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Gearing Up Your Organizations (or Not) for Implementing HCBS Services

This presentation by Cindy Freidmutter will discuss the challenges and considerations of implementing Home and Community Based Services (HCBS) for supportive housing providers. It will cover business planning, implementation strategies, and advocacy issues.

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Gearing Up Your Organizations (or Not) for Implementing HCBS Services

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  1. Gearing Up Your Organizations (or Not) for Implementing HCBS Services Presenter: Cindy Freidmutter, CLF Consulting for Supportive Housing Network of New York August 12, 2016

  2. Presentation Overview

  3. HCBS Services • Psychosocial Rehabilitation (PSR) • Habilitation • Peer Support • Family Support and Training • Education Support • Employment (pre-voc, transitional, ongoing, intensive) • Community Psychiatric Support & Treatment (CPST) • Short-term Crisis Respite • Intensive Crisis Respite

  4. Goals for This Session • Identify common challenges SHNNY members will encounter in becoming HCBS providers • Factors to consider in deciding whether or when to proceed with offering HCBS services • Offer an overview of business planning & implementation strategies for launching and sustaining various HCBS services • Flag advocacy issues that are critical to supportive housing providers

  5. HCBS 101: Lessons from NYC • Can implement HCBS in Stages: • Certification as an HCBS provider doesn’t mean you have to offer all certified services on day 1 (10/1/16) or ever • OMH will do readiness survey of certified providers, with option to put some or all services on hiatus for a period of time (up to one year in NYC) • Referral of Your Clients or Others Not Assured: • May not get a viable number of clients for the services you plan to provide • Your client can only be referred if agency has contract with MCO • Relationships with lead Health Homes and their downstream care management agencies (CMA) are critical to referrals • Uncertain % of HARP Clients Who Will Receive HCBS: • Assessment & referral for HCBS is a multi-step process that is not ideal for target population; some are not making it through process • Individuals living in certain residential settings (CRs, adult homes) and receiving certain Medicaid services (e.g. PROS, ACT) are ineligible

  6. HCBS 101: Lessons from NYC • Financial support available from OMH/OASAS for some costs: • Start-up grants awarded to most agencies, but $ contingent on submitting a viability plan, contracting with MCO & offering one service by the due date • Grants will be awarded for full, partial or upgrade for BHIT platform if agencies contract with 1+ MCOs and complete NYS HCBS surveys • Rates & FFS Structure Big Challenge: • Only reimbursed for face-to-face individual or limited group services • Significant service planning, pre-authorization, documentation and billing mandates that are not reimbursed • Even with MCO pre-authorization, expect only 85% or fewer claims to be paid • NYC rates are not adequate to cover costs; OMH has a rate increase pending at CMS that will better compensate providers especially during start-up

  7. Challenges for SH Providers • Supportive housing (SH) contract services overlap with certain HCBS services (e.g. PRS, Habilitation), but as structured HCBS should only supplement, not supplant, SH funding. • HARP enrollees who live in certain residential settings (e.g. CRs, adult homes) will not be able to access HCBS services and services cannot be offered in those settings. • Starting in NYC, OMH is surveying all residential sites to determine site-by-site eligibility for HCBS. • Individuals using PROS, ACT & some other services will not be eligible for many HCBS services. • SH providers are not preferred providers for their tenants; no requirement that clients even get to choose their SH provider. • As HCBS provider, SH agency will get referrals of non-residents/tenants even if current services are housing-focused.

  8. Offer HCBS Services or Not: Factors to Consider • Access to eligible population • # of agency clients who are HARP eligible & likely to need/use HCBS services • Opportunities to engage new clients in HCBS services • Start-up/ongoing administrative costs to become HCBS provider • Is agency already a Medicaid provider or will it need to add all needed infrastructure • What are ongoing costs to support Medicaid infrastructure? • How does HCBS fit with agency’s strategic vision • Is patient outcomes likely to improve? • Is building HCBS capacity an agency growth opportunity? • Are there other significant opportunities in same time period? • Timing of HCBS Start-up to Minimize Operating Losses • Can you implement one or several services with low/no additional fixed operating costs? • What are your projections for service demand in start-up year?

  9. Business planning for HCBS You need a business plan for each service cluster and for core administrative functions • Project volume of services based on number of HARP eligible in your service area and in your programs. Be conservative • Consider whether you have to build, buy or just adapt Medicaid billing, corporate compliance and QA functions, and at what cost above available NYS start-up & BHIT grants • Calculate revenues and operating costs to see if offering HCBS services is financially viable at a scale you can achieve. Given the fee-for-service rate structure, high fixed costs & uncertainty of referrals, HCBS may not be a viable choice if your agency projects small volume.

  10. Implementing PSR: HCBS Manual • Goal: optimally restore the individual’s functional level • Flexibly Delivered: Services may be delivered to individual or group in their home, in the community or at program site like clubhouse • Health Homes are Gatekeeper: Must be in care plan, activities linked to goal achievement and time limited (250 hours annually or 500 with Hab/CPST) • Service Requirements: Utilize (with documentation) evidence-based rehabilitation and recovery practices • Need supervising licensed practitioner (SLP): Workers who provide PSR services should periodically report to a SLP on participants’ progress/re-acquisition of skills (no ratio but other services require 1:10)

  11. Implementing PSR: Provider Start-up Plan • No new hires needed-Qualified staff can offer and supervise service delivery • Serve people eligible for & who need PSR-Develop strategy to get agency clients referred • Can deliver services efficiently at existing agency sites or in community-No need to rent space • Upgrading or adding infrastructure is within bandwidth of agency-Can operate with current administrative staff and no significant competing priorities • Will offer other services that clients may also need- In NYC, referrals are targeted to agencies that offer all HCBS services in the individual’s service plan • Can absorb deficits until or unless rates and costs are aligned.

  12. Implementing Short-Term Crisis Respite • Plus: Can get direct referrals into program & has potential to save MCOs $. • High fixed costs: Site based with single rooms & 24/7 staff • Will $306 per diem rate (proposed to increase to $476*) cover fixed costs and at what bed count & average occupancy? • Available site aids implementation as no capital available except through recent statewide RFPs • Path to sustainability: Will one or several MCOs contract for all or a % of beds and generate referrals? *89% for upstate counties

  13. Common supports that could benefit SHNNY members Three suggestions • Administrative Infrastructure: A cost-effective ASO that can help with billing, corporate compliance, QA, IT and more • Financial Viability: Identify HCBS services & volume that can be most easily implemented by SH agencies and sustained during start-up at break-even or low deficit budget. HCBS may be an outlier where volume actually increases deficits. • Agency culture & staff reorientation: HCBS requires an approach to service delivery that is much closer to clinic operations than supportive housing. Providers might utilize a regional approach to preparing SH agencies for change? What else?

  14. Why consider HCBS at all? • Mission-congruent: Residents/tenants will get expanded access to recovery services & best opportunity for agency growth • Financial & program viability varies: Some agencies may be able to develop plans for feasible implementation, including through partnerships • Current rates and processes may change in 2 years: NYS plans on rolling HCBS funds into MCO payment • Future Value Based Payments: If SH providers can show HCBS helps clients fill gaps that are critical to recovery/community stability, they may be in position to benefit from the VBP structure

  15. Advocacy issues critical to supportive housing providers Three suggestions • Guidance from DOH and OMH that HCBS supplements, not supplants, SH contract services • Transition to tiered case rate for HCBS sooner than later that focuses on goal attainment • Simplified front-end processes with fewer assessments, plans & MCO authorizations, so clients get timely services they want and need What else?

  16. Upcoming HCBS Roll-out • July 1—HARP enrollment started for ROS • October 1-HCBS enrollment starts for ROS • MCTAC-Ongoing provider training • MCOs-available to discuss contracting, billing and other processes • OMH/OASAS-will soon be releasing Readiness Survey & information on BHIT grants (webinars 8/30 at noon and 9/14 at 11am for eligible certified providers. • Providers-still not too late to apply for HCBS certification, but likely too late for start-up grants • SHNNY-Additional technical assistance may be available

  17. Important Links • Applying for HCBS Certification: New applicants can get a user ID and passcode to access the system by emailing omh.sm.co.HCBS-Application@omh.ny.gov https://www.omh.ny.gov/omhweb/bho/app-site.html • HCBS Provider Manual https://www.omh.ny.gov/omhweb/bho/hcbs_manual.pdf • Provider Preparation for MCO Billing http://ctacny.org/sites/default/files/5qs-one-sheet-v4.pdf • HCBS Rates http://ctacny.org/media/663#overlay-context=media/662 • More info on BHIT Grants Sharon Bari  - SBari@nyehealth.org & Erica Manganelli - emanganelli@nyehealth.org • MCTAC HCBS Trainings http://www.ctacny.org/search-trainings?title=HCBS&field_date_time_value%5Bmin%5D%5Bdate%5D=&field_date_time_value%5Bmin%5D%5Btime%5D=&field_date_time_value%5Bmax%5D%5Bdate%5D=&field_date_time_value%5Bmax%5D%5Btime%5D=&filter_institute_categories=All&field_training_presenters_tid=All&field_training_keywords_tid=All&op=Apply&form_build_id=form-tVycbZE5tcLf9IF6qJ62GD32GEdckXU8N20MR7f9FRk

  18. Remember…

  19. Questions & What Next Thank you for participating! Cindy Freidmutter CLF Consulting c.freidmutter@gmail.com 917-554-5599

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