1 / 66

CUSTOMER SERVICES STANDARDS TRAINING

CUSTOMER SERVICES STANDARDS TRAINING. [Date] [Place]. Welcome. This training will model the characteristics and the practices of a high quality customer services unit: Friendly, welcoming, open attitude A gate-”opener” rather than a gate-”keeper”

cambree
Download Presentation

CUSTOMER SERVICES STANDARDS TRAINING

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. CUSTOMER SERVICES STANDARDS TRAINING [Date] [Place]

  2. Welcome • This training will model the characteristics and the practices of a high quality customer services unit: • Friendly, welcoming, open attitude • A gate-”opener” rather than a gate-”keeper” • Customer services staff are systems navigators • Ready to help • Answers to your questions

  3. Customer Service At A Glance

  4. Background • The federal Balanced Budget Act (BBA) of 1997 was enacted after Congress heard critical testimony from managed care recipients: • Lack of information about providers • No choice of providers • Health care decisions were made by personnel without clinical training • No due process

  5. Background, II • As a result, the BBA requires certain protections for beneficiaries enrolled in Medicaid health plans • The BBA requires that Medicaid health plans meet managed care standards • The BBA requires that external quality reviews of their compliance be done annually

  6. Background, III • In Michigan, Medicaid Pre-paid inpatient health plans (PIHPs) were required to have customer service capacity by the 2002 Application for Participation (AFP) and by their contract with MDCH • AFP and MDCH contract had minimal description of expectations • PIHPs were expected to review and adhere to the BBA requirements and assure oversight and compliance by subcontractors to whom CS is delegated

  7. Background, IV • The 2004 External Quality Review performed by Health Services Advisory Group (HSAG) found that most PIHPs did not meet the Standard VI “Customer Service” Standard VII “Grievance Process”, or Standard VIII “Enrollee Rights” • MDCH determined that since this was a wide-spread problem, Michigan standards for how a customer services unit should operate and uniform language for enrollee information should be developed

  8. Background, V • Process: • Workgroup of the top performers and MDCH staff • Consulted with HSAG • Developed draft standards • Sought input from PIHPs, Recovery Council, Quality Improvement Council and Customer Services staff • Revised per input • Submitted recommendations to Quality Improvement Council: Approved standards on May 31, 2006; approved uniform language on July 26, 2006 • Contract and Financial Issues Committee approved July 13, 2006

  9. Background, VI • Therefore, standards are not negotiable

  10. Preamble • Front door: Welcome to Mental Health • Like a concierge service at a hotel • “Systems navigation” – link to the right people and right information • Not a replacement for case managers, supports coordinators or recipient rights advisors! • Not a substitute for emergency access • PIHP needs to clearly distinguish emergency phone # from CS phone #

  11. Preamble, II • Standards are for PIHPs • If a PIHP delegates the customer services function to an affiliate CMHSP, substance abuse coordinating agency or provider network (e.g., MCPN): these standards apply to them also • PIHP retains the responsibility for oversight

  12. Functions of Customer Services Unit • Welcome and Orient individuals to services and benefits available, and the provider network • Provide information about how to access mental health, primary health, and other community services • Help individuals with problems and inquiries regarding benefits

  13. Functions of Customer Services Unit, II • Assist people with and oversee local complaint and grievance processes • Track and report patterns of problem areas for the organization

  14. Standard #1 • There shall be a designated unit called “Customer Services”

  15. Standard #2 • There shall be at the PIHP a minimum of one FTE (full time equivalent) dedicated to customer services. If the function is delegated, affiliate CMHSPs, substance abuse coordinating agencies (CAs) and network providers, as applicable, shall have additional FTEs (or fractions thereof) as appropriate to sufficiently meet the needs of the people in the service area.

  16. Standard #3 • There shall be a designated toll-free customer services telephone line and access to a TTY number. The numbers shall be displayed in agency brochures and public information material.

  17. Standard #4 • Telephone calls to the customer services unit shall be answered by a live voice during business hours. Telephone menus are not acceptable. A variety of alternatives may be employed to triage high volumes of calls.

  18. Standard #5 • The hours of customer service unit operations and the process for accessing information from customer services outside those hours shall be publicized.

  19. Standard #6 • The customer handbook shall contain the state-required topics

  20. Standard #7 • The Medicaid coverage name and the state’s description of each service shall be printed in the customer handbook.

  21. Standard #8 • The customer handbook shall contain a date of publication and revision(s).

  22. Standard #9 • Affiliate CMHSP, substance abuse coordinating agency, or network provider names, addresses, phone numbers, TTYs, E-mails, and web addresses shall be contained in the customer handbook.

  23. Standard #10 • Information about how to contact the Medicaid Health Plans or Medicaid fee-for-service programs in the PIHP service area shall be provided in the handbook (actual phone numbers and addresses may be omitted and held at the customers services office due to frequent turnover of plans and providers)

  24. Standard #11 • Customer services unit shall maintain current listings of all providers, both organizations and practitioners, with whom the PIHP has contracts, the service they provide, languages they speak, and any specialty for which they are known. This list must include independent person-centered planning facilitators. Beneficiaries shall be given this list initially and be informed annually of its availability.

  25. Standard #12 • Customer services unit shall have access to information about the PIHP including CMHSP affiliate annual report, current organizational chart, CMHSP board member list, meeting schedule and minutes that are available to be provided in a timely manner to an individual upon request.

  26. Standard #13 • Upon request, the customer services unit shall assist beneficiaries with the grievance and appeals, and local dispute resolution processes, and coordinate as appropriate with Fair Hearing Officers and the local Office of Recipient Rights.

  27. Standard #14 • Customer services staff shall be trained to welcome people to the public mental health system and to possess current working knowledge in, and know where in the organization detailed information can be obtained on at least the following…

  28. Standard #14.a. • Information regarding the populations served (serious mental illness, serious emotional disturbance, developmental disability and substance use disorder) and eligibility criteria for various benefits plans (e.g., Medicaid, Adult Benefit Waiver, MIChild)

  29. Standard #14.b. • Service array (including substance abuse treatment services), medical necessity criteria, and eligibility for and referral to specialty services

  30. Standard #14.c. • Person-centered planning

  31. Standard #14.d. • Self-determination

  32. Standard #14.e. • Recovery

  33. Standard #14.f. • Peer Specialists

  34. Standard #14.g. • Grievance and appeals, Fair Hearings, local dispute resolution processes, and Recipient Rights

  35. Standard #14.h. • Limited English Proficiency (LEP) and cultural competency

  36. Standard #14.i. • Information about Medicaid covered services and referral within PIHPs as well as outside to Medicaid Health Plans, Fee-for-Service practitioners, and Department of Human Services

  37. Standard #14.j: The Public Mental Health System • Structure • Funding • Services • Protections

  38. General Service Structure MDCH Community Mental Health Services Programs (46CMHSPs) Medicaid Prepaid Inpatient Heath Plans (18 PIHPs) Services Each local CMHSP provides an array of Mental Health services through a network of providers to adults with SPMI, children with SED, persons with DD and persons with substance use disorders.

  39. Funding State taxes Federal Medicaid State Appropriations Federal Block Grant funding MDCH County Mental Health appropriation PIHP Medicaid contract CMHSP - GF contract CMHSP - PIHP Affiliate agreement Services

  40. Mental Health Code Services Within the available state funding … priority for services shall be given to individuals with the most severe forms of serious mental illness , serious emotional disturbances and developmental disability, with priority to be given to those in urgent or emergency situations… Persons who do not meet this threshold of severity may be put on waiting lists (or referred elsewhere) for services. The public generally does not understand these financial and legal limitations to service.

  41. Medicaid Mental Health Services Medicaid beneficiaries presenting with a specialty level of care are entitled to receive all “medically necessary covered services and supports from the CMHSP to treat, ameliorate, diminish or stabilize their mental health, developmental disability and substance abuse conditions.

  42. Recipient Protections • The person centered planning process • The individualized plan of service • Dedicated local Customer Service/problem resolution staff • Local recipient rights protection system • Local dispute resolution process • Local Grievance and Appeal Process • And the Lansing-based Medicaid fair hearing process

  43. Standard #14.k. • Balanced Budget Act relative to customer services functions and beneficiary rights and protections

  44. Standard #14.l. • Community Resources (e.g., advocacy organizations, housing options, schools, public health agencies)

  45. Standard #14.m. • Public Health Code (for substance abuse treatment recipients if not delegated to the substance abuse coordinating agency)

  46. Customer Services Handbook • Each PIHP must provide a beneficiary an up-to-date handbook when they first come for services and periodically thereafter • There are BBA-required topics that must be in the handbook • There is MDCH-required language for some topics to ensure consistency across the state • PIHPs may tailor information to reflect their local operations and may add information to each template

  47. Customer Services Handbook, II • PIHPs that have quantity of handbooks on hand may give these out as long as they contain or are supplemented with the required information • Drafts of new handbooks must be available for review in the Spring 2007 • New handbooks must be distributed beginning October 1, 2007

  48. Customer Services Handbook, III • There are 12 topics that require the use of template language. • They are not required to appear in this order

  49. Template #1 • Confidentiality and family access to information

More Related