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Federal and State Health Care Reform: What Does it Mean for CPM’s Members?

Federal and State Health Care Reform: What Does it Mean for CPM’s Members?. April 29, 2010 Michael Scandrett, JD Halleland Habicht PA and LPaC alliance. Overview of Federal Reform. Temporary national high risk pool Insurance market changes (6 mos. post-effective date)

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Federal and State Health Care Reform: What Does it Mean for CPM’s Members?

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  1. Federal and State Health Care Reform: What Does it Mean for CPM’s Members? April 29, 2010 Michael Scandrett, JD Halleland Habicht PA and LPaC alliance

  2. Overview of Federal Reform • Temporary national high risk pool • Insurance market changes (6 mos. post-effective date) • Prohibit annual and lifetime limits • Prohibit rescissions, except for fraud • Extend dependent coverage to age 26, even if married • Cover pre-ex conditions for kids (under age 19) • Individual mandates and employer requirements to offer coverage (2014)

  3. Overview, cont. • Insurance exchanges (fully operational in 2014) • States may begin establishing exchanges sooner • Medicaid/Medicare reform • Expand Medicaid coverage – effective April 1, 2010 for some states including Minnesota • Extensive Medicare changes – parts A,B,D, Medicare Advantage • Payment reform and care coordination • Medical homes, Payment bundling, ACOs, CMS Innovation Center

  4. Provisions Impacting LTC: CLASS Act • CLASS Act: National Voluntary Insurance Program for Purchasing Community Living Assistance Services and Support • Voluntary*, self-funded public long-term care insurance program for individuals with “functional limitations” • Secretary develops actuarially sound benefit plan • 5-year vesting period • Provides cash benefit – not < avg. of $50/day to purchase non-medical services and supports needed to live in community * Working adults will be automatically enrolled and must opt-out (effective Jan. 1, 2011)

  5. Provisions Impacting LTC: Medicaid • Community First Choice Option • Optional Medicaid benefit to provide community-based supports for beneficiaries with disabilities who would otherwise require an institutional level of care • Enhanced federal matching rate – additional six percentage points • Effective Oct. 1, 2011, sunsets after 5 years • State Balancing Incentive Program • FMAP increases for Medicaid expenditures for non-institutionally based LTC services and supports • Oct. 1, 2011 – Sept. 30, 2015

  6. Medicaid, cont. • Removal of Barriers to Providing Home and Community Based Services (HCBS) • State option to provide more types of HCBS through a State plan amendment, rather than through a waiver • For individuals with incomes up to 300% max SSI payment and w/higher level need • States may extend full Medicaid benefits to individuals receiving HCBS under a State plan amendment • Money Follows the Person Rebalancing Demo • Extends through Sept. 2016 • Allocates $10 mil/yr. for 5 yrs. to continue the Aging and Disability Resource Center initiatives

  7. Provisions Impacting LTC: Medicare • Many Changes • Restructure Medicare Advantage Payments • Therapy Caps • Reduce annual market basket updates for inpatient, home health, SNF, hospice, etc. • Freeze threshold income for Part B premiums (2011 through 2019) • Reduce Part D premium subsidy for incomes over $85k(single), $170k(couple) • Assisted Living Part D Copay Partial Elimination • Reduce wasteful dispensing of outpatient Rx in LTC settings • Establish 15-member Independent Payment Advisory Board • Eliminate Medicare Improvement Fund • Medicare Shared Savings Programs (ACOs) • Community-based Care Transitions Program • Innovation Center w/in CMS

  8. Provisions Impacting LTC: SNF Requirements • New Transparency Requirements • Disclose info re ownership, accountability req’s, expenditures; publish standardized info on nursing facilities to a website so Medicare enrollees can compare facilities • Compliance and Ethics Programs • Requires compliance and ethics program SNF/NH; effective in preventing and detecting criminal, civil, and administrative violations and in promoting quality of care • SNF Market Basket Productivity Adjustment • Begins FY 2012 – reduced by productivity adjustment equal to the 10-yr. moving average of changes in annual economy-wide private non-farm business multifactor productivity as projected by the Secretary

  9. SNF Requirements, cont. • Many Changes • Delays certain SNF “RUGs-IV” payment system changes to Oct. 1, 2011 • Medicare value-based purchasing implementation plan for SNF • Reporting of expenditures – wages and benefits for direct care staff, breaking out RN, LPN, CNA, other med. and therapy staff • Standardized complaint form • Staffing accountability requirements • GAO study and report on Five-Star Quality Rating System • Permissive reductions in civil money penalties for facilities that self-report deficiencies • Notification of facility closure requirements • Dementia and abuse prevention training requirements • New screening requirements for Medicare/Medicaid certification • Additional Fraud and Abuse prevention meausres

  10. LTC Organizations as Employers • Many considerations: • Reporting of employee health coverage on W-2 Forms • CLASS Act – whether to participate • Higher Medicare payroll tax on incomes over $200k/$250k • Notice to employees of coverage through exchange • Shared Responsibility provisions – offer affordable coverage to employees working 30+ hrs/wk • Add’l background check requirements for SNF/NH employees with “direct patient access” • How to pay for the higher costs?

  11. Strategic Considerations for CPM • Understand the currents • Mind the gap • Design the mousetrap

  12. Currents: Global Accountability • Provider accountability • Payment reform: ACOs, bundled payment, shared savings, total cost of care • Care management: Health care homes, chronic care management, disease management • Public reporting: baskets of care, peer grouping • Methods of managing care • Care manager and health coach • IT tools • Reduce use of hospital, ER and other expensive • Care model redesign • Outside the medical model: social services, housing, etc.

  13. Currents: Demographic Changes • Long-term Care Imperative • Demographics of consumers • Workforce changes • Financing and revenue sources

  14. Currents: Population Health • Increasing attention to population-wide health status (obesity, smoking, addiction, mental illness) • Funding and incentives for upstream primary and secondary prevention • Acknowledgement of need for greater community-wide (and employer-wide) cooperation to improve the health of entire communities (and employers)

  15. Currents: Long-term Care Trends • Home and community-based services • Fewer traditional long-term SNF services • More sub-acute transitional care services • Changing consumer and family preferences

  16. Currents: Employer Health Coverage • Too early, too complex to predict the impact • Anticipate health insurance costs may go up in the short-term • Public program program reimbursement questions need to be answered • 2011 Legislative Session will be significant!

  17. Mind the Gap • Embrace (or at least accept) the demise of the distinction between acute and long-term care • Understand the new payers – who are the customers? • Federal government (Medicare, etc) • State government (MA, MNCare, etc.) • Managed care plans • Providers (ACO’s, bundled payments, health care homes) • Anticipate and market to the new consumer preferences and incentives

  18. Design the Mousetrap • Continuously redefine your organization and your industry • New role in the newly integrated continuum of care • New relationships with payers and consumers • New accountability • New terminology • Design, negotiate new approaches to care delivery, payment and financing • Join with, learn from, other employers about strategies for controlling health benefit costs • Be proactive in proposing reimbursement changes related to LTC organizations as employers

  19. Case Study: GAMC & ACOs • Hospitals: GAMC Coordinated Care Delivery Systems • Dramatic decrease in revenues • Increased provider-level accountability for total cost of care • “Payment reform” – the demise of fee-for-service incentives • Opportunities to improve coordination of services • Opportunities to improve the care model • Strategies: • New members of the care team • Better IT tools to track utilization, costs, quality • New external partners • Patient engagement

  20. Case Study: GAMC & ACOs 3. Implications • Buy vs build • Control costs vs. maximize revenues • Manage capacity • Predict future costs and measure impact of new strategies • Improve risk adjustment tools • Address non-clinical factors (and services and providers) affecting health status and care plan compliance

  21. Final Thoughts: Cost Shifting (‘05) Long-Term Care Social Services Public Health and Prevention Acute Care

  22. Final Thoughts: Continuum (’06)

  23. Final Thoughts: Paradigm Shift (‘06) • Private sector marketplace and payers • Part of a continuum of care and a network of providers • Competing for business • Data-driven, outcomes-based report cards • Shift to lower cost services and settings • Multiple payors, drug formularies, suppliers, care management protocols • Electronic medical records & communication

  24. Questions?

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