Access to AHCCCS October 29, 2012

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Access to AHCCCS October 29, 2012 30 Years of Medicaid Innovation Our first care is your health care Arizona Health Care Cost Containment System Reaching across Arizona to provide comprehensive quality health care for those in need

Access to Care Legal Aspects/Implications Federal Efforts to Date Arizona Access Efforts Strategies for the future 30 Years of Medicaid Innovation Our first care is your health care Arizona Health Care Cost Containment System 2 Reaching across Arizona to provide comprehensive quality health care for those in need

Legal Requirements Federal Statute 1902 (a)(30)(a) A State plan for medical assistance must assure that payments are consistent with efficiency, economy, and quality of care and are sufficient to enlist enough providers so that care and services are available under the plan at least to the extent that such care and services are available to the general population in the geographic area. 30 Years of Medicaid Innovation Our first care is your health care Arizona Health Care Cost Containment System 3 Reaching across Arizona to provide comprehensive quality health care for those in need

Legal Issues Without clarifying regulations further interpretation left to the Courts Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals several California cases over proposed rate reductions We have several times held that the balance of hardships favors beneficiaries of public assistance who may be forced to do without needed medical services over a state concerned with conserving scarce resources Standing issue went to Supreme Court (Douglas v Independent Living Centers) 30 Years of Medicaid Innovation Our first care is your health care Arizona Health Care Cost Containment System 4 Reaching across Arizona to provide comprehensive quality health care for those in need

9 th Circuit Rulings Continued Finally, we have stated that even if 30(A) imposes a substantive requirement, a rate reduction might still conflict with the statute if at least some providers stop treating Medi- Cal beneficiaries. Indep. Living II, 572 F.3d at 656-57. 30 Years of Medicaid Innovation Our first care is your health care Arizona Health Care Cost Containment System 5 Reaching across Arizona to provide comprehensive quality health care for those in need

Arizona Ruling on rate reduction case Hospital lawsuit over rate reductions March 23, 2012 Secretary relied on (Administrative Record) Tribal Consultation Historical hospital provider participation Additional Measures tracked Arizona s robust monitoring tools Court found in favor of the State 30 Years of Medicaid Innovation Our first care is your health care Arizona Health Care Cost Containment System 6 Reaching across Arizona to provide comprehensive quality health care for those in need

CMS Proposed Regulations May 6, 2011 First attempt to provide regulatory guidance regarding access requirement Framework enrollee needs, availability of care and utilization Purpose Create standardized transparent process for states to follow as part of compliance with (access) States would have to review access by subset of services every year all services at least once every 5 years Information included Beneficiary Input (hotline surveys ombudsman) Data looking at costs charges Medicare other payers Identify any access issues highlighted by the review Review must be completed if imposing rate reductions If state identifies issues submit Corrective Action Plan 30 Years of Medicaid Innovation Our first care is your health care Arizona Health Care Cost Containment System 7 Reaching across Arizona to provide comprehensive quality health care for those in need

Arizona Response CMS proposed rule based on MACPAC framework looked at limited services and did not offer comparison to general population in area Recommended CMS partner with states to determine framework Relying on member satisfaction surveys is not an indication of community standard Comparison to billed charges and Medicare not necessarily relevant States should be provided with flexibility to determine the elements most appropriate for review The inclusion of Corrective Action Plans will increase litigation 30 Years of Medicaid Innovation Our first care is your health care Arizona Health Care Cost Containment System 8 Reaching across Arizona to provide comprehensive quality health care for those in need

CMS Access Efforts CMS working on analytical approach to monitor access. Evaluating data sources that can be used 1. Survey data (household and physician) 2. Medicaid Claims data Work in progress Held some discussions with States 30 Years of Medicaid Innovation Our first care is your health care Arizona Health Care Cost Containment System 9 Reaching across Arizona to provide comprehensive quality health care for those in need

State Concerns No Specific Medicaid data other then old claims - currently no encounters (MCO) Weakness in surveys what services did they get May provide national picture but is it really comparable? Is it enough information to inform and take action? Reaching across Arizona to provide comprehensive quality health care for those in need

Significant Measurement Efforts Numerous fragmented federal efforts around updating and improving quality measures What is goal? Actionable data that allows improvement in health care system CHIPRA Core Comprehensive Well Child Core Adult Core Dual Eligible Multiple Chronic Disease Meaningful Use CMS Access Measures 30 Years of Medicaid Innovation Our first care is your health care Arizona Health Care Cost Containment System 11 Reaching across Arizona to provide comprehensive quality health care for those in need

Arizona Access Principles Create Strong Contractual Network Requirements Robust real-time Monitoring with information from plans systems Establish Quality expectations and measure Focus on actionable information to improve system Do not drown in data generate information Disciplined Review of Information Accountability for plans to perform Reaching across Arizona to provide comprehensive quality health care for those in need

Arizona Network Requirements Largely Managed Care Establish strong network requirements PCP/Pharmacy within 5 miles (urban areas 80%+ of population) Hospital, NF, Assisted Living facilities by region Appointment standards emergency/urgent/ routine Require adequate network for specialists MCOs must monitor and ensure appointment availability Reaching across Arizona to provide comprehensive quality health care for those in need

Arizona Robust Monitoring Provider Analysis Hospital Analysis other providers Participation Financial status Reimbursement levels Quarterly MCO report on providers terminating contracts (250 out of 55,000 in past 2+ years) Requirement to notify immediately if substantive change in network Provider Affiliation Tape electronic info on MCO providers Conduct Operational and Financial reviews Track Member and Provider Grievance and Appeals Reaching across Arizona to provide comprehensive quality health care for those in need

Quality Measures Quality of Care (QOC) process Significant sentinel events MCO tracks and trends to determine system issues Resolve care needed today issues Performance measures HEDIS like well child visits dental care 30 Years of Medicaid Innovation Our first care is your health care Arizona Health Care Cost Containment System 15 Reaching across Arizona to provide comprehensive quality health care for those in need

Actionable Data/Review/Accountability Measures previously identified are more real time no significant lag Important because Goal is to take appropriate actions to improve system Staff from various division meet quarterly to review health plan data Also look at medical management data IP/ED trends pharmacy lockdown etc Agency willing to impose monetary sanctions even have suspended enrollment Reaching across Arizona to provide comprehensive quality health care for those in need

Potential Arizona Population Growth (FY 16) Population FPL Est. # State Cost Total Children 6-18 100-133 44,000 $33 m $124 m Eligible not enrolled 0-133 137,000 $225 m $656 m Childless Adult Restoration Childless Adult not previously enrolled 0-100 154,000 $170 m $1.4 B 0-100 33,600 $37 m $306 m Optional Parent Expansion Optional Childless Adult Expansion 30 Years of Medicaid Innovation Our first care is your health care Arizona Health Care Cost Containment System 100-133 42,000 $0 $289 m 100-133 18,000 $0 $165 m 17 Reaching across Arizona to provide comprehensive quality health care for those in need

Capacity/Access Strategies Currently serves population 1.3 million AZ looking at growth anywhere from 180,000 (14%) to 425,000 (33%) new members How to expand network capacity? Program has been increasing GME funding Currently in procurement may add plan capacity? Lessen hassle factor single credentialing process Continue to have plans add value for providers care coordination data - Integration efforts behavioral health duals Payment Reform - Gainsharing Reaching across Arizona to provide comprehensive quality health care for those in need

30 Years of Medicaid Innovation Our first care is your health care Arizona Health Care Cost Containment System 19 Reaching across Arizona to provide comprehensive quality health care for those in need

Access to Care: Balancing Medicaid s Goals and Capacity The Community Health Center Perspective NAMD Conference, Oct. 2012 Heather Foster, MPH Deputy Director, Federal Affairs

The NACHC Mission To promote the provision of high quality, comprehensive and affordable health care that is coordinated, culturally and linguistically competent, and community directed for all medically underserved populations.

What are Community Health Centers? 1,200 Community Health Center Organizations Over 8,500 delivery sites 20 million patients served Nearly 1 million migrant and seasonal farm workers Over 1 million homeless patients 48% rural patients 92.5% of patients are under 200% FPL 37% uninsured, 39% Medicaid 35% Hispanic; 25% African American; 4% API Saving over $24 billion each year!

What makes a CHC a CHC Must provide service to all regardless of patient s ability to pay Community-driven: Health centers must have a patient-majority community board Located in or serving patients in a medicallyunderserved area Comprehensive primary care services (all ages)

Services Offered by Health Centers Primary Medical Care Preventive Health Care Prenatal, Perinatal, & Newborn Care Gynecological Care HIV Care Hearing/Vision Screening Oral Health Mental Health Substance Abuse Pharmacy X-Rays and Lab Specialty Medical Care Enabling Services

Enabling Services at CHCs Case Management Environmental Health Risk Reduction Health Education Interpretation/Translation Services Outreach Child Care (during visits) Housing Assistance Transportation Home Visiting Parenting Education Employment referral & counseling Testing for Blood Lead Levels Food bank/meal delivery

Health Centers Have a Unique Role as Primary Care Providers

Health Center Patients: Disproportionately Poor, Uninsured, and Publicly-Insured Health Centers U.S. 93% 72% 38% 39% 40% 16% 16% 21% Uninsured Medicaid At or below 100% of Poverty Under 200% of Poverty Note: Health Center: Based on Bureau of Primary Health Care, HRSA, DHHS, 2010 Uniform Data System. U.S.: Kaiser Family Foundation, State Health Facts Online, www.statehealthfacts.org. Based on U.S. Census Bureau 2009 and 2010 March Current Population Survey. U.S. Census Bureau,Table POV46. Poverty Status by State, August 2010, Annual Social and Economic Supplement, 2010 Current Population Survey. www.census.gov.

Figure 1.5 Health Center Patient Mix Is Unique Among Ambulatory Care Providers 100% 90% 80% 70% 60% 50% 40% 30% 20% 10% 0% 2.6 14% 8% 38% 39% 4% 5% 9% 61% 17% 13% 37% 14% 9% 31% Health Centers Private Physicians Hospital Outpatient Depts. Other/Unknown Private Insurance Medicare Uninsured Medicaid Notes: Other public includes non-medicaid SCHIP and other state-funded insurance programs. Sources: Based on Bureau of Primary Health Care, HRSA, DHHS, 2010 Uniform Data System. Hing E, Uddin S. Visits to primary care delivery sites: United States, 2008. NCHS data brief, no 47. Hyattsville, MD: National Center for Health Statistics. 2010.

Health Centers Save $$$ Source: Ku L et al, Using Primary Care to Bend the Curve: Estimating the Impact of a Health Center Expansion on Health Care Costs, GWU Department of Health Policy, Policy Research Brief #14, September 2009

What Does it Mean for Access: Balancing Costs & Returns in Medicaid

Questions? hfoster@nachc.org (202) 296-1721

For further information about NACHC and America s Health Centers Visit us at www.nachc.org

Measuring Access to Care in Medicaid Managed Care Joe Moser Director of Government Affairs October 29, 2012 Hurricane Sandy

Medicaid Health Plans of America (MHPA) 111 Members 34 States + DC 35

Access to Care in Medicaid MCOs Balanced Budget Act of 1997: Medicaid managed care organizations must offer an appropriate range of services and access to preventative and primary care for the population expected to be enrolled in such service area. Federal Regulation 42 CFR 438.206: Requirement that each plan maintain and monitor a network of appropriate providers that is sufficient to provide adequate access to all services covered under the contract.

Measuring Access

How is Access to Care Measured in Medicaid Health Plans? Provider to population ratios Massachusetts and Maryland: PCPs 1/200 Virginia: PCPs 1/1500 South Carolina: PCPs 1/2500 GeoAccess report and mapping Appointment timeliness standards Disenrollment reports

How is Access to Care Measured in Medicaid Health Plans? (cont.) CAHPS access questions HEDIS access measures External Quality Review and other state auditing Complaints and grievance data Internal monitoring

A Profile of Medicaid Managed Care Programs in 2010: Findings from a 50-State Survey Kathleen Gifford Vernon K. Smith Dyke Snipes Health Management Associates Julia Paradise Kaiser Family Foundation

Access Many but not all states reported that Medicaid MCO enrollees sometimes face access problems Improved access to care both primary and specialty care was cited most frequently as a perceived benefit of MCOs relative to FFS Access problems that exist are due to general problems encountered by all persons in those areas and not due to MCOs No assessment of access problems in FFS

Medicaid directors were asked: Can MCOs absorb Medicaid enrollment growth under ACA?

Medicaid Health Plans Prepare for Building network capacity to meet demand Partnering to build a stronger healthcare workforce Reassessing role of mid-level practitioners Medicaid Expansion

Community Health Centers Important source of primary and preventive care for MCO enrollees FQHCs recognized as MCO PCPs in 25 of 35 states responding to Kaiser survey 30 of 34 states encourage plans to contract with FQHCs in contract language

Questions? Joe Moser Director of Government Affairs jmoser@mhpa.org www.mhpa.org 45