DRAFT Level of Care Determination (LOCD) Process Improvement - Biller s Stakeholder Feedback Sessions JANUARY 29, 30, 31 AND FEBRUARY 5 AND 7, 2018

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DRAFT Level of Care Determination (LOCD) Process Improvement - Biller s Stakeholder Feedback Sessions JANUARY 29, 30, 31 AND FEBRUARY 5 AND 7, 2018 SPONSORED BY THE BOLD COUNCIL LTSS PROCESS AND QUALITY IMPROVEMENT INITIATIVE

Michigan s LTSS Quality Improvement Initiative - Background No Wrong Door (NWD) Aging and Disability Resource Centers Special Message on Aging Charge by Governor to Improve LTSS Meeting of LTSS State Government Representatives Charter to Collaborate Signed by DHS, DCH, LARA and OSA Federal Planning Grant to Create NWD System at State Level Creation of the BOLD Council Collaboration, Coordination, Streamlining and Integration Introduction to Lean Continual Process Improvement Value Stream Mapping of 18 LTSS 2

Michigan s LTSS Quality Improvement Initiative - Background MDHHS Executive Leadership and Sponsor Selection of Services to Undergo Process Improvement Adult Protective Services (APS) Design Team Home Help Design Team MI Choice Waiver Design Team Level of Care Determination (LOCD) Other Current Design and Action Teams Pre-Admission Screening and Resident Review (PASRR), Person Centered Planning (PCP), Nursing Facility Transition (NFT) State-level Design and 4 Action Teams, Michigan Rehabilitation Services (MRS) Options Counseling 3

Michigan s LTSS Quality Improvement Initiative Background Design Team Responsibilities Meet Weekly Attend Weekly Stand and Deliver Monthly Executive Sponsor Meetings Review Ideas for Improvement generated by Value Stream Mapping (and others), conduct Plan, Do, Study, Act (PDSA) Cycles to test hypotheses, pilot ideas for improvement and gather stakeholder input, repeat Stakeholder Input the Purpose for Today s Meeting 4

Michigan s Redesigned LOCD Process Background At this session we will cover: Why a re-design was needed How initial input was sought Design Team process improvement progress New idealized LOCD process Recommendations to eliminate identified barriers Getting your input about other potential barriers and additional ideas for improvement Design Team pilots to test improvement ideas 5

LOCD Design Team Members Aimee Khaled, MDHHS PACE Lisa Biskupski-Pangborn, MDHHS Provider Support Michael Daeschlein, MDHHS Manager Gina Bey, MI Choice Agency Provider Roxanne Perry, MDHHS Manager Jennifer Shong, Nursing Facility Staff Julie Clement, Nursing Facility Staff Ashiya Brown, MDHHS Analyst Weylin Douglas, MDHHS Analyst L. Alisyn Daniel-Crawford, MDHHS Specialist Heather Hill, MDHHS MI Health Link Coach Brian Barrie, MDHHS 6

Why was A Re-design of LOCD Needed? Errors Payment Delays Timing Issues Increased Workload Long Audit Process Fear of Certain LOCD Doors Difficulty Death by Assessment Beneficiary Burden A Punitive Hearing/Appeal process Large and burdensome recoupment of payment Policy that exceeds its scope and purpose Precarious statutory foundation Inconsistent policy and application between LTSS programs 7

How Initial Input was Sought Previous stakeholder workgroup Value Stream Maps Subject Matter Experts (Now Design Team Members) We asked subject matter experts from the following programs to process map their LOCD assessment processes: Nursing Homes PACE MI Choice Waiver MI Health Link 8

Nursing Facility LOCD - The Basics CMS permits State Medicaid Agencies to establish their definition of nursing facility level of care (LOC). Simply a tool to determine an individual s functional eligibility for Medicaid LTSS. Used to establish functional eligibility for Nursing Facilities, MI Choice, PACE, & MI Health Link LTSS services. A sample of LOCDs are reviewed monthly by MDHHS contractor Michigan Peer Review Organization (MPRO). MPRO determines periods of ineligibility; and periods of ineligibility, which may result in recoupment from the first date of ineligibility in continuum. 9

Nursing Facility LOCD - The Problems In 2015, a workgroup consisting of providers and other stakeholders identified 53 areas of concern relating to: The LOCD Assessment The LOCD Process and System LOCD Door 7 Service Dependency Hearings and Appeals Timing Issues LOCD Policy Inter-program Comparability Evaluation of Transfer Trauma Nothing changed as a result of the workgroup. 10

Nursing Facility LOCD - Design Team Findings Value Stream Map was created in December 2016, which identified: A fragmented and dubious process with inaccurate interpretations of federal regulation & state law. Focused more on claims payments than individual eligibility. A review process inherently misaligned with the purpose of the assessment. Timeframes more punitive than productive. Policy designed & applied to maximize recoupments at the expense of equity. A disjointed retrospective review process. On overall system that denies needed services to qualified individuals and often works in direct opposition to the stated values and objectives of the department. 11

Issues 12

LOCD Design Team: Issues Identified 3 full-time State staff doing LOCD corrections $56 Million Dollars in outstanding payment issues Payment delays as a result of LOCD and Level of Care timing issues Beneficiaries can receive an LOCD up to 12 times in a single year Providers avoid certain LOCD Doors as a result of audits and the LOCD Retrospective Review Process Inability to see all provider LOCDs for the beneficiary is problematic for providers 13

Pain in the Current System - Provider Perspective An awful burden; very difficult, much like a Rubik s cube. Farthest thing from Person-Centered. It s probably easier to get out of a black hole than to get half of our LOCD issues fixed! Lost in Transition. Wish it would line up with assessment..options and time frames are different....tragic and out of touch! 14

Plan Do Study Act (PDSA) PDSA #1 MI Choice LOCD staff costs existing process $30,000/month PDSA #2 LOCD start and end date problems/corrections and payment delays PDSA #3 Data modeling to determine the reliability of the idealized design calculate LOCD dates MI Choice LOCD's (N=98) Nursing Facility Records (N=86) Existing System Idealized Design Existing System Idealized Design Correctly calculated 13% 100% 90% 100% Incorrectly calculated 87% 0% 10% 0% 15

PDSA #4 Inactive records Adding unnecessary complexity without added benefit only puts burden on the overall system

DRAFT LOCD Idealized Process 17

LOCD Idealized Process 18

DRAFT Solutions 19

Draft Idealized Solutions for LOCD Payment Issues LOCD Follows the Person, not the provider. Professional conducted date entered by provider. Four fields are calculated from the professional conducted date: LOCD start date/end date and potential payment start date/end date. Ability to conduct an LOCD on a non-medicaid person to reduce system data and payment errors. Reduction in State and provider staff time. 20

DRAFT Idealized Solutions for the LOCD and Retrospective Review Process Random Selection of LOCD for review using CHAMPS The review process will not include information beyond the date the LOCD was conducted. Ongoing eligibility is a programmatic requirement. Office of Inspector General (OIG) will now be responsible for Medicaid integrity reviews. Clear and consistent policies and guidelines. 21

DRAFT Idealized Solutions for Assessment Issues The initial LOCD assessment must be entered manually into CHAMPS The subsequent LOCD s may be passively redetermined using a MDS or ihc algorithm. The benefits to this will be: LOCD burden for beneficiaries More streamlined for providers Based on a University of Michigan analysis passive redetermination will renew 99% of nursing home LOCD s and 89% for managed care. If the passive redetermination process does not find an eligible door, then the existing LOCD is end dated 60 days from the date of calculation to allow for a new face to face assessment. 22

DRAFT Idealized Solutions for Assessment Issues LOCD adoption All doors are 365 days Providers can see all LOCD s they created or adopted in one query 23

Biller s Solutions 24

DRAFT Idealized Design Biller s Solutions User Interface: System changes to user interface: Removal of selecting provider type, provider name Instead this will be handled by program login Adding fields related to professional who conducted the LOCD Conducting professional name Conducting professional licenses type Date professional conducted LOCD Ability to search by provider name/id Providers will be able to pull up a full list of the participant s that they are currently serving. Will be able to see the LOCD end date on the enrollment/admission roster page. Will be able run a query in the LOCD page 25

DRAFT Idealized Design Biller s Solutions LOCD start and end date calculations: The LOCD start date will be calculated by date the professional conducted the LOCD. All LOCD doors across all programs will be 365 days from the LOCD start date. LOCD start and end dates will be calculated upon data entry into CHAMPS. CHAMPS will be able to sequentially place LOCD s in the correct order based on reliable start dates. CHAMPS will allow LOCD entry into CHAMPS before an admission/enrollment is entered online. CHAMPS will allow LOCD entry for a participant even if they have not applied for Medicaid CHAMPS will no longer link to eligibility for statuses. 26

DRAFT Idealized Design Biller s Solutions Passive redetermination: CHAMPS will use assessment data with a cross walk for determining eligibility to derive the LOCD qualifying door passively for participants: For Nursing Facility- The MDS will be used to calculate the door value for the participant For MI Choice- The IHC will be used to calculate the door value for the participant For MI Health Link- The IHC will be used to calculate door value for the participant PACE is exploring assessment options to see if they want to determine passive LOCD door values. If the passive redetermination process does not find the person eligible CHAMPS will end date the existing LOCD 60 days giving the professional time to conduct a manual LOCD. If the passive redetermination process cannot find a person eligible, it is not implied that he/she do not meet eligibility. The provider will send a professional out to conduct a LOCD using the manual process. If the professional finds the person eligible then the information is entered into CHAMPS using the manual process. If the professional finds the person not eligible then the information is entered into CHAMPS using the manual process. 27

DRAFT Idealized Design Biller s Solutions Payment edit into CHAMPS: Compliance equals providers having up to 14 days to both conduct and enter an LOCD in CHAMPS If compliant potential payment start date is 14 days before the professional conducted date. If not compliant payment start date is the date entered into CHAMPS. There may extenuating circumstances to this rule which would need to be handled by your program area to protect beneficiaries. Change of Ownership CHOW: If a Nursing Facility takes ownership of an existing nursing home, the LOCD process for CHOW will continue to be the same for current residents under old NPI. For new residents during the CHOW process: Face to face LOCDs must be conducted on their regular schedule to comply with policy. Manual entry of LOCDs will not be entered into CHAMPS until the new provider has an established NPI number. Once the NPI number is established records may be entered into CHAMPS. If the electronic LOCD submission is beyond payment start date CHAMPS will review and determine if an NPI was established within the last 6 months. If so, then the payment start date equals the date the professional conducted the LOCD. 28

Next Steps for LOCD Improvements Stakeholder Input/Feedback Categorized Stakeholder Input/Feedback Adopted, Adapted or Abandoned or Out of Scope Meeting with CNSI about IT Improvements Policy Promulgation Training Measurement to Ensure Improvements are Improvements Continual Improvement 29

Time to Gather Your Feedback! Sticky Notes Sharpie Markers Please come up to one of the Idealized Process Maps and review the steps Please write down issues, potential barriers, questions and additional ideas for improvement you may have on the sticky notes Please indicate the step number to which you are addressing your concern, issue, barrier or idea for improvement on your sticky note and place near the step If your concern, issue, barrier or idea for improvement impacts the entire process, write all on your sticky note and place anywhere on the process map 30

Michigan s LTSS Process and Quality Improvement Initiative Map of Current Process Improvements LTSS Processes still to be improved PACE MI Health Link Nursing Home Admission/Discharge Children s Special Health Care Services AASA Financial/Grants AAA Care Management 31

LOCD Process Maps Visit www.osapartner.net to view a copy of: Copy of Today s Power Point Presentation Idealized LOCD Redesigned Process Map DRAFT BOLD Council LTSS Transformation Timeline Document 32

Thank you for your feedback!!! If you pre-registered and provided your email address or signed in today and provided your (legible) email address, we will be sending you the feedback we receive from all 5 of the feedback sessions, for your information. 33