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HEALTH HOMES AND CARE MANAGEMENT
Proposed Initiative by the
Division of Health Care Financing and Policy
(DHCFP)
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OBJECTIVES
Define health homes, medical homes and care management organizations
Explain how these health care models will work in Nevada
Address concerns and issues related to the project
Discuss the current plan Review expected timelines for these new
health care models Answer any questions
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MEDICAL HOME – VS. – HEALTH HOME
What is a Medical Home? An enhanced primary care model where a team
of health professionals attend to the multifaceted needs of patients by providing comprehensive and coordinated patient-centered care
What is a Health Home? Outlined under Section 2703 of the Patient
Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA) Same concept as a Medical Home, but it
incorporates additional services, such as: Behavioral and mental health Long term care transitions Health Information Technology
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REQUIREMENTS TO BE A HEALTH HOME
Health Home defined by the ACA (Sec. 2703): A designated provider that operates in coordination with
a team of health care professionals, or a health team selected by an eligible individual with chronic conditions to provide health home services.
Required Services by Health Home: comprehensive care management; care coordination and health promotion; comprehensive transitional care, including appropriate
follow-up, from inpatient to other settings; patient and family support (including authorized
representatives); referral to community and social support services, if
relevant; and use of health information technology to link services, as
feasible and appropriate.
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REQUIREMENTS TO BE A MEDICAL HOME
Medical Homes Can be similar to the ACA health home definition,
but it is not required to offer the same services Are not required to be certified or accredited
under the same criteria as health homes Can offer more flexibility to address the needs of
the targeted population
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WHAT IS CARE MANAGEMENT
Traditional Care Management or Primary Care Case Management (PCCM) typically consists of the primary care provider coordinating care with other medical specialists.
Enhanced Care Management models expand on the PCCM concept by focusing on all needs of the patient’s care, including linking with community resources and other medical services. This one-on-one and hands-on approach ensures
that the health needs of individual recipients are met.
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VISION TO COORDINATE THE CARE OF THE MEDICAID POPULATION
Project based on DHCFP Legislatively approved budget to help address rising costs of certain Medicaid populations
Project initially will provide management for Nevada’s high need (chronic conditions and/or based on utilization patterns) fee for service (FFS) population (with some exclusions). This will be done through the use of: Care Management Organization (CMO) – A Request for Proposal
(RFP) was released on February 1st 2012 with planned program initiation in August 2012.
Pilot Health Homes with planned RFP release in Spring of 2012 and implementation in Fall of 2012
If found favorable, the project will be extended to coordinate the care of all Medicaid recipients, either through a managed care organization (MCO) or a “managed” FFS program.
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“MANAGED” FEE-FOR-SERVICE
The health home and the care management programs integrate the medical care, behavioral health and long term care needs of the patient into one coordinated plan of care through a medical team all focused on the needs of the patient.
They monitor and manage the provision of patient care through case management and health information technology.
They utilize national benchmarks to track outcomes (hospital re-admission rates, ER use, well child visits)
Payment may be: A per-member per-month (PMPM) dollar amount, Payment for improved outcomes (usually indicating
savings), An increase in the regular service rate, Or a combination of these.
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CARE INTEGRATION
Care integration includes: Obtaining a “health/medical home” – a primary care provider
responsible for overall coordination Medical disease management for persons with mental illness;
mental health management for persons with chronic medical conditions
Preventive healthcare screening and monitoring by mental health providers; mental health screening and monitoring by primary care providers
Integrated and consolidated mental health and medical services Medication adherence, both mental health (MH) and non-MH
medications Assisting in scheduling and keeping appointments Monitoring follow through, developing health and wellness
services Verifying healthcare services are occurring by utilizing data
management Providing real time healthcare information to appropriate
healthcare service providers
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COMPREHENSIVE CARE MANAGEMENT ORGANIZATION (CMO)
The CMO would: 1)Complete the integrated Care Management;
and/or 2) Develop a cost-effective infrastructure to help
small medical practices meet the requirements of a health home, thereby promoting the expansion of health homes in Nevada. (Nevada currently only has a few medical practices that have the infrastructure needed to be a health home.) CMO cost-effective activities includes: health care
information exchange, data analysis and performance measurement, care coordination and patient outreach, patient education and wellness services
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ISSUES THAT DEVELOPED
Per Discussion with Centers for Medicare and Medicaid (CMS), it was determined Nevada would require a Section 1115 Research and Demonstration Wavier: The scope of the desired health homes and care
management programs under the ACA (Sec. 2703) were not an option under the Nevada Medicaid State Plan. Therefore, Medicaid needed to waive some of the
requirements in 1902 of the Social Security Act through the use of a Social Security Section 1115 demonstration waiver.
Some patients are receiving case management services through existing programs (i.e. Targeted Case Management (TCM) and medical case management provided to community long term care clients through a Home and Community Based Waiver). Nevada does not want to duplicate medical services for these individuals, so they need to be excluded from the program.
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ISSUES THAT DEVELOPED (CONT).
Public comment and feedback from other agencies also indicated that an 1115 waiver would be needed because: Both counties and sister agencies perform targeted
case management services. CMO or health home services to individuals in these programs would create an unnecessary duplication of services. It would also impact the current infrastructure and services that these agencies provided.
Concerns were expressed about provider participation. Nevada needs to be able to develop creative payment models that would support incentives to providers to ensure additional services were provided and additional interactions between providers would be performed.
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RECIPIENT CRITERIA BASED ON FEEDBACK
Recipients must be Fee for Service (FFS) and not already enrolled in: managed care, waivered service eligibility, or in a category that already includes targeted case management (TCM) services.
Selection Criteria Chronic Condition(s) High Utilization Rates (multiple ER visits, etc.) High Risk (potential for additional chronic
conditions) Additional selection criteria may be chosen
based on population and need.
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CURRENT PLAN
Develop Health Home(s) and Care Management program that integrates the medical/behavioral health and long term care needs for targeted Medicaid recipients
Initially exclude persons who are receiving TCM, long-term care waiver (HCBW) services or are in the state or county child welfare and juvenile justice systems However, once the results of the initial program
are determined, the State needs to create a long term plan to determine how and when this population would be able to be included in the CMO and/or health/medical homes program.
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AN 1115 WAIVER IS NEEDED IN PHASE 1 TO:
Use innovative care delivery and payment models, including PMPM provider payments, shared savings options, and pay for performance.
Tailor some programs to specific populations or age groups (such as, health homes specific to children with cardiac conditions or adults with severe diabetes pre-end stage renal disease).
Limit some programs to Medicaid and exclude the dual Medicaid/Medicare population.
Mandatorily enroll or exclude specific groups. Act expeditiously when opportunities arise,
without having to go through the CMS amendment process.
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OVERALL TIMELINE AND WAIVER NEEDS OF 1115 WAIVER PHASE 1:
•PHASE 1 (listed times contingent on CMS approval time frame)
JUL
2012
•Care Management Program Lock in. (Freedom of Choice, 1902(a)(23))
JUL
2012
•Implement Medical Home pilots for high need/chronic condition enrollees. (Comparability 1902(a)(10)(B); Payment Reforms 1902 (a)(13)&1902(a)(30))
AUG
2012
•Implement Care Management Organization (CMO) for high need enrollees where medical home not available or as alternative. (Comparability 1902(a)(10)(B))
AUG
2012
•Expansion of Health Homes with CMO infrastructure support.
SEP
2012
•Implementation of Comprehensive Health Homes (integration of medical, behavioral health and long term supports).
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AN 1115 WAIVER IS NEEDED IN PHASE 2 TO:
Continue these Phase 1 needs: Using innovative care delivery & payment
models Tailoring some programs to specific populations
or age groups Mandatorily enrolling or excluding specific
groups Act expeditiously when opportunities arise
To implement meaningful benefit design changes (capped benefit unless participating in care management).
Begin to incorporate previously excluded populations.
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OVERALL TIMELINE AND NEEDS OF 1115 WAIVER PHASE 2:
•PHASE 2
SEP
2013
•Implementation of Integrated Care for Dual Eligible's (coordinate with Medicare for shared savings). (possible integration on 1915(c) waivers into the 1115 waiver)
SEP
2013
•Expansion of “Managed” fee for service for exempt populations (Severe Emotional Disturbed (SED), Severe Mental Illness (SMI), foster care).
DEC
2013
•If data indicates beneficial outcomes, implementation of “Managed” FFS for other populations not yet included.
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CARE DELIVERY SYSTEM CHANGES
There will be three primary delivery systems under the section 1115 waiver. DHCFP currently has (1) for the TANF/CHAP/CHIP populations and would require CMS approval of the 1115 waiver to implement (2) and (3): (1) HMOs, Managed FFS
(2) health homes, and (3) care management organization/administrative
service organization.
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POTENTIAL PROGRAM POPULATION BASED ON SFY 2011 CLAIMS DATA
Definition Caseload Dollars
•Total Medicaid FFS (excluding those who have Medicare) population who have a diagnosis of Chronic Condition on a medical claim
66,379 $808,752,072
•Of those persons, the number of combined TCM, Child Welfare or Waiver patients
12,539 $253, 738,669
•The number of those with Chronic Conditions who are not in TCM, Child Welfare or the Waiver
53,840 $555,013,403
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THANK YOU
If you have any additional questions, please visit our website: https://dhcfp.nv.gov/caremgmt.htm
Or send an email: [email protected]