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CNY doctor to pay $900,000 for overcharging Medicaid services

 
 

MM Curator summary

The article below has been highlighted and summarized by our research team. It is provided here for member convenience as part of our Curator service.

 
 

[MM Curator Summary]: The “doctor” stole $600k by upcoding smoking cessation counseling sessions.

 
 

 
 

After investigating state Medicaid overpayments, the state attorney general and the U.S. Attorney’s Office of the Northern District of New York say a medical practice doctor with offices in Tully and Groton has overcharged Medicaid for medical services.

State Attorney General Letitia James said since January 2012, Dr. Ahmad M. Mehdi has submitted up-coded reimbursement bills for Medicaid services.

In a release, James stated the doctor “up-coded” medical services, and billed for smoking cessation counseling without sufficient documentation from 2012 to 2018. Up-coding is the act of requesting more reimbursement for medical procedures that are not as costly as billed for.

Dr. Mehdi also breached the Controlled Substances Act by prescribing opiates outside his normal practice to three patients from 2018 to 2020.

Under the terms of the settlement, the doctor has agreed to pay the State Medicaid Program $260,000 and a penalty of nearly $309,000. He will also pay the federal government $331,250.

“Every dollar scammed from Medicaid is a dollar not spent caring for New Yorkers with actual medical needs,” Attorney General James said in the release. “I am proud of the work my team did, together with the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Northern District of New York, in uncovering these false claims and securing these funds.

Clipped from: https://www.waer.org/2022-10-25/cny-doctor-to-pay-900-000-for-overcharging-medicaid-services
 

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Transport provider convicted of Medicaid fraud

 
 

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The article below has been highlighted and summarized by our research team. It is provided here for member convenience as part of our Curator service.

 
 

[MM Curator Summary]: The company billed for wheelchair transports for members who did not need wheelchairs, stealing about $800k.

 
 

 
 

TOLEDO, Ohio (WTVG) – A federal jury on Monday, Oct. 24, 2022, convicted the founder and owner of Blue Line Express Taxi & Medical Transport Monday on three counts of healthcare fraud.

Abdul Haji Faqi, 46, of Toledo, was found guilty of participating in a scheme that submitted and received reimbursement payments from Medicaid for ineligible claims.

Faqi’s co-defendants pleaded guilty and were sentenced earlier this year for their part in the scheme.

Between 2009 and 2016, Faqi schemed with his co-defendants to transport and bill Medicaid for ambulette transportation services of Medicaid beneficiaries who did not require or use a wheelchair. They also billed Medicaid for wheelchair attendants without actually providing any attendants, as well as other tactics to increase their Medicaid billing.

In total, court documents state that Faqi and his co-defendants received over $800,000 in reimbursements from Medicaid to which they were not entitled.

Faqi is scheduled to be sentenced on Feb. 13, 2023.

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Clipped from: https://www.13abc.com/2022/10/25/transport-provider-convicted-medicaid-fraud/

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States brace for Medicaid spending surge

 
 

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The article below has been highlighted and summarized by our research team. It is provided here for member convenience as part of our Curator service.

 
 

[MM Curator Summary]: States are worried that the extra COVID money will go away, but few are tightening their belt in preparation for it.

 
 

Data: Kaiser Family Foundation; Chart: Madison Dong/Axios Visuals

States could start the new year grappling with a surge in Medicaid spending to accompany supply chain pressures, workforce shortages and the effects of inflation.

The big picture: The end of the COVID-19 public health emergency could result in state Medicaid outlays growing at a rate of 16.3% in fiscal 2023, even with efforts underway to control future program costs, according to a report from the Kaiser Family Foundation.

  • The federal government increased its contribution to the safety-net program during the pandemic in exchange for state pledges to keep enrollees in the program through the crisis. But that additional money could run out as soon as March, if the Biden administration lets the public health emergency expire in January, as many expect.

What they’re saying: “Inflationary pressures obviously put pressures on our members, but also on the state and on rates, which are really challenging to manage,” Amanda Cassel Kraft, who leads Massachusetts’ Medicaid program, said during a KFF call on the report. “If the economic picture shifts and we don’t have the same level of revenue coming into this state to be able to make additional investments, it creates a real challenge.”

  • Indiana is working on a plan to improve transparency and predictability around payment rates for providers, added Allison Taylor, the state’s Medicaid director. “It won’t solve all the problems but I think it’s a nice tool in the toolbox for sustainability.”

Zoom in: Medicaid is a huge component of state budgets. Because of balanced budget requirements, a surge in program costs can scramble broader revenue and spending projections.

  • Federal actuaries last spring projected per enrollee spending on Medicaid would increase 6.7% in 2022, and 6% in 2023.
  • Most states have turned to managed care plans to administer Medicaid benefits and better control spending on the health program.
  • But nearly a third of states in fiscal 2022 reported increased health provider or managed care costs were putting upward pressure on spending, per the KFF report.
  • Pent up demand from pandemic-related delays in care and higher spending for home and community-based services also were factors, the report said.

Yes, but: Most state Medicaid agencies surveyed between June and September weren’t expecting state legislators to cut Medicaid budgets.

  • About half of survey respondents pointed to longer-term financial uncertainty in their states.

Worth noting: Nearly all states reported higher rates for at least one provider group in fiscal 2023. Half said they’re decreasing or freezing at least one set of provider rates.

  • Nursing home and providers of home- and community-based services saw Medicaid payment increases most frequently this fiscal year.
  • Providers increasingly ask Medicaid agencies for payment increases due to inflation and labor costs, states told KFF.
  • None of the states reported restricting or scrapping any benefits in 2023, while 34 states said they’re increasing benefit offerings.
  • States also didn’t see legislative action to freeze or cut rates across all or most provider groups in 2022 or 2023.
  • “As always, it is an exciting and challenging time to serve as a Medicaid director,” said Kathy Gifford, co-author of the report and a principal at Health Management Associates.

 
 

Clipped from: https://www.axios.com/2022/10/26/states-medicaid-spending-surge

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Kentucky offers expanded Medicaid health coverage for adults

 
 

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The article below has been highlighted and summarized by our research team. It is provided here for member convenience as part of our Curator service.

 
 

[MM Curator Summary]: The Good Guvn’r is making some savvy arguments about how the new benefits will improve the workforce.

 
 

Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear has announced plans to extend Medicaid coverage for dental, vision and hearing care to hundreds of thousands of adults

 
 

FRANKFORT (AP) — Gov. Andy Beshear on Thursday extended Medicaid coverage for dental, vision and hearing care to hundreds of thousands of Kentucky adults, saying the sweeping initiative will remove some of the health-related obstacles keeping people from getting jobs.

The expansion will cover about 900,000 adults enrolled in the state’s Medicaid program, the Democratic governor said at his weekly news conference. They will be eligible for the extended benefits starting Jan. 1, 2023, with no special enrollment period needed.

Beshear linked good health to workforce participation in announcing the initiative.

“If you can’t see, it’s really hard to work,” he said. “If you can’t hear the instructions that you’re getting, it’s really hard to work. If you have massive dental problems that are creating major pain or other complications, it’s really hard to work.”

Medicaid is a joint federal and state health care program for poor and disabled people. The federal government will pay for the “vast majority” of the expanded care, the governor said. The remainder of the costs can be absorbed by the state’s Medicaid budget, which is healthy, he said.

“It will have no significant impact on Kentucky’s budget,” the governor said. “It will require no changes to our budget in this next (legislative) session. In other words, it is easily affordable, which means we absolutely should do it.”

Federal funds will cover 90% of the initiative’s $36 million in annual costs, the Kentucky Cabinet for Health and Family Services said in a follow-up statement Thursday. The state Department for Medicaid Services will cover the remaining 10%, the statement said.

The initiative applies to individuals earning less than $18,700 per year and a family of four with income under $38,200 yearly, Beshear said. Without Medicaid, they couldn’t afford health care, he said. People 21 and under already qualify for the dental, vision and hearing services if enrolled in Medicaid.

Beshear commonly refers to health care as a “basic human right,” but he stressed the initiative’s value in getting more people into the workforce. Lagging workforce participation coming out of the COVID-19 pandemic has drawn complaints from business leaders and Republican politicians.

“The goal here is to get folks to work, to ultimately get them off Medicaid,” the governor said.

This year, the Bluegrass State has set record low unemployment rates, holding at or below 3.9% since April. Kentucky also set records for business investments and job creation in 2021.

Ben Chandler, president and CEO of the Foundation for a Healthy Kentucky, on Thursday called the Medicaid initiative a “remarkable step forward.” Expanding dental, hearing and vision coverage will have a “positive impact” on state’s workforce and the health of Kentuckians, he said.

“All of the data shows that when you work, you have a much better chance of having good health,” Chandler said. “You have to be able to have good health to work and you have to be able to work to have good health.”

On average, almost 100 million work hours are lost annually in the United States due to emergency dental care, Beshear’s office said in a news release. Meanwhile, about 16% of Kentuckians have some degree of hearing loss, the release said, citing U.S. Census data.

Beshear’s Medicaid initiative is an extension of action taken by his father, Steve Beshear, who championed the state’s Medicaid expansion when he was governor. More than 400,000 people were added to the Medicaid rolls when Steve Beshear expanded the program to cover able-bodied adults. For many Kentuckians, it was their first time to have health coverage.

Republican Matt Bevin, who succeeded Steve Beshear as governor, proposed a waiver that would have required some able-bodied Medicaid recipients to get a job, go to school or volunteer to keep their benefits. Bevin said the Medicaid expansion was too expensive.

The work requirements became tied up in court, but Andy Beshear rescinded Bevin’s waiver plan in his first few days as governor after narrowly defeating Bevin in 2019.

 
 

Clipped from: https://www.richmondregister.com/ap/business/kentucky-offers-expanded-medicaid-health-coverage-for-adults/article_8a2997fc-698b-58c8-8356-4441623a7e23.html

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HHS approves Medicaid housing intervention program in Arizona

 
 

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The article below has been highlighted and summarized by our research team. It is provided here for member convenience as part of our Curator service.

 
 

[MM Curator Summary]: AZ will join a growing list of states using Medicaid dollars to address housing needs for members.

 
 

An article from

Dr. Elizabeth Maziarka uses a stethoscope during an examination of patient June Mendez at the Codman Square Health Center April 11, 2006 in Dorchester, Massachusetts. Joe Raedle/Getty Images via Getty Images

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Dive Brief:

  • The HHS approved a Medicaid intervention program in Arizona targeting drivers of health outcomes with a focus on housing insecurity, according to a Friday release from the department.
  • It’s the latest 1115 demonstration approval from the agency, following others in Oregon and Massachusetts targeted at expanding access to coverage and addressing nutrition and housing needs.
  • The HHS is encouraging more states to stand up such programs, Secretary Xavier Becerra and CMS Administrator Chiquita Brooks-LaSure said in the release.

Dive Insight:

Social determinants of health have been increasingly highlighted amid rising healthcare costs and growing acknowledgment that lifestyle and circumstances can dictate health outcomes.

The coronavirus pandemic brought even more attention to the issue, as the virus has disproportionately claimed the lives of people of color and those in underserved communities.

The program in Arizona will focus on making sure Medicaid beneficiaries have adequate housing with resources to help them transition from temporary to more stable living situations.

The intervention will provide support for community and transitional housing for those with unique needs or for people transitioning out of institutionalized care. It will also help provide rent or temporary housing for up to six months for those transitioning out of congregate settings or homeless shelters, according to the release.

Arizona’s Medicaid program will also offer case management and outreach.

The CMS is approving health-related social infrastructure funding to support Arizona’s efforts, and it will require a rigorous evaluation of outcomes and impacts of the program, the agency said.

“Everyone deserves the chance to receive the care they need to live safe and healthy lives,” Becerra said in the release.

 
 

Clipped from: https://www.healthcaredive.com/news/HHS-arizona-medicaid-intervention-1115-demonstration/634258/

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Alabama Medicaid Removes Sobriety Requirements for Hepatitis C Treatment

 
 

MM Curator summary

The article below has been highlighted and summarized by our research team. It is provided here for member convenience as part of our Curator service.

 
 

[MM Curator Summary]: AL will join most other states that do not require members to be sober before they can get help he needs Hep-C.

 
 

 
 

Istock

Eliminating the hurdle of abstinence is a big win for people in Alabama with substance use disorders and their health.

The Center for Health Law and Policy Innovation of Harvard Law School (CHLPI) and the National Viral Hepatitis Roundtable (NVHR) applaud Alabama Medicaid’s decision to remove its previous sobriety requirements for individuals seeking hepatitis C treatment.

Earlier this year, CHLPI joined forces with AIDS Alabama to file an administrative complaint with the U.S. Department of Justice saying the state’s requirement for abstinence as a prerequisite to hepatitis C treatment violated the rights of people who use drugs.

“Previously, Alabama’s Medicaid program imposed one of the harshest substance use restrictions in the nation on people seeking hepatitis C treatment,” said Suzanne Davies, a clinical fellow at CHLPI. “The new policy is a welcome change that will enable Alabamians with hepatitis C to access lifesaving treatment regardless of whether they are disabled due to substance use disorder.”

More than 30,000 Alabamians are currently living with hepatitis C, according to an estimate from HepVu. Left untreated, those infections cause liver inflammation that regularly leads to liver cancer and other potentially fatal complications.

Direct-acting antivirals, which have been available since 2013, cure most HCV infections within 8 to 12 weeks, but administrative processes and arbitrary treatment eligibility requirements hinder access to these lifesaving drugs throughout the U.S.

Alabama joins 32 other jurisdictions across the nation who do not impose substance use requirements for hepatitis C treatment. Still, the barrier of prior authorization looms large in Alabama and the majority of U.S. states, a stumbling block that poses serious concerns for the country’s momentum with hepatitis C elimination.

“For too long the substance use requirement interfered with providers’ ability to offer patients with hepatitis C the medical standard of care,” said Adrienne Simmons, director of programs at NVHR. “By ensuring that people who use drugs have access to lifesaving therapy, Alabama will help stem the tide of liver cancer and health inequities in the South.”

For more information about hepatitis C treatment access barriers, please visit www.stateofhepc.org. View the Hepatitis C: State of Medicaid Access 2022 national summary report here.

 
 

Clipped from: https://www.hepmag.com/blog/alabama-medicaid-removes-sobriety-requirements-hepatitis-c-treatment

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Centene Gave Thousands to Georgia Leaders’ Campaigns While Facing Medicaid Overbilling Questions

 
 

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The article below has been highlighted and summarized by our research team. It is provided here for member convenience as part of our Curator service.

 
 

[MM Curator Summary]: Sometimes seeing the sausage made can be [insert your punchline here].

 
 

 
 

(SOPA Images / Getty Images)

[UPDATED at 9:35 a.m. ET on Oct. 18]

A health insurance giant that has paid out more than $485 million in legal settlements with states over pharmacy billing allegations has also been a major donor to Georgia’s Republican Gov. Brian Kemp and Attorney General Chris Carr, according to campaign finance records.

St. Louis-based Centene Corp. said Monday in a statement that it’s working to settle Medicaid billing issues with Georgia and eight other states, beyond the 13 states it has already agreed to pay. In the public agreements so far, state attorney general offices have been involved in setting the agreements’ terms and have announced the settlement amounts.

According to Carr’s campaign filings, Centene-related donations included spending around an event for him in late August.

The attorney general “appreciates those who support his campaign, but all should understand the attorney general will vigorously defend his client — the people of Georgia — and handle every case before him legally, ethically and honestly,” Carr campaign manager Neil Bitting said in a statement. Kemp’s campaign declined to comment.

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Centene is the parent company of Peach State Health Plan, which delivers managed-care services to about 1 million low-income Georgians enrolled in Medicaid and PeachCare for Kids. It is one of three companies that typically receive more than $4 billion, combined, from the state annually to run the public health insurance programs.

Centene has settled with 13 states over allegations the conglomerate overbilled state Medicaid programs for prescription drug services. It has paid a total of at least $489 million to 10 states, with the other three not yet publicly announced, KHN has reported.

A spokesperson for Carr’s office said Friday that it was waiting for direction from the state Department of Community Health, or DCH, Georgia’s Medicaid agency, before the state pursues a settlement with Centene. “The state is aware of other settlements in other states involving Centene, and the Law Department understands that DCH is conducting a review of its relevant information,” Kara Richardson said. “Once DCH comes to a decision, the Law Department stands ready to provide legal representation in any potential settlement negotiation or litigation.”

A spokesperson for the Community Health Department, David Graves, told The Atlanta Journal-Constitution on Monday that the agency “can confirm that we will be thoughtful and intentional with our approach in a way that ensures the taxpayers of Georgia are best protected.” The governor’s office did not respond directly to questions about possible settlement negotiations.

Centene is the national leader in Medicaid managed care, with more than 15 million members. The company earns about two-thirds of its revenue from Medicaid, which is jointly funded by state and federal taxpayers.

In many states, insurance companies such as Centene also administer Medicaid enrollees’ prescription medications through what is called a pharmacy benefit manager. These benefit managers act as middlemen between drugmakers and health insurers and as intermediaries between health plans and pharmacies. In some cases, Centene acted as both the Medicaid managed-care provider and the pharmacy benefit manager for those plans.

The company, in a statement on Monday, said that it donates to candidates of both parties and is generally supportive of incumbents: “As a member of the healthcare community, we work with elected representatives to help improve quality of care and access to services for the communities we serve.”

Kemp’s reelection campaign has received more than $100,000 in contributions from Centene, its subsidiaries, and its employees since 2018, according to state campaign records, with heavy giving after the first publicly announced settlements, with Ohio and Mississippi in 2021.

Most of the more than $70,000 in Centene-related giving to Carr’s campaign this year came from company executives, including $10,000 from CEO Sarah London. Carr’s campaign also got $6,000 from Centene general counsel Chris Koster, a former Missouri attorney general who has signed pharmacy billing settlements on behalf of the company.

Much of the Centene-related donations to Carr’s campaign occurred in late August, according to the campaign records. They include $3,097 for a venue rental Aug. 26 and catering costs of $3,000 on Aug. 24. The latter was paid by Kelly Layton, wife of Centene President Brent Layton, a former staffer at the Georgia insurance department. Five out-of-state Centene employees donated a total of $13,000 during that three-day period.

In previously announced settlements, Centene has not admitted any wrongdoing. Centene set aside $1.25 billion in 2021 to resolve the pharmacy benefit manager settlements in “affected states,” according to a July filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission that did not specify how many states were involved.

In January, Wade Rakes, president and CEO of Centene subsidiary Peach State Health Plan, alerted Community Health officials that the company, after an analysis of its pharmacy cost reporting, “may have a remittance obligation” to the state Medicaid program, according to an email obtained by KHN through a public records request.

William Perry, founder of Georgia Ethics Watchdogs, pointed out that nothing in state law bars Kemp or Carr from accepting donations from companies like Centene that do business with the state. “They’ll sit there and say they’ve done nothing unethical under the law, but if you come from an ethically moral position, it’s horrible,” he said. “It’s bad optics, and it just really makes me sick.”

The campaign of Carr’s Democratic opponent in the November election, Jen Jordan, criticized the attorney general for accepting the Centene contributions to his campaign. A Centene subsidiary donated $1,500 to Jordan in 2019, when she was running for reelection to the Georgia Senate, but the conglomerate doesn’t appear to have given to her campaign this cycle.

“This is yet another example of how Chris Carr prioritizes special interests over the people of Georgia, and the culture of corruption that characterizes the current office of the attorney general,” said Caroline Korba, a spokesperson for Jordan. “Our attorney general should not be bought and sold.”

A Centene subsidiary gave a total of $6,600 to Stacey Abrams, the Democrat running against Kemp, in three separate donations since 2015, the last coming in October 2018, during Abrams’ previous campaign for governor.

Maya T. Prabhu is a state government reporter for The Atlanta Journal-Constitution.

[Update: This article was updated at 9:35 a.m. ET with comments from the campaign of Attorney General Chris Carr.]

Clipped from: https://khn.org/news/article/centene-georgia-settlement/

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Lawsuits, challenges and debates: Where California’s controversial Medicaid contract process stands

 
 

MM Curator summary

The article below has been highlighted and summarized by our research team. It is provided here for member convenience as part of our Curator service.

 
 

[MM Curator Summary]: If you thought the losing plans were going to take this sitting down, you got another thing coming.

 
 

California’s first-ever Medicaid managed contract procurements are a major shakeup in the state’s Medi-Cal system, which has over 12 million enrollees, or a third of California’s population. 

Millions of residents will switch plans as a result of the changes, and a lengthy road of appeals and legal battles could lay ahead. 

California selected the intended recipients of the Medicaid managed contract procurement process Aug. 25. Here’s what you need to know about who won and lost in the bidding battle, and what comes next in the appeals process. 

1. California’s first-ever Medicaid managed contract procurement process was designed to promote health equity

The California Department of Health Care Services first issued a request for proposals from managed care organizations on Feb. 9, saying the process would “redefine” how care is delivered to Medi-Cal beneficiaries. 

The new contracts require plans to address social determinants of health, including food insecurity and housing. The contracts also include value-based payments, tying payments to quality metrics. 

The plans are also required to allocate between 5 and 7.5 percent of their profits to community investment. 

In an Aug. 25 news release, California Department of Health Care Services Director Michelle Baas called the contract awards a “defining moment for Medi-Cal and its millions of members.” 

2. The contracts are part of the state’s wider value-based Medicaid reforms 

California is implementing several efforts to improve Medi-Cal, including CalAIM, an initiative to improve outcomes and reduce health disparities, address social determinants of health and keep people continuously enrolled in Medicaid. 

“We know that 80 percent of a person’s ability to be healthy is predicated on social conditions or social determinants of health, and 20 percent is just the nuts and bolts of medical services,” Kelly Bruno-Nelson, executive director of Medi-Cal and CalAIM at CalOptima, told Becker’s in June.

“CalAIM recognizes that nuance and says, we shouldn’t be separating these two buckets, we should be bringing these two buckets together,” Ms. Bruno-Nelson said. 

The reforms have raised some concerns among providers, who say these reforms aren’t reaching the patients who need them most and don’t go far enough to reimburse providers. 

So far, 97,200 patients out of 14.7 million Medi-Cal recipients are enrolled in the CalAIM program, Kaiser Health News reported Oct. 10. 

3. Molina Healthcare won big in the decisions, while Kaiser Permanente didn’t have to bid 

The state chose to award the contracts to three managed care providers: Molina Healthcare, Anthem Blue Cross Partnership Plan and Centene subsidiary Health Net. Molina won its largest ever Medicaid deal, scoring contracts in some of the state’s largest counties. It will add 1.4 million enrollees, the Los Angeles Business Journal reported, mostly at Health Net’s expense.  

These contracts cover 23 counties. The state also entered a controversial direct contract with Kaiser Permanente in 32 counties. The direct contract allowed the payer-provider to skip the bidding process. 

California Gov. Gavin Newsom approved the contract with Kaiser Permanente June 30. The contract was developed in secret with the governor’s office and allows Kaiser to pick its Medicaid enrollees. 

4. Up to 2 million people could switch plans

The state’s Department of Health Care Services estimates around 2.3 million Medi-Cal members will likely change managed care organizations.

The department said its priority is to ensure a smooth transition for members who will switch contracts. In an FAQ document, the department said members have continuity of care rights that will be “fully protected and enforced during the transition.”  

Additionally, the department says it does not expect any disruption of pharmacy benefits. 

In a Sept. 6 letter to the Department of Health Care Services, dozens of providers in San Diego county expressed concern about Community Health Group — the only locally-based Medi-Cal plan in the area — losing out on contracts in the county, urging the department to reinstate the plan.. 

“The lives of San Diego residents — especially its most vulnerable, marginalized, and high-need populations — are at stake,” the providers wrote. 

5. A legal battle is looming 

Payers that lost out on contracts — including Aetna, Blue Shield of California Promise Health Plan, Community Health Group Partnership and Health Net Community Solutions — are challenging the state’s decisions, according to documents from the Health Care Services department. 

Providers had until Oct. 7 to submit written responses and rebuttals to the appeal process. 

Payers slammed their rivals in appeal documents, Kaiser Health News reported Sept. 26. Health Net, which lost several contracts to Molina, said the payer’s application contained “false, inaccurate and misleading information” in its appeal. 

Insurers who don’t win out in the appeal process are likely to sue. Community Health Group’s COO, Joseph Garcia, told Kaiser Health News Sept. 26 it will sue if it loses its appeal. 

Blue Shield of California, which lost contracts in all 13 counties in which it bid, filed a lawsuit against the state Oct. 7, alleging it had violated public records laws by not turning over documents related to the contracts.

“We have waited in good faith and the Department of Health Care Services is refusing to provide the public information we are requesting or to provide a reasonable amount of time for the appeal process,” Kristen Cerf, president and CEO of Blue Shield of California Promise Health Plan, said in a news release.

A spokesperson for the Department of Health Care Services told Becker’s Oct. 7 that the department has no comment on pending or potential litigation. 

“DHCS remains committed to a robust procurement process to select awardees that demonstrate the capacity and capability to deliver on DHCS’ stated goals and priorities, including transparency, high-quality care, access, behavioral health services, children services, coordinated/integrated care, increased health equity, and accountability,” the spokesperson said. 

The Health Services Department intends for the contracts to take effect in January 2024. 

 

Clipped from: https://www.beckerspayer.com/payer/lawsuits-challenges-and-debates-where-californias-controversial-medicaid-contract-process-stands.html
 

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Nebraska Medicaid will have multiple changes starting in 2024

 
 

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The article below has been highlighted and summarized by our research team. It is provided here for member convenience as part of our Curator service.

 
 

[MM Curator Summary]: New MCOs, a new D-SNP, dental, rx and BH integration, and new EVV requirements- all going live in about 15 months.

 
 

 
 

HASTINGS, Neb. — The public health insurance program Medicaid is visiting communities across the state to share with healthcare providers and members their new changes. Medicaid is also listening to the biggest struggles the insurance users and healthcare providers are facing.

“One of the first things we want to do is try to understand what the root of the issue is,” said the Director of the Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS) Medicaid & Long-Term Care Division Kevin Bagley. ” What is causing access issues for our members? We heard a lot of that tonight.”

Bagley said that currently around 375,000 Nebraskans are insured with them.

Starting on Jan. 1, 2024, Medicaid will have new health plan contracts. The contracts will run until Dec. 31, 2028. Five companies put bids in to be Medicaid’s manage care plans, the three selected are: United Health Care, Nebraska Total Care and Molina Health Care.

“We hope we’ll see better communication,” Bagley said. “They [Insurance users] will have those plans which will have a better focus on the ‘whole person care,’ and not just physical and behavioral health.”

To select the three companies, Medicaid performed interviews and asked specific questions that stakeholders wanted to know the answers to during Medicaid’s listening tour in January.

For members who are also eligible for Medicare, starting on Jan.1, 2024, Medicaid will offer to them a Medicare Advantage Plan called Dual Eligible Special Needs Plans (D-SNPs).

“That allows the same plan to manage their Medicaid and Medicare benefits, so those members won’t have two places to work through. They’ll have one for both insurances,” Bagley said.

With the new contracts, dental services will be covered and integrated with physical, behavioral health and pharmacy services. Bagley said that in their first listening tour, stakeholders brought up multiple times the huge need for dental care.

“As part of that, we sat down with a lot of our dental stakeholders to try and understand what some of the barriers are,” Bagley said. “One of the things that we determined was to shift away from having a single manage care plan for dental like we do today, to work with those plans that have a ‘whole person care’.”

“I’m optimistic about the new plan going forward,” said Pediatric Dentist Dr. Jessica Meeske. “We know there is a shortage of dentists right now that are accepting Medicaid, and there are a lot of Nebraskans that have this insurance plan and they would like a place to go and have their dental needs met.”

Bagley said that as part of the new contracts, starting a year after Jan. 1, 2024, the process of credentialing healthcare providers will be simplified.

“It shouldn’t be a six-month time frame to get people credentialed,” Bagley said. “So our providers today might have to do it [credentialing] three times in three different ways, starting on January of 2025 they’ll do it one time, one way.”

“We don’t want to spend a lot of time filling up paperwork, we need to spend our time taking care of our patients,” Dr. Meeske said.
 

Changes will also be made to electronic visits verification.

“For folks that are involved in either personal care services or home health services, they’ll be required to have some changes on that front,” Bagley said.

He added that care and case management will be more robust.

“We recognize that’s the only way we can ensure that we are actually helping people live better lives,” Bagley said. “By actually talking to them, working with them, understanding what their personal needs are, and how we address those needs.”

NE Medicaid will start coverage for continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) devises for eligible members with diabetes on Jan. 1, 2023. The devices measure intestinal glucose levels for those with type one and type two diabetes. Bagley said the eligibility is currently being developed.

The Medicaid insurance plans vary depending on the person. According to Bagley, NE Medicaid spends $3 billion a year on those 375,000 individuals insured with them.

Bagley said Medicaid is planning to soon release a strategic plan for key initiatives. They also plan to start a new phase of community outreach to continue the conversations with the public through meetings. He added that they are thinking of doing their statewide tour every six months, to keep hearing from stakeholders, providers and Medicaid members.

Bagley already visited Lincoln, Omaha, Scottsbluff, North Platte and Hastings. Before October ends, they hope to visit South Sioux City, and Fremont. Bagley is also holding virtual meetings with stakeholders, providers, and members.

For more information about the upcoming Medicaid updates visit this website.

 
 

Clipped from: https://nebraska.tv/news/local/starting-in-2024-nebraska-medicaid-will-have-multiple-changes

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CA – ‘Separate and unequal’: Critics say Newsom’s pricey Medicaid reforms leave most patients behind

MM Curator summary

The article below has been highlighted and summarized by our research team. It is provided here for member convenience as part of our Curator service.

 
 

[MM Curator Summary]: Hospitals make a valid point- spending Medicaid bucks on food sounds great, as long as the actual healthcare needs are being met first.

 
 

It wasn’t exactly an emergency, but Michael Reed, a security guard who lives in Watts, had back pain and ran out of his blood pressure medication. Unsure where else to turn, he went to his local emergency room for a refill.

Around the same time, James Woodard, a homeless man, appeared for his third visit that week. He wasn’t in medical distress. Nurses said he was likely high on meth and just looking for a place to rest.

In an overflow tent outside, Edward Green, a restaurant cook, described hearing voices and needing medication for his bipolar disorder.

The three patients were among dozens who packed the emergency room at MLK Community Hospital, a bustling health care complex in South Los Angeles reincarnated from the old hospital known as “Killer King” for its horrific patient care. The new campus serves the 1.3 million residents of Willowbrook, Compton, Watts, and other neighborhoods — a heavily Black and Latino population that suffers disproportionately high rates of devastating chronic conditions like diabetes, liver disease, and high blood pressure.

Arguably, none of the three men should have gone, on this warm April afternoon, to the emergency room, a place intended to address severe and life-threatening cases — and where care is extremely expensive.

But patients and doctors say it is nearly impossible to find a timely medical appointment or receive adequate care in the impoverished community, where fast food is easy to come by and fresh fruits and vegetables are not. Liquor stores outnumber grocery stores, and homeless encampments are overflowing. A staggering 72% of patients who receive care at the hospital rely on Medi-Cal, the state’s Medicaid program for low-income people.

“For some people, the emergency room is a last resort. But for so many people who live here, it’s literally all there is,” said Dr. Oscar Casillas, who runs the department. “Most of what I see is preventable — preventable with normal access to health care. But we don’t have that here.”

The community is short 1,400 doctors, according to Dr. Elaine Batchlor, the hospital’s CEO, who said her facility is drowning under a surge of patients who are sicker than those in surrounding communities. For instance, the death rate from diabetes is 76% higher in the community than in Los Angeles County as a whole, 77% higher for high blood pressure — an early indicator of heart disease — and 50% higher for liver disease.

But dramatic changes are afoot that could herald improvements in care — or cement the stark health disparities that persist between rich and poor communities.

Gov. Gavin Newsom is spearheading a massive experiment in Medi-Cal, pouring nearly $9 billion into a five-year initiative that targets the sickest and costliest patients and provides them with nonmedical benefits such as home-delivered meals, money for housing move-in costs, and home repairs to make living environments safer for people with asthma.

The concept — which is being tested in California on a larger scale than anywhere else in the country — is to improve patient health by funneling money into social programs and keeping patients out of costly institutions such as emergency departments, jails, nursing homes, and mental health crisis centers.

The initiative, known as CalAIM, sounds like an antidote to some of the ills that plague MLK. Yet only a sliver of its patients will receive the new and expensive benefits.

Just 108 patients — the hospital treats about 113,000 people annually — have enrolled since January. Statewide, health insurers have signed up more than 97,200 patients out of roughly 14.7 million Californians with Medi-Cal, according to state officials. And while a growing number of Medi-Cal enrollees are expected to receive the new benefits in the coming years, most will not.

Top state health officials argue that the broader Medi-Cal population will benefit from other components of CalAIM, which is a multipronged, multiyear effort to boost patients’ overall physical and mental health. But doctors, hospital leaders, and health insurance executives are skeptical that the program will fundamentally improve the quality of care for those not enrolled — including access to doctors, one of the biggest challenges for Medi-Cal patients in South Los Angeles.

“The state is now saying it will allow Medicaid dollars to be spent on things like housing and nutritious food — and those things are really important — but they’re still not willing to pay for medical care,” Batchlor said.

Batchlor has been lobbying the Newsom administration and state lawmakers to fix basic health care for the state’s poorest residents. She believes that increasing payments for doctors and hospitals that treat Medi-Cal patients could lead to improvements in both quality and access. The state and the 25 managed-care insurance plans it pays to provide health benefits to most Medi-Cal enrollees reimburse providers so little for care that it perpetuates “racism and discrimination,” she said.

Batchlor said the hospital gets about $150, on average, to treat a Medi-Cal patient in its emergency room. But it would receive about $650 if that patient had Medicare, she said, while a patient with commercial health insurance would trigger a payment of about $2,000.

The hospital brought in $344 million in revenue in 2020 and spent roughly $330 million on operations and patient care. It loses more than $30 million a year on the emergency room alone, Batchlor said.

Medicaid is generally the lowest payer in health care, and California is among the lowest-paying states in the country, experts say.

“The rates are not high enough for providers to practice. Go to Beverly Hills and those people are overdosing on health care, but here in Compton, patients are dying 10 years earlier because they can’t get health care,” Batchlor said. “That’s why I call it separate and unequal.”

Newsom in September vetoed a bill that would have boosted Medi-Cal payment rates for the hospital, saying the state can’t afford it. But Batchlor isn’t giving up. Nor are other hospitals, patient advocates, Medi-Cal health insurers, and the state’s influential doctors’ lobby, which are working to persuade Newsom and state lawmakers to pony up more money for Medi-Cal.

It’ll be a tough sell. Newsom’s top health officials defend California’s rates, saying the state has boosted pay for participating providers by offering bonus and incentive payments for improvements in health care quality and equity — even as the state adds Medi-Cal recipients to the system.

“We’ve been the most aggressive state in expanding Medi-Cal, especially with the addition of undocumented immigrants,” said Dustin Corcoran, CEO of the California Medical Association, which represents doctors and is spearheading a campaign to lobby officials. “But we have done nothing to address the patient access side to health care.”

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The hospital previously known as Martin Luther King Jr./Drew Medical Center was forced to shut down in 2007 after a Los Angeles Times investigation revealed the county-run hospital’s “long history of harming, or even killing, those it was meant to serve.” In one well-publicized case, a homeless woman was writhing in pain and vomiting blood while janitors mopped around her. She later died.

MLK Community Hospital rose from its ashes in 2015 as a private, nonprofit safety-net hospital that runs largely on public insurance and philanthropy. Its state-of-the-art facilities include a center to treat people with diabetes and prevent their limbs from being amputated — and the hospital is trying to reach homeless patients with a new street medicine team.

Still, decades after the deadly 1965 Watts riots spurred construction of the original hospital — which was supposed to bring high-quality health care to poor neighborhoods in South Los Angeles — many disparities persist.

Less than a mile from the hospital, 60-year-old Sonny Hawthorne rattled through some trash cans on the sidewalk. He was raised in Watts and has been homeless for most of his adult life, other than stints in jail for burglary.

He hustles on his bike doing odd jobs for cash, such as cleaning yards and recycling, but said he has trouble filling out job applications because he can’t read. Most of his day is spent just surviving, searching for food and shelter.

Hawthorne is one of California’s estimated 173,800 homeless residents, most of whom are enrolled in Medi-Cal or qualify for the program. He has diabetes and high blood pressure. He had been on psychotropic medicine for depression and paranoia but hasn’t taken it in months or years. He can’t remember.

“They wanted me to come back in two weeks, but I didn’t go,” he said of an emergency room visit this year for chronic foot pain associated with diabetes. “It’s too much responsibility sometimes.”

Hawthorne’s chronic health conditions and homelessness should qualify him for the CalAIM initiative, which would give him access to a case manager to help him find a primary care doctor, address untreated medical conditions, and navigate the new social services that may be available to him under the program.

But it’s not up to him whether he receives the new benefits.

The state has yielded tremendous power to Medi-Cal’s managed-care insurance companies to decide which social services they will offer. They also decide which of their sickest and most vulnerable enrollees get them.

One benefit all plans must offer is intensive care management, in which certain patients are assigned to case managers who help them navigate their health and social service needs, get to appointments, take their medications regularly, and eat healthy foods.

Plans can also provide benefits from among 14 broad categories of social services, such as six months of free housing for some homeless patients discharged from the hospital, beds in sobering centers that allow patients to recover and get clean outside the emergency room, and assistance with daily tasks such as grocery shopping.

L.A. Care Health Plan, the largest Medi-Cal managed-care insurer in Los Angeles County, with more than 2.5 million enrollees, is contracting with the hospital, which will provide housing and case management services under the initiative. For now, the hospital is targeting patients who are homeless and repeat emergency room visitors, said Fernando Lopez Rico, who helps homeless patients get services.

So far, the hospital has referred 78 patients to case managers and enrolled 30 other patients in housing programs. Only one has been placed in permanent housing, and about 17 have received help getting temporary shelter.

“It is very difficult to place people,” Lopez Rico said. “There’s almost nothing available, and we get a lot of hesitancy and pushback from private property owners not wanting to let these individuals or families live there.”

Patrick Alvarez, 57, has diabetes and was living in a shed without running water until July, when an infection in his feet grew so bad that he had several toes amputated.

The hospital sent him to a rehabilitation and recovery center, where he is learning to walk again, receiving counseling, and looking for permanent housing.

If he finds a place he can afford, CalAIM will pay his first month’s and last month’s rent, the security deposit, and perhaps even utility hookup fees.

But the hunt for housing, even with the help of new benefits, is arduous. A one-bedroom apartment he saw in September was going for $1,600 a month and required a deposit of $1,600. “It’s horrible, I can’t afford that,” he said.

Hawthorne needs help just as badly. But he’s unlikely to get it since he doesn’t have a phone or permanent address — and wouldn’t be easy for the hospital to find. The homeless encampments where he lives are routinely cleared by law enforcement officials.

“We have so many more people who need help than are able to get it,” Lopez Rico said. “There aren’t enough resources to help everyone, so only some people get in.”

***

L.A. Care has referred about 28,400 members to CalAIM case managers, roughly 1% of its total enrollees, according to its CEO, John Baackes. It is offering housing, food, and other social services to even fewer: about 12,600 people.

CalAIM has the potential to dramatically improve the health of patients who are lucky enough to receive new benefits, Baackes said. But he isn’t convinced it will save the health care system money and believes it will leave behind millions of other patients — without greater investment in the broader Medi-Cal program.

“Access is not as good for Medi-Cal patients as it is for people with means, and that is a fundamental problem that has not changed with CalAIM,” Baackes said.

Evidence shows that basic Medi-Cal patient care is often subpar.

Year-over-year analyses published by the state Department of Health Care Services, which administers Medi-Cal, have found that, by some measures, Medi-Cal health plans are getting worse at caring for patients, not better. Among the most recent findings: The rates of breast and cervical cancer screenings for women were worse in 2020 than 2019, even when the demands that covid-19 placed on the health care system were factored into the analysis. Hospital readmissions increased, and diabetes care declined.

“The impact of covid is real — providers shut down — but we also know we need a lot of improvement in access and quality,” said State Medicaid Director Jacey Cooper. “We don’t feel we are where we should be in California.”

Cooper said her agency is cracking down on Medi-Cal insurance plans that are failing to provide adequate care and is strengthening oversight and enforcement of insurers, which are required by state law to provide timely access to care and enough network doctors to serve all their members.

The state is also requiring participating health plans to sign new contracts with stricter quality-of-care measures.

Cooper argues CalAIM will improve the quality of care for all Medi-Cal patients, describing aspects of the initiative that require health plans to hook patients up with primary care doctors, connect them with specialty care, and develop detailed plans to keep them out of expensive treatment zones like the emergency room.

She denied that CalAIM will leave millions of Medi-Cal patients behind and said the state has increased incentive and bonus payments so health care providers will focus on improving care while implementing the initiative.

“CalAIM targets people who are homeless and extremely high-need, but we’re also focusing on wellness and prevention,” she told KHN. “It really is a wholesale reform of the entire Medicaid system in California.”

A chorus of doctors, hospital leaders, health insurance executives, and health care advocates point to Medi-Cal reimbursement rates as the core of the problem. “The chronic condition in Medi-Cal is underfunding,” said Linnea Koopmans, CEO of the Local Health Plans of California.

Although the state has restored some previous Medi-Cal rate cuts, there’s no move to increase base payments for doctors and hospitals. Cooper said the state is using tobacco tax dollars and other state money to attract more providers to the system and to entice doctors who already participate to accept more Medi-Cal patients.

When Newsom vetoed the bill to provide higher reimbursements primarily for emergency room care at MLK, he said the state cannot afford the “tens of millions” of dollars it would cost.

MLK leaders vow to continue pushing, while other hospitals and the powerful California Medical Association plot a larger campaign to draw attention to the low payment rates.

“Californians who rely on Medi-Cal — two-thirds of whom are people of color — have a harder time finding providers who are willing to care for them,” said Jan Emerson-Shea, a spokesperson for the California Hospital Association.

For Dr. Oscar Casillas at MLK, the issue is critical. Although he’s a highly trained emergency physician, most days he practices routine primary care, addressing fevers, chronic foot and back pain, and missed medications.

“If you put yourself in the shoes of our patients, what would you do?” asked Casillas, who previously worked as an ER doctor in the affluent coastal city of Santa Monica. “There’s no reasonable access if you’re on Medi-Cal. Most of the providers are by the beach, so emergency departments like ours are left holding the bag.”

This story was produced by KHN, which publishes California Healthline, an editorially independent service of the California Health Care Foundation.

 
 

This article was reprinted from khn.org with permission from the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. Kaiser Health News, an editorially independent news service, is a program of the Kaiser Family Foundation, a nonpartisan health care policy research organization unaffiliated with Kaiser Permanente.

 
 

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