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NC man arrested for fraud in Columbia: SC Attorney General

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[MM Curator Summary]: Tommel Hayes stole SC Medicaid monies with a (mental health) services not provided scheme.

 
 

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.

 
 

South Carolina


White collar crime is a financially motivated crime done to obtain or avoid losing money, property, services, or to secure a personal or business advantage. Here’s the most common types. By Candi Bolden

A North Carolina man was locked up in a Richland County jail on Medicaid fraud charges, the South Carolina Attorney General’s Office said Tuesday.

Tommel Devon Hayes was booked at the Alvin S. Glenn Detention Center Monday, S.C. Attorney General Alan Wilson said in a news release.

Following an investigation by the South Carolina Medicaid Fraud Control Unit, the 45-year-old Goldsboro, North Carolina, resident was charged with three counts of obtaining signature or property by false pretenses, value of $10,000 or more, and one count of medical assistance provider fraud, according to the release.

Hayes owned and operated Clearscreen LLC, that’s based in Columbia, the S.C. Attorney General’s Office said. The drug testing service opened in November 2015 and is at 201 Columbia Mall Blvd., which is in the Dentsville area near Two Notch Road.

Between Oct. 10, 2015, and Jan. 31, 2018, Hayes used the business at least three times to “knowingly and willfully, by false pretense or representation,” obtain more than $10,000 “to cheat and defraud” the South Carolina Department of Health and Human Services’ Medicaid Program, Wilson’s office said.

There was no word on how much money Hayes got from the S.C. Medicaid program, or what he did with the funds.

Information about how the scheme operated was not available.

Hayes was also charged with creating and submitting fraudulent documents and claims to the S.C. Medicaid program for mental health services that were not rendered to numerous Medicaid beneficiaries who lived in Greenville and Florence, according to the release.

If convicted on the felony obtaining signature or property by false pretenses charges, Hayes faces a maximum punishment of 10 years in prison on each count, according to South Carolina law. He could also be sentenced to a maximum of 3 years in prison and a $1,000 fine if he’s found guilty of the misdemeanor medical assistance provider fraud.

On Tuesday, Hayes was not listed on the jail’s inmate roster. Information about bond was not available.

BEHIND OUR REPORTING

This is a breaking news story

In a breaking news situation, facts can be unclear and the situation may still be developing. The State is trying to get important information to the public as quickly and accurately as possible. This story will be updated as more information becomes available, and some information in this story may change as the facts become clearer. Refresh this page later for more updated information.

This story was originally published July 19, 2022 11:32 AM.

 
 

Clipped from: https://www.newsobserver.com/news/state/south-carolina/article263607313.html

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Diagnostic Laboratory to Pay $10 Million to Resolve Self-Referral and Kickback Allegations

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[MM Curator Summary]: BioReference Health used rental payments to docs as kickbacks.

 
 

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.

 
 

BOSTON — A national diagnostic laboratory company has agreed to pay $10 million to the federal government and the states of Massachusetts and Connecticut to resolve self-referral and false claims allegations raised by a whistleblower, Attorney General Maura Healey and United States Attorney Rachael Rollins announced today. Massachusetts will receive a total of $141,000 for MassHealth, the Massachusetts Medicaid program. 

According to the AG’s Office, Delaware-based BioReference Health, LLC and its corporate parent OPKO Health, Inc. (OKPO) submitted claims to Medicare, MassHealth and Connecticut Medicaid that violated state and federal anti-kickback and self-referral laws. The primary fraud allegation involved kickbacks disguised as rental payments to encourage referrals from high-volume physician groups.  

“Diagnostic medical laboratories provide important services and testing, but this company engaged in dishonest and unlawful kickbacks to doctors instead of earning their business,” said AG Healey. “Patients and insurers should be able to trust that medical diagnostic companies are following the law and engaging in fair and honest business practices.”  

“Medical decisions by doctors should be based on what is best for each patient, not a doctor’s personal financial interest,” said United States Attorney Rachael S. Rollins. “When companies violate the federal health care laws that are meant to protect patients, health care costs for hard working people increase. We will continue to find fraud and use the False Claims Act to make companies that break the law pay back the taxpayers they defrauded as well as pay a financial price for their misconduct.” 

In April 2019, a former employee of OKPO and BioReference filed a whistleblower lawsuit raising the allegations resolved by this settlement.  

This settlement is the latest development in the work of the AG’s Office to address kickbacks and false claims among Medicaid providers, particularly clinical and diagnostic laboratories. In May, the AG’s Medicaid Fraud Division secured indictments against an independent clinical laboratory in New Bedford and one of its owners who allegedly conducted an illegal kickback and Medicaid fraud scheme involving urine drug screens at sober homes. In June, an investigation by the Medicaid Fraud Division resulted in charges against three independent clinical laboratories, their owner and holding company, an additional independent clinical laboratory and its owner, two laboratory marketing companies, and a Massachusetts physician in connection with Medicaid fraud, money laundering, and kickbacks involving over $2 million in urine drug tests. 

This matter was handled by Managing Attorney Ian Marinoff of the AG’s Medicaid Fraud Division in close partnership with the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Massachusetts. The Office of Inspector General for the United States Department of Health and Human Services, FBI Boston Division, and the Defense Criminal Investigative Service, the law enforcement arm of the Department of Defense Office of Inspector General, also assisted in this case. 

The AG’s Medicaid Fraud Division receives 75 percent of its funding from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services under a grant award. The remaining 25 percent is funded by the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. 

 Clipped from: https://www.mass.gov/news/diagnostic-laboratory-to-pay-10-million-to-resolve-self-referral-and-kickback-allegations

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HHS putting $49 million toward increased healthcare coverage for children

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[MM Curator Summary]: The money will be doled out in $1.5M grants to entities working to increase Medicaid enrollment outreach efforts.

 
 

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.

 
 

Grantees will provide enrollment and renewal assistance to children and their families, as well as expectant parents.

 
 

Photo: FS Productions/Getty Images

The administration made a push to expand healthcare coverage for young people this week when the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, through the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, awarded $49 million to organizations trying to reduce uninsured rates among children, parents and families.

The agency said it’s looking to invest in outreach and enrollment through Medicaid’s Connecting Kids to Coverage program. Grantees were funded through the Helping Ensure Access for Little Ones, Toddlers, and Hopeful Youth by Keeping Insurance Delivery Stable Act of 2017 (HEALTHY KIDS Act). The HEALTHY KIDS Act provides continued funding for outreach and enrollment to reduce the number of children eligible for, but not enrolled in, Medicaid and CHIP.

Grantees will provide enrollment and renewal assistance to children and their families, as well as expectant parents, to promote improved maternal and infant health outcomes. 

CMS issued 36 cooperative agreements in 20 states through the Connecting Kids to Coverage program. Grantees – including state and local governments, tribal organizations, federal health safety net organizations, nonprofits and schools – will each receive up to $1.5 million over three years to advance Medicaid and CHIP enrollment and retention.

WHAT’S THE IMPACT

Grantees will participate in the Connecting Kids to Coverage National Campaign efforts, including the national back-to-school initiative, the year-round enrollment initiative, and new initiatives focused on retaining individuals in Medicaid and CHIP.

CMS said this work will be key as states prepare to resume normal Medicaid and CHIP
operations once the COVID-19 public health emergency ends.

The grantees will also work on several unique activities of their own. They may: engage schools and other programs serving young people; bridge demographic health disparities by targeting communities with low coverage; use social media to conduct virtual outreach and enrollment assistance; and use parent mentors and community health workers to assist families with enrolling in Medicaid and CHIP, retaining coverage, and addressing social determinants of health.

THE LARGER TREND

According to CMS, of America’s 4 million uninsured children, 2.3 million are eligible for Medicaid and CHIP – though  many families don’t know they’re eligible or struggle with enrollment.

There are also pronounced disparities. American Indian and Alaska Native children have the highest uninsured rates (11.8%), followed by those who are Hispanic (11.4%) and non-Hispanic Black (5.9%). 

Targeting new and expectant parents can also lead to increased child enrollment, since infants born to people on Medicaid and CHIP are automatically deemed eligible for one year, CMS said.

ON THE RECORD

“At HHS, it is a top priority to make high-quality health care accessible and affordable for every American,” said HHS Secretary Xavier Becerra. “This past year, through unprecedented investments in outreach and enrollment efforts, a record-breaking 14.5 million people signed up for health care coverage through the ACA Marketplace. With today’s historic investment for children and parents, we will redouble our efforts to get families covered – and give them the peace of mind that comes with it.”
 

Twitter: @JELagasse
Email the writer: jeff.lagasse@himssmedia.com

 
 

Clipped from: https://www.healthcarefinancenews.com/news/hhs-putting-49-million-toward-increased-healthcare-coverage-children

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No-bid Medicaid contract for Kaiser Permanente is now California law, but key details are missing

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[MM Curator Summary]: The sweet-heart deal for the MCO is now inked into freakin law.

 
 

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.

 
 

[Editor’s note: KHN is not affiliated with Kaiser Permanente.]

California lawmakers have approved a controversial no-bid statewide Medi-Cal contract for HMO giant Kaiser Permanente over the objection of county governments and competing health plans. But key details — including how many new patients KP will enroll — are still unclear.

On June 30, with little fanfare, Gov. Gavin Newsom signed the bill that codifies the deal, despite concerns first reported by KHN that KP was getting preferential treatment from the state that would allow it to continue enrolling a healthier pool of Medi-Cal patients, leaving other health plans with a disproportionate share of the program’s sickest and costliest patients. Medi-Cal, California’s version of Medicaid, the government-funded health insurance program for people with low incomes, covers nearly 14.6 million Californians, 84% of whom are in managed-care plans.

Now that the debate is over, opponents of the KP deal are looking ahead.

“We look forward to working with the state on implementing the statewide contract, and we will continue to advocate the value and importance of local plans in providing care to their communities,” said Linnea Koopmans, CEO of Local Health Plans of California, which spearheaded the opposition.

Kaiser Permanente is a huge player in California’s health insurance market, covering nearly a quarter of all Golden State residents. But its slightly less than 900,000 Medi-Cal enrollees are only about 7% of that program’s total managed-care membership.

Kaiser Permanente has long been allowed to limit its Medi-Cal membership by accepting only people who have been KP members in the recent past — primarily in employer-based or Affordable Care Act plans — and their immediate family members.

Under the new law, the number of Kaiser Permanente enrollees in the program “would be permitted to grow by 25%” over the five-year life of the contract, starting from its level on Jan. 1, 2024, when the contract takes effect, said Katharine Weir-Ebster, a spokesperson for the Department of Health Care Services, which runs Medi-Cal. But that 25% figure is not in the text of the law — and the precise magnitude of the intended enrollment increase for KP remains unclear.

Currently, most of KP’s Medi-Cal members are covered through subcontracts with local, publicly governed health plans around the state. Under the new law, those members would be covered directly by Kaiser Permanente under its statewide contract. Proponents say the change will increase efficiency, reduce confusion for consumers, and make Kaiser Permanente more accountable to the state.

Opponents have argued that having a national behemoth compete with local plans — especially in places such as Orange, Ventura, San Mateo, and Sonoma counties, where county-operated plans have been the sole Medi-Cal option — could weaken community control over health care and compromise the safety net system that serves California’s most vulnerable residents.

The new law commits KP to increasing its footprint in Medi-Cal by accepting certain categories of new enrollees, including current and former foster care youths, kids who have received services from another child welfare agency, seniors who are eligible both for Medi-Cal and Medicare, and enrollees who fail to choose a health plan and are assigned one by default.

Nearly half of Medi-Cal enrollees in counties with more than one health plan are assigned by default, Weir-Ebster said. The law, however, doesn’t specify how many default enrollees Kaiser Permanente will accept, saying only that the number will be based on KP’s “projected capacity” in each county or region.

Another significant source of enrollment growth for Kaiser Permanente will be patients — and their family members — transferring out of KP commercial plans in counties where KP will be a Medi-Cal option for the first time.

Some prominent consumer advocacy groups argue that any increase in Kaiser Permanente’s Medi-Cal population is a positive development, especially since the HMO gets high marks for the quality of its care.

“We think that system is something that more Medi-Cal members should have access to, and this bill is a step in that direction,” said Kiran Savage-Sangwan, executive director of the California Pan-Ethnic Health Network, which advocates for equity in health care.

Kaycee Velarde, head of Medi-Cal contracting for KP, said via email that the deal will give more people “access to our high-quality Medi-Cal managed care plan” and allow for better collaboration with the state “to improve quality for a broader number of Medi-Cal enrollees.”

But exactly how the new arrangement will work remains unclear.

The specifics — including the enrollment growth figure — are expected to be enshrined in a memorandum of understanding separate from the contract. That has raised some eyebrows, since MOUs are not typically binding in the same way contracts are. Nor is it clear when the details will come.

“Our expectation is that the Department of Health Care Services is developing the MOU,” Velarde said. The department doesn’t have an estimate of when a draft will be issued, Weir-Ebster said.

Many skeptics of the deal remain concerned about its impact on the safety-net population. The law says Kaiser Permanente will provide the “highest need” specialty services to non-KP members in certain areas of the state. But it does not specify which services or where they will be provided. Those details, expected to be in the MOU, have not yet been decided, Weir-Ebster said.

Leslie Conner, CEO of Santa Cruz Community Health, which runs three clinics in Santa Cruz County, said access to specialty care is a challenge for patients. “That’s going to be a remaining problem that I hope Kaiser would work with the community to address,” she said. “If we don’t all figure it out together, there’s going to be winners and losers, and, honestly, the losers are always the low-income people.”

Lawmakers did make a small number of changes to the original bill intended to address opponents’ concerns. One of them, aimed at local health plans’ fear of having a sicker pool of Medi-Cal enrollees, says all Medi-Cal managed-care plans should be paid in “an actuarially sound manner” in line with the medical risk of their enrollees.

Another one directs the state to assess, before the contract begins, whether KP is adequately complying with behavioral health coverage requirements. The health care giant has come under fire in recent years for providing inadequate mental health services, and the state Department of Managed Health Care is investigating the HMO’s mental health program after a sharp increase in complaints, said Rachel Arrezola, a department spokesperson.

Sal Rosselli, president of the National Union of Healthcare Workers, which has waged a pitched battle against KP over mental health care, said the provision in the new law to assess compliance is insufficient. The union had wanted KP to undergo an annual certification process that would have barred it from enrolling new Medi-Cal enrollees in any year it wasn’t certified.

“Can you imagine any health plan would be granted such a large expansion of its Medi-Cal contract if it couldn’t provide therapy for cancer or cardiac care?” Rosselli said.

Ultimately, KP’s contract creates more choice for the Medi-Cal population, said Linda Nguy, a lobbyist with the Western Center on Law & Poverty. But the group, which advocates for people with low incomes, pledged to keep an eye on how the new law is rolled out.

“We will be monitoring it and certainly raising issues as things come up,” Nguy said.

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.

 
 

Clipped from: https://www.news-medical.net/news/20220719/No-bid-Medicaid-contract-for-Kaiser-Permanente-is-now-California-law-but-key-details-are-missing.aspx

 

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Ossipee Woman Pleads Guilty to Theft of Medicaid Funds

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[MM Curator Summary]: Erin submitted bogus NEMT mileage claims and stole $5k from NH Medicaid.

 
 

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.

 
 

Concord, NH – Attorney General John M. Formella announces that Erin M. Longo, age 44, of Center Ossipee, New Hampshire, pleaded guilty and was sentenced on Friday, July 8, 2022 in the Merrimack County Superior Court to theft of New Hampshire Medicaid funds.

Between August 22, 2019 and February 28, 2020, Ms. Longo presented falsified mileage reimbursement claims forms to New Hampshire Medicaid’s non-emergency medical transportation broker in order to receive mileage reimbursement for traveling to medical appointments in Concord that did not exist.

Ms. Longo pleaded guilty to class A misdemeanor Theft by Deception and was sentenced to serve twelve months in the Merrimack County House of Corrections, with all but four days suspended for three years. She has been ordered to pay $4,898.04 in restitution and to perform 50 hours of community service.

Senior Assistant Attorney General Thomas T. Worboys and Attorney Andrew T. Yourell of the Attorney General’s Medicaid Fraud Control Unit prosecuted this case. Financial Analyst/Investigator Timothy E. Brackett and Investigator John M. Lannon, also of the Attorney General’s Medicaid Fraud Control Unit, investigated the matter based on a referral from Well Sense Health Plan’s Special Investigations Unit.

The Medicaid Fraud Control Unit investigates and prosecutes fraud by healthcare providers who treat Medicaid beneficiaries. Healthcare providers include, but are not limited to, hospitals, nursing homes, doctors, dentists, pharmacies, ambulance companies, and anyone else who is paid for providing healthcare services to Medicaid beneficiaries. If you would like to report a case of provider fraud, please contact the Medicaid Fraud Control Unit at (603) 271-1246.

The Medicaid Fraud Control Unit of the New Hampshire Department of Justice receives 75 percent of its funding from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services under a grant award totaling $910,048 for Federal fiscal year (FY) 2022. The State of New Hampshire funds the remaining 25 percent, totaling $303,346 for FY 2022.

 
 

Clipped from: https://www.doj.nh.gov/news/2022/20220708-longo-guilty-medicaid-theft.htm

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Medicaid fraud case continues

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[MM Curator Summary]: Latisha and hubby stole $14M from NC Medicaid and now the court is trying to get it back using a 25% garnishment of earnings- so she’ll have to earn $52M in order for the state to get its money back. Might be hard to do while in prison.

 
 

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.

 
 

By LANCE MARTIN

rrspin.com

The United States Court for the Eastern District of North Carolina is continuing garnishment proceedings in the case of a woman who bilked the North Carolina Medicaid system out of millions of dollars through sham home health care operations in Ahoskie and Roanoke Rapids.

Navy Federal Credit Union in Vienna, Virginia, is listed in the court documents as the garnishee in the case of Latisha Reese Harron.

The document explains a judgment was entered against Harron upon her sentencing last year in the amount of $13,397,221.64. There remains a balance of $13,397,046.64, the document says.

“You are required by law to begin withholding any property in which the defendant has a substantial non-exempt interest or for which you may become indebted to the defendant as of the date you were served with this writ,” the document says.

Under terms of the writ, the bank is required to withhold 25 percent of the defendant’s earnings which remain after all deductions required by law have been withheld. That also includes 100 percent of any other money which is owed to Harron as well as any and all accounts in which she is a primary party or has signature authority.

The writ spells out the garnishment should include any accounts containing a positive cash value — even any IRAs or 401(k) plans which don’t exceed the outstanding balance of the debt.

The credit union’s response was filed Tuesday, July 5.

Harron has requested a hearing on the matter.

In May of last year, Harron was sentenced to 170 months on charges of conspiracy to commit healthcare fraud and wire fraud, aggravated identity theft, and conspiracy to commit money laundering. She is currently serving her time at Federal Medical Center Carswell located in Fort Worth.

In September of last year Mrs. Harron’s husband, Timothy Mark Harron, was sentenced to 144 months in federal prison and ordered to pay $4,321,590.39 in restitution to the North Carolina Medicaid Program. He is serving his time at Federal Medical Center Devens which is located in Ayer, Massachusetts.

Mrs. Harron created, and was operating, Agape Healthcare Systems, an alleged Medicaid home health provider, in Roanoke Rapids.

They also operated Assured Healthcare Systems in Ahoskie.

Along with the $13,396,921, court documents reflect that other forfeitable items included a British Aerospace Bae 125-800A aircraft, a 2017 Aston Martin DB 11 sports car; a 2016 Ford F-150 Supercrew pickup; real property held in the name of Assured Healthcare Systems in Hertford County, real property located in Charles County, Maryland, as well as various other items of designer jewelry and luxury items seized from the couple’s penthouse condominium in Las Vegas.

(Lance Martin is the Editor and Publisher of www.rrspin.com. Permission was granted to publish this story.)

 
 

Clipped from: https://www.roanoke-chowannewsherald.com/2022/07/12/medicaid-fraud-case-continues/

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MT Medicaid patients to see greater access to substance use disorder treatment

MM Curator summary

[MM Curator Summary]: CMS is waiving the bed cap for another state (Montana).

 
 

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.

 
 

Montana this week received federal approval for substance-use disorder treatment providers with 17 or more beds to bill Medicaid, an expansion providers called a “game changer” for combating addiction across the state.

“Until now, we’ve been limited in the number of Medicaid members that we’ve been able to serve, despite an increased demand for treatment,” said Lenette Kosovich, CEO at Rimrock Foundation, the state’s largest provider of treatment for substance-use and co-occurring disorders.

The governor’s office and the Montana Department of Public Health and Human Services announced the approval Wednesday. Federal law prohibits Medicaid payment to any institution for mental disease with 17 or more beds that provide substance-use or mental-health treatment. Last year, DPHHS applied for a waiver to expand the number of services not typically covered for Medicaid recipients. A DPHHS spokesperson said Wednesday during those negotiations, the department decided to ask the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services to specifically waive the 17-bed exclusion in order to get that piece in place sooner while negotiations continue.

That exclusion waiver granted this week allows larger treatment providers to receive Medicaid reimbursement for short-term acute inpatient and residential stays at facilities serving patients with mental disease.

“There’s more work ahead, but we’re certainly excited to announce this achievement today,” DPHHS spokesperson Jon Ebelt said in an email.

The CMS
letter dated July 1 specifically does not approve substance use disorder services at the Montana State Hospital, citing the agency’s decision in April to terminate its reimbursement agreement at the facility due to repeated failures to maintain health and safety levels there.

The state is leveraging its new Healing and Ending Addiction through Recovery Treatment (HEART) Fund, proposed by Gov. Greg Gianforte and approved by the state Legislature in 2021, which draws $7 million from new marijuana tax revenues. That money will generate federal matching dollars to bring that to a new total of $25 million in annual spending, according to the governor’s office.

“Our HEART Fund fills gaps to provide for a full continuum of substance use prevention and treatment programs for communities,” Gianforte said in a press release. “For too long, Montanans have struggled to receive timely access to treatment due in large part to the limited number of beds. With this approval, more people will have access to treatment when they need it most.”

 
 

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Department of Public Health and Human Services Director Adam Meier.

THOM BRIDGE, Independent Record

Adam Meier, director of DPHHS, said the waiver addresses the ongoing challenge of wait times for this level of care due to an insufficient number of beds available for Medicaid patients.

“Access to treatment is vital, and now hundreds more Medicaid recipients will be able to receive this critical service,” Meier said in the release.

The statewide impact will be realized over time, the governor’s office said in Wednesday’s press release. The Rimrock Foundation, meanwhile, estimates the waiver will allow the organization to scale up to serve an additional 350 Medicaid members annually.

In whole, the waiver application asked for federal approval of Medicaid coverage for additional community-based treatment and recovery services, including evidence-based stimulant use disorder treatment models, housing supports and pre-release care management for individuals in the 30 days prior to their release from a correctional setting. The state health department and CMS continue to negotiate toward the approval of these components of the waiver application, Ebelt said Wednesday.

 
 

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Clipped from: https://www.bozemandailychronicle.com/news/state_government/mt-medicaid-patients-to-see-greater-access-to-substance-use-disorder-treatment/article_5246f72a-51e6-5251-836f-50ed92f5748f.html

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Virginia lawmakers boosted Medicaid payments for primary care. Providers say it’s not enough

MM Curator summary

[MM Curator Summary]: The bump will get rates to 80% of Medicare.

 
 

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.

 
 

The increase in funding is part of a larger conversation over how to improve services for low-income patients

 
 

An employee of Neighborhood Health, which provides primary care services through multiple health clinics in Fairfax County, administers a COVID-19 vaccine to a pediatric patient. The nonprofit led efforts to vaccinate low-income children in Northern Virginia. (Courtesy of Neighborhood Health)

Virginia’s latest budget includes an additional $82 million to boost Medicaid reimbursements for primary care providers, many still struggling to recover amid the uncertainty of the COVID-19 pandemic.

The move follows years of pushing from doctors, particularly pediatricians and other childhood practitioners, who represent the largest share of providers to participate in Virginia’s Medicaid program, according to Dr. Sandy Chung, a Northern Virginia-based pediatrician and president-elect of the American Academy of Pediatrics.

But the state’s low rates of repayment became particularly acute for many doctors over the last two years, as shutdown orders and general fear over the virus led to plummeting demand for medical services. Chung said she knew of at least one pediatric practice in Southwest Virginia that mostly served children covered under Medicaid and closed its doors during the pandemic.

“They just could not sustain their business, so they had to shut down,” she said. Several locations of her own practice also closed to new Medicaid patients after taking losses on the services they provided for them. 

“Once more than 20 to 30 percent of your patient population is on Medicaid, it’s unsustainable,” Chung added. “So, it’s also creating access issues across the state.”

While increasing reimbursement rates has long been a goal for physician groups, the formation of a statewide task force on primary care in July 2020 jump-started the advocacy process, according to Beth Bortz, president and CEO of the Virginia Center for Health Innovation. Originally formed to meet some of the most pressing needs of the pandemic — including major shortages of personal protective equipment among primary care providers — the group gradually turned to long-term issues including reimbursement and payment models under Medicaid.

Bortz said the additional Medicaid funding in this year’s budget was a significant step forward, especially given that the task force only recently began pulling data comparing Virginia’s spending on primary care with other states and countries. But physicians say it’s still not enough to solve some of the biggest challenges facing primary care. 

Previously, state Medicaid reimbursed providers at 70 percent of the rate offered under the federal Medicare program for primary care services. The $82 million increase will push reimbursement to 80 percent of Medicare payment rates. And while it’s common for states to underinvest public dollars in primary care services, Bortz said, Virginia ranked lower in spending than many other Medicaid programs. On average, states tend to allocate 7 to 8 cents of every dollar spent on health care to primary care, according to analysis from the task force. In Virginia, it’s closer to 3 to 5 cents.

“So, we advocated for this and expected this,” said Dr. Michael Martin, the past president of the Virginia chapter of the American Academy of Pediatrics. “But we would have liked more. The number of us taking Medicaid is still less than it needs to be.”

The ongoing concerns over provider reimbursement is part of a larger debate over the state’s payment structure for primary care under Medicaid — a crucial source of health care coverage for low-income Virginians. The rate of repayment has taken on outsized importance, Chung said, given its impact on workforce and the availability of services to Medicaid patients.

A 2019 survey conducted by VCU researchers for the Virginia Department of Medical Assistance Services found that while 76 percent of doctors report accepting Medicaid patients, nearly a quarter saw fewer than 10 a year. Rates of reimbursement were listed as one of the top three barriers to treating more low-income patients, and the state’s workforce is aging, with 20 percent of physicians older than 65 and only 12 percent under the age of 40.

“The number of people going into primary care is getting smaller and smaller,” Chung said. “Our health care system is set up to reward specialists, and if you’re a medical student graduating with $300,000, $400,000 in debt, there’s no incentive to go into a practice where you may struggle to pay that back.”

But Bortz said that the task force, which will continue for at least another two years, is also focused more broadly on what’s known as value-based purchasing — a reimbursement model that links payments to health outcomes. The federal government, for example, has a program that boosts Medicare reimbursements to certain hospitals for reducing deaths and complications along with operating more cost-efficiently and improving patient experience ratings.

While some commercial insurance companies have experimented with value-based purchasing for primary care services, it’s not consistent across the industry. And Bortz said Virginia’s Medicaid program is still working out how to implement the model, with input from the task force. The goal, for physicians, is a system that would reward primary care practices for expanding services that improve health in the long run. Conducting food insecurity screening and connecting at-need patients with resources is one example, Chung said, along with adding mental health providers to pediatric practices.

In order for that to work, you have to get doctors off the hamster wheel of seeing as many patients as possible.

– Dr. Sandy Chung, a Northern Virginia pediatrician and president-elect of the American Academy of Pediatrics

“We want to encourage providers to accept more Medicaid patients and offer services they know they’ll get reimbursed for,” said Dr. Kristina Powell, current president of the state’s chapter of the American Academy of Pediatrics. “Because if a depression screen is positive, for example, we’re going to spend another 20 to 30 minutes talking with our patient about it.”

So far, there are no concrete plans to change the state’s Medicaid payment structure when it comes to primary care. But Powell said the program doesn’t currently cover multiple social and emotional screenings during the same visit, which can prevent providers from fully assessing patients. It’s also difficult to bill for counseling after screenings, which can significantly increase the time that doctors spend with individual patients.

The state chapter of the American Academy of Pediatrics is advocating for coverage of those services, along with in-office screenings for lead and cholesterol levels — which Medicaid patients are currently required to receive through outside laboratories or hospitals, Powell said. 

In some ways, Chung said the pandemic helped spur the call for change, as the sudden drop in patients highlighted the vulnerability of the current Medicaid payment model. But while many doctors are eager to prioritize more holistic care over higher volumes, she added that it would require equal investment from the state.

“It’s important to answer the big questions like, ‘Oh, if this patient can’t get food, how do we help them get food?'” Chung said. “But in order for that to work, you have to get doctors off the hamster wheel of seeing as many patients as possible to keep their practice open.”

 
 

Clipped from: https://www.virginiamercury.com/2022/07/08/virginia-lawmakers-boosted-medicaid-payments-for-primary-care-providers-say-its-not-enough/

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Colorado mental health providers say they were “blindsided” again

MM Curator summary

[MM Curator Summary]: MH services provided by interns will now need to be supervised by licensed counselors with at least 2 years licensed experience and who are not barred from the program. And providers are up in arms about this.

 
 

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.

 
 

New rules about the supervision of counselors working toward their licenses could worsen the workforce shortage, private practice therapists say

 
 

 
 

Carla D’Agostino-Vigil, clinical director at Ignite Counseling Colorado, speaks during an employee meeting Feb. 23, 2022, in Westminister. D’Agostino-Vigil is one of Colorado’s mental health providers who has grown frustrated with billing issues with the state Medicaid program. (Hugh Carey, The Colorado Sun)

Colorado mental health counselors in private practice say they’ve been surprised once again with new rules that will make it harder to treat the state’s most vulnerable patients: those with Medicaid insurance. 

The latest friction between behavioral health professionals and the Colorado Department of Health Care Policy and Financing centers on the supervision of post-graduate counselors working toward their state license. 

The department — which approved the policy written by the regional agencies that handle payments to mental health clinics — says the new rules are necessary to ensure Medicaid patients are receiving quality care. But counselors in private practice say the rules could mean the loss of dozens of workers and potentially hundreds of mental health appointments. 

They’re also frustrated because they said they didn’t know the new rules were coming.

The policy, which was announced at the beginning of this month, imposes stricter requirements on using interns still working toward their graduate degrees and therapists who have graduated but have yet to receive their license, a process that takes two to four years after graduation. Those pre-licensed counselors can see patients, but must have a licensed counselor sign off on their diagnoses and progress notes from each counseling session. 

With the new rules, only counselors who have been licensed for at least two years can sign off on the work of pre-licensed counselors. The rules also stipulate that any counselor sanctioned by the state licensing division, at the Department of Regulatory Agencies, must wait for two years after their sanctions have expired before supervising pre-licensed counselors. 


Colorado is divided into seven regions run by agencies that contract with the state Medicaid division. Behavioral health providers who want to take patients on Medicaid must enroll first at the state department and then with the regional agencies. (Colorado Department of Health Care Policy and Financing)

Counselors in private practice see both rules as an overreach, one that will mean fewer appointments for patients on the government insurance program for the needy, Medicaid. About 30 of them attended a virtual meeting this week with the Medicaid division, which is housed in the Department of Health Care Policy and Financing. 

“We feel like that is going too far,” Andrew Rose, a psychotherapist and director of Boulder Emotional Wellness, said in an interview. “If DORA has decided you are safe to practice, that should be good enough.”

But Cristen Bates, the state’s interim Medicaid director, said the policy is geared toward expanding the workforce — by creating standardized rules so that counselors still seeking their license have a clear path to getting experience and becoming licensed counselors. The issue is that the regional agencies that serve as the middlemen between clinics and the state Medicaid department have had inconsistent rules as they’ve allowed pre-licensed counselors to practice under supervision. The new policy, which also applies to community mental health centers, was created by those agencies to apply to counselors statewide.

“We have to make sure that our members are getting high-quality care,” Bates said. “We  were glad to see some very clear rules about when this is and is not appropriate.” 

Where the department erred, Bates said, was in not informing behavioral health care professionals about the policy changes or showing them a draft ahead of the implementation date. 

“The rollout was where we kind of had some challenges,” she said. 

The regional agencies are now considering possible changes to the policy and have said they will not deny claims or penalize clinics that are not following the new rules. After the outcry from providers, the regional agencies backtracked on the July 1 implementation date. One of them, Colorado Access, said in an email to The Sun that the policy change is not in effect and that “any changes to our current program will include additional input and advance notice.”

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The discord is the latest in a long list of frustrations among mental health professionals who say they want to provide therapy for people on Medicaid but are fed up dealing with burdensome rules, redundant paperwork and even threats of having payments revoked. It comes as Colorado is facing unprecedented need for services, due in part to the isolation and stress of the coronavirus pandemic. 

Rose said he typically signs off on 100 to 200 notes per week for his team of pre-licensed staff at Boulder Emotional Wellness. The clinic employs 38 pre-licensed counselors and plans to bump that number to 42 next month. 

The rule changes will make this a challenge, since it’s already difficult to find licensed counselors willing to take on the liability of supervising pre-licensed therapists, he said. 

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Rose and others said they found out about the policy in a July 5 newsletter from one of the regional agencies that also laid out other policies that went into effect July 1. 

“The larger concern here is really, who sets policy and who gets to have a say in that process?” he said. “It’s hard enough right now to keep providers. We just need some relief from this. We need to be included in decisions about who we can hire.” 

The need for mental health counseling is so high right now that appointments with licensed counselors are “filled in a hot second,” said Dr. Lisa Griffiths, director of the Center for Valued Living in Aurora. Many clients rely on appointments with pre-licensed counselors under the supervision of licensed counselors. 

 
 

One of Griffiths’ seven supervisors has a doctoral degree but has not yet had her license for two years, meaning she could no longer supervise other counselors under the new rules. 

Mental health providers have been meeting regularly with the Medicaid department to smooth out their relationship after a series of issues, including rate cuts and processing problems that resulted in a regional agency trying to take back money from clinics that had already been paid for seeing Medicaid clients. 

In the past few months, providers and the department have collaborated on new policies for marriage therapists and treating patients with gender dysphoria. The latest policy changes, however, came out of nowhere, Griffiths said. 

“The providers felt blindsided,” she said. 

 
 

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Clipped from: https://coloradosun.com/2022/07/14/mental-health-medicaid-counselors/

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South Dakota Medicaid expansion groups join for constitutional amendment

MM Curator summary

[MM Curator Summary]: They were able to convince the other guy to fold his initiative in with theirs. They being Big Hospital who needs to ensure the win.

 
 

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.

 
 

 
 

(WSAZ)

SIOUX FALLS, S.D. (AP) – A pair of South Dakota campaigns trying to expand access to Medicaid through the November ballot will join efforts to focus on passing an amendment to the state constitution.

The announcement from the two organizations – South Dakotans Decide Healthcare and Dakotans for Health – puts to rest a potential rivalry between the two campaigns.

Both brought separate ballot proposals to require the state to make Medicaid government health insurance available to people who live below 133% of the federal poverty level.

South Dakotans Decide Healthcare is sponsoring Constitutional Amendment D and is backed by the state’s health care industry. It says that Dakotans for Health will join its coalition rather than push its own proposal for a voter-initiated measure.

 
 

Clipped from: https://www.dakotanewsnow.com/2022/07/11/south-dakota-medicaid-expansion-groups-join-constitutional-amendment/