Medicaid Managed Care: How, why, and keeping
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Transcript Medicaid Managed Care: How, why, and keeping
Medicaid Managed Care: Keeping
your clients connected to care in a
changing environment
Lessons, advice, and warnings from
California
Vanessa Cajina, Legislative Advocate
Families USA, January 23, 2014
WESTERN CENTER ON LAW & POVERTY
First things first:
We made it! Happy January 2014!
Okay, now down to business:
Roadmap for today:
California’s Medicaid program (Medi-Cal), and our
historic managed care populations
Other California laws and protections for health care
consumers
How our state managed to get pretty much all of our
populations into managed care
How we fought back, and continue to do so: tips, tricks,
and flashpoints
Resources and state laws and regulations
A little background:
Population-wise, the largest state in the nation: 38 million
We’re officially a “majority-minority” state: 2/3s people of
color & almost 40% Latino in 2012
43% of us speak a language other than English at home
We have the highest poverty rate in the US - almost 25%
Our state budget: Back in black
We were the 1st to start an Exchange, & one of the 1st to
enact the full Medicaid expansion
Medi-Cal: At a glance
US’ largest Medicaid program: about 7.6 million people
Medi-Cal provides free, comprehensive coverage for:
1 in 5 Californians under age 65
1 in 3 of our kids
Most people living with AIDS
We also cover:
Low-income parents
People with disabilities
Pregnant women
Seniors about age 65
And we’re excited that we NOW cover childless adults
from age 19 up to age 65!
A brief history of Medi-Cal
1966 – California creates Medi-Cal following Title XIX of
Social Security Act created Medicaid
1973 – first Medi-Cal managed care plans established
1982 – state creates 3 County Organized Health Systems
(COHS). A COHS is the health plan for ALL Medi-Cal
beneficiaries in that county; 3 more added in 1990
1992-96 – Additional managed care models adopted
throughout California
1993 – State required most children and parents with MediCal to enroll in managed care
2011 – Feds ok’d move of Seniors and Persons with
Disabilities & Duals into managed care, expansion into rural
areas
The pros & cons of managed care
Managed care can be a good fit, particularly for people
with lower health needs or those in good overall health
However, it can be very hard to navigate for people with
multiple providers, specialists, subspecialists, or those who
use non-medical services like durable medical equipment,
pharmacies, other long-term services
These navigation problems are especially prevalent during
transitions between traditional Medicaid to managed care
And what do provider contracts look like? How are your
medical groups regulated – how much risk do they bear
and does that impact treatment decisions?
Can the health plan guarantee that their networks are
adequate for the population they serve, including specialist
access, subspecialists, hospital contracts, etc…
From the County of Los Angeles, with a total
population of 9.9 million
*About 2.39 million Angelenos
will be Medi-Cal-eligible with
the ACA expansion
To Rural California
For example, Mono County has a population of under 15,000
and a population density of 4 people per square mile
California currently has
6 models of managed
care delivery, with
each of 58 counties
choosing which model
to employ – each with
its own regulations
and sets of operations
California Protections
Under CA law, most Medi-Cal managed care plans are
treated like commercial managed care plans, meaning
they have to follow certain laws in providing and
helping patients access care
Some of our tools include:
Knox-Keene Act – the granddaddy of California health
consumer protections
Continuity of care
Medical Exemption Requests
Contract language, health plan oversight
Knox Keene – CA Health & Safety Code §
1340-1399.818
The big law in California that regulates managed care
plans, including most Medi-Cal plans
Passed in 1975 with subsequent amendments, includes:
Services covered
Access standards
Consumer protections
Quality assurance
Grievances & dispute resolution
Financial protections & solvency for plans, contracts &
licensure
Knox Keene cont’d
Since enacted, great provisions added on requiring
plans to provide language assistance and
interpretation to consumers
Provides for Continuity of Care – we’ll discuss in a
moment
More information available at:
http://www.healthconsumer.org/cs016knoxkeene.pdf
http://www.leginfo.ca.gov/cgibin/calawquery?codesection=hsc&codebody=&hits=20
Medical Exemption Requests
An existing policy within our Medi-Cal program
The use of MERs was expanded when SPDs were required
to enroll in managed care
Permits a beneficiary to opt out of managed care if s/he
has a relationship with a doctor/nurse midwife/licensed
midwife who is not part of a health plan
In California, this is a narrow document and the MER only
lasts 12 months
When new populations are added to mandatory managed
care, MERs are typically added to legislative language
Continuity of Care
Beneficiaries have the right to completion of certain
covered services they were getting from a nonparticipating or terminated provider, under some
conditions
Services for an acute condition, serious chronic
condition, pregnancy, terminal illness, newborn care, and
some planned surgeries must be provided for up to 12
months
Medi-Cal enrollees newly enrolled in a plan can continue
RX as long as RX was in effect when the beneficiary
moved into the plan.
An underused protection, and subject to a health plan
negotiation with the non-participating provider
Continuity of Care for special populations
1.
SPDs: FFS to managed care
-Additional RX authorizations if their MER was denied, plus other
protections.
-New enrollees can request to see FFS provider for up to 12 months – must
have seen the provider in the last 12 months – provider must accept the
higher of the plan’s rate or the Medi-Cal FFS rate. Plan must notify SPD
within 30 days of request.
2.
Duals: FFS to managed care
-Duals in certain counties may request treatment with out-of-network
providers for 6 months if they have seen provider twice in last 12 months.
3.
Children shifting from CHIP to Medi-Cal: managed care to managed
care
-Kids going to a new health plan will get preference in keeping their PCP
-If child’s PCP isn’t in new plan, the child may keep that provider for 12
months
Administrative Advocacy
Medi-Cal is administered by the state’s Department of
Health Care Services, but participating plans are
regulated by the Department of Managed Health Care
Demand that contracts be public, as well as
correspondence and directives from the plan’s
regulator or contract manager including
subregulatory guidance
Establish relationships with health plans and provider
organizations
Is your state considering
expanding managed care?
Draft and advocate for model language if the transition is a
foregone conclusion – even piecemeal fixes can help
Start with gradual additions of types of beneficiaries –
perhaps children & families, or adult expansion Medicaid
population
Your state has a D majority? Talk to labor – some home
care unions have found that managed care could be better
for their members
Your state has an R majority? Pit health plans against
providers and choose your friends and battles wisely
For more information and model
language:
Western Center on Law and Poverty
www.wclp.org – [email protected]
National Health Law Program
www.healthlaw.org &
http://www.healthlaw.org/issues/medicaid/managedcare/continuity-of-care-in-medi-cal#.UtcYWLRXL5M