HCBS Waiver Expansion and Medicaid Nursing Home Spending: Implications

Similar documents
The Legacy of Sidney Katz: Setting the Stage for Systematic Research in Long Term Care. Vincent Mor, Ph.D. Brown University

Quality of Life and Quality of Care in Nursing Homes: Abuse, Neglect, and the Prevalence of Dementia. Kevin E. Hansen, J.D.

Aging in Place: Do Older Americans Act Title III Services Reach Those Most Likely to Enter Nursing Homes? Nursing Home Predictors

North Carolina Division of Medical Assistance

Long Term Care. Lecture for HS200 Nov 14, 2006

Dual Eligibles: Medicaid s Role in Filling Medicare s Gaps

PROFILES OF LONG-TERM CARE AND INDEPENDENT LIVING NEW JERSEY. by Ari Houser Wendy Fox-Grage Mary Jo Gibson 2006 AARP

Use of Medicaid MCO Capitation by State Projections for 2016

Long Term Care Delivery System

PROFILES OF LONG-TERM CARE AND INDEPENDENT LIVING RHODE ISLAND. by Ari Houser Wendy Fox-Grage Mary Jo Gibson 2006 AARP

Selected State Background Characteristics

Department of Human Services Division of Medical Assistance and Health Services Transportation Broker Services Contract Capitation Rates

The Home Health Groupings Model (HHGM)

kaiser medicaid and the uninsured commission on State Options That Expand Access to Medicaid Home and Community-Based Services October 2011

STATE MEDICAID HOME CARE POLICIES: INSIDE THE BLACK BOX

Medicaid Reform: The Opportunities for Home and Community Based Providers. All Rights Reserved

Selected State Background Characteristics

Rebalancing Long Term Care in Maine: Policy Options and Considerations

SNAPSHOT Nursing Homes: A System in Crisis

2016 Edition. Upper Payment Limits and Medicaid Capitation Rates for Programs of All-Inclusive Care for the Elderly (PACE )

Better Health Care for all Floridians. July 13, 2012

Selected State Background Characteristics

Long-Term Services and Supports (LTSS): Medicaid s Role and Options for States

SWING BED (SWB) Rural Hospitals under 100 Beds and Critical Access Hospitals

Selected State Background Characteristics

THE WASHINGTON MEDICAID STATE PLAN PERSONAL CARE SERVICES PROGRAM

Medicaid and CHIP Payment and Access Commission (MACPAC) February 2013 Meeting Summary

Implementing Managed Long Term Care in NYS and What You Need to Know. The Rochester Experience - Journey. Albany Guardian Society April 18, 2013

Medicaid: Current Challenges and Future Prospects

The home-delivered meals program. Providing More Home-Delivered Meals Is One Way To Keep Older Adults With Low Care Needs Out Of Nursing Homes

Hospital Utilization by the Uninsured and Other Vulnerable Populations in New Jersey

Medicaid Overview. Home and Community Based Services Conference

Dual eligible beneficiaries and care coordination. Mark E. Miller, Ph. D.

Grants and Per Capita Funding

Costs & Benefits Reconsidered

A Balancing Act: State Long-Term Care Reform. AARP Public Policy Institute

September 25, Via Regulations.gov

Selected State Background Characteristics

Selected State Background Characteristics

A CROSS T H E S TAT E S PROFILES OF LONG-TERM CARE:

Selected State Background Characteristics

9/10/2013. The Session s Focus. Status of the NYS FIDA Initiative

Selected State Background Characteristics

Trends in Family Caregiving and Why It Matters

POSITION DESCRIPTION

Selected State Background Characteristics

Day 2, Morning Plenary 1 CMS and OIG Joint Briefing: Importance and Progress of Improved Background Screenings for Long Term Care

New Opportunities in Long Term Services and Supports

uninsured Dual Eligible Home and Community-Based Waiver Program Participants and the New Medicare Drug Benefit

Selected State Background Characteristics

Quality Metrics in Post-Acute Care: FIVE-STAR QUALITY RATING SYSTEM

Michigan Skilled Nursing Facilities, the Minimum Data Set, and the MI Choice Waiver Program: An Analysis and Implications for Policy

Continuing Certain Medicaid Options Will Increase Costs, But Benefit Recipients and the State

programs and briefly describes North Carolina Medicaid s preliminary

Introduction. Current Law Distribution of Funds. MEMORANDUM May 8, Subject:

Valuing the Invaluable: A New Look at State Estimates of the Economic Value of Family Caregiving (Data Update)

Revisiting The Name Game: A Taxonomy of Home and Community-Based Services

Health and Long-Term Care Use Patterns for Ohio s Dual Eligible Population Experiencing Chronic Disability

Medi-Cal Hospital Fee Program. Amber Ott Vice President, Finance

Understanding Medicaid: A Primer for State Legislators

Managed Medicaid Impact, Trends and Challenges. February 29, 2012 Las Vegas, NV

QUALITY OF LIFE FOR NURSING HOME RESIDENTS: PREDICTORS, DISPARITIES, AND DIRECTIONS FOR THE FUTURE

Long Term Care Briefing Virginia Health Care Association August 2009

Improving Nursing Home Compare for Consumers. Five-Star Quality Rating System

New Federal Regulations for Home and Community-Based Services Program: Offers Greater Autonomy, Choice, and Independence

Ch COUNTY NURSING FACILITY SERVICES CHAPTER COUNTY NURSING FACILITY SERVICES

NURSING FACILITY ASSESSMENTS

J. Brandon Durbin th Street Lubbock, Texas Plano, Texas Fax

CMS HCBS Regulation Overview: Module 1

Medicaid 201: Home and Community Based Services

Hospital Rate Setting

Cardinal Bank & George Mason University

State of Florida Medicaid Access Monitoring Review Plan 2016

Letters in the Medicaid Alphabet:

UCSF UC San Francisco Previously Published Works

Determining Need for Medicaid Personal Care Services

Driving Change with the Health Care Spending Benchmark

Value based care: A system overhaul

Home Health Agency (HHA) Medicare Margins: 2007 to 2011 Issue Brief July 7, 2009

A Snapshot of Uniform Assessment Practices in Managed Long Term Services and Supports

North Carolina Medicaid Reform

Medicaid Managed Care. Long-term Services and Supports Trends

Niccie L. McKay. Education Ph.D., Economics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1984 B.S., Economics, University of New Orleans, 1979

NC TIDE SPRING CONFERENCE April 26, NC Department of Health and Human Services Medicaid Transformation and the 1115 Waiver

FLORIDA NURSING HOME ESTIMATED AVERAGE PRIVATE PAY RATE 2016

Aetna Medicaid. Special Needs Plans. What Works; What Doesn t

1915(j) Self-Directed Personal Assistance Services State Plan Option

Using Medicaid Home and Community Based Services or ICF/MR Funding to Pay for Direct Support Staff Training and Credentialing Programs

Medicaid. (Title XIX and Title XXI) STATE REPORTS FY 2008 TEXAS. Text7:

Nursing Home Labor Market Issues. Testimony for the Institute of Medicine Committee on the Future of Health Care Workforce for Older Americans

Chapter 7 Section 1. Hospital Reimbursement - TRICARE Inpatient Mental Health Per Diem Payment System

Long-Term Care Homes Financial Policy

Florida Medicaid Family Planning Waiver

Medicaid Prescribed Drug Program. Spending Control Initiatives

What is Health Care Policy?

Home Health Chartbook 2018: Prepared for the Alliance for Home Health Quality and Innovation

1915(k) Community First Choice Overview

Family Planning Waiver

SECTION 7. The Changing Health Care Marketplace

CHAPTER House Bill No. 5201

Transcription:

HCBS Waiver Expansion and Medicaid Nursing Home Spending: Implications December 24, 2012 Avalere Health LLC The intersection of business strategy and public policy

Introduction Analysis suggests that home-based services have helped states save hundreds of millions in Medicaid dollars that would otherwise have been spent on nursing home care. The expansion of Medicaid home and community-based services (Section 1915(c)) waiver programs has been associated with a sharp decline in the growth of Medicaid nursing home residents. As a result, state Medicaid spending on nursing home care for elderly residents is lower than would have been predicted, in the absence of the home and community-based services (HCBS) waiver program expansion. Home care, in particular assistance with activities of daily living (ADLs), and home health are among the principal HCBS waiver program services. Page 2

Projected Number of Elderly Medicaid Nursing Home (NH) Residents, in the Absence of HCBS Waiver Expansion State Number of Elderly (65+) 1 Medicaid NH Residents, 1999 Percentage Growth in Elderly (65+) 2 Poverty Population, 1999-2008 Projected Number of Elderly Medicaid NH Residents, 2008 CA 91,577 31% 119,966 NJ 38,550 11% 42,791 FL 61,878 34% 82,917 1 Nursing home residents under age 65 are more likely to need care due to disability. Data on elderly Medicaid NH residents are from the Medicaid Statistical Information System (MSIS). 2 The Census Bureau reports data only on the number of poor 65 and over, not the number of poor 75 and over. Page 3

Projected vs. Actual Number of Medicaid Nursing Home Residents State Projected Number of Elderly Medicaid NH Residents, 2008 Actual Number of Elderly Medicaid NH Residents, 2008 CA 119,966 88,815 NJ 42,791 33,354 FL 82,917 55,779 Page 4

Medicaid Savings Associated with Decreased Use of Nursing Home Care State Actual Medicaid NH Expenditures, 2008 (millions) Projected Medicaid NH Expenditures Using 1999 Prevalence (millions) 1 Estimated Savings, 2008 (millions) CA $2,768 $3,739 $971 NJ $1,452 $1,863 $411 FL $1,906 $2,833 $927 1 Projected Medicaid NH expenditures calculated based on 2008 Medicaid NH expenditures per resident, from MSIS. Page 5

Increases in HCBS Waiver Program Spending Offset Savings on Nursing Home Care State HCBS Expenditures, 2008 (millions) 1 HCBS Expenditures, 1999 (millions) Increase in HCBS Spending, 1999-2008 (millions) CA $131 $22 $109 NJ $148 $35 $113 FL $45 $1 $44 1 HCBS expenditures are from MSIS. Page 6

Net Medicaid Savings Associated with Decreased Use of Nursing Home Care/HCBS Waiver Expansion State Estimated Savings on Nursing Home Care, 2008 (millions) Increase in HCBS Spending, 1999-2008 (millions) Estimated Savings Net of HCBS Spending Increase, 2008 (millions) CA $971 $109 $862 NJ $411 $113 $298 FL $927 $44 $883 Page 7

Spotlight on Florida: Recent Research Finds Investment in HCBS Is Associated with Savings on Nursing Home Care Hahn and colleagues examined the relationship between Medicaid HCBS waiver expenditures and the prevalence of low-care 1 nursing home residents in Florida counties in 2007. 2 The authors analyzed facility level data and county-level market characteristics (including HCBS waiver expenditures) for 653 Florida nursing homes. Data modeling showed that a $10,000 increase in per capita HCBS waiver expenditures was associated with a 3.5 percentage point reduction in low-care nursing home residents. The authors conclude that Medicaid HCBS waiver programs may reduce the number of low-care residents in nursing homes. 1 Low-care was defined as residents who require no physical assistance in any of the 4 late-loss activities of daily living (bed mobility, toileting, transferring, and eating). 2 Elizabeth A. Hahn, BS, Kali S. Thomas, MA, Kathryn Hyer, PhD, MPP, Ross Andel, PhD, and Hongdao Meng, PhD (2011): Predictors of Low-Care Prevalence in Florida Nursing Homes: The Role of Medicaid Waiver Programs., The Gerontologist, 51:4, 495-503. Page 8

Discussion of Findings The analysis in this presentation is illustrative rather than definitive. There have not been any controlled experiments (e.g., random assignment demonstrations) testing the impact of HCBS waiver program expansion on Medicaid nursing home and overall long-term care spending. Accordingly, we can show that HCBS waiver expansion is associated with reductions in Medicaid spending on nursing home care, relative to expected levels, but we cannot prove that the HCBS expansion caused these reductions. One recent study analyzed several data sets to determine savings associated with HCBS expansion and found that HCBS saved $57 billion nationally in 2006. 1 1 Charlene Harrington PhD, Terence Ng JDMA & Martin Kitchener PhD (2011): Do Medicaid Home and Community Based Service Waivers Save Money?, Home Health Care Services Quarterly, 30:4, 198-213 Page 9

Methodological Considerations This analysis focuses solely on HCBS waiver spending, rather than all Medicaid HCBS spending (i.e., including spending under the mandatory home health and optional personal care benefits), in order to illustrate the impact of HCBS waivers as a policy innovation.» The Medicaid Statistical Information System (MSIS) defines HCBS waiver spending as payment for services furnished under a 1915(c) waiver approved under the provisions in 42 CFR Part 441. The analysis is limited to Medicaid NH residents and HCBS waiver program participants over age 65. Page 10