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Robbing Peter to Pay Paul

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Robbing Peter to Pay Paul Creative Approaches to Funding & Providing Early Intervention Services Presentation By: Patti Rawding-Anderson MA, MSPT Director of Program ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Robbing Peter to Pay Paul


1
Robbing Peter to Pay Paul
  • Creative Approaches to Funding Providing Early
    Intervention Services

2
Presentation ByPatti Rawding-Anderson MA,
MSPTDirector of Program Development for Early
Childhood Services Easter Seals
3
Overview of Methods
  • Actual Revenues
  • Building Community Capacity
  • Helping others to do what we cant
  • Partnerships
  • Sharing the load
  • Decision Making
  • The hard choices

4
Actual Revenues
  • Part C Dollars
  • BDS
  • Medicaid Bundle
  • Medicaid Case Management
  • Insurance Reimbursement
  • Family Cost Share
  • Other Funding Sources
  • Philanthropic Dollars

5
Part C Bureau of Developmental Services
(BDS)Dollars
  • NH receives the least amount of Part C Dollars
    based on the national formula for state size.
    This combined with the BDS state dollars
  • Accounts for roughly 23 of EI moneys (20 Part C
    3 BDS)
  • Supports the Part C infrastructure and
  • Area Agencies - CSPD
    activities
  • ICC - MICE
  • EEIN, - Mentorship
  • Technical assistance grants e.g. Autism Protocol
  • Childrens Care Management Collaborative
  • Continuous Improvement and Focused Monitoring
    (QA)
  • Family Resource Connection
  • To a small degree, direct services

6
Medicaid BundleMedicaid Case Management
  • NH has a unique Early Intervention agreement with
    the state Medicaid system through a contract with
    EDS which began in September of 1993.
  • Medicaid Bundle for services and evaluations
  • Targeted EI Case Management

7
Medicaid Bundle
  • The Medicaid Bundle allows for all health related
    services mandated by then Part H and now Part C.
    This was a set rate of 137.07 per week per
    child regardless of the number of services
    provided. In 2002, the rate was increased to
    200 per week per child / family.
  • Seven Services were included
  • 1. Assistive Technology Support (not equipment)
  • 2. OT 3. PT 4. SLP 5. Social Work
  • 6. Special Instruction 7. Family / Child
    training and counseling services (except by
    psychologists or psychiatrists)

8
Medicaid Bundle
  • The Medicaid Bundle also reimburses for
    assessments / evaluations / screenings at a rate
    of 200 per activity except those conducted by
    service providers outside the bundle This
    category is primarily to determine eligibility

9
Medicaid Case Management
  • Targeted Medicaid Case Management
  • 8.41 per day per child / family for every day of
    the month in which that child / family is
    enrolled in the EI system as long as at least one
    case management contact has been made

10
Medicaid Funding
  • This stream applies only to those children
    receiving NH Medicaid which in NH is called the
    Healthy Kids Gold Plan.
  • As long as Medicaid enrollment is up, this is a
    vital funding stream to support EI.
  • When Medicaid enrollment is down which is
    currently the case in NH , this funding stream is
    compromised.
  • In the mid 90s the percentage of children with
    Medicaid receiving EI services was 42. Today,
    it hovers around 31 but varies considerably
    geographically. This is a huge loss of revenues
    to the system.

11
Insurance Reimbursement
  • In the late 90s, NH recognized a significant
    funding concern on the horizon. Thus a strong
    push for insurance revenue recovery was
    implemented.
  • Programs were encouraged to bill private
    insurance
  • Parent fees were established and recommended
  • Insurance denial data was collected to determine
    if legislation could be introduced to mandate
    insurance coverage for EI services
  • Discussions began with some of the larger
    insurance companies to introduce a voluntary EI
    benefit

12
Insurance Reimbursement
  • Results of efforts varied across programs
  • Some programs billed insurance - others did not
  • Few programs implemented parent fees
  • Legislation was not introduced as it was not
    perceived as likely to pass
  • However, an agreement was establish with Anthem
    BC / BS to implement a voluntary benefit for EI
    services (3200 per year per child up to a
    maximum of 9600 for three years not to extend
    beyond a childs third birthday)
  • Services for OT / PT / SLP only
  • Consistent with the Massachusetts model which was
    state mandated

13
Insurance Reimbursement
  • In the early 2000s, revenue projections
    indicated that within 6 years, the EI system
    would be in extreme financial crisis.
  • Insurance billing by programs became mandatory
    with a set of revenue expectations projected for
    each region
  • Eligibility criteria changed from a 25 to 33
    delay in one area
  • Intake coordinators were trained on how better to
    inform parents about EI funding and more
    successfully engage their permission to allow
    programs to bill insurance
  • Technical Assistance was provided to EI programs
    to increase capacity to bill insurance (funded by
    Part C)
  • Insurance billing practices / responsibilities
    became part of the initial state wide training
    for all new service coordinators

14
Insurance Reimbursement
  • An insurance TA support group was established to
    network EI billing staff and administrators
  • Topical trainings were provided on coding,
    electronic billing, referral / authorization
    practices, and insurance billing protocols
  • Trainings were facilitated so that the major
    insurance carriers in NH could educate EI
    Programs about their respective policies and
    practices. Also to build relationships of
    understanding around billing practices between EI
    and insurers
  • A strong relationship was built with the NH state
    Insurance Commission with training to EI staff
    about their role and support structure
  • A delegate from the Insurance Commission was
    appointed to the ICC
  • Outreach was made to pre-service education
    programs to build insurance billing practices
    into their curriculums

15
And if all that still doesnt work?
  • Despite efforts, EI funding remains a concern in
    NH
  • In 2004, NHs ICC decided to prioritize EI
    funding and implemented a strategic planning
    process
  • Steps
  • Brainstorming all potential ways to optimize
    funding
  • Critical review of the Federal Part C rules to
    ensure compliance without supplemental activities
  • Review of the current EI funding structure and
    implementation practices
  • Revisiting proposed legislation to mandate
    insurance reimbursement of EI services
  • Negotiations with other insurance carriers for a
    voluntary EI benefit and avoid a legislative
    mandate

16
Family Cost Share
  • NH is currently reviewing all other states
    family cost share practices including
  • Mandated EI insurance access for all children /
    parents
  • Mandated parent fees
  • Combination of both
  • Parent contribution in non-financial ways

17
Other Funding Sources
  • Traditional Medicaid billing for medically
    necessitated services outside the bundle
  • Family Support funding for families with
    extraordinary circumstances (DD funding)
  • Respite dollars for families (DD funding)
  • Bureau of Special Medical Services for families
    with children with significant developmental
    disabilities NH DHHS
  • Partners In Health Funding for families with
    children with significant health care needs
  • Part B / 619 resources to help with transition
    support, exiting evaluations, provision of summer
    services when a child turns three prior to Sept.,
    or Child Find activities
  • Parent contributions (financial / inkind)
  • Adult DD services system (robbing the adult
    system to pay for the EI system through Area
    Agency budgets as EI is an entitlement and Adult
    services are not not optimal)
  • EI vendors - generated revenues in a variety of
    ways

18
Philanthropic Dollars
  • Grants
  • United Way
  • Individualized fund development activities
  • Fund raisers
  • Partnerships with Businesses

19
Building Community Capacity
  • Teaching Developmental Screening (ELOA / Baby
    Steps)
  • Primary Health Care
  • Childcare
  • Child Protective Services (County Incentive
    funds)
  • Maternal and Child Health Programs (Healthy
    Families HV)
  • Parent generated screening via access to Ages
    Stages Parent Questionnaires (Early Connections
    Project / FRC)
  • Access to Information
  • Family Resource Connection (state wide I R for
    children, families, providers)
  • Libraries (Early Connections / ELOA)
  • Newsletters Collaborative Events (Parent
    Information Center, EEIN, SERESC, PTAN,
    Mentorship Program, UNH Cooperative Extension
    Program, IMH teams)
  • Public / Cable networks (NH Public Television,
    Parenting NH)

20
Partnerships
  • Joint Activities
  • School Districts
  • Early Head Start
  • Family Resource Centers
  • Parenting Programs
  • Home Visiting Programs
  • Delegation of Activities
  • Community based services (therapists)
  • Program sharing staff / contracts with other EI
    or PS / school programs
  • External Evaluation Services (Child Development
    clinics, hospitals, and private treatment
    services)

21
Decision Making
  • Changing Standards of Practice
  • Making eligibility criteria more stringent
  • Reduction in frequency or scope of professional
    services
  • Reducing resource intensive activities
  • Creating efficient use of resources
  • Requiring parent cost participation
  • Developing alternative programs for children not
    eligible to reduce risk of entry into system
    later
  • Service delivery practice changes (greater use of
    paraprofessionals, transdisciplinary practice,
    use of professional consultation to home visitors
    rather than weekly professional services, etc.

22
NOW ITS YOUR TURN
  • Ideas
  • Innovative Funding Sources
  • Creative Activities from the Field?
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