in month 1 vs current) of AR bennies met the requirement or were grandfathered in. There are also 1,000 bennies who did not have a job before who chose to go out and get one to keep the coverage. Resistors- Commence name-calling, pearl-clutching, et cet era.

EXPANSION STILL NO DICE IN BAMA- The Good Guvn’r Kay Ivey re-iterated this week that Alabama will not be pursuing expansion any time soon. She seems stuck on this whole “you have to pay for it” silliness. Maybe she hasn’t heard the magical incantations about its free federal money? Or the wise counsel to ignore other tales of woe from expansion states that got shackled to crippling Medicaid debt? Quick, someone call Mrs. Ivey and tell her she simply must take the “free” money.

HEAD OVER 1 STATE EAST, THOUGH- And Stacey Abrams (Dem gubernatorial hopeful in Georgia) is promising Medicaid expansion “is the only answer to Georgia’s challenges.” I must say her background is interesting.. a career in finance and tax law. If anyone can figure out how to get more Medicaid moula, surely it would be a tax attorney. But wait a minute, there’s more- according to an op-ed she wrote for Forbes in the spring, she owes $50,000 in taxes and has outstanding credit card and student loan debt of $170,000. I must say- Mrs. Abrams is uniquely qualified to set Medicaid policy. All she has to do is take her current personal finance skills and scale it up to the level of a state agency. Onward and Upward!

OK, I KEEP READING ABOUT ABRAMS, AND IT JUST GETS BETTER- She is also a romance novelist. I kid you not. Titles include “Hidden Sins,” Secrets and Lies,” The Art of Desire,” and “Deception.” Here is a link to her Harper Collins author page if you don’t believe me. I am unable to resist the temptation to personify Medicaid (as the male interest, a public health Fabio, if you will) in one of her novels. “I looked across the meadow, and the Budget Deficit was staring at me. A look of voracious desire burned a hole into my bones. As he ran to meet me, all I could do was smile and think “Medicaid expansion.” The wind blew through his hair, and we embraced. Mr. Budget Deficit and I were a match made to be. Some might even say, a Federal Match.” FMAP- get it? Ba-dum-bum-bum. Please, please, please Georgia voters- elect this gem. She will give all us writers 4 years of complete silliness to write about.

WE WERE JUST KIDDING ABOUT MORE PRIOR AUTH RULES- Says the NV Medicaid agency. NV Medicaid spending doubled when in expanded, and regulators are desperately looking for any tools to help control costs. They wanted to put more prior auth around certain mental health services to slow down utilization – but providers were loud enough that the state decided not to. Also I think maybe there was a go fund me that raised $10M that said they would NOT call agency officials mean names if they reversed the decision. Or am I getting that confused with some other state?

THINGS IMPROVING IN CT NEMT- We reported previously on the challenged Veyo contract in CT. Looks like there have been significant turnaround efforts (re-training call center reps, improved provider outreach) and the call center wait times are down from 5.5 mins to 2.8. I’m loving the terms and conditions on this contract though- Veyo got $52M in year one of a three-year contract. Lots of terrible press in past few months about service quality, so they have been fined. Total fines Feb. to Sep- $13,500. You can’t make this stuff up.

REMEMBERING 9/11- That’s still ok to do, right? This week we hit the 17th anniversary of this evil attack on U.S. soil. I remember exactly where I was when it happened (living on a friend’s couch) and most of that day very clearly. Have a 9/11 story? Would love to hear it sometime. Send a note. Give a call. Too young to remember it? Here’s a recording of CNN coverage as it happened.

 FARRIS’S FANTASTIC FRAUD FOLLIES– And now for everybody’s favorite paragraph. Let’s start the ticker and see who wins this week’s award. Haydn Thomas and Catinia Farrington of Raleigh, NC plead guilty to stealing $4M Medicaid bucks using their mental health counseling business to submit false claims. Francis Steen and Alicia Sanders of Savannah, NY got caught in “Operation Find the Dough” (that’s the real name local investigators gave their op, and I love them for it). This dynamic duo provides for us one of our rare member fraud cases (rare in that they got caught and were above our $50k minimum for Roundup appearance, technically). It’s a pretty cool list of thieveries for these two- $23,957 in SNAP benefits, $676 in Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program (LiHeap- bonus points!), and $44,594 in Medicaid benefits. Centers Plan for Health Living in Staten Island agreed to pay $2M to double dog promise it did not steal Medicaid bucks by enrolling non-eligible members and then sending Medicaid the bill. Haydn and Catinia – You win! Taxpayers, you lose – about $6.1M based on the ones we showcased today. Work harder!

That’s it for this week. As always, please send me a note with your thoughts to clay@mostlymedicaid.com or give me a buzz at 919.727.9231. Get outside (get a surprise puppy and forever be a hero in the minds of your children) and keep running the race (you know who you are).

FULL, FREE newsletter@ mostlymedicaid.com . News that didn’t make it and sources for those that did: twitter @mostlymedicaid . Trystero: Tatăl la trimis pe Fiul să salveze lumea.

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Monday Morning Medicaid Must Reads:September 10th, 2018

Helping you consider differing viewpoints. Before it’s illegal. 

 

Article 1:  

HHS Secretary Alex Azar warns drug makers to pay full Medicaid rebate amount, Susan Morse, Healthcare Finance, August 10, 2018

Clay’s summary: Who the heck let them get away with this between the years 2008 and 2016?

Key Passage from the Article

“In fact, I am pleased to announce here, to all of you, that HHS is issuing a guidance today to drug manufacturers that will ensure they are paying the full Medicaid rebates they owe on certain prescription drugs,” HHS Secretary Alex Azar said Thursday during the 45th American Legislative Exchange Council Annual Meeting in New Orleans. The Medicaid drug rebate program requires prescription drug companies to pay rebates to states on drugs purchased by Medicaid, where about 10 percent of drug spending occurs. Sometimes, drug manufacturers roll out what’s called a “line extension” for a drug, such as an extended release, once-daily form of a pill they already sell and some of them have used it to reset the price that’s used to calculate the inflation rebates they have to pay, Azar said. This means they could pay less than they would otherwise owe, just by introducing a new drug formulation. “This is the kind of abusive behavior from drug companies that this administration will not tolerate,” Azar said. “Starting today, we’ve made clear that manufacturers must pay the full amount of rebates that they owe under the law.”…

  

Read it here 


Article 2:   

Texas Tightens Disclosure Rules Following Medicaid Investigation, Liz Whyte, NPR, August 17, 2018

Clay’s summary: How is this even a thing?

Key Passage from the Article

A Medicaid committee in Texas is requiring those who comment at its meetings to disclose more details about their ties to pharmaceutical companies after a Center for Public Integrity and NPR investigation into the drug industry’s influence on such boards. The state is one of the latest to respond to the findings of the Medicaid, Under the Influence project. Officials in Arizona, Colorado and New York have already taken action. The Texas committee, which helps decide which medicines are best for patients and should therefore be preferred by Medicaid, will now ask speakers to disclose verbally and in writing if they have “directly or indirectly received payments or gifts” from any pharmaceutical companies and to identify those firms, Texas Health and Human Services Commission spokeswoman Kelli Weldon said in an email. The changes come in response to the July investigation that detailed, among other things, how doctors who came before the Texas committee praised drugs without acknowledging their financial ties to the drugmakers that market them. One physician did not disclose more than $181,000 he had been paid to speak about certain drugs that he then recommended to the committee…

   

Read it here

 

 


 

Article 3:   

3 things you need to know about drug pricing to understand this week’s Medicaid changes, Katie Weddel, Dayton Daily News, August 16, 2018

Correcting an injustice: HHS moves to stop unions from skimming from Medicaid, Chantal Lovell  & Vincent Vernuccio, Washington Examiner,  August 07, 2018

Clay’s summary: Ohio got tired of all the reports showing them paying stupid money to CVS.

Key Passage from the Article

 

The change was announced as Auditor of State Dave Yost prepared to release a report, out today, that shows PBMs charged Ohio a 31 percent markup on some drugs or more than $224.8 million in a one-year period through a controversial “spread” pricing model. This news can be difficult to understand if you don’t know how Medicaid prescription benefits currently work. The Dayton Daily News has been covering the complex system of drug pricing and efforts to make it more transparent for more than a year. 

1. What is a PBM?

Pharmacy benefit managers — or PBMs — are the middlemen between the pharmacy and your health plan and they have influence on many aspects of the consumer prescription experience. They determine which drugs are covered or excluded by health plans, which pharmacies patients can use, and play a major role in determining the price everyone along the supply chain will pay.

Health plan sponsors have been contracting with pharmacy benefit managers since the 1970s to run their prescription benefits. They started out as just claims processors, but now wield much more power…

Read it here

 


 

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Clay’s Weekly Medicaid RoundUp: Week of September 3rd 2018

Soundtrack for today’s RoundUp pessimist readers- http://bit.ly/2wNmryN (1989)

For optimist readers- http://bit.ly/2wLmsDv (1976)

 

POISON PILL IN MAINE- LePage’s administration finally submitted an expansion waiver request this week to CMS. But the Good Guvn’r asked CMS to deny it. LePage sent Veerma a letter, with the gist being – “Hey, a lefty judge forced us to submit this waiver app, but we ain’t got no cash for it. So best to just shoot it down. Wink-wink. Nod-nod.”

SD BALLOT EXPANSION INITIATIVE LOSES KEY BACKER- State Rep David Moore was a proponent of expansion in SD when it included a sunset provision / escape clause if it put SD on a runaway, break-the-bank spending path (like it has in most states that took the “free” money). Now that activists have put full-on, no-way-out expansion on the ballot in November (I-185; not an interstate but rather how they name their resolutions they vote on come election day), Moore has come out against it in a pretty high-profile op-ed. Seems like some other op-ed in the NYT overshadowed this one. I missed the NYT one. Can someone tell me the name of the person that wrote that one?

ASTRAZENECA TO PAY TX $110M TO DOUBLE-DOG PROMISE IT DID NOTHING WRONG- The Lonestar state should have held-out for triple-dog level money. AstraZeneca got caught marketing Seroquel and Crestor off-label. For Seroquel, they worked to get docs to feed it to teenagers, before it was approved for the hip kids. For Crestor they downplayed diabetes risks.

WHY CAN’T COUNTIES IN NY JUST CONTINUE TO PAY BALLOONING MEDICAID COSTS AND SMILE LIKE EVERYBODY ELSE? Well for one reason there’s a new report out reminding county managers how much they must chip in and how big the NY Medicaid behemoth has become. Its now a $70B budget – just for Medicaid; bigger than some state’s entire budgets- and counties have to pay $7.6B of that. And it used to be worse before Pataki and Cuomo put in hard caps on what counties pay.

RELATED TO THAT LAST STORY– NY Medicaid enrollment has grown 57% over the last 10 years. There are now 7M enrollees, which translates into about 36% of all state denizens.

CONGRATULATIONS TO CAROL, BUT MORE SO TO KY– Carol Steckel will take the helm as KY Medicaid Commissioner. She’s one of the absolute best Directors our little world has seen, and I have lost count of how many states she has headed up.  Carol, Congrats! KY team – you made a great choice!

FARRIS’S FANTASTIC FRAUD FOLLIES– And now for everybody’s favorite paragraph. Let’s start the ticker and see who wins this week’s award. John Durmon of Warren, AR was charged with stealing $185k in Medicaid dental bucks. Some good nuggets in this one – he billed for 2,557 x-rays for 85 patients over a 1 year period. That’s 30 x-rays each! Margaret Williams of Anchorage stole an estimated $7M using her nursing homes. Flamingo Eye (that’s the name of the nursing home chain- maybe it made you think of warm places while you were in her crappy nursing home in Alaska?) was used as a rev-max scheme for elderly and disabled members. Waveny Blackman of National Harbor, MD plead to stealing $9M Medicaid bucks using fake patient IDs to bill for bogus medical supply products. Vincent Njong of Silver Spring, MD plead guilty to stealing $66k for bogus billings as a personal care aide (with $66k you just barely made the floor to get included in the RoundUp, Vincent – try harder when you get your billing ID back. Which we all know you will in a few years). Margaret, you win hands down! Taxpayers- you lost $16.3M this week just in these stories that made it the news. You better work hard and smile just thinking how you are helping pay for all this fraud. Somebody’s gotta pay for it.

 

That’s it for this week. As always, please send me a note with your thoughts to clay@mostlymedicaid.com or give me a buzz at 919.727.9231. Get outside (start chopping firewood. I predict a real winter this year) and keep running the race (you know who you are).

FULL, FREE newsletter@ mostlymedicaid.com . News that didn’t make it and sources for those that did: twitter @mostlymedicaid . Trystero: Pitā nē jagata nū bacā’uṇa la’ī putara nū bhēji’ā.

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Monday Morning Medicaid Must Reads:September 3rd, 2018

Helping you consider differing viewpoints. Before it’s illegal. 

 

Article 1:  

California Eyes Medicaid Reimbursement for Telehealth Counseling, Eric Wicklund, mHealth Intelligence, August 28, 2018

Clay’s summary: The opioid crisis is driver broader acceptance of telehealth. CA is the 2nd state in as many months to approve more telehealth reimbursement to deal with the crisis.

Key Passage from the Article

With passage of the bill, which was unanimously approved by state legislators, California joins a growing list of states who are enabling reimbursement for connected care services that address substance abuse addiction disorders. Telehealth and telemedicine experts say a telemental health platform can improve access to care for underserved communities, giving more people with substance abuse issues the ability to access virtual treatment. They also have the support of the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services. Earlier this year, CMS sent a letter to state Medicaid directors urging them to consider telehealth and mHealth in new programs addressing the nation’s opioid abuse crisis. Medi-Cal currently offers telehealth as part of the Drug Medi-Cal Organized Delivery System, but that coverage doesn’t extend across the entire state. This bill would enable providers across California to quality for reimbursement. “The opioid epidemic has ravaged communities and ruined the lives of too many families,” the bill’s sponsor, State Assemblyman Rudy Salas, D-Bakersfield, said in a press release. “For those seeking treatment, we need to ensure that they can access help when they need it most. Telehealth is an innovative way to remove barriers for people seeking help in rural areas so that they can get treatment from specialists and get on the road to recovery.”

  

Read it here 


Article 2:   

Don’t Blame Older Adults For Big Increases In Medicaid Spending, Howard Gleckman, Forbes, August 23, 2018

Clay’s summary: Looks like I will have to get some new charts that aren’t as simplified as the old KFF ones we’ve all been cribbing in our slides for the last 20 years..

Key Passage from the Article

Is the growing need for long-term supports and services (LTSS) by older adults driving big increases in Medicaid spending? Not according to a new study by Don Redfoot and my Urban Institute colleague Melissa Favreault. Indeed, they found that while Medicaid enrollment and expenditures for older adults grew in recent decades, it had far less effect on the program than increases in other Medicaid populations, especially younger people with disabilities. Older adults accounted for only about 13% of Medicaid spending increases from 1975 to 2011. Their paper, published in the Gerontological Society of America’s Public Policy and Aging Report, found that over that period the number of Medicaid beneficiaries tripled from about 22 million to 68 million and program spending increased four-fold from $90 billion to $365 billion (in 2011 dollars)…

  

Read it here

 

 


 

Article 3:   

 Humana Bold Goal Targets Members’ Social Determinants of Health, Thomas Beaton, Health Payer Intelligence, March 27, 2018

Correcting an injustice: HHS moves to stop unions from skimming from Medicaid, Chantal Lovell  & Vincent Vernuccio, Washington Examiner,  August 07, 2018

Clay’s summary: We need more studies of actual SDOH projects like this. The time for research on SDOH from an academic perspective is over (sorry researchers).  Go do stuff.

Key Passage from the Article

The Bold Goal 2018 Progress Report reveals that implementing community-level changes has led to positive health outcomes for elderly beneficiaries with diabetes, heart disease, respiratory conditions, mental health issues, and other chronic diseases. Humana looked for patterns of key social determinants within senior citizen populations such as food insecurity, housing instability, limited English proficiency, social isolation, and inadequate emotional support. The payer found these social determinants had a strong correlation with poor beneficiary health. Older beneficiaries that had limited access to healthy food options were 50 percent more likely to develop diabetes, 14 percent more likely to experience higher blood pressure, and had a 60 percent higher chance of having a heart attack.Social isolation was cited as a significant social determinant of health for elderly beneficiaries. Humana Medicare members living in social isolation had a 26 percent higher likelihood of dying prematurely than members who lived with friends or family. These socially isolated members also had double the risk of Alzheimer’s disease. “As the nation’s senior population grows, they’ll play a larger and more vital role in all of our communities,” said Bruce D. Broussard, Humana’s President and CEO…

 

Read it here

 


 

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Clay’s Weekly Medicaid RoundUp: Week of August 27th 2018

Soundtrack for today’s RoundUp pessimist readers- http://bit.ly/2LKpRI9

For optimist readers- http://bit.ly/2Nyrnic

 

I WILL BE AT MHPA 2018 IN OCT., WILL YOU? You can check it out here – http://bit.ly/2M4KRhY

If you are going, please let me know. I absolutely love to meet RoundUp readers in real life.

MAYBE LONESTAR STATE PULLING THAT MCO RFP RECENTLY IS MAKING MORE SENSE? TX providers gave legislators an ear full on Wednesday. Many tales of provider woe from meanie MCOs, including delayed payments, more paperwork and tighter utilization control. Providers also complained that there are not enough agency staff, and the program is underfunded. This is an easy fix, guys – more money! Duh, Wilberforce.

MISSOURI PHI BREACH FOR 19,750 CHILDREN- WellCare sent letters reminding kiddos (or their parents) about the need for well child visits- but they sent them to the wrong addresses. Seems to be a recurring problem, with a similar breach involving 1,223 member letters last year.

ADD THE MOUNT RUSHMORE STATE TO LIST OF THOSE ASKING FOR WORK RQUIREMENTS- South Dakotans have spoken (through their duly elected representatives, unless of course Russia swung recent SD elections, too. You never know. I was talking to John Stewart at an Antifa potluck he and I were both at last weekend, and he says the Ruskies swung SD. And I like to get all my political analysis from celebrities. Totes) and they want CMS to allow work requirements for their Medicaid program, too.

 NEBRASKA JUDGE OK’S MEDICAID POLICY BY BALLOT; MEDICAID DIRECTOR ROLE NO LONGER NEEDED- Two state lawmakers had tried to head it off at the pass, but no dice. A judge ruled this week that Medicaid expansion can go to the ballot. Hey voters- which DRG grouper do you think we should use next year? Also, we need to update our CMS-34 reports to pull down the additional funds needed. Do you think we should check box 1 or 2 on section F? Would love your opinion…Cuz y’all are totes awesome Medicaid geniuses.

 TRYING TO DEAL WITH OPIOID CRISES IN OREGON IS TRICKY- New plan to make current chronic pain opioid users taper down to zero over 12 months is not without its detractors. That is a best practice, by the way (at least based on some of the research we are using in our upcoming Understanding the Opioid Crisis online course).

 TN HOSPITAL SUES STATE SAYING IT FAVORS MCOS OVER PROVIDERS- Erlanger Health System in Chattanooga (man that’s a fun word) has sued TN over payment rates to hospitals. Looks like a 2007 law requiring MCOs pay the average in-network rate for Medicaid ED visits may be getting interpreted to be the lowest in-network rate instead. Here’s my question – How do the hospitals that’s suing know any of the rates besides their own? Isn’t that secret-sauce, MCO/provider contract stuff?

FL MCO AWARDS COURT CASE STILL GOING- I thought this was over, but the AIDS Foundation plan that lost out, and the South Florida Community Care Network are still pushing for either a new RFP or new awards (for themselves). You know the old- “do the right thing or favor us. Whichever one comes first, we’re cool with as long as it favors us.”

CA MAY PAY FOR TELEHEALTH FOR SUD TREATMENT- Perhaps seeing IL do a similar thing, CA Good Guvn’r Brown is planning on signing a law that will allow for substance abuse counseling sessions via telemedicine (think a Skype session with your therapist).

FARRIS’S FANTASTIC FRAUD FOLLIES– And now for everybody’s favorite paragraph. Let’s start the ticker and see who wins this week’s award. East Mental Health of Roanoke, VA may get off this time due to prosecutors not meeting a discovery handover deadline in this $45M Medicaid case (there are 3.5M documents to wade through). Christopher East (the owner) is charged with 73 counts of tomfoolery, including making up claims and records needed to nab the Medicaid bucks. Helen Balding and Robin Raveendram – who operated the fairly high-profile Arkansas Preferred Family Healthcare scam – were arrested on Medicaid fraud charges in the past few weeks. Looks like Robin was the brains behind the operation, instructing employees VIA EMAIL to forge $2.3M in claims. Michael Gaines of Baton Rouge (Red Stick for all you parents of curious children) was collared as part of the ginormous federal healthcare fraud sweep recently (along with 20 other defendants in the town). He stole about $2M as a social worker by submitting bogus claims for group therapy for students. Matilda Prince of Mineral Bluff, Georgia was sentenced to 3 years for stealing $1.2M from both Medicare and Medicaid. She billed for optometry/ophthalmology services never provided. Melissa DeLap of Jefferson City, MO was sentenced this week for stealing $106k by falsifying personal nursing claims for 4 Medicaid members. One of the people she supposedly provided care for died in Sep 2016 but was not even reported missing until April 2017. Mr. East, your strategy of “drown em’ in documents” put you over the top and you win this week! Taxpayers, you lost about $51M just in these cases that made it to the news. Keep working hard!

 

That’s it for this week. As always, please send me a note with your thoughts to clay@mostlymedicaid.com or give me a buzz at 919.727.9231. Get outside (plan your winter garden/greens) and keep running the race (you know who you are).

FULL, FREE newsletter@ mostlymedicaid.com . News that didn’t make it and sources for those that did: twitter @mostlymedicaid . Trystero: Pai enviou o filho para salvar o mundo