Drug Medi-Cal Organized Delivery System Evaluation: Baseline

Similar documents
California County Administrator Survey 2015 Preliminary Results

California s Drug Medi-Cal Organized Delivery System

Drug Medi-Cal Waiver Discussion: Issues Related to Managed Care and ASAM Data

Drug Medi-Cal Waiver Evaluation Planning

DRUG MEDI-CAL ORGANIZED DELIVERY SYSTEM (DMC-ODS) PERFORMANCE METRICS. (version 6/23/17)

DRUG MEDI-CAL ORGANIZED DELIVERY SYSTEM (DMC-ODS) YEAR 1 PERFORMANCE METRICS (version 10/24/17)

Drug Medi-Cal Organized Delivery System

Drug Medi-Cal Organized Delivery System Demonstration Waiver

DRUG MEDI-CALWAIVER STAKEHOLDER FORUM

Evaluation, Training, and Technical Assistance for Substance Use Disorder Services Integration (ETTA)

Drug Medi-Cal Organized Delivery System (DMC-ODS) Waiver

SANTA BARBARA COUNTY DEPARTMENT OF Behavioral Wellness A System of Care and Recovery. o--,-.m-a----,laa~-d-c~~~~~~~~~~-

DMC-ODS. System Transformation. Presented at DHCS 2017 Annual Conference. Elizabeth Stanley-Salazar, MPH Doug Bond Lisa Garcia, LCSW

California Drug Medi-Cal. Organized Delivery System: Proposed Evaluation for California s Section 1115 Demonstration Waiver

Drug Medi-Cal (DMS) Organized Delivery System (ODS)

Drug/Medi-Cal Organized Delivery System (DMC-ODS) Waiver County Implementation Plan. Submitted By: Ventura County Behavioral Health Department

Stanislaus County Drug Medi-Cal Organized Delivery System (DMC- ODS)

Drug Medi-Cal Organized Delivery System Implementation Plan

Expanded Coverage For Addiction Treatment: Finding The Opportunities With The Drug Medi-Cal Organized Delivery System

Drug Medi-Cal Organized Delivery System Implementation Plan

Drug Medi-Cal Organized Delivery System Implementation Plan. Imperial County Behavioral Health Services

Behavioral Health Services

The Importance of Data Sharing to Support Integration of Substance Use Treatment in California s Medi-Cal Program

Drug Medi-Cal Organized Delivery System Implementation Plan

Overview of California External Quality Review Activities

EQRO Year 1 Toolkit for Counties Participating in the DMC-ODS Waiver

The County of Sonoma Department of Health Services Behavioral Health Division

Substance Use Disorder Treatment Provider Manual

State of New Jersey Department of Human Services Division of Medical Assistance & Health Services (DMAHS)

Behavioral Wellness A System of Care and Recovery

California Medi-Cal 2020 Demonstration Page 89 of 307 Approved December 30, 2015 through December 31, 2020

The Addiction Treatment Landscape:

Department of Health & Human Services Division of Behavioral Health Services Alcohol & Drug Services. Uma K. Zykofsky, LCSW Behavioral Health Director

Notice of Adverse Benefit Determination Training

econsult Update: Utilizing Technology to Bridge the Integration Gap Christopher Benitez, MD Clayton Chau, MD, PhD Ricardo Mendoza, MD Gary Tsai, MD,

SAMHSA Primary and Behavioral Health Care Integration (PBHCI) Program Grantees: Part 2

Health Services. Purpose. Major Budget Changes. F-12 County of San Joaquin Proposed Budget. Health Care Services Director

Title 22 Background & Updated Information State Plan Amendments Roles and Responsibilities Provider SUD Medical Director Physician Department of

Draft Meeting Minutes August 3 rd, :00 P.M. to 5:00 P.M. Pea Soup Andersen s Pavilion Room, Buellton, CA

Contra Costa County. Drug Medi-Cal Organized Delivery System (DMC-ODS) Program BENEFICIARY HANDBOOK

Any time of the day or night, seven days a

~,, Behavioral Wellness ~ ' ~ A System of Care and Recovery

Vermont Hub and Spoke Model

Quality Improvement Work Plan

Leveraging FQHCs in California s Behavioral Health Care Continuum

Version Summary New Questions Added Answers Revised Answers Archived 08/25/ thru 42 n/a n/a

Template Language for Memorandum of Understanding between Duals Demonstration Health Plans and County Behavioral Health Department(s)

The CCBHC: An Innovative Model of Care for Behavioral Health

9/13/2016. ASAM Criteria and Levels of Care. Why a Continuum of Care. and. Substance Use. Co-Occurring Disorders. Guiding Principles

MassHealth Restructuring Overview

Departm. The Department of. Stakeholder. Delivery Bridge to. ion Waiver. CMS. Delivery. Phone: (916) TOBY DOUGLAS DIRECTOR

Department of Health Care Services Drug Medi-Cal Organized Delivery System Waiver San Diego County Implementation Plan

AVATAR Billing Providers Bulletin Medicare-MediCal Issue

CalOMS Discharge Codes

INCIDENTAL MEDICAL SERVICES AUGUST 21, 2018 SUMMARY OF DHCS AUTHORITY. TOTAL TREATMENT FACILITIES: 1,931 (as of June 30, 2018) 8/14/2018

Division of Mental Health, Developmental Disabilities & Substance Abuse Services NC Mental Health and Substance Use Service Array Survey

Yolo County Department of Health and Human Services

Transforming County Drug & Alcohol Treatment Services into a System of Care

Sutter-Yuba Mental Health Plan

The CMS Medicaid Managed Care Final Rule An Overview for Behavioral Health Directors. Linnea Koopmans Senior Policy Analyst December 14, 2016

Department of Health Care Services Integrating Telehealth Efforts. Joanne Peschko, MBA Health Program Specialist

MARIN BEHAVIORAL HEALTH AND RECOVERY SERVICES Department Update

Drug Medi-Cal Billing Manual. Substance Use Disorder Program, Policy, and Fiscal Division Fiscal Management and Accountability Branch

Federal Legislation to Address the Opioid Crisis: Medicaid Provisions in the SUPPORT Act

Widespread prescribing, distribution and availability of naloxone for high risk individuals and as rescue medication 2

Ron Vlasaty, Executive Vice President, Family Guidance Centers, Inc.

Drug Medi Cal Organized Delivery System Member Handbook

COMPLETING THE INITIAL APPLICATION- DHCS Form 6001

ODS Waiver SUD Treatment Documentation. A high level overview of DMC-Organized Delivery System (ODS) Waiver documentation requirements

Minnesota s Plan for the Prevention, Treatment and Recovery of Addiction

MEDI-CAL MANAGED CARE OVERVIEW

Volume 26 No. 05 July Providers of Behavioral Health Services For Action Health Maintenance Organizations For Information Only

CBHS100 MENTAL HEALTH SERVICES (MHS) & DRUG AND ALCOHOL SERVICES (DAS) PROVIDER DATA FORM

The Long and Winding Road-map: From Waiver Services to VBP and Other Stops Along the Way

Community Health Centers (CHCs)

Innovative and Outcome-Driven Practices and Systems Meaningful Prevention and Early Intervention Wellness, Recovery, & Resilience Focus

SUD Rate Matrix - Treatment Services

Managed Medi-Cal Behavioral Health Benefits. Alliance Board Meeting October 23, 2013

This report is a summary of the November 2015 Behavioral Health Stakeholder s Summit that was held in Fargo.

ILLINOIS 1115 WAIVER BRIEF

MEDI-CAL MANAGED CARE OVERVIEW

Improving Access to Specialty Care. Janet M. Coffman, MPP, PhD Center for the Health Professions Philip R. Lee Institute for Health Policy Studies

The Status of the Implementation of Medi-Cal Mental Health Services

Behavioral Health Concurrent Review

IROC Treatment Provider FAQ

I. Coordinating Quality Strategies Across Managed Care Plans

12. Additional Service Specific Information

The Budget: Maximizing Federal Reimbursement For Parolee Mental Health Care Summary

Understanding the Initiative Landscape in Medi-Cal. IHA Stakeholder Meeting September 23, 2016 Sarah Lally, Project Manager

Integrating Opiate Agonist Treatment in Primary Care and Mental Health Settings: a clinical model

San Francisco Whole Person Care California Medi-Cal 2020 Waiver Initiative

Optum/OptumHealth Behavioral Solutions of California Facility Network Request Form / Credentialing Application

1. SMHS Section of CCR Title 9 (Division 1, Chapter 11): this is the regulation created by the California Department of Health Care Services (DHCS).

MEDICAID MENTAL HEALTH PARITY AND ADDICTION EQUITY ACT COMPLIANCE PLAN

From HARPs to DSRIP to VBP: What Do They Mean To You?

DHCS Update: Major Initiatives and Strategies Towards Standardization

COMPLIANCE. Behavioral Health Compliance Office Compliance Corner. October Defining Healthcare Compliance. A culture that promotes:

Provider Relations Training

Prospective Provider Information Form Organizational / Group Behavioral Health and Substance Use Providers

10/4/2017. County/FQHC Collaborations to Improve Behavioral Health Continuum of Care. FQHCs in SUD/SMH

Transcription:

Drug Medi-Cal Organized Delivery System Evaluation: Baseline Darren Urada, Ph.D., Cheryl Teruya, Ph.D., Valerie P. Antonini, M.P.H., Elise Tran, B.A., David Huang, Ph.D., Howard Padwa, Ph.D., June Lim, Ph.D. Shifting the SUD Paradigm: SUD 2016 Statewide Conference August 24, 2016 Orange County, CA UCLA Integrated Substance Abuse Programs

Acknowledgments UCLA would like to thank DHCS and CMS for their feedback during the development of the DMC-ODS Evaluation Plan, and we are thankful for continuing advice and feedback from our Evaluation Advisory Group: Clara Boyden, Wesley Ford, Michael Hutchinson, Dan George, Victor Kogler, Judy Martin, Steve Maulhardt, D.J. Pierce, Albert Senella, and Tom Trabin.

Evaluation Goals Evaluate the Organized Delivery System in terms of: Access to care Quality of care Coordination of care Costs Help inform implementation. Current status: BASELINE data collection

Planned Data Sources Existing Data Drug Medi-Cal, Medi-Cal California Outcome Measurement System Treatment (CalOMS-Tx) National Survey on Drug Use and Health Potentially other sources Document Reviews New Data County Administrator Surveys Provider Surveys Patient Surveys Managed Care Surveys Stakeholder Interviews / Focus Groups Secret Shopper Calls ASAM Data DMC-ODS Evaluation plan: www.uclaisap.org/ca-policy/assets/documents/dmc-ods-evaluation-plan-approved.pdf

ACCESS

Number Of Medi-Cal Beneficiaries By Tx Modality (CalOMS-Tx) 4500 4000 3500 3000 2500 2000 1500 1000 500 0 IOP WM NTP WM NTP OP Resid

Use of Medications, Patients w/opiate Primary Drug (CalOMS-Tx, 2015) Phase 1 Counties (N=10,315) Phase 2 Counties (N=27,610) Phase 3 Counties (N=9,286) Phase 4 Counties (N=2,301) Medication used in drug treatment None 37.6% 32.4% 22.6% 72.5% Methadone 60.8% 62.5% 76.2% 26.0% Buprenorphine (Subutex) 0.9% 1.4% 1.0% 0.7% Other 0.7% 3.7% 0.2% 0.8%

Availability of NTPs (Administrator Survey)

Availability of Withdrawal Management / Detox (Administrator Survey)

Counties with Licensed Narcotic Treatment Programs April 2016 28 Counties Without NTP Services 30 Counties With NTP Services Source: DHCS (2016). Small County Strategic Planning. May 25, 2016 Available at: http://www.cbhda.org/wpcontent/uploads/2014/12/dmc_ods_demo_ Waiver_Pres._5-17-16.pptx The top eight opioid overdose counties have zero NTPs. 10

Expansion Challenges (Administrator Survey) Most challenging modalities to expand: 1. Residential 2. NTP 3. Withdrawal management (detox) Facility certification and reimbursement rates were top challenges across modalities (may be improving) For NTP, community opposition (NIMBY-ism) was the top challenge.

Penetration Rates (2013-2014, National Survey on Drug Use and Health, CA Sample) Penetration rates for treatment among patients who need tx are estimated to be below 10%, and below national rates, leaving room for improvement. Most people who needed treatment did not feel they needed specialty treatment. This suggests that although efforts to increase penetration rates can and should include expansion of physical capacity, efforts to change perceptions about specialty treatment and to reach patients in non-specialty settings, such as primary care.

Capacity / Maximum Utilization (CalOMS-Tx, 2015) Modality Phase 1 Counties (8,333,973) Phase (2015 Population) Phase 2 Counties (23,644,610) Phase 3 Counties (5,357,610) Phase 4 Counties (1,049,548) Outpatient, Intensive Outpatient Providers 116 251 116 39 Max Patient Census 5,114 11,582 5,198 1,403 Max Census/100,000 Popn 61 49 97 34 Residential Providers 80 138 41 11 Max Patient Census 1,556 3,944 1,003 169 Max Census/100,000 Popn 19 17 19 16 Withdrawal Management Providers 24 83 38 4 Max Patient Census 403 907 328 31 Max Census/100,000 Popn 5 4 6 3 NTP Maintenance Providers 40 107 38 8 Max Patient Census 2,397 5,195 2,494 134 Max Census/100,000 Popn 29 22 47 12

Service Delivery Following Withdrawal Management (Transition Within 14 Days, CalOMS-Tx) Non-NTP Withdrawal Mgmt (WM) (n = 22,859) No Treatment 76.0% NTP Maintenance 0.2% NTP WM 0.1% Non-NTP WM 7.3% Outpatient/IOP 2.7% Residential 13.6%

Service Delivery Following Residential Treatment (Transition Within 14 Days, CalOMS-Tx) Residential Treatment n = 33,323 No Treatment 87.5% NTP Maintenance 0.1% NTP Withdrawal Mgmt (WM) 0.02% Non-NTP WM 0.9% Outpatient/ IOP 6.5% Residential 4.9%

Quality Findings Patient quality of care perceptions. Most counties (65%) require SUD treatment providers to collect patient satisfaction/perceptions of care data, typically written surveys. Establishment of quality improvement (QI) committees and plans Most counties (63%) had a QI committee with SUD participation, but only 21% had a written SUD QI plan. Patient outcomes at baseline. CalOMS-Tx data suggest patients improved from treatment admission to discharge for AOD use, social support, living arrangements, and employment. UCLA has concerns about data quality and completeness, however. Readmissions to withdrawal management and residential treatment. Among patients who initially received WM, 10.4% were re-admitted within 30 days of discharge Among patients who initially received residential tx, 6.2% were re-admitted within 30 days of discharge. Readmissions may actually be higher. For now this is based on CalOMS-Tx. Context: 30-day all-cause hospital admissions for heart attacks and pneumonia: 17-18%* Retention: 57% of admissions to long term residential treatment surpassed 30 days. 69%-70% for NTP, OP, IOP. 75% of county administrators reported that the waiver has positively influenced quality improvement activities in their counties. *Source: http://kff.org/medicare/issue-brief/aiming-for-fewer-hospital-u-turns-the-medicare-hospital-readmission-reduction-program/

Quotes on Waiver Impact Pushed integration to one whole QI [Committee] for both MH and SU. The merger of AOD with Mental Health is an outcome influenced by the waiver along with coordination of quality improvement. The ODS waiver has positively influenced everything in our current system of care, though our current system of care is largely successful. Our quality management department has been more active in looking at their SUD activities, and asking for input in how to meet the SUD EQRO.

Coordination MOUs between SUD and managed care plans: At the time of UCLA s County Administrator survey in 2015, no county had a signed MOU that met all waiver requirements. (this has changed) Referrals from Health Care: Referrals remain very low (~3% of admissions). Where they do occur, it tends to be for withdrawal management followed by residential, intensive outpatient. 44% of administrators reported that DMC ODS waiver planning had already had a positive impact on communication with physical health services in their county.

Quotes on Waiver Impact Communication between SUD and MH will be enhanced as a result of the waiver and development of the continuum. There are some meetings that still forget about one side or the other. But this is happening less and less. We were already there.

Managed Care Plan Medical Directors Ratings: How Regularly Coordination Occurs with the SUD Tx System

Recommendations Access Ensure the availability of withdrawal management and methadone / other medications for opiate use in small/mba counties. Consider buprenorphine & WM in outpatient settings or as part of incidental medical services in residential settings. Remove barriers to capacity expansion. Program certification was a significant challenge across modalities. Expedite certifications for sites that are already Short Doyle certified (providing mental health), and for new sites that belong to organizations that already have DMC certification. Look beyond physical capacity to increase penetration rates. Penetration rates in California are low, but most people who need treatment do not feel they need specialty treatment. Need to change perceptions about specialty treatment among prospective patients, and to reach patients in non-specialty settings such as primary care.

Recommendations Quality Improve continuum of care transitions. Patients receiving WM or residential treatment generally do not step-down into treatment afterward. There are many reasons this may not be occurring, each of which requires a different response. More accurately estimate patient outcomes. Treatment appeared to be associated with improvements in outcomes, but findings are undermined by questionable data quality. UCLA recommends a patient follow-up study to measure outcomes for patients with missing data, CalOMS-Tx data quality improvement efforts. Reduce readmissions to withdrawal management. Depending on the case, improving transitions to treatment, (including MAT), coordinating with recovery residences may help.

Recommendations Integration/coordination Coordination/integration pilot projects Coordination between SUD and physical health care systems is currently weak. Payment reform and information exchange pilot projects are currently being considered by DHCS to address this. Increase referrals from the broader health system: Embed counselors in primary care, reform the way SBIRT is reimbursed. UCLA is currently working on a report on this topic.

QUESTIONS? COMMENTS? Darren Urada, Ph.D. durada@ucla.edu