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Medicaid Acronym of the Day – SNF

Skilled Nursing Facility – Many nursing homes are also certified as a Medicare skilled nursing facility (SNF), and most accept long term care insurance and private payment. … If the nursing home is not Medicaid certified, he or she would have to transfer to a NF in order to be covered by the Medicaid Nursing Facility benefit. Medicare Part A (Hospital Insurance) covers skilled nursing care provided in a skilled nursing facility (SNF) under certain conditions for a limited time.

Further reading

https://www.cms.gov/Center/Provider-Type/Skilled-Nursing-Facility-Center.html

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Medicaid Acronym of the Day – NIMH

The National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) is the lead federal agency for research on mental disorders. NIMH is one of the 27 Institutes and Centers that make up the National Institutes of Health (NIH), the largest biomedical research agency in the world. NIH is part of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS).

Further reading

https://www.nimh.nih.gov/index.shtml

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Weekly Medicaid RoundUp: Week of October 23rd, 2017

Soundtrack for today’s RoundUp pessimist readers- http://bit.ly/2y9t7L7

For optimist readers-  http://bit.ly/2y8BeaQ

 

A LITTLE LONGER THIS WEEK- Sit a spell. Let’s catch up.

 

STATES TO GET EASIER TIME ON WAIVER REVIEWS- CMS head Verma was at a conference this week in Ohio and let attendees know the agency is moving towards an
“unprecedented level of flexibility” for states to operate Medicaid the way they want to (v.s. being told what to do by the feds staring down the barrel of an FMAP). Sounds good to me, and should sound good to any freedom-loving person who thinks local autonomy is a good thing. Will of course ring alarm bells for lefties who want to continue using the feds to impose their views.

BADGER STATE STRUGGLES TO GET LEAD TESTS FOR KIDS- Guidelines require that kids get lead testing at 1 and 2 years of age. But it ain’t happening in Wisconsin. Less than 2/3rds of Medicaid kids there receive them according to a new report. Especially concerning since Medicaid kids have a 3X risk of lead poisoning.

 

… BUT APPROVES MORE SUBSTANCE ABUSE TREATMENT— The Good Guvnr Walker announced pay raises for mental health and substance abuse professionals treating Medicaid members this week. All in all, the state will spend about $17M on the rate increases, with the hopes it will entice more providers to offer more treatment.

 

SUNSHINE STATE TIGHTENS TIME AND DISTANCE STANDARDS TO INCREASE PHARMACY NETWORK- Florida changed requirements on MCOs to now have to have a pharmacy within a 10-mile drive of all patients this week. The move added thousands of pharmacies to the overall managed care network, with Staywell adding 1,400 alone (Molina added nearly 900). There were not a lot of rx access complaints before the change, so some analysts are left scratching their heads. Based on what I am reading it may be related to an ongoing independent pharmacy v.s. PBM lobbying scuffle, but not sure. Please write in or call with any intel if you are there on the ground.

 

… ALSO MOVES FORWARD WITH PLANS FOR NEW DENTAL PROGRAM – FL is rolling out a stand-alone dental program March of 2019. The RFP (technically and Invitation to Negotiate, or ITN) was released last week. Bids are due April next year. Considering bidding? Give me a ring. This is one of the ones we are tracking.

 

 

EMBOLDENED DEMS GEAR UP FOR TROTTING OUT “PUBLIC OPTION” – After the multiple nothing-burger attempts at repeal died on the garbage piles of our Congress and Senate, “progressive” Dems (I love that adjective and how its used – what is the corollary- indeed is one allowed in modern discourse?- for Republicans whom journalists want to give them linguistic halos? I digress) are now trotting out the revolutionary (think Che) idea of selling Medicaid to the masses via the exchange. This is the “public option” that ACA footsoldiers dreamed of nearly 10 years ago. Senators from HI and NM are leading the charge. Let’s do a poll – would you buy Medicaid if you had a choice? Assume: no changes to benefits or network compared to Medicaid in your state today; you pay a similar percentage of the total costs as you do for your commercial coverage today; and there are no subsidies. Please do comment or write in on this one.

 

NM BUDGET GROANS, PARTLY DUE TO CHIP RE-AUTH UNCERTAINTY- $82M short for Medicaid this year. $31M is being pinned on CHIP, which is still currently in the air in The District. $15M is tied to the ACA expansion bill coming due (states like NM who expanded start paying more of the costs of that decision this year).

 

AZ GOP NOT GIVING UP ON FIGHTING EXPANSION, DESPITE D.C. GOP FAILURES TO REPEAL/REPLACE— If you’ve been following this, you know its been a long road. If you are pro-expansion, you view these guys as the zombies that just won’t die. If you are pro-taxpayer, you admire their stick-to-it-ness. After being denied at the state appeals court, the AZ lawmakers get their day in the AZ Supreme Court this week. Recap: Good Guvn’r Brewer expanded unilaterally. State GOP said it’s a tax passed without their consent, which is against AZ laws.

 

GOOD GUVN’R USES CHIP FUNDING CRISIS TO RENEW PUSH FOR EXPANSION- The state that brought us the Batman-Villain-Eyebrows VP Candidate, continues to grace us with current Good Governor McAuliffe (Virginia). The Good Guvn’r insists that the way to deal with CHIP uncertainty is to expand Medicaid. Can someone please let him that’s so 2015? The hip thing now, Terry, is to sell Medicaid on the exchanges, under the “public option.”

 

CONVERT YOUR NURSING HOME TO BE “COUNTY-OWNED” IN THE HOOSIER STATE, GET 30% HIGHER RATES FROM MEDICAID— All you have to do is lease your nursing home to a county health system and you get higher rates. Pretty much every facility in Indiana knows about the loophole now, so 90% of them lease themselves to county hospitals. No big deal though. Spending over past 5 years on IN nursing homes has only increased a paltry $1B. That’s less than 1% of a typical pay-off-Iran-in-the-middle-of-the-night-with-a-ship-load-of-cash scheme. Seems legit.

 

DIRECTORS SAY CAID SPENDING WILL INCREASE 5.2% IN FY 2018, V.S. 3.9% IN FY 2017— This is even with slower enrollment growth. Seems most states are resolved to pay most providers more (except hospitals). 

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. Isaiah Bongham, owner of Dynamic Visions (a home health agency in D.C.) has been ordered to pay back $2M he stole from Medicaid. Actually he stole $480k, but the Fraudulent Claims Act triples it (that’s cool). Santila Terry of Morgan Park, IL stole $1M using her speech therapy operation. She kept billing for services provided by an employee long after the employee left her firm. Christina Benson of Orlando was sentenced to 4.5 years for her role in a scheme that enticed homeless Medicaid members to get services at her psych rehab center. Mrs. Benson’s kickback scheme cost FL about $200k. Charline Brandon of Little Rock is accused of billing Medicaid nearly $300k for hospice care for patients without a terminal diagnosis. Jerrold Rosenberg of Jamestown, RI plead guilty this week to accepting $180k in kickback payments in exchange for prescribing a version of Fentanyl called Subsys. He was conspiring with AZ-based Insys Therapies. Cesar Tavera of Cherry Hill, PA was sentenced this week for embezzling $1.5M from the community mental health center he ran. His wife plead guilty to Medicaid fraud earlier this year.  Mr. Tavera – you win on sheer volume alone! Congratulations! This weeks total taxpayer tab: $3.5M.

 

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 (make a bonfire) 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: abeojineun sesang-eul guhagi wihae adeul-eul bonae syeossda.

 

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Medicaid Acronym of the Day – FSA

Flexible Spending Account (FSA) An arrangement you set up through your employer to pay for many of your out-of-pocket medical expenses with tax-free dollars. These expenses include insurance copayments and deductibles, and qualified prescription drugs, insulin and medical devices.

Further reading

https://www.healthcare.gov/glossary/flexible-spending-account-FSA/

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Medicaid Acronym of the Day – AWP

Average Wholesale Price – A benchmark used for pricing and reimbursement of prescription drugs for both government and private payers. AWP is not a true representation of actual market prices for either generic or brand drug products. AWP has often been compared to the “list price” or “sticker price”, meaning it is an elevated drug price that is rarely what is actually paid. It is provided by pricing services.

Further reading

http://www.ncsl.org/research/health/medicaid-pharmaceutical-laws-and-policies.aspx

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Medicaid Acronym of the Day – JCAHO

Joint Commission for Accreditation of Health Organizations – a private, nonprofit organization whose mission is to continuously improve the safety and quality of care provided to the public; it does this through the provision of health accreditation and related services that support performance improvement in health care organizations. JCAHO is governed by a 28-member Board of Commissioners that includes nurses, physicians, consumers, medical directors, administrators, providers, employers, labor representatives, health plan leaders, quality experts, ethicists, health insurance administrators, and educators. The corporate members of JCAHO are the American College of Physicians-American Society of Internal Medicine, the American College of Surgeons, the American Dental Association, the American Hospital Association, and the American Medical Association.

Further reading

https://www.jointcommission.org/about_us/fact_sheets.aspx

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Medicaid Acronym of the Day – DUA

Data Use Agreement – The Privacy Act of 1974 requires the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) to account for all disclosures of personally identifiable information (PII). CMS uses the DUA to account for all such disclosures.

Further reading

https://www.cms.gov/Research-Statistics-Data-and-Systems/Files-for-Order/Data-Disclosures-Data-Agreements/DUA_-_Extensions_Closures.html

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Medicaid Acronym of the Day – NHE

The National Health Expenditure Accounts (NHEA) are the official estimates of total health care spending in the United States. Dating back to 1960, the NHEA measures annual U.S. expenditures for health care goods and services, public health activities, government administration, the net cost of health insurance, and investment related to health care. The data are presented by type of service, sources of funding, and type of sponsor.

U.S. health care spending grew 5.8 percent in 2015, reaching $3.2 trillion or $9,990 per person. As a share of the nation’s Gross Domestic Product, health spending accounted for 17.8 percent.

 

Further reading

https://www.cms.gov/Research-Statistics-Data-and-Systems/Statistics-Trends-and-Reports/NationalHealthExpendData/NHE-Fact-Sheet.html

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Medicaid Acronym of the Day – OMW

Osteoporosis Management in Women Who Had a Fracture – The percentage of women 67–85 years of age who suffered a fracture and who had either a bone mineral density (BMD) test or prescription for a drug to treat osteoporosis in the six months after the fracture.

 

Further reading

https://www.qualitymeasures.ahrq.gov/summaries/summary/49727

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Medicaid Acronym of the Day – SPC

Statin Therapy for Patients With Cardiovascular Disease –

The percentage of males 21–75 years of age and females 40–75 years of age who were identified as having clinical atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease (ASCVD) and met the following criteria.

Members who were dispensed at least one high or moderate-intensity statin medication during the measurement year.
Members who remained on a high or moderate-intensity statin medication for at least 80% of the treatment period.

 

Further reading

http://www.rxeconsult.com/healthcare-articles/HEDIS-2017-Measure-For-Statin-Therapy-For-Patients-With-Cardiovascular-Disease-SPC-1271/