| 1 | A bill to be entitled | 
| 2 | An act relating to health care; amending s. 400.23, F.S.;  | 
| 3 | delaying a nursing home staffing increase; providing for  | 
| 4 | retroactive application; amending s. 408.909, F.S.;  | 
| 5 | providing additional eligibility; amending s. 409.8134,  | 
| 6 | F.S.; revising a date for eligibility to be exempt from  | 
| 7 | reapplying; amending s. 409.814, F.S.; providing  | 
| 8 | additional eligibility for KidCare; requiring proof of  | 
| 9 | family income with supporting documents; amending s.  | 
| 10 | 409.903, F.S.; eliminating services for certain persons;  | 
| 11 | providing income deductions; amending s. 409.905, F.S.,  | 
| 12 | relating to mandatory Medicaid services; requiring  | 
| 13 | utilization management of private duty nursing services;  | 
| 14 | establishing a hospitalist program; limiting payment for  | 
| 15 | bed hold days for nursing facilities; amending s. 409.906,  | 
| 16 | F.S., relating to optional Medicaid services; providing  | 
| 17 | for adult denture and adult hearing and visual services;  | 
| 18 | eliminating vacancy interim rates for intermediate care  | 
| 19 | facility for the developmentally disabled services;  | 
| 20 | requiring utilization management for home and community- | 
| 21 | based services; consolidating home and community-based  | 
| 22 | services; amending s. 409.9065, F.S.; authorizing the  | 
| 23 | agency to operate a pharmaceutical expense assistance  | 
| 24 | program under certain circumstances; amending s. 409.907,  | 
| 25 | F.S.; revising Medicaid provider agreement requirements;  | 
| 26 | amending s. 409.908, F.S.; revising guidelines relating to  | 
| 27 | reimbursement of Medicaid providers; mandating the payment  | 
| 28 | method of county health departments; amending s. 409.911,  | 
| 29 | F.S.; requiring the convening of the Medicaid  | 
| 30 | Disproportionate Share Council and providing duties  | 
| 31 | thereof; amending ss. 409.9112, 409.9113, and 409.9117,  | 
| 32 | F.S.; restricting the agency from distributing certain  | 
| 33 | funds; amending s. 409.912, F.S.; granting Medicaid  | 
| 34 | provider network management; providing limits on certain  | 
| 35 | drugs; providing for management of mental health drugs;  | 
| 36 | reducing payment for pharmaceutical ingredient prices;  | 
| 37 | expanding the existing pharmaceutical supplemental rebate  | 
| 38 | threshold; correcting cross references; amending s.  | 
| 39 | 409.9124, F.S.; requiring the agency to publish managed  | 
| 40 | care rates annually; amending s. 624.91, F.S.; revising  | 
| 41 | Healthy Kids contract requirements; requiring certain  | 
| 42 | programs be provided in certain counties; requiring the  | 
| 43 | agency to negotiate to reduce costs; requiring a review by  | 
| 44 | the Office of Program Policy Analysis and Government  | 
| 45 | Accountability; requiring a report; authorizing the Agency  | 
| 46 | for Health Care Administration to contract on a capitated,  | 
| 47 | prepaid, or fixed-sum basis with a laboratory service  | 
| 48 | provider to provide statewide laboratory services for  | 
| 49 | Medicaid recipients; requiring the agency to ensure that  | 
| 50 | it secures laboratory values from Medicaid-enrolled  | 
| 51 | laboratories for all tests provided to Medicaid recipients  | 
| 52 | and to include such data in the Medicaid real-time web- | 
| 53 | based reporting system that interfaces with a real time  | 
| 54 | web-based prescription ordering and tracking system;  | 
| 55 | providing effective dates. | 
| 56 | 
  | 
| 57 | Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida: | 
| 58 | 
  | 
| 59 |      Section 1.  Effective upon this act becoming a law and  | 
| 60 | applying retroactively to May 1, 2004, paragraph (a) of  | 
| 61 | subsection (3) of section 400.23, Florida Statutes, is amended  | 
| 62 | to read: | 
| 63 |      400.23  Rules; evaluation and deficiencies; licensure  | 
| 64 | status.-- | 
| 65 |      (3)(a)  The agency shall adopt rules providing for the  | 
| 66 | minimum staffing requirements for nursing homes. These  | 
| 67 | requirements shall include, for each nursing home facility, a  | 
| 68 | minimum certified nursing assistant staffing of 2.3 hours of  | 
| 69 | direct care per resident per day beginning January 1, 2002,  | 
| 70 | increasing to 2.6 hours of direct care per resident per day  | 
| 71 | beginning January 1, 2003, and increasing to 2.9 hours of direct  | 
| 72 | care per resident per day beginning July May 1, 2005 2004.  | 
| 73 | Beginning January 1, 2002, no facility shall staff below one  | 
| 74 | certified nursing assistant per 20 residents, and a minimum  | 
| 75 | licensed nursing staffing of 1.0 hour of direct resident care  | 
| 76 | per resident per day but never below one licensed nurse per 40  | 
| 77 | residents. Nursing assistants employed never below one licensed  | 
| 78 | nurse per 40 residents. Nursing assistants employed under s.  | 
| 79 | 400.211(2) may be included in computing the staffing ratio for  | 
| 80 | certified nursing assistants only if they provide nursing  | 
| 81 | assistance services to residents on a full-time basis. Each  | 
| 82 | nursing home must document compliance with staffing standards as  | 
| 83 | required under this paragraph and post daily the names of staff  | 
| 84 | on duty for the benefit of facility residents and the public.  | 
| 85 | The agency shall recognize the use of licensed nurses for  | 
| 86 | compliance with minimum staffing requirements for certified  | 
| 87 | nursing assistants, provided that the facility otherwise meets  | 
| 88 | the minimum staffing requirements for licensed nurses and that  | 
| 89 | the licensed nurses so recognized are performing the duties of a  | 
| 90 | certified nursing assistant. Unless otherwise approved by the  | 
| 91 | agency, licensed nurses counted towards the minimum staffing  | 
| 92 | requirements for certified nursing assistants must exclusively  | 
| 93 | perform the duties of a certified nursing assistant for the  | 
| 94 | entire shift and shall not also be counted towards the minimum  | 
| 95 | staffing requirements for licensed nurses. If the agency  | 
| 96 | approved a facility's request to use a licensed nurse to perform  | 
| 97 | both licensed nursing and certified nursing assistant duties,  | 
| 98 | the facility must allocate the amount of staff time specifically  | 
| 99 | spent on certified nursing assistant duties for the purpose of  | 
| 100 | documenting compliance with minimum staffing requirements for  | 
| 101 | certified and licensed nursing staff. In no event may the hours  | 
| 102 | of a licensed nurse with dual job responsibilities be counted  | 
| 103 | twice. | 
| 104 |      Section 2.  Paragraphs (c) and (d) of subsection (5) of  | 
| 105 | section 408.909, Florida Statutes, are redesignated as  | 
| 106 | paragraphs (d) and (e), respectively, present paragraph (c) of  | 
| 107 | subsection (5) of said section is amended, and a new paragraph  | 
| 108 | (c) is added to said subsection, to read: | 
| 109 |      408.909  Health flex plans.-- | 
| 110 |      (5)  ELIGIBILITY.--Eligibility to enroll in an approved  | 
| 111 | health flex plan is limited to residents of this state who: | 
| 112 |      (c)  Are eligible under a federally approved Medicaid  | 
| 113 | demonstration waiver and reside in Palm Beach County or Miami- | 
| 114 | Dade County; | 
| 115 |      (d)(c)  Are not covered by a private insurance policy and  | 
| 116 | are not eligible for coverage through a public health insurance  | 
| 117 | program, such as Medicare or Medicaid, unless specifically  | 
| 118 | authorized under paragraph (c), or another public health care  | 
| 119 | program, such as KidCare, and have not been covered at any time  | 
| 120 | during the past 6 months; and | 
| 121 |      Section 3.  Subsection (2) of section 409.8134, Florida  | 
| 122 | Statutes, as amended by chapter 2004-1, Laws of Florida, is  | 
| 123 | amended to read: | 
| 124 |      409.8134  Program enrollment and expenditure ceilings.-- | 
| 125 |      (2)  Upon a unanimous recommendation by representatives  | 
| 126 | from each of the four Florida KidCare administrators, the  | 
| 127 | Florida KidCare program may conduct an open enrollment period  | 
| 128 | for the purpose of enrolling children eligible for all program  | 
| 129 | components listed in s. 409.813 except Medicaid. The four  | 
| 130 | Florida KidCare administrators shall work together to ensure  | 
| 131 | that the open enrollment period is announced statewide at least  | 
| 132 | 1 month before the open enrollment is to begin. Eligible  | 
| 133 | children shall be enrolled on a first-come, first-served basis  | 
| 134 | using the date the open enrollment application is received. The  | 
| 135 | potential open enrollment periods shall be January 1st through  | 
| 136 | January 30th and September 1st through September 30th. Open  | 
| 137 | enrollment shall immediately cease when the enrollment ceiling  | 
| 138 | is reached reaches. An open enrollment shall only be held if the  | 
| 139 | Social Services Estimating Conference determines that sufficient  | 
| 140 | federal and state funds will be available to finance the  | 
| 141 | increased enrollment through federal fiscal year 2007. Any  | 
| 142 | individual who is not enrolled, including those added to the  | 
| 143 | waiting list after March 11 January 30, 2004, must reapply by  | 
| 144 | submitting a new application during the next open enrollment  | 
| 145 | period. However, the Children's Medical Services Network may  | 
| 146 | annually enroll up to 120 additional children based on emergency  | 
| 147 | disability criteria outside of the open enrollment periods and  | 
| 148 | the cost of serving these children must be managed within the  | 
| 149 | KidCare program's appropriated or authorized levels of funding.  | 
| 150 | Except for the Medicaid program, whenever the Social Services  | 
| 151 | Estimating Conference determines that there is presently, or  | 
| 152 | will be by the end of the current fiscal year, insufficient  | 
| 153 | funds to finance the current or projected enrollment in the  | 
| 154 | Florida KidCare program, all additional enrollment must cease  | 
| 155 | and additional enrollment may not resume until sufficient funds  | 
| 156 | are available to finance such enrollment. | 
| 157 | 
  | 
| 158 |      Section 4.  Paragraph (f) of subsection (4) and paragraph  | 
| 159 | (a) of subsection (8) of section 409.814, Florida Statutes, as  | 
| 160 | amended by chapter 2004-1, Laws of Florida, are amended, and  | 
| 161 | paragraph (g) is added to subsection (4) of said section, to  | 
| 162 | read: | 
| 163 |      409.814  Eligibility.--A child who has not reached 19 years  | 
| 164 | of age whose family income is equal to or below 200 percent of  | 
| 165 | the federal poverty level is eligible for the Florida KidCare  | 
| 166 | program as provided in this section. For enrollment in the  | 
| 167 | Children's Medical Services network, a complete application  | 
| 168 | includes the medical or behavioral health screening. If,  | 
| 169 | subsequently, an individual is determined to be ineligible for  | 
| 170 | coverage, he or she must immediately be disenrolled from the  | 
| 171 | respective Florida KidCare program component. | 
| 172 |      (4)  The following children are not eligible to receive  | 
| 173 | premium assistance for health benefits coverage under the  | 
| 174 | Florida KidCare program, except under Medicaid if the child  | 
| 175 | would have been eligible for Medicaid under s. 409.903 or s.  | 
| 176 | 409.904 as of June 1, 1997: | 
| 177 |      (f)  A child who has had his or her coverage in an  | 
| 178 | employer-sponsored health benefit plan voluntarily canceled in  | 
| 179 | the last 6 months, except those children who were on the waiting  | 
| 180 | list prior to March 12 January 31, 2004. | 
| 181 |      (g)  A child who is otherwise eligible for KidCare and who  | 
| 182 | has a preexisting condition that prevents coverage under another  | 
| 183 | insurance plan as described in paragraph (b) which would have  | 
| 184 | disqualified the child for KidCare if the child were able to  | 
| 185 | enroll in the plan shall be eligible for KidCare coverage when  | 
| 186 | enrollment is possible. | 
| 187 |      (8)  In determining the eligibility of a child, an assets  | 
| 188 | test is not required. Each applicant shall provide written  | 
| 189 | documentation during the application process and the  | 
| 190 | redetermination process, including, but not limited to, the  | 
| 191 | following: | 
| 192 |      (a)  Proof of family income supported by copies of any  | 
| 193 | federal income tax return for the prior year, any wages and  | 
| 194 | earnings statements (W-2 forms), and any other appropriate  | 
| 195 | document. | 
| 196 |      Section 5.  Effective January 1, 2005, subsection (6) of  | 
| 197 | section 409.814, Florida Statutes, as amended by chapter 2004-1,  | 
| 198 | Laws of Florida, is amended to read: | 
| 199 |      409.814  Eligibility.--A child who has not reached 19 years  | 
| 200 | of age whose family income is equal to or below 200 percent of  | 
| 201 | the federal poverty level is eligible for the Florida KidCare  | 
| 202 | program as provided in this section. For enrollment in the  | 
| 203 | Children's Medical Services network, a complete application  | 
| 204 | includes the medical or behavioral health screening. If,  | 
| 205 | subsequently, an individual is determined to be ineligible for  | 
| 206 | coverage, he or she must immediately be disenrolled from the  | 
| 207 | respective Florida KidCare program component. | 
| 208 |      (6)  Once a child is enrolled in the Florida KidCare  | 
| 209 | program, the child is eligible for coverage under the program  | 
| 210 | for 12 6 months without a redetermination or reverification of  | 
| 211 | eligibility, if the family continues to pay the applicable  | 
| 212 | premium. Eligibility for program components funded through Title  | 
| 213 | XXI of the Social Security Act shall terminate when a child  | 
| 214 | attains the age of 19. Effective January 1, 1999, a child who  | 
| 215 | has not attained the age of 5 and who has been determined  | 
| 216 | eligible for the Medicaid program is eligible for coverage for  | 
| 217 | 12 months without a redetermination or reverification of  | 
| 218 | eligibility. | 
| 219 |      Section 6.  Subsection (5) of section 409.903, Florida  | 
| 220 | Statutes, is amended to read: | 
| 221 |      409.903  Mandatory payments for eligible persons.--The  | 
| 222 | agency shall make payments for medical assistance and related  | 
| 223 | services on behalf of the following persons who the department,  | 
| 224 | or the Social Security Administration by contract with the  | 
| 225 | Department of Children and Family Services, determines to be  | 
| 226 | eligible, subject to the income, assets, and categorical  | 
| 227 | eligibility tests set forth in federal and state law. Payment on  | 
| 228 | behalf of these Medicaid eligible persons is subject to the  | 
| 229 | availability of moneys and any limitations established by the  | 
| 230 | General Appropriations Act or chapter 216. | 
| 231 |      (5)  A pregnant woman for the duration of her pregnancy and  | 
| 232 | for the postpartum period as defined in federal law and rule, or  | 
| 233 | a child under age 1, if either is living in a family that has an  | 
| 234 | income which is at or below 150 percent of the most current  | 
| 235 | federal poverty level, or, effective January 1, 1992, that has  | 
| 236 | an income which is at or below 185 percent of the most current  | 
| 237 | federal poverty level. Such a person is not subject to an assets  | 
| 238 | test. Further, a pregnant woman who applies for eligibility for  | 
| 239 | the Medicaid program through a qualified Medicaid provider must  | 
| 240 | be offered the opportunity, subject to federal rules, to be made  | 
| 241 | presumptively eligible for the Medicaid program. Effective July  | 
| 242 | 1, 2005, eligibility for Medicaid services is eliminated for  | 
| 243 | women who have incomes above 150 percent of the most current  | 
| 244 | federal poverty level. | 
| 245 |      Section 7.  Subsections (2) and (3) of section 409.904,  | 
| 246 | Florida Statutes, are amended to read: | 
| 247 |      409.904  Optional payments for eligible persons.--The  | 
| 248 | agency may make payments for medical assistance and related  | 
| 249 | services on behalf of the following persons who are determined  | 
| 250 | to be eligible subject to the income, assets, and categorical  | 
| 251 | eligibility tests set forth in federal and state law. Payment on  | 
| 252 | behalf of these Medicaid eligible persons is subject to the  | 
| 253 | availability of moneys and any limitations established by the  | 
| 254 | General Appropriations Act or chapter 216. | 
| 255 |      (2)  A family, a pregnant woman, a child under age 21, a  | 
| 256 | person age 65 or over, or a blind or disabled person, who would  | 
| 257 | be eligible under any group listed in s. 409.903(1), (2), or  | 
| 258 | (3), except that the income or assets of such family or person  | 
| 259 | exceed established limitations. For a family or person in one of  | 
| 260 | these coverage groups, medical expenses are deductible from  | 
| 261 | income in accordance with federal requirements in order to make  | 
| 262 | a determination of eligibility. A family or person eligible  | 
| 263 | under the coverage known as the "medically needy," is eligible  | 
| 264 | to receive the same services as other Medicaid recipients, with  | 
| 265 | the exception of services in skilled nursing facilities and  | 
| 266 | intermediate care facilities for the developmentally disabled.  | 
| 267 | Effective July 1, 2005, the medically needy are eligible for  | 
| 268 | prescribed drug services only. | 
| 269 |      (3)  A person who is in need of the services of a licensed  | 
| 270 | nursing facility, a licensed intermediate care facility for the  | 
| 271 | developmentally disabled, or a state mental hospital, whose  | 
| 272 | income does not exceed 300 percent of the SSI income standard,  | 
| 273 | and who meets the assets standards established under federal and  | 
| 274 | state law. In determining the person's responsibility for the  | 
| 275 | cost of care, the following amounts must be deducted from the  | 
| 276 | person's income: | 
| 277 |      (a)  The monthly personal allowance for residents as set  | 
| 278 | based on appropriations. | 
| 279 |      (b)  The reasonable costs of medically necessary services  | 
| 280 | and supplies that are not reimbursable by the Medicaid program. | 
| 281 |      (c)  The cost of premiums, copayments, coinsurance, and  | 
| 282 | deductibles for supplemental health insurance. | 
| 283 |      Section 8.  Subsections (4), (5), and (8) of section  | 
| 284 | 409.905, Florida Statutes, are amended to read: | 
| 285 |      409.905  Mandatory Medicaid services.--The agency may make  | 
| 286 | payments for the following services, which are required of the  | 
| 287 | state by Title XIX of the Social Security Act, furnished by  | 
| 288 | Medicaid providers to recipients who are determined to be  | 
| 289 | eligible on the dates on which the services were provided. Any  | 
| 290 | service under this section shall be provided only when medically  | 
| 291 | necessary and in accordance with state and federal law.  | 
| 292 | Mandatory services rendered by providers in mobile units to  | 
| 293 | Medicaid recipients may be restricted by the agency. Nothing in  | 
| 294 | this section shall be construed to prevent or limit the agency  | 
| 295 | from adjusting fees, reimbursement rates, lengths of stay,  | 
| 296 | number of visits, number of services, or any other adjustments  | 
| 297 | necessary to comply with the availability of moneys and any  | 
| 298 | limitations or directions provided for in the General  | 
| 299 | Appropriations Act or chapter 216. | 
| 300 |      (4)  HOME HEALTH CARE SERVICES.--The agency shall pay for  | 
| 301 | nursing and home health aide services, supplies, appliances, and  | 
| 302 | durable medical equipment, necessary to assist a recipient  | 
| 303 | living at home. An entity that provides services pursuant to  | 
| 304 | this subsection shall be licensed under part IV of chapter 400  | 
| 305 | or part II of chapter 499, if appropriate. These services,  | 
| 306 | equipment, and supplies, or reimbursement therefor, may be  | 
| 307 | limited as provided in the General Appropriations Act and do not  | 
| 308 | include services, equipment, or supplies provided to a person  | 
| 309 | residing in a hospital or nursing facility. | 
| 310 |      (a)  In providing home health care services, the agency may  | 
| 311 | require prior authorization of care based on diagnosis. | 
| 312 |      (b)  The agency shall implement a comprehensive utilization  | 
| 313 | management program that requires prior authorization of all  | 
| 314 | private duty nursing services, an individualized treatment plan  | 
| 315 | that includes information about medication and treatment orders,  | 
| 316 | treatment goals, methods of care to be used, and plans for care  | 
| 317 | coordination by nurses and other health professionals. The  | 
| 318 | utilization management program shall also include a process for  | 
| 319 | periodically reviewing the ongoing use of private duty nursing  | 
| 320 | services. The assessment of need shall be based on a child's  | 
| 321 | condition, family support and care supplements, a family's  | 
| 322 | ability to provide care, and a family's and child's schedule  | 
| 323 | regarding work, school, sleep, and care for other family  | 
| 324 | dependents. When implemented, the private duty nursing  | 
| 325 | utilization management program shall replace the current  | 
| 326 | authorization program used by the Agency for Health Care  | 
| 327 | Administration and the Children's Medical Services program of  | 
| 328 | the Department of Health. The agency may competitively bid on a  | 
| 329 | contract to select a qualified organization to provide  | 
| 330 | utilization management of private duty nursing services. The  | 
| 331 | agency is authorized to seek federal waivers to implement this  | 
| 332 | initiative. | 
| 333 |      (5)  HOSPITAL INPATIENT SERVICES.--The agency shall pay for  | 
| 334 | all covered services provided for the medical care and treatment  | 
| 335 | of a recipient who is admitted as an inpatient by a licensed  | 
| 336 | physician or dentist to a hospital licensed under part I of  | 
| 337 | chapter 395. However, the agency shall limit the payment for  | 
| 338 | inpatient hospital services for a Medicaid recipient 21 years of  | 
| 339 | age or older to 45 days or the number of days necessary to  | 
| 340 | comply with the General Appropriations Act. | 
| 341 |      (a)  The agency is authorized to implement reimbursement  | 
| 342 | and utilization management reforms in order to comply with any  | 
| 343 | limitations or directions in the General Appropriations Act,  | 
| 344 | which may include, but are not limited to: prior authorization  | 
| 345 | for inpatient psychiatric days; prior authorization for  | 
| 346 | nonemergency hospital inpatient admissions for individuals 21  | 
| 347 | years of age and older; authorization of emergency and urgent- | 
| 348 | care admissions within 24 hours after admission; enhanced  | 
| 349 | utilization and concurrent review programs for highly utilized  | 
| 350 | services; reduction or elimination of covered days of service;  | 
| 351 | adjusting reimbursement ceilings for variable costs; adjusting  | 
| 352 | reimbursement ceilings for fixed and property costs; and  | 
| 353 | implementing target rates of increase. The agency may limit  | 
| 354 | prior authorization for hospital inpatient services to selected  | 
| 355 | diagnosis-related groups, based on an analysis of the cost and  | 
| 356 | potential for unnecessary hospitalizations represented by  | 
| 357 | certain diagnoses. Admissions for normal delivery and newborns  | 
| 358 | are exempt from requirements for prior authorization. In  | 
| 359 | implementing the provisions of this section related to prior  | 
| 360 | authorization, the agency shall ensure that the process for  | 
| 361 | authorization is accessible 24 hours per day, 7 days per week  | 
| 362 | and authorization is automatically granted when not denied  | 
| 363 | within 4 hours after the request. Authorization procedures must  | 
| 364 | include steps for review of denials. Upon implementing the prior  | 
| 365 | authorization program for hospital inpatient services, the  | 
| 366 | agency shall discontinue its hospital retrospective review  | 
| 367 | program. | 
| 368 |      (b)  A licensed hospital maintained primarily for the care  | 
| 369 | and treatment of patients having mental disorders or mental  | 
| 370 | diseases is not eligible to participate in the hospital  | 
| 371 | inpatient portion of the Medicaid program except as provided in  | 
| 372 | federal law. However, the department shall apply for a waiver,  | 
| 373 | within 9 months after June 5, 1991, designed to provide  | 
| 374 | hospitalization services for mental health reasons to children  | 
| 375 | and adults in the most cost-effective and lowest cost setting  | 
| 376 | possible. Such waiver shall include a request for the  | 
| 377 | opportunity to pay for care in hospitals known under federal law  | 
| 378 | as "institutions for mental disease" or "IMD's." The waiver  | 
| 379 | proposal shall propose no additional aggregate cost to the state  | 
| 380 | or Federal Government, and shall be conducted in Hillsborough  | 
| 381 | County, Highlands County, Hardee County, Manatee County, and  | 
| 382 | Polk County. The waiver proposal may incorporate competitive  | 
| 383 | bidding for hospital services, comprehensive brokering, prepaid  | 
| 384 | capitated arrangements, or other mechanisms deemed by the  | 
| 385 | department to show promise in reducing the cost of acute care  | 
| 386 | and increasing the effectiveness of preventive care. When  | 
| 387 | developing the waiver proposal, the department shall take into  | 
| 388 | account price, quality, accessibility, linkages of the hospital  | 
| 389 | to community services and family support programs, plans of the  | 
| 390 | hospital to ensure the earliest discharge possible, and the  | 
| 391 | comprehensiveness of the mental health and other health care  | 
| 392 | services offered by participating providers. | 
| 393 |      (c)  The Agency for Health Care Administration shall adjust  | 
| 394 | a hospital's current inpatient per diem rate to reflect the cost  | 
| 395 | of serving the Medicaid population at that institution if: | 
| 396 |      1.  The hospital experiences an increase in Medicaid  | 
| 397 | caseload by more than 25 percent in any year, primarily  | 
| 398 | resulting from the closure of a hospital in the same service  | 
| 399 | area occurring after July 1, 1995; | 
| 400 |      2.  The hospital's Medicaid per diem rate is at least 25  | 
| 401 | percent below the Medicaid per patient cost for that year; or | 
| 402 |      3.  The hospital is located in a county that has five or  | 
| 403 | fewer hospitals, began offering obstetrical services on or after  | 
| 404 | September 1999, and has submitted a request in writing to the  | 
| 405 | agency for a rate adjustment after July 1, 2000, but before  | 
| 406 | September 30, 2000, in which case such hospital's Medicaid  | 
| 407 | inpatient per diem rate shall be adjusted to cost, effective  | 
| 408 | July 1, 2002. | 
| 409 | 
  | 
| 410 | No later than October 1 of each year, the agency must provide  | 
| 411 | estimated costs for any adjustment in a hospital inpatient per  | 
| 412 | diem pursuant to this paragraph to the Executive Office of the  | 
| 413 | Governor, the House of Representatives General Appropriations  | 
| 414 | Committee, and the Senate Appropriations Committee. Before the  | 
| 415 | agency implements a change in a hospital's inpatient per diem  | 
| 416 | rate pursuant to this paragraph, the Legislature must have  | 
| 417 | specifically appropriated sufficient funds in the General  | 
| 418 | Appropriations Act to support the increase in cost as estimated  | 
| 419 | by the agency. | 
| 420 |      (d)  The agency shall implement a hospitalist program in  | 
| 421 | certain high-volume participating hospitals, select counties, or  | 
| 422 | statewide. The program shall require hospitalists to authorize  | 
| 423 | and manage Medicaid recipients' hospital admissions and lengths  | 
| 424 | of stay. Individuals who are dually eligible for Medicare and  | 
| 425 | Medicaid are exempted from this requirement. Medicaid  | 
| 426 | participating physicians and other practitioners with hospital  | 
| 427 | admitting privileges shall coordinate and review admissions of  | 
| 428 | Medicaid recipients with the hospitalist. The agency may  | 
| 429 | competitively bid a contract for selection of a qualified  | 
| 430 | organization to provide hospitalist services. The qualified  | 
| 431 | organization shall employ board certified physicians who are  | 
| 432 | full-time dedicated employees of the contractor and have no  | 
| 433 | outside practice. Where used, the hospitalist program shall  | 
| 434 | replace the existing hospital utilization review program. The  | 
| 435 | agency is authorized to seek federal waivers to implement this  | 
| 436 | program. | 
| 437 |      (e)  The agency shall implement a comprehensive utilization  | 
| 438 | management program for hospital neonatal intensive care stays in  | 
| 439 | certain high-volume participating hospitals, select counties, or  | 
| 440 | statewide, and shall replace existing hospital inpatient  | 
| 441 | utilization management programs for neonatal intensive care  | 
| 442 | admissions. The program shall be designed to manage the lengths  | 
| 443 | of stay for children being treated in neonatal intensive care  | 
| 444 | units and must seek the earliest medically appropriate discharge  | 
| 445 | to the child's home or other less costly treatment setting. The  | 
| 446 | agency may competitively bid a contract for selection of a  | 
| 447 | qualified organization to provide neonatal intensive care  | 
| 448 | utilization management services. The agency is authorized to  | 
| 449 | seek any federal waivers to implement this initiative. | 
| 450 |      (8)  NURSING FACILITY SERVICES.--The agency shall pay for  | 
| 451 | 24-hour-a-day nursing and rehabilitative services for a  | 
| 452 | recipient in a nursing facility licensed under part II of  | 
| 453 | chapter 400 or in a rural hospital, as defined in s. 395.602, or  | 
| 454 | in a Medicare certified skilled nursing facility operated by a  | 
| 455 | hospital, as defined by s. 395.002(11), that is licensed under  | 
| 456 | part I of chapter 395, and in accordance with provisions set  | 
| 457 | forth in s. 409.908(2)(a), which services are ordered by and  | 
| 458 | provided under the direction of a licensed physician. However,  | 
| 459 | if a nursing facility has been destroyed or otherwise made  | 
| 460 | uninhabitable by natural disaster or other emergency and another  | 
| 461 | nursing facility is not available, the agency must pay for  | 
| 462 | similar services temporarily in a hospital licensed under part I  | 
| 463 | of chapter 395 provided federal funding is approved and  | 
| 464 | available. The agency shall pay only for bed hold days if the  | 
| 465 | facility has an occupancy rate of 95 percent or greater. The  | 
| 466 | agency is authorized to seek any federal waivers to implement  | 
| 467 | this policy. | 
| 468 |      Section 9.  Subsections (1), (13), and (15) of section  | 
| 469 | 409.906, Florida Statutes, are amended to read: | 
| 470 |      409.906  Optional Medicaid services.--Subject to specific  | 
| 471 | appropriations, the agency may make payments for services which  | 
| 472 | are optional to the state under Title XIX of the Social Security  | 
| 473 | Act and are furnished by Medicaid providers to recipients who  | 
| 474 | are determined to be eligible on the dates on which the services  | 
| 475 | were provided. Any optional service that is provided shall be  | 
| 476 | provided only when medically necessary and in accordance with  | 
| 477 | state and federal law. Optional services rendered by providers  | 
| 478 | in mobile units to Medicaid recipients may be restricted or  | 
| 479 | prohibited by the agency. Nothing in this section shall be  | 
| 480 | construed to prevent or limit the agency from adjusting fees,  | 
| 481 | reimbursement rates, lengths of stay, number of visits, or  | 
| 482 | number of services, or making any other adjustments necessary to  | 
| 483 | comply with the availability of moneys and any limitations or  | 
| 484 | directions provided for in the General Appropriations Act or  | 
| 485 | chapter 216. If necessary to safeguard the state's systems of  | 
| 486 | providing services to elderly and disabled persons and subject  | 
| 487 | to the notice and review provisions of s. 216.177, the Governor  | 
| 488 | may direct the Agency for Health Care Administration to amend  | 
| 489 | the Medicaid state plan to delete the optional Medicaid service  | 
| 490 | known as "Intermediate Care Facilities for the Developmentally  | 
| 491 | Disabled." Optional services may include: | 
| 492 |      (1)  ADULT DENTAL SERVICES.-- | 
| 493 |      (a)  The agency may pay for medically necessary, emergency  | 
| 494 | dental procedures to alleviate pain or infection. Emergency  | 
| 495 | dental care shall be limited to emergency oral examinations,  | 
| 496 | necessary radiographs, extractions, and incision and drainage of  | 
| 497 | abscess, for a recipient who is age 21 years of age or older. | 
| 498 |      (b)  Beginning January 1, 2005, the agency may pay for  | 
| 499 | dentures, the procedures required to seat dentures, and the  | 
| 500 | repair and reline of dentures, provided by or under the  | 
| 501 | direction of a licensed dentist, for a recipient who is 21 years  | 
| 502 | of age or older. This paragraph is repealed effective July 1,  | 
| 503 | 2005. | 
| 504 |      (c)  However, Medicaid will not provide reimbursement for  | 
| 505 | dental services provided in a mobile dental unit, except for a  | 
| 506 | mobile dental unit: | 
| 507 |      1.(a)  Owned by, operated by, or having a contractual  | 
| 508 | agreement with the Department of Health and complying with  | 
| 509 | Medicaid's county health department clinic services program  | 
| 510 | specifications as a county health department clinic services  | 
| 511 | provider. | 
| 512 |      2.(b)  Owned by, operated by, or having a contractual  | 
| 513 | arrangement with a federally qualified health center and  | 
| 514 | complying with Medicaid's federally qualified health center  | 
| 515 | specifications as a federally qualified health center provider. | 
| 516 |      3.(c)  Rendering dental services to Medicaid recipients, 21  | 
| 517 | years of age and older, at nursing facilities. | 
| 518 |      4.(d)  Owned by, operated by, or having a contractual  | 
| 519 | agreement with a state-approved dental educational institution. | 
| 520 |      (13)  HOME AND COMMUNITY-BASED SERVICES.-- | 
| 521 |      (a)  The agency may pay for home-based or community-based  | 
| 522 | services that are rendered to a recipient in accordance with a  | 
| 523 | federally approved waiver program. The agency may limit or  | 
| 524 | eliminate coverage for certain Project AIDS Care Waiver  | 
| 525 | services, preauthorize high-cost or highly utilized services, or  | 
| 526 | make any other adjustments necessary to comply with any  | 
| 527 | limitations or directions provided for in the General  | 
| 528 | Appropriations Act. | 
| 529 |      (b)  The agency may consolidate types of services offered  | 
| 530 | in the Aged and Disabled Waiver, the Channeling Waiver, the  | 
| 531 | Project AIDS Care Waiver, and the Traumatic Brain and Spinal  | 
| 532 | Cord Injury Waiver programs in order to group similar services  | 
| 533 | under a single service, or continue a service upon evidence of  | 
| 534 | the need for including a particular service type in a particular  | 
| 535 | waiver. The agency is authorized to seek a Medicaid state plan  | 
| 536 | amendment or federal waiver approval to implement this policy. | 
| 537 |      (c)  The agency may implement a utilization management  | 
| 538 | program designed to prior authorize home and community-based  | 
| 539 | service plans and includes, but is not limited to, assessing  | 
| 540 | proposed quantity and duration of services and monitoring  | 
| 541 | ongoing service use by participants in the program. The agency  | 
| 542 | is authorized to competitively procure a qualified organization  | 
| 543 | to provide utilization management of home and community-based  | 
| 544 | services. The agency is authorized to seek any federal waivers  | 
| 545 | to implement this initiative. | 
| 546 |      (15)  INTERMEDIATE CARE FACILITY FOR THE DEVELOPMENTALLY  | 
| 547 | DISABLED SERVICES.--The agency may pay for health-related care  | 
| 548 | and services provided on a 24-hour-a-day basis by a facility  | 
| 549 | licensed and certified as a Medicaid Intermediate Care Facility  | 
| 550 | for the Developmentally Disabled, for a recipient who needs such  | 
| 551 | care because of a developmental disability. Payment shall not  | 
| 552 | include bed-hold days except in facilities with occupancy rates  | 
| 553 | of 95 percent or greater. The agency is authorized to seek any   | 
| 554 | federal waiver approvals to implement this policy. | 
| 555 |      Section 10.  Subsection (8) of section 409.9065, Florida  | 
| 556 | Statutes, is renumbered as subsection (9), and a new subsection  | 
| 557 | (8) is added to said section, to read: | 
| 558 |      409.9065  Pharmaceutical expense assistance.-- | 
| 559 |      (8)  PHARMACEUTICAL EXPENSE ASSISTANCE PROGRAM.--In the  | 
| 560 | absence of federal approval for the Lifesaver Rx Program to  | 
| 561 | provide benefits to higher income groups and additional  | 
| 562 | discounts as described in subsections (2) and (3), the Agency  | 
| 563 | for Health Care Administration may, subject to federal approval  | 
| 564 | and continuing state appropriations, operate a pharmaceutical  | 
| 565 | expense assistance program that limits eligibility and benefits  | 
| 566 | to Medicaid beneficiaries who do not normally receive Medicaid  | 
| 567 | benefits, are Florida residents age 65 and older, have an income  | 
| 568 | less than or equal to 120 percent of the federal poverty level,  | 
| 569 | are eligible for Medicare, and request to be enrolled in the  | 
| 570 | program. Benefits under the limited pharmaceutical expense  | 
| 571 | assistance program shall include Medicaid payment for up to $160  | 
| 572 | per month for prescribed drugs, subject to benefit utilization  | 
| 573 | controls applied to other Medicaid prescribed drug benefits and  | 
| 574 | the following copayments: $2 per generic product, $5 for a  | 
| 575 | product that is on the Medicaid Preferred Drug List, and $15 for  | 
| 576 | a product that is not on the preferred drug list. | 
| 577 |      Section 11.  Subsection (12) is added to section 409.907,  | 
| 578 | Florida Statutes, to read: | 
| 579 |      409.907  Medicaid provider agreements.--The agency may make  | 
| 580 | payments for medical assistance and related services rendered to  | 
| 581 | Medicaid recipients only to an individual or entity who has a  | 
| 582 | provider agreement in effect with the agency, who is performing  | 
| 583 | services or supplying goods in accordance with federal, state,  | 
| 584 | and local law, and who agrees that no person shall, on the  | 
| 585 | grounds of handicap, race, color, or national origin, or for any  | 
| 586 | other reason, be subjected to discrimination under any program  | 
| 587 | or activity for which the provider receives payment from the  | 
| 588 | agency. | 
| 589 |      (12)  Licensed, certified, or otherwise qualified providers  | 
| 590 | are not entitled to enrollment in a Medicaid provider network. | 
| 591 |      Section 12.  Subsections (4), (14), and (19) of section  | 
| 592 | 409.908, Florida Statutes, are amended to read: | 
| 593 |      409.908  Reimbursement of Medicaid providers.--Subject to  | 
| 594 | specific appropriations, the agency shall reimburse Medicaid  | 
| 595 | providers, in accordance with state and federal law, according  | 
| 596 | to methodologies set forth in the rules of the agency and in  | 
| 597 | policy manuals and handbooks incorporated by reference therein.  | 
| 598 | These methodologies may include fee schedules, reimbursement  | 
| 599 | methods based on cost reporting, negotiated fees, competitive  | 
| 600 | bidding pursuant to s. 287.057, and other mechanisms the agency  | 
| 601 | considers efficient and effective for purchasing services or  | 
| 602 | goods on behalf of recipients. If a provider is reimbursed based  | 
| 603 | on cost reporting and submits a cost report late and that cost  | 
| 604 | report would have been used to set a lower reimbursement rate  | 
| 605 | for a rate semester, then the provider's rate for that semester  | 
| 606 | shall be retroactively calculated using the new cost report, and  | 
| 607 | full payment at the recalculated rate shall be affected  | 
| 608 | retroactively. Medicare-granted extensions for filing cost  | 
| 609 | reports, if applicable, shall also apply to Medicaid cost  | 
| 610 | reports. Payment for Medicaid compensable services made on  | 
| 611 | behalf of Medicaid eligible persons is subject to the  | 
| 612 | availability of moneys and any limitations or directions  | 
| 613 | provided for in the General Appropriations Act or chapter 216.  | 
| 614 | Further, nothing in this section shall be construed to prevent  | 
| 615 | or limit the agency from adjusting fees, reimbursement rates,  | 
| 616 | lengths of stay, number of visits, or number of services, or  | 
| 617 | making any other adjustments necessary to comply with the  | 
| 618 | availability of moneys and any limitations or directions  | 
| 619 | provided for in the General Appropriations Act, provided the  | 
| 620 | adjustment is consistent with legislative intent. | 
| 621 |      (4)  Subject to any limitations or directions provided for  | 
| 622 | in the General Appropriations Act, alternative health plans,  | 
| 623 | health maintenance organizations, and prepaid health plans shall  | 
| 624 | be reimbursed a fixed, prepaid amount negotiated, or  | 
| 625 | competitively bid pursuant to s. 287.057, by the agency and  | 
| 626 | prospectively paid to the provider monthly for each Medicaid  | 
| 627 | recipient enrolled. The amount may not exceed the average amount  | 
| 628 | the agency determines it would have paid, based on claims  | 
| 629 | experience, for recipients in the same or similar category of  | 
| 630 | eligibility. The agency shall calculate capitation rates on a  | 
| 631 | regional basis and, beginning September 1, 1995, shall include  | 
| 632 | age-band differentials in such calculations. Effective July 1,  | 
| 633 | 2001, the cost of exempting statutory teaching hospitals,  | 
| 634 | specialty hospitals, and community hospital education program  | 
| 635 | hospitals from reimbursement ceilings and the cost of special  | 
| 636 | Medicaid payments shall not be included in premiums paid to  | 
| 637 | health maintenance organizations or prepaid health care plans.  | 
| 638 | Each rate semester, the agency shall calculate and publish a  | 
| 639 | Medicaid hospital rate schedule that does not reflect either  | 
| 640 | special Medicaid payments or the elimination of rate  | 
| 641 | reimbursement ceilings, to be used by hospitals and Medicaid  | 
| 642 | health maintenance organizations, in order to determine the  | 
| 643 | Medicaid rate referred to in ss. 409.912(17), 409.9128(5), and  | 
| 644 | 641.513(6). | 
| 645 |      (14)  A provider of prescribed drugs shall be reimbursed  | 
| 646 | the least of the amount billed by the provider, the provider's  | 
| 647 | usual and customary charge, or the Medicaid maximum allowable  | 
| 648 | fee established by the agency, plus a dispensing fee. The  | 
| 649 | Medicaid maximum allowable fee for ingredient cost will be based  | 
| 650 | on the lower of: average wholesale price (AWP) minus 15.4  | 
| 651 | percent, wholesaler acquisition cost (WAC) plus 5.75 percent,  | 
| 652 | the federal upper limit (FUL), the state maximum allowable cost  | 
| 653 | (SMAC), or the usual and customary (UAC) charge billed by the  | 
| 654 | provider. Medicaid providers are required to dispense generic  | 
| 655 | drugs if available at lower cost and the agency has not  | 
| 656 | determined that the branded product is more cost-effective,  | 
| 657 | unless the prescriber has requested and received approval to  | 
| 658 | require the branded product. The agency is directed to implement  | 
| 659 | a variable dispensing fee for payments for prescribed medicines  | 
| 660 | while ensuring continued access for Medicaid recipients. The  | 
| 661 | variable dispensing fee may be based upon, but not limited to,  | 
| 662 | either or both the volume of prescriptions dispensed by a  | 
| 663 | specific pharmacy provider, the volume of prescriptions  | 
| 664 | dispensed to an individual recipient, and dispensing of  | 
| 665 | preferred-drug-list products. The agency may increase the  | 
| 666 | pharmacy dispensing fee authorized by statute and in the annual  | 
| 667 | General Appropriations Act by $0.50 for the dispensing of a  | 
| 668 | Medicaid preferred-drug-list product and reduce the pharmacy  | 
| 669 | dispensing fee by $0.50 for the dispensing of a Medicaid product  | 
| 670 | that is not included on the preferred-drug list. The agency may  | 
| 671 | establish a supplemental pharmaceutical dispensing fee to be  | 
| 672 | paid to providers returning unused unit-dose packaged  | 
| 673 | medications to stock and crediting the Medicaid program for the  | 
| 674 | ingredient cost of those medications if the ingredient costs to  | 
| 675 | be credited exceed the value of the supplemental dispensing fee.  | 
| 676 | The agency is authorized to limit reimbursement for prescribed  | 
| 677 | medicine in order to comply with any limitations or directions  | 
| 678 | provided for in the General Appropriations Act, which may  | 
| 679 | include implementing a prospective or concurrent utilization  | 
| 680 | review program. | 
| 681 |      (19)  County health department services shall may be  | 
| 682 | reimbursed a rate per visit based on total reasonable costs of  | 
| 683 | the clinic, as determined by the agency in accordance with  | 
| 684 | federal regulations under the authority of 42 C.F.R. s. 431.615. | 
| 685 |      Section 13.  Section 409.911, Florida Statutes, is amended  | 
| 686 | to read: | 
| 687 |      409.911  Disproportionate share program.--Subject to  | 
| 688 | specific allocations established within the General  | 
| 689 | Appropriations Act and any limitations established pursuant to  | 
| 690 | chapter 216, the agency shall distribute, pursuant to this  | 
| 691 | section, moneys to hospitals providing a disproportionate share  | 
| 692 | of Medicaid or charity care services by making quarterly  | 
| 693 | Medicaid payments as required. Notwithstanding the provisions of  | 
| 694 | s. 409.915, counties are exempt from contributing toward the  | 
| 695 | cost of this special reimbursement for hospitals serving a  | 
| 696 | disproportionate share of low-income patients. | 
| 697 |      (1)  Definitions.--As used in this section, s. 409.9112,  | 
| 698 | and the Florida Hospital Uniform Reporting System manual: | 
| 699 |      (a)  "Adjusted patient days" means the sum of acute care  | 
| 700 | patient days and intensive care patient days as reported to the  | 
| 701 | Agency for Health Care Administration, divided by the ratio of  | 
| 702 | inpatient revenues generated from acute, intensive, ambulatory,  | 
| 703 | and ancillary patient services to gross revenues. | 
| 704 |      (b)  "Actual audited data" or "actual audited experience"  | 
| 705 | means data reported to the Agency for Health Care Administration  | 
| 706 | which has been audited in accordance with generally accepted  | 
| 707 | auditing standards by the agency or representatives under  | 
| 708 | contract with the agency. | 
| 709 |      (c)  "Charity care" or "uncompensated charity care" means  | 
| 710 | that portion of hospital charges reported to the Agency for  | 
| 711 | Health Care Administration for which there is no compensation,  | 
| 712 | other than restricted or unrestricted revenues provided to a  | 
| 713 | hospital by local governments or tax districts regardless of the  | 
| 714 | method of payment, for care provided to a patient whose family  | 
| 715 | income for the 12 months preceding the determination is less  | 
| 716 | than or equal to 200 percent of the federal poverty level,  | 
| 717 | unless the amount of hospital charges due from the patient  | 
| 718 | exceeds 25 percent of the annual family income. However, in no  | 
| 719 | case shall the hospital charges for a patient whose family  | 
| 720 | income exceeds four times the federal poverty level for a family  | 
| 721 | of four be considered charity. | 
| 722 |      (d)  "Charity care days" means the sum of the deductions  | 
| 723 | from revenues for charity care minus 50 percent of restricted  | 
| 724 | and unrestricted revenues provided to a hospital by local  | 
| 725 | governments or tax districts, divided by gross revenues per  | 
| 726 | adjusted patient day. | 
| 727 |      (e)  "Hospital" means a health care institution licensed as  | 
| 728 | a hospital pursuant to chapter 395, but does not include  | 
| 729 | ambulatory surgical centers. | 
| 730 |      (f)  "Medicaid days" means the number of actual days  | 
| 731 | attributable to Medicaid patients as determined by the Agency  | 
| 732 | for Health Care Administration. | 
| 733 |      (2)  The Agency for Health Care Administration shall use  | 
| 734 | the following actual audited data to determine the Medicaid days  | 
| 735 | and charity care to be used in calculating the disproportionate  | 
| 736 | share payment: | 
| 737 |      (a)  The average of the 1997, 1998, and 1999, and 2000  | 
| 738 | audited data to determine each hospital's Medicaid days and  | 
| 739 | charity care. | 
| 740 |      (b)  The average of the audited disproportionate share data  | 
| 741 | for the years available if the Agency for Health Care  | 
| 742 | Administration does not have the prescribed 3 years of audited  | 
| 743 | disproportionate share data for a hospital. | 
| 744 |      (c)  In accordance with s. 1923(b) of the Social Security  | 
| 745 | Act, a hospital with a Medicaid inpatient utilization rate  | 
| 746 | greater than one standard deviation above the statewide mean or  | 
| 747 | a hospital with a low-income utilization rate of 25 percent or  | 
| 748 | greater shall qualify for reimbursement. | 
| 749 |      (3)  Hospitals that qualify for a disproportionate share  | 
| 750 | payment solely under paragraph (2)(c) shall have their payment  | 
| 751 | calculated in accordance with the following formulas: | 
| 752 | 
  | 
| 753 | DSHP = (HMD/TMSD) x $1 million | 
| 754 | 
  | 
| 755 | Where: | 
| 756 |      DSHP = disproportionate share hospital payment. | 
| 757 |      HMD = hospital Medicaid days. | 
| 758 |      TSD = total state Medicaid days. | 
| 759 | 
  | 
| 760 | Any funds not allocated to hospitals qualifying under this  | 
| 761 | section shall be redistributed to the non-state government owned  | 
| 762 | or operated hospitals with greater than 3,300 Medicaid days. | 
| 763 |      (4)  The following formulas shall be used to pay  | 
| 764 | disproportionate share dollars to public hospitals: | 
| 765 |      (a)  For state mental health hospitals: | 
| 766 | 
  | 
| 767 | DSHP = (HMD/TMDMH) x TAAMH | 
| 768 | 
  | 
| 769 |      shall be the difference between the federal cap for  | 
| 770 | Institutions for Mental Diseases and the amounts paid under the  | 
| 771 | mental health disproportionate share program. | 
| 772 | 
  | 
| 773 | Where: | 
| 774 |      DSHP = disproportionate share hospital payment. | 
| 775 |      HMD = hospital Medicaid days. | 
| 776 |      TMDHH = total Medicaid days for state mental health  | 
| 777 | hospitals. | 
| 778 |      TAAMH = total amount available for mental health hospitals. | 
| 779 | 
  | 
| 780 |      (b)  For non-state government owned or operated hospitals  | 
| 781 | with 3,300 or more Medicaid days: | 
| 782 | 
  | 
| 783 | DSHP = [(.82 x HCCD/TCCD) + (.18 x HMD/TMD)] | 
| 784 | x TAAPH | 
| 785 | TAAPH = TAA - TAAMH | 
| 786 | 
  | 
| 787 | Where: | 
| 788 |      TAA = total available appropriation. | 
| 789 |      TAAPH = total amount available for public hospitals. | 
| 790 |      DSHP = disproportionate share hospital payments. | 
| 791 |      HMD = hospital Medicaid days. | 
| 792 |      TMD = total state Medicaid days for public hospitals. | 
| 793 |      HCCD = hospital charity care dollars. | 
| 794 |      TCCD = total state charity care dollars for public non- | 
| 795 | state hospitals. | 
| 796 | 
  | 
| 797 | The TAAPH shall be reduced by $6,365,257 before computing the  | 
| 798 | DSHP for each public hospital. The $6,365,257 shall be  | 
| 799 | distributed equally between the public hospitals that are also  | 
| 800 | designated statutory teaching hospitals. | 
| 801 |      (c)  For non-state government owned or operated hospitals  | 
| 802 | with less than 3,300 Medicaid days, a total of $750,000 $400,000  | 
| 803 | shall be distributed equally among these hospitals. | 
| 804 |      (5)  In no case shall total payments to a hospital under  | 
| 805 | this section, with the exception of public non-state facilities  | 
| 806 | or state facilities, exceed the total amount of uncompensated  | 
| 807 | charity care of the hospital, as determined by the agency  | 
| 808 | according to the most recent calendar year audited data  | 
| 809 | available at the beginning of each state fiscal year. | 
| 810 |      (6)  The agency is authorized to receive funds from local  | 
| 811 | governments and other local political subdivisions for the  | 
| 812 | purpose of making payments, including federal matching funds,  | 
| 813 | through the Medicaid disproportionate share program. Funds  | 
| 814 | received from local governments for this purpose shall be  | 
| 815 | separately accounted for and shall not be commingled with other  | 
| 816 | state or local funds in any manner. | 
| 817 |      (7)  Payments made by the agency to hospitals eligible to  | 
| 818 | participate in this program shall be made in accordance with  | 
| 819 | federal rules and regulations. | 
| 820 |      (a)  If the Federal Government prohibits, restricts, or  | 
| 821 | changes in any manner the methods by which funds are distributed  | 
| 822 | for this program, the agency shall not distribute any additional  | 
| 823 | funds and shall return all funds to the local government from  | 
| 824 | which the funds were received, except as provided in paragraph  | 
| 825 | (b). | 
| 826 |      (b)  If the Federal Government imposes a restriction that  | 
| 827 | still permits a partial or different distribution, the agency  | 
| 828 | may continue to disburse funds to hospitals participating in the  | 
| 829 | disproportionate share program in a federally approved manner,  | 
| 830 | provided: | 
| 831 |      1.  Each local government which contributes to the  | 
| 832 | disproportionate share program agrees to the new manner of  | 
| 833 | distribution as shown by a written document signed by the  | 
| 834 | governing authority of each local government; and | 
| 835 |      2.  The Executive Office of the Governor, the Office of  | 
| 836 | Planning and Budgeting, the House of Representatives, and the  | 
| 837 | Senate are provided at least 7 days' prior notice of the  | 
| 838 | proposed change in the distribution, and do not disapprove such  | 
| 839 | change. | 
| 840 |      (c)  No distribution shall be made under the alternative  | 
| 841 | method specified in paragraph (b) unless all parties agree or  | 
| 842 | unless all funds of those parties that disagree which are not  | 
| 843 | yet disbursed have been returned to those parties. | 
| 844 |      (8)  Notwithstanding the provisions of chapter 216, the  | 
| 845 | Executive Office of the Governor is hereby authorized to  | 
| 846 | establish sufficient trust fund authority to implement the  | 
| 847 | disproportionate share program. | 
| 848 |      (9)  The Agency for Health Care Administration shall create  | 
| 849 | a Medicaid Disproportionate Share Council. | 
| 850 |      (a)  The purpose of the council is to study and make  | 
| 851 | recommendations regarding: | 
| 852 |      1.  The formula for the regular disproportionate share  | 
| 853 | program and alternative financing options. | 
| 854 |      2.  Enhanced Medicaid funding through the Special Medicaid  | 
| 855 | Payment program. | 
| 856 |      3.  The federal status of the upper-payment-limit funding  | 
| 857 | option and how this option may be used to promote health care  | 
| 858 | initiatives determined by the council to be state health care  | 
| 859 | priorities. | 
| 860 |      (b)  The council shall include representatives of the  | 
| 861 | Executive Office of the Governor and of the agency;  | 
| 862 | representatives from teaching, public, private nonprofit,  | 
| 863 | private for-profit and family practice teaching hospitals; and  | 
| 864 | representatives from other groups as needed. | 
| 865 |      (c)  The council shall submit its findings and  | 
| 866 | recommendations to the Governor and the Legislature no later  | 
| 867 | than February 1 of each year. | 
| 868 |      Section 14.  Section 409.9112, Florida Statutes, is amended  | 
| 869 | to read: | 
| 870 |      409.9112  Disproportionate share program for regional  | 
| 871 | perinatal intensive care centers.--In addition to the payments  | 
| 872 | made under s. 409.911, the Agency for Health Care Administration  | 
| 873 | shall design and implement a system of making disproportionate  | 
| 874 | share payments to those hospitals that participate in the  | 
| 875 | regional perinatal intensive care center program established  | 
| 876 | pursuant to chapter 383. This system of payments shall conform  | 
| 877 | with federal requirements and shall distribute funds in each  | 
| 878 | fiscal year for which an appropriation is made by making  | 
| 879 | quarterly Medicaid payments. Notwithstanding the provisions of  | 
| 880 | s. 409.915, counties are exempt from contributing toward the  | 
| 881 | cost of this special reimbursement for hospitals serving a  | 
| 882 | disproportionate share of low-income patients. For the state  | 
| 883 | fiscal year 2004-2005, the agency shall not distribute moneys  | 
| 884 | under the regional perinatal intensive care centers  | 
| 885 | disproportionate share program, except as noted in subsection  | 
| 886 | (2). In the event the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services  | 
| 887 | do not approve Florida's inpatient hospital state plan amendment  | 
| 888 | for the public disproportionate share program by January 1,  | 
| 889 | 2005, the agency may make payments to hospitals under the  | 
| 890 | regional perinatal intensive care centers disproportionate share  | 
| 891 | program. | 
| 892 |      (1)  The following formula shall be used by the agency to  | 
| 893 | calculate the total amount earned for hospitals that participate  | 
| 894 | in the regional perinatal intensive care center program: | 
| 895 | 
  | 
| 896 | TAE = HDSP/THDSP | 
| 897 | 
  | 
| 898 | Where: | 
| 899 |      TAE = total amount earned by a regional perinatal intensive  | 
| 900 | care center. | 
| 901 |      HDSP = the prior state fiscal year regional perinatal  | 
| 902 | intensive care center disproportionate share payment to the  | 
| 903 | individual hospital. | 
| 904 |      THDSP = the prior state fiscal year total regional  | 
| 905 | perinatal intensive care center disproportionate share payments  | 
| 906 | to all hospitals. | 
| 907 | 
  | 
| 908 |      (2)  The total additional payment for hospitals that  | 
| 909 | participate in the regional perinatal intensive care center  | 
| 910 | program shall be calculated by the agency as follows: | 
| 911 | 
  | 
| 912 | TAP = TAE x TA | 
| 913 | 
  | 
| 914 | Where: | 
| 915 |      TAP = total additional payment for a regional perinatal  | 
| 916 | intensive care center. | 
| 917 |      TAE = total amount earned by a regional perinatal intensive  | 
| 918 | care center. | 
| 919 |      TA = total appropriation for the regional perinatal  | 
| 920 | intensive care center disproportionate share program. | 
| 921 | 
  | 
| 922 |      (3)  In order to receive payments under this section, a  | 
| 923 | hospital must be participating in the regional perinatal  | 
| 924 | intensive care center program pursuant to chapter 383 and must  | 
| 925 | meet the following additional requirements: | 
| 926 |      (a)  Agree to conform to all departmental and agency  | 
| 927 | requirements to ensure high quality in the provision of  | 
| 928 | services, including criteria adopted by departmental and agency  | 
| 929 | rule concerning staffing ratios, medical records, standards of  | 
| 930 | care, equipment, space, and such other standards and criteria as  | 
| 931 | the department and agency deem appropriate as specified by rule. | 
| 932 |      (b)  Agree to provide information to the department and  | 
| 933 | agency, in a form and manner to be prescribed by rule of the  | 
| 934 | department and agency, concerning the care provided to all  | 
| 935 | patients in neonatal intensive care centers and high-risk  | 
| 936 | maternity care. | 
| 937 |      (c)  Agree to accept all patients for neonatal intensive  | 
| 938 | care and high-risk maternity care, regardless of ability to pay,  | 
| 939 | on a functional space-available basis. | 
| 940 |      (d)  Agree to develop arrangements with other maternity and  | 
| 941 | neonatal care providers in the hospital's region for the  | 
| 942 | appropriate receipt and transfer of patients in need of  | 
| 943 | specialized maternity and neonatal intensive care services. | 
| 944 |      (e)  Agree to establish and provide a developmental  | 
| 945 | evaluation and services program for certain high-risk neonates,  | 
| 946 | as prescribed and defined by rule of the department. | 
| 947 |      (f)  Agree to sponsor a program of continuing education in  | 
| 948 | perinatal care for health care professionals within the region  | 
| 949 | of the hospital, as specified by rule. | 
| 950 |      (g)  Agree to provide backup and referral services to the  | 
| 951 | department's county health departments and other low-income  | 
| 952 | perinatal providers within the hospital's region, including the  | 
| 953 | development of written agreements between these organizations  | 
| 954 | and the hospital. | 
| 955 |      (h)  Agree to arrange for transportation for high-risk  | 
| 956 | obstetrical patients and neonates in need of transfer from the  | 
| 957 | community to the hospital or from the hospital to another more  | 
| 958 | appropriate facility. | 
| 959 |      (4)  Hospitals which fail to comply with any of the  | 
| 960 | conditions in subsection (3) or the applicable rules of the  | 
| 961 | department and agency shall not receive any payments under this  | 
| 962 | section until full compliance is achieved. A hospital which is  | 
| 963 | not in compliance in two or more consecutive quarters shall not  | 
| 964 | receive its share of the funds. Any forfeited funds shall be  | 
| 965 | distributed by the remaining participating regional perinatal  | 
| 966 | intensive care center program hospitals. | 
| 967 |      Section 15.  Section 409.9113, Florida Statutes, is amended  | 
| 968 | to read: | 
| 969 |      409.9113  Disproportionate share program for teaching  | 
| 970 | hospitals.--In addition to the payments made under ss. 409.911  | 
| 971 | and 409.9112, the Agency for Health Care Administration shall  | 
| 972 | make disproportionate share payments to statutorily defined  | 
| 973 | teaching hospitals for their increased costs associated with  | 
| 974 | medical education programs and for tertiary health care services  | 
| 975 | provided to the indigent. This system of payments shall conform  | 
| 976 | with federal requirements and shall distribute funds in each  | 
| 977 | fiscal year for which an appropriation is made by making  | 
| 978 | quarterly Medicaid payments. Notwithstanding s. 409.915,  | 
| 979 | counties are exempt from contributing toward the cost of this  | 
| 980 | special reimbursement for hospitals serving a disproportionate  | 
| 981 | share of low-income patients. For the state fiscal year 2004- | 
| 982 | 2005, the agency shall not distribute moneys under the teaching  | 
| 983 | hospital disproportionate share program, except as noted in  | 
| 984 | subsection (2). In the event the Centers for Medicare and  | 
| 985 | Medicaid Services do not approve Florida's inpatient hospital  | 
| 986 | state plan amendment for the public disproportionate share  | 
| 987 | program by January 1, 2005, the agency may make payments to  | 
| 988 | hospitals under the teaching hospital disproportionate share  | 
| 989 | program. | 
| 990 |      (1)  On or before September 15 of each year, the Agency for  | 
| 991 | Health Care Administration shall calculate an allocation  | 
| 992 | fraction to be used for distributing funds to state statutory  | 
| 993 | teaching hospitals. Subsequent to the end of each quarter of the  | 
| 994 | state fiscal year, the agency shall distribute to each statutory  | 
| 995 | teaching hospital, as defined in s. 408.07, an amount determined  | 
| 996 | by multiplying one-fourth of the funds appropriated for this  | 
| 997 | purpose by the Legislature times such hospital's allocation  | 
| 998 | fraction. The allocation fraction for each such hospital shall  | 
| 999 | be determined by the sum of three primary factors, divided by  | 
| 1000 | three. The primary factors are: | 
| 1001 |      (a)  The number of nationally accredited graduate medical  | 
| 1002 | education programs offered by the hospital, including programs  | 
| 1003 | accredited by the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical  | 
| 1004 | Education and the combined Internal Medicine and Pediatrics  | 
| 1005 | programs acceptable to both the American Board of Internal  | 
| 1006 | Medicine and the American Board of Pediatrics at the beginning  | 
| 1007 | of the state fiscal year preceding the date on which the  | 
| 1008 | allocation fraction is calculated. The numerical value of this  | 
| 1009 | factor is the fraction that the hospital represents of the total  | 
| 1010 | number of programs, where the total is computed for all state  | 
| 1011 | statutory teaching hospitals. | 
| 1012 |      (b)  The number of full-time equivalent trainees in the  | 
| 1013 | hospital, which comprises two components: | 
| 1014 |      1.  The number of trainees enrolled in nationally  | 
| 1015 | accredited graduate medical education programs, as defined in  | 
| 1016 | paragraph (a). Full-time equivalents are computed using the  | 
| 1017 | fraction of the year during which each trainee is primarily  | 
| 1018 | assigned to the given institution, over the state fiscal year  | 
| 1019 | preceding the date on which the allocation fraction is  | 
| 1020 | calculated. The numerical value of this factor is the fraction  | 
| 1021 | that the hospital represents of the total number of full-time  | 
| 1022 | equivalent trainees enrolled in accredited graduate programs,  | 
| 1023 | where the total is computed for all state statutory teaching  | 
| 1024 | hospitals. | 
| 1025 |      2.  The number of medical students enrolled in accredited  | 
| 1026 | colleges of medicine and engaged in clinical activities,  | 
| 1027 | including required clinical clerkships and clinical electives.  | 
| 1028 | Full-time equivalents are computed using the fraction of the  | 
| 1029 | year during which each trainee is primarily assigned to the  | 
| 1030 | given institution, over the course of the state fiscal year  | 
| 1031 | preceding the date on which the allocation fraction is  | 
| 1032 | calculated. The numerical value of this factor is the fraction  | 
| 1033 | that the given hospital represents of the total number of full- | 
| 1034 | time equivalent students enrolled in accredited colleges of  | 
| 1035 | medicine, where the total is computed for all state statutory  | 
| 1036 | teaching hospitals. | 
| 1037 | 
  | 
| 1038 | The primary factor for full-time equivalent trainees is computed  | 
| 1039 | as the sum of these two components, divided by two. | 
| 1040 |      (c)  A service index that comprises three components: | 
| 1041 |      1.  The Agency for Health Care Administration Service  | 
| 1042 | Index, computed by applying the standard Service Inventory  | 
| 1043 | Scores established by the Agency for Health Care Administration  | 
| 1044 | to services offered by the given hospital, as reported on  | 
| 1045 | Worksheet A-2 for the last fiscal year reported to the agency  | 
| 1046 | before the date on which the allocation fraction is calculated.  | 
| 1047 | The numerical value of this factor is the fraction that the  | 
| 1048 | given hospital represents of the total Agency for Health Care  | 
| 1049 | Administration Service Index values, where the total is computed  | 
| 1050 | for all state statutory teaching hospitals. | 
| 1051 |      2.  A volume-weighted service index, computed by applying  | 
| 1052 | the standard Service Inventory Scores established by the Agency  | 
| 1053 | for Health Care Administration to the volume of each service,  | 
| 1054 | expressed in terms of the standard units of measure reported on  | 
| 1055 | Worksheet A-2 for the last fiscal year reported to the agency  | 
| 1056 | before the date on which the allocation factor is calculated.  | 
| 1057 | The numerical value of this factor is the fraction that the  | 
| 1058 | given hospital represents of the total volume-weighted service  | 
| 1059 | index values, where the total is computed for all state  | 
| 1060 | statutory teaching hospitals. | 
| 1061 |      3.  Total Medicaid payments to each hospital for direct  | 
| 1062 | inpatient and outpatient services during the fiscal year  | 
| 1063 | preceding the date on which the allocation factor is calculated.  | 
| 1064 | This includes payments made to each hospital for such services  | 
| 1065 | by Medicaid prepaid health plans, whether the plan was  | 
| 1066 | administered by the hospital or not. The numerical value of this  | 
| 1067 | factor is the fraction that each hospital represents of the  | 
| 1068 | total of such Medicaid payments, where the total is computed for  | 
| 1069 | all state statutory teaching hospitals. | 
| 1070 | 
  | 
| 1071 | The primary factor for the service index is computed as the sum  | 
| 1072 | of these three components, divided by three. | 
| 1073 |      (2)  By October 1 of each year, the agency shall use the  | 
| 1074 | following formula to calculate the maximum additional  | 
| 1075 | disproportionate share payment for statutorily defined teaching  | 
| 1076 | hospitals: | 
| 1077 | 
  | 
| 1078 | TAP = THAF x A | 
| 1079 | 
  | 
| 1080 | Where: | 
| 1081 |      TAP = total additional payment. | 
| 1082 |      THAF = teaching hospital allocation factor. | 
| 1083 |      A = amount appropriated for a teaching hospital  | 
| 1084 | disproportionate share program.  | 
| 1085 |      Section 16.  Section 409.9117, Florida Statutes, is amended  | 
| 1086 | to read: | 
| 1087 |      409.9117  Primary care disproportionate share program.--  | 
| 1088 | For the state fiscal year 2004-2005, the agency shall not  | 
| 1089 | distribute moneys under the primary care disproportionate share  | 
| 1090 | program, except as noted in subsection (2). In the event the  | 
| 1091 | Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services do not approve  | 
| 1092 | Florida's inpatient hospital state plan amendment for the public  | 
| 1093 | disproportionate share program by January 1, 2005, the agency  | 
| 1094 | may make payments to hospitals under the primary care  | 
| 1095 | disproportionate share program. | 
| 1096 |      (1)  If federal funds are available for disproportionate  | 
| 1097 | share programs in addition to those otherwise provided by law,  | 
| 1098 | there shall be created a primary care disproportionate share  | 
| 1099 | program. | 
| 1100 |      (2)  The following formula shall be used by the agency to  | 
| 1101 | calculate the total amount earned for hospitals that participate  | 
| 1102 | in the primary care disproportionate share program: | 
| 1103 | 
  | 
| 1104 | TAE = HDSP/THDSP | 
| 1105 | 
  | 
| 1106 | Where: | 
| 1107 |      TAE = total amount earned by a hospital participating in  | 
| 1108 | the primary care disproportionate share program. | 
| 1109 |      HDSP = the prior state fiscal year primary care  | 
| 1110 | disproportionate share payment to the individual hospital. | 
| 1111 |      THDSP = the prior state fiscal year total primary care  | 
| 1112 | disproportionate share payments to all hospitals. | 
| 1113 | 
  | 
| 1114 |      (3)  The total additional payment for hospitals that  | 
| 1115 | participate in the primary care disproportionate share program  | 
| 1116 | shall be calculated by the agency as follows: | 
| 1117 | 
  | 
| 1118 | TAP = TAE x TA | 
| 1119 | 
  | 
| 1120 | Where: | 
| 1121 |      TAP = total additional payment for a primary care hospital. | 
| 1122 |      TAE = total amount earned by a primary care hospital. | 
| 1123 |      TA = total appropriation for the primary care  | 
| 1124 | disproportionate share program. | 
| 1125 | 
  | 
| 1126 |      (4)  In the establishment and funding of this program, the  | 
| 1127 | agency shall use the following criteria in addition to those  | 
| 1128 | specified in s. 409.911, payments may not be made to a hospital  | 
| 1129 | unless the hospital agrees to: | 
| 1130 |      (a)  Cooperate with a Medicaid prepaid health plan, if one  | 
| 1131 | exists in the community. | 
| 1132 |      (b)  Ensure the availability of primary and specialty care  | 
| 1133 | physicians to Medicaid recipients who are not enrolled in a  | 
| 1134 | prepaid capitated arrangement and who are in need of access to  | 
| 1135 | such physicians. | 
| 1136 |      (c)  Coordinate and provide primary care services free of  | 
| 1137 | charge, except copayments, to all persons with incomes up to 100  | 
| 1138 | percent of the federal poverty level who are not otherwise  | 
| 1139 | covered by Medicaid or another program administered by a  | 
| 1140 | governmental entity, and to provide such services based on a  | 
| 1141 | sliding fee scale to all persons with incomes up to 200 percent  | 
| 1142 | of the federal poverty level who are not otherwise covered by  | 
| 1143 | Medicaid or another program administered by a governmental  | 
| 1144 | entity, except that eligibility may be limited to persons who  | 
| 1145 | reside within a more limited area, as agreed to by the agency  | 
| 1146 | and the hospital. | 
| 1147 |      (d)  Contract with any federally qualified health center,  | 
| 1148 | if one exists within the agreed geopolitical boundaries,  | 
| 1149 | concerning the provision of primary care services, in order to  | 
| 1150 | guarantee delivery of services in a nonduplicative fashion, and  | 
| 1151 | to provide for referral arrangements, privileges, and  | 
| 1152 | admissions, as appropriate. The hospital shall agree to provide  | 
| 1153 | at an onsite or offsite facility primary care services within 24  | 
| 1154 | hours to which all Medicaid recipients and persons eligible  | 
| 1155 | under this paragraph who do not require emergency room services  | 
| 1156 | are referred during normal daylight hours. | 
| 1157 |      (e)  Cooperate with the agency, the county, and other  | 
| 1158 | entities to ensure the provision of certain public health  | 
| 1159 | services, case management, referral and acceptance of patients,  | 
| 1160 | and sharing of epidemiological data, as the agency and the  | 
| 1161 | hospital find mutually necessary and desirable to promote and  | 
| 1162 | protect the public health within the agreed geopolitical  | 
| 1163 | boundaries. | 
| 1164 |      (f)  In cooperation with the county in which the hospital  | 
| 1165 | resides, develop a low-cost, outpatient, prepaid health care  | 
| 1166 | program to persons who are not eligible for the Medicaid  | 
| 1167 | program, and who reside within the area. | 
| 1168 |      (g)  Provide inpatient services to residents within the  | 
| 1169 | area who are not eligible for Medicaid or Medicare, and who do  | 
| 1170 | not have private health insurance, regardless of ability to pay,  | 
| 1171 | on the basis of available space, except that nothing shall  | 
| 1172 | prevent the hospital from establishing bill collection programs  | 
| 1173 | based on ability to pay. | 
| 1174 |      (h)  Work with the Florida Healthy Kids Corporation, the  | 
| 1175 | Florida Health Care Purchasing Cooperative, and business health  | 
| 1176 | coalitions, as appropriate, to develop a feasibility study and  | 
| 1177 | plan to provide a low-cost comprehensive health insurance plan  | 
| 1178 | to persons who reside within the area and who do not have access  | 
| 1179 | to such a plan. | 
| 1180 |      (i)  Work with public health officials and other experts to  | 
| 1181 | provide community health education and prevention activities  | 
| 1182 | designed to promote healthy lifestyles and appropriate use of  | 
| 1183 | health services. | 
| 1184 |      (j)  Work with the local health council to develop a plan  | 
| 1185 | for promoting access to affordable health care services for all  | 
| 1186 | persons who reside within the area, including, but not limited  | 
| 1187 | to, public health services, primary care services, inpatient  | 
| 1188 | services, and affordable health insurance generally. | 
| 1189 | 
  | 
| 1190 | Any hospital that fails to comply with any of the provisions of  | 
| 1191 | this subsection, or any other contractual condition, may not  | 
| 1192 | receive payments under this section until full compliance is  | 
| 1193 | achieved. | 
| 1194 |      Section 17.  Section 409.912, Florida Statutes, is amended  | 
| 1195 | to read: | 
| 1196 |      409.912  Cost-effective purchasing of health care.--The  | 
| 1197 | agency shall purchase goods and services for Medicaid recipients  | 
| 1198 | in the most cost-effective manner consistent with the delivery  | 
| 1199 | of quality medical care. The agency shall maximize the use of  | 
| 1200 | prepaid per capita and prepaid aggregate fixed-sum basis  | 
| 1201 | services when appropriate and other alternative service delivery  | 
| 1202 | and reimbursement methodologies, including competitive bidding  | 
| 1203 | pursuant to s. 287.057, designed to facilitate the cost- | 
| 1204 | effective purchase of a case-managed continuum of care. The  | 
| 1205 | agency shall also require providers to minimize the exposure of  | 
| 1206 | recipients to the need for acute inpatient, custodial, and other  | 
| 1207 | institutional care and the inappropriate or unnecessary use of  | 
| 1208 | high-cost services. The agency may establish prior authorization  | 
| 1209 | requirements for certain populations of Medicaid beneficiaries,  | 
| 1210 | certain drug classes, or particular drugs to prevent fraud,  | 
| 1211 | abuse, overuse, and possible dangerous drug interactions. The  | 
| 1212 | Pharmaceutical and Therapeutics Committee shall make  | 
| 1213 | recommendations to the agency on drugs for which prior  | 
| 1214 | authorization is required. The agency shall inform the  | 
| 1215 | Pharmaceutical and Therapeutics Committee of its decisions  | 
| 1216 | regarding drugs subject to prior authorization. The agency is  | 
| 1217 | authorized to limit the entities it contracts with or enrolls as  | 
| 1218 | Medicaid providers by developing a provider network through  | 
| 1219 | provider credentialing. The agency may limit its network based  | 
| 1220 | on the assessment of beneficiary access to care, provider  | 
| 1221 | availability, provider quality standards, time and distance  | 
| 1222 | standards for access to care, the cultural competence of the  | 
| 1223 | provider network, demographic characteristics of Medicaid  | 
| 1224 | beneficiaries, practice and provider-to-beneficiary standards,  | 
| 1225 | appointment wait times, beneficiary use of services, provider  | 
| 1226 | turnover, provider profiling, provider licensure history,  | 
| 1227 | previous program integrity investigations and findings, peer  | 
| 1228 | review, provider Medicaid policy and billing compliance record,  | 
| 1229 | clinical and medical record audits, and other factors. Providers  | 
| 1230 | shall not be entitled to enrollment in the Medicaid provider  | 
| 1231 | network. The agency is authorized to seek federal waivers  | 
| 1232 | necessary to implement this policy. | 
| 1233 |      (1)  The agency shall work with the Department of Children  | 
| 1234 | and Family Services to ensure access of children and families in  | 
| 1235 | the child protection system to needed and appropriate mental  | 
| 1236 | health and substance abuse services. | 
| 1237 |      (2)  The agency may enter into agreements with appropriate  | 
| 1238 | agents of other state agencies or of any agency of the Federal  | 
| 1239 | Government and accept such duties in respect to social welfare  | 
| 1240 | or public aid as may be necessary to implement the provisions of  | 
| 1241 | Title XIX of the Social Security Act and ss. 409.901-409.920. | 
| 1242 |      (3)  The agency may contract with health maintenance  | 
| 1243 | organizations certified pursuant to part I of chapter 641 for  | 
| 1244 | the provision of services to recipients. | 
| 1245 |      (4)  The agency may contract with: | 
| 1246 |      (a)  An entity that provides no prepaid health care  | 
| 1247 | services other than Medicaid services under contract with the  | 
| 1248 | agency and which is owned and operated by a county, county  | 
| 1249 | health department, or county-owned and operated hospital to  | 
| 1250 | provide health care services on a prepaid or fixed-sum basis to  | 
| 1251 | recipients, which entity may provide such prepaid services  | 
| 1252 | either directly or through arrangements with other providers.  | 
| 1253 | Such prepaid health care services entities must be licensed  | 
| 1254 | under parts I and III by January 1, 1998, and until then are  | 
| 1255 | exempt from the provisions of part I of chapter 641. An entity  | 
| 1256 | recognized under this paragraph which demonstrates to the  | 
| 1257 | satisfaction of the Office of Insurance Regulation of the  | 
| 1258 | Financial Services Commission that it is backed by the full  | 
| 1259 | faith and credit of the county in which it is located may be  | 
| 1260 | exempted from s. 641.225. | 
| 1261 |      (b)  An entity that is providing comprehensive behavioral  | 
| 1262 | health care services to certain Medicaid recipients through a  | 
| 1263 | capitated, prepaid arrangement pursuant to the federal waiver  | 
| 1264 | provided for by s. 409.905(5). Such an entity must be licensed  | 
| 1265 | under chapter 624, chapter 636, or chapter 641 and must possess  | 
| 1266 | the clinical systems and operational competence to manage risk  | 
| 1267 | and provide comprehensive behavioral health care to Medicaid  | 
| 1268 | recipients. As used in this paragraph, the term "comprehensive  | 
| 1269 | behavioral health care services" means covered mental health and  | 
| 1270 | substance abuse treatment services that are available to  | 
| 1271 | Medicaid recipients. The secretary of the Department of Children  | 
| 1272 | and Family Services shall approve provisions of procurements  | 
| 1273 | related to children in the department's care or custody prior to  | 
| 1274 | enrolling such children in a prepaid behavioral health plan. Any  | 
| 1275 | contract awarded under this paragraph must be competitively  | 
| 1276 | procured. In developing the behavioral health care prepaid plan  | 
| 1277 | procurement document, the agency shall ensure that the  | 
| 1278 | procurement document requires the contractor to develop and  | 
| 1279 | implement a plan to ensure compliance with s. 394.4574 related  | 
| 1280 | to services provided to residents of licensed assisted living  | 
| 1281 | facilities that hold a limited mental health license. Except as  | 
| 1282 | provided in subparagraph 8., the agency shall seek federal  | 
| 1283 | approval to contract with a single entity meeting these  | 
| 1284 | requirements to provide comprehensive behavioral health care  | 
| 1285 | services to all Medicaid recipients not enrolled in a managed  | 
| 1286 | care plan in an AHCA area. Each entity must offer sufficient  | 
| 1287 | choice of providers in its network to ensure recipient access to  | 
| 1288 | care and the opportunity to select a provider with whom they are  | 
| 1289 | satisfied. The network shall include all public mental health  | 
| 1290 | hospitals. To ensure unimpaired access to behavioral health care  | 
| 1291 | services by Medicaid recipients, all contracts issued pursuant  | 
| 1292 | to this paragraph shall require 80 percent of the capitation  | 
| 1293 | paid to the managed care plan, including health maintenance  | 
| 1294 | organizations, to be expended for the provision of behavioral  | 
| 1295 | health care services. In the event the managed care plan expends  | 
| 1296 | less than 80 percent of the capitation paid pursuant to this  | 
| 1297 | paragraph for the provision of behavioral health care services,  | 
| 1298 | the difference shall be returned to the agency. The agency shall  | 
| 1299 | provide the managed care plan with a certification letter  | 
| 1300 | indicating the amount of capitation paid during each calendar  | 
| 1301 | year for the provision of behavioral health care services  | 
| 1302 | pursuant to this section. The agency may reimburse for substance  | 
| 1303 | abuse treatment services on a fee-for-service basis until the  | 
| 1304 | agency finds that adequate funds are available for capitated,  | 
| 1305 | prepaid arrangements. | 
| 1306 |      1.  By January 1, 2001, the agency shall modify the  | 
| 1307 | contracts with the entities providing comprehensive inpatient  | 
| 1308 | and outpatient mental health care services to Medicaid  | 
| 1309 | recipients in Hillsborough, Highlands, Hardee, Manatee, and Polk  | 
| 1310 | Counties, to include substance abuse treatment services. | 
| 1311 |      2.  By July 1, 2003, the agency and the Department of  | 
| 1312 | Children and Family Services shall execute a written agreement  | 
| 1313 | that requires collaboration and joint development of all policy,  | 
| 1314 | budgets, procurement documents, contracts, and monitoring plans  | 
| 1315 | that have an impact on the state and Medicaid community mental  | 
| 1316 | health and targeted case management programs. | 
| 1317 |      3.  Except as provided in subparagraph 8., by July 1, 2006,  | 
| 1318 | the agency and the Department of Children and Family Services  | 
| 1319 | shall contract with managed care entities in each AHCA area  | 
| 1320 | except area 6 or arrange to provide comprehensive inpatient and  | 
| 1321 | outpatient mental health and substance abuse services through  | 
| 1322 | capitated prepaid arrangements to all Medicaid recipients who  | 
| 1323 | are eligible to participate in such plans under federal law and  | 
| 1324 | regulation. In AHCA areas where eligible individuals number less  | 
| 1325 | than 150,000, the agency shall contract with a single managed  | 
| 1326 | care plan to provide comprehensive behavioral health services to  | 
| 1327 | all recipients who are not enrolled in a Medicaid health  | 
| 1328 | maintenance organization. The agency may contract with more than  | 
| 1329 | one comprehensive behavioral health provider to provide care to  | 
| 1330 | recipients who are not enrolled in a Medicaid health maintenance  | 
| 1331 | organization plan in AHCA areas where the eligible population  | 
| 1332 | exceeds 150,000. Contracts for comprehensive behavioral health  | 
| 1333 | providers awarded pursuant to this section shall be  | 
| 1334 | competitively procured. Both for-profit and not-for-profit  | 
| 1335 | corporations shall be eligible to compete. Managed care plans  | 
| 1336 | contracting with the agency under subsection (3) shall provide  | 
| 1337 | and receive payment for the same comprehensive behavioral health  | 
| 1338 | benefits as provided in AHCA rules, including handbooks  | 
| 1339 | incorporated by reference. | 
| 1340 |      4.  By October 1, 2003, the agency and the department shall  | 
| 1341 | submit a plan to the Governor, the President of the Senate, and  | 
| 1342 | the Speaker of the House of Representatives which provides for  | 
| 1343 | the full implementation of capitated prepaid behavioral health  | 
| 1344 | care in all areas of the state. The plan shall include  | 
| 1345 | provisions which ensure that children and families receiving  | 
| 1346 | foster care and other related services are appropriately served  | 
| 1347 | and that these services assist the community-based care lead  | 
| 1348 | agencies in meeting the goals and outcomes of the child welfare  | 
| 1349 | system. The plan will be developed with the participation of  | 
| 1350 | community-based lead agencies, community alliances, sheriffs,  | 
| 1351 | and community providers serving dependent children. | 
| 1352 |      a.  Implementation shall begin in 2003 in those AHCA areas  | 
| 1353 | of the state where the agency is able to establish sufficient  | 
| 1354 | capitation rates. | 
| 1355 |      b.  If the agency determines that the proposed capitation  | 
| 1356 | rate in any area is insufficient to provide appropriate  | 
| 1357 | services, the agency may adjust the capitation rate to ensure  | 
| 1358 | that care will be available. The agency and the department may  | 
| 1359 | use existing general revenue to address any additional required  | 
| 1360 | match but may not over-obligate existing funds on an annualized  | 
| 1361 | basis. | 
| 1362 |      c.  Subject to any limitations provided for in the General  | 
| 1363 | Appropriations Act, the agency, in compliance with appropriate  | 
| 1364 | federal authorization, shall develop policies and procedures  | 
| 1365 | that allow for certification of local and state funds. | 
| 1366 |      5.  Children residing in a statewide inpatient psychiatric  | 
| 1367 | program, or in a Department of Juvenile Justice or a Department  | 
| 1368 | of Children and Family Services residential program approved as  | 
| 1369 | a Medicaid behavioral health overlay services provider shall not  | 
| 1370 | be included in a behavioral health care prepaid health plan or  | 
| 1371 | any other Medicaid managed care plan pursuant to this paragraph. | 
| 1372 |      6.  In converting to a prepaid system of delivery, the  | 
| 1373 | agency shall in its procurement document require an entity  | 
| 1374 | providing only comprehensive behavioral health care services to  | 
| 1375 | prevent the displacement of indigent care patients by enrollees  | 
| 1376 | in the Medicaid prepaid health plan providing behavioral health  | 
| 1377 | care services from facilities receiving state funding to provide  | 
| 1378 | indigent behavioral health care, to facilities licensed under  | 
| 1379 | chapter 395 which do not receive state funding for indigent  | 
| 1380 | behavioral health care, or reimburse the unsubsidized facility  | 
| 1381 | for the cost of behavioral health care provided to the displaced  | 
| 1382 | indigent care patient. | 
| 1383 |      7.  Traditional community mental health providers under  | 
| 1384 | contract with the Department of Children and Family Services  | 
| 1385 | pursuant to part IV of chapter 394, child welfare providers  | 
| 1386 | under contract with the Department of Children and Family  | 
| 1387 | Services in areas 1 and 6, and inpatient mental health providers  | 
| 1388 | licensed pursuant to chapter 395 must be offered an opportunity  | 
| 1389 | to accept or decline a contract to participate in any provider  | 
| 1390 | network for prepaid behavioral health services. | 
| 1391 |      8.  For fiscal year 2004-2005, all Medicaid eligible  | 
| 1392 | children, except children in areas 1 and 6, whose cases are open  | 
| 1393 | for child welfare services in the HomeSafeNet system, shall be  | 
| 1394 | enrolled in MediPass or in Medicaid fee-for-service and all  | 
| 1395 | their behavioral health care services including inpatient,  | 
| 1396 | outpatient psychiatric, community mental health, and case  | 
| 1397 | management shall be reimbursed on a fee-for-service basis.  | 
| 1398 | Beginning July 1, 2005, such children, who are open for child  | 
| 1399 | welfare services in the HomeSafeNet system, shall receive their  | 
| 1400 | behavioral health care services through a specialty prepaid plan  | 
| 1401 | operated by community-based lead agencies either through a  | 
| 1402 | single agency or formal agreements among several agencies. The  | 
| 1403 | specialty prepaid plan must result in savings to the state  | 
| 1404 | comparable to savings achieved in other Medicaid managed care  | 
| 1405 | and prepaid programs. Such plan must provide mechanisms to  | 
| 1406 | maximize state and local revenues. The specialty prepaid plan  | 
| 1407 | shall be developed by the agency and The Department of Children  | 
| 1408 | and Family Services. The agency is authorized to seek any  | 
| 1409 | federal waivers to implement this initiative. | 
| 1410 |      (c)  A federally qualified health center or an entity owned  | 
| 1411 | by one or more federally qualified health centers or an entity  | 
| 1412 | owned by other migrant and community health centers receiving  | 
| 1413 | non-Medicaid financial support from the Federal Government to  | 
| 1414 | provide health care services on a prepaid or fixed-sum basis to  | 
| 1415 | recipients. Such prepaid health care services entity must be  | 
| 1416 | licensed under parts I and III of chapter 641, but shall be  | 
| 1417 | prohibited from serving Medicaid recipients on a prepaid basis,  | 
| 1418 | until such licensure has been obtained. However, such an entity  | 
| 1419 | is exempt from s. 641.225 if the entity meets the requirements  | 
| 1420 | specified in subsections (17) (15) and (18) (16). | 
| 1421 |      (d)  A provider service network may be reimbursed on a fee- | 
| 1422 | for-service or prepaid basis. A provider service network which  | 
| 1423 | is reimbursed by the agency on a prepaid basis shall be exempt  | 
| 1424 | from parts I and III of chapter 641, but must meet appropriate  | 
| 1425 | financial reserve, quality assurance, and patient rights  | 
| 1426 | requirements as established by the agency. The agency shall  | 
| 1427 | award contracts on a competitive bid basis and shall select  | 
| 1428 | bidders based upon price and quality of care. Medicaid  | 
| 1429 | recipients assigned to a demonstration project shall be chosen  | 
| 1430 | equally from those who would otherwise have been assigned to  | 
| 1431 | prepaid plans and MediPass. The agency is authorized to seek  | 
| 1432 | federal Medicaid waivers as necessary to implement the  | 
| 1433 | provisions of this section. | 
| 1434 |      (e)  An entity that provides only comprehensive behavioral  | 
| 1435 | health care services to certain Medicaid recipients through an  | 
| 1436 | administrative services organization agreement. Such an entity  | 
| 1437 | must possess the clinical systems and operational competence to  | 
| 1438 | provide comprehensive health care to Medicaid recipients. As  | 
| 1439 | used in this paragraph, the term "comprehensive behavioral  | 
| 1440 | health care services" means covered mental health and substance  | 
| 1441 | abuse treatment services that are available to Medicaid  | 
| 1442 | recipients. Any contract awarded under this paragraph must be  | 
| 1443 | competitively procured. The agency must ensure that Medicaid  | 
| 1444 | recipients have available the choice of at least two managed  | 
| 1445 | care plans for their behavioral health care services. | 
| 1446 |      (f)  An entity that provides in-home physician services to  | 
| 1447 | test the cost-effectiveness of enhanced home-based medical care  | 
| 1448 | to Medicaid recipients with degenerative neurological diseases  | 
| 1449 | and other diseases or disabling conditions associated with high  | 
| 1450 | costs to Medicaid. The program shall be designed to serve very  | 
| 1451 | disabled persons and to reduce Medicaid reimbursed costs for  | 
| 1452 | inpatient, outpatient, and emergency department services. The  | 
| 1453 | agency shall contract with vendors on a risk-sharing basis. | 
| 1454 |      (g)  Children's provider networks that provide care  | 
| 1455 | coordination and care management for Medicaid-eligible pediatric  | 
| 1456 | patients, primary care, authorization of specialty care, and  | 
| 1457 | other urgent and emergency care through organized providers  | 
| 1458 | designed to service Medicaid eligibles under age 18 and  | 
| 1459 | pediatric emergency departments' diversion programs. The  | 
| 1460 | networks shall provide after-hour operations, including evening  | 
| 1461 | and weekend hours, to promote, when appropriate, the use of the  | 
| 1462 | children's networks rather than hospital emergency departments. | 
| 1463 |      (h)  An entity authorized in s. 430.205 to contract with  | 
| 1464 | the agency and the Department of Elderly Affairs to provide  | 
| 1465 | health care and social services on a prepaid or fixed-sum basis  | 
| 1466 | to elderly recipients. Such prepaid health care services  | 
| 1467 | entities are exempt from the provisions of part I of chapter 641  | 
| 1468 | for the first 3 years of operation. An entity recognized under  | 
| 1469 | this paragraph that demonstrates to the satisfaction of the  | 
| 1470 | Office of Insurance Regulation that it is backed by the full  | 
| 1471 | faith and credit of one or more counties in which it operates  | 
| 1472 | may be exempted from s. 641.225. | 
| 1473 |      (i)  A Children's Medical Services network, as defined in  | 
| 1474 | s. 391.021. | 
| 1475 |      (5)  By October 1, 2003, the agency and the department  | 
| 1476 | shall, to the extent feasible, develop a plan for implementing  | 
| 1477 | new Medicaid procedure codes for emergency and crisis care,  | 
| 1478 | supportive residential services, and other services designed to  | 
| 1479 | maximize the use of Medicaid funds for Medicaid-eligible  | 
| 1480 | recipients. The agency shall include in the agreement developed  | 
| 1481 | pursuant to subsection (4) a provision that ensures that the  | 
| 1482 | match requirements for these new procedure codes are met by  | 
| 1483 | certifying eligible general revenue or local funds that are  | 
| 1484 | currently expended on these services by the department with  | 
| 1485 | contracted alcohol, drug abuse, and mental health providers. The  | 
| 1486 | plan must describe specific procedure codes to be implemented, a  | 
| 1487 | projection of the number of procedures to be delivered during  | 
| 1488 | fiscal year 2003-2004, and a financial analysis that describes  | 
| 1489 | the certified match procedures, and accountability mechanisms,  | 
| 1490 | projects the earnings associated with these procedures, and  | 
| 1491 | describes the sources of state match. This plan may not be  | 
| 1492 | implemented in any part until approved by the Legislative Budget  | 
| 1493 | Commission. If such approval has not occurred by December 31,  | 
| 1494 | 2003, the plan shall be submitted for consideration by the 2004  | 
| 1495 | Legislature. | 
| 1496 |      (6)  The agency may contract with any public or private  | 
| 1497 | entity otherwise authorized by this section on a prepaid or  | 
| 1498 | fixed-sum basis for the provision of health care services to  | 
| 1499 | recipients. An entity may provide prepaid services to  | 
| 1500 | recipients, either directly or through arrangements with other  | 
| 1501 | entities, if each entity involved in providing services: | 
| 1502 |      (a)  Is organized primarily for the purpose of providing  | 
| 1503 | health care or other services of the type regularly offered to  | 
| 1504 | Medicaid recipients; | 
| 1505 |      (b)  Ensures that services meet the standards set by the  | 
| 1506 | agency for quality, appropriateness, and timeliness; | 
| 1507 |      (c)  Makes provisions satisfactory to the agency for  | 
| 1508 | insolvency protection and ensures that neither enrolled Medicaid  | 
| 1509 | recipients nor the agency will be liable for the debts of the  | 
| 1510 | entity; | 
| 1511 |      (d)  Submits to the agency, if a private entity, a  | 
| 1512 | financial plan that the agency finds to be fiscally sound and  | 
| 1513 | that provides for working capital in the form of cash or  | 
| 1514 | equivalent liquid assets excluding revenues from Medicaid  | 
| 1515 | premium payments equal to at least the first 3 months of  | 
| 1516 | operating expenses or $200,000, whichever is greater; | 
| 1517 |      (e)  Furnishes evidence satisfactory to the agency of  | 
| 1518 | adequate liability insurance coverage or an adequate plan of  | 
| 1519 | self-insurance to respond to claims for injuries arising out of  | 
| 1520 | the furnishing of health care; | 
| 1521 |      (f)  Provides, through contract or otherwise, for periodic  | 
| 1522 | review of its medical facilities and services, as required by  | 
| 1523 | the agency; and | 
| 1524 |      (g)  Provides organizational, operational, financial, and  | 
| 1525 | other information required by the agency. | 
| 1526 |      (7)  The agency may contract on a prepaid or fixed-sum  | 
| 1527 | basis with any health insurer that: | 
| 1528 |      (a)  Pays for health care services provided to enrolled  | 
| 1529 | Medicaid recipients in exchange for a premium payment paid by  | 
| 1530 | the agency; | 
| 1531 |      (b)  Assumes the underwriting risk; and | 
| 1532 |      (c)  Is organized and licensed under applicable provisions  | 
| 1533 | of the Florida Insurance Code and is currently in good standing  | 
| 1534 | with the Office of Insurance Regulation. | 
| 1535 |      (8)  The agency may contract on a prepaid or fixed-sum  | 
| 1536 | basis with an exclusive provider organization to provide health  | 
| 1537 | care services to Medicaid recipients provided that the exclusive  | 
| 1538 | provider organization meets applicable managed care plan  | 
| 1539 | requirements in this section, ss. 409.9122, 409.9123, 409.9128,  | 
| 1540 | and 627.6472, and other applicable provisions of law. | 
| 1541 |      (9)  The Agency for Health Care Administration may provide  | 
| 1542 | cost-effective purchasing of chiropractic services on a fee-for- | 
| 1543 | service basis to Medicaid recipients through arrangements with a  | 
| 1544 | statewide chiropractic preferred provider organization  | 
| 1545 | incorporated in this state as a not-for-profit corporation. The  | 
| 1546 | agency shall ensure that the benefit limits and prior  | 
| 1547 | authorization requirements in the current Medicaid program shall  | 
| 1548 | apply to the services provided by the chiropractic preferred  | 
| 1549 | provider organization. | 
| 1550 |      (10)  The agency shall not contract on a prepaid or fixed- | 
| 1551 | sum basis for Medicaid services with an entity which knows or  | 
| 1552 | reasonably should know that any officer, director, agent,  | 
| 1553 | managing employee, or owner of stock or beneficial interest in  | 
| 1554 | excess of 5 percent common or preferred stock, or the entity  | 
| 1555 | itself, has been found guilty of, regardless of adjudication, or  | 
| 1556 | entered a plea of nolo contendere, or guilty, to: | 
| 1557 |      (a)  Fraud; | 
| 1558 |      (b)  Violation of federal or state antitrust statutes,  | 
| 1559 | including those proscribing price fixing between competitors and  | 
| 1560 | the allocation of customers among competitors; | 
| 1561 |      (c)  Commission of a felony involving embezzlement, theft,  | 
| 1562 | forgery, income tax evasion, bribery, falsification or  | 
| 1563 | destruction of records, making false statements, receiving  | 
| 1564 | stolen property, making false claims, or obstruction of justice;  | 
| 1565 | or | 
| 1566 |      (d)  Any crime in any jurisdiction which directly relates  | 
| 1567 | to the provision of health services on a prepaid or fixed-sum  | 
| 1568 | basis. | 
| 1569 |      (11)  The agency, after notifying the Legislature, may  | 
| 1570 | apply for waivers of applicable federal laws and regulations as  | 
| 1571 | necessary to implement more appropriate systems of health care  | 
| 1572 | for Medicaid recipients and reduce the cost of the Medicaid  | 
| 1573 | program to the state and federal governments and shall implement  | 
| 1574 | such programs, after legislative approval, within a reasonable  | 
| 1575 | period of time after federal approval. These programs must be  | 
| 1576 | designed primarily to reduce the need for inpatient care,  | 
| 1577 | custodial care and other long-term or institutional care, and  | 
| 1578 | other high-cost services. | 
| 1579 |      (a)  Prior to seeking legislative approval of such a waiver  | 
| 1580 | as authorized by this subsection, the agency shall provide  | 
| 1581 | notice and an opportunity for public comment. Notice shall be  | 
| 1582 | provided to all persons who have made requests of the agency for  | 
| 1583 | advance notice and shall be published in the Florida  | 
| 1584 | Administrative Weekly not less than 28 days prior to the  | 
| 1585 | intended action. | 
| 1586 |      (b)  Notwithstanding s. 216.292, funds that are  | 
| 1587 | appropriated to the Department of Elderly Affairs for the  | 
| 1588 | Assisted Living for the Elderly Medicaid waiver and are not  | 
| 1589 | expended shall be transferred to the agency to fund Medicaid- | 
| 1590 | reimbursed nursing home care. | 
| 1591 |      (12)  The agency shall establish a postpayment utilization  | 
| 1592 | control program designed to identify recipients who may  | 
| 1593 | inappropriately overuse or underuse Medicaid services and shall  | 
| 1594 | provide methods to correct such misuse. | 
| 1595 |      (13)  The agency shall develop and provide coordinated  | 
| 1596 | systems of care for Medicaid recipients and may contract with  | 
| 1597 | public or private entities to develop and administer such  | 
| 1598 | systems of care among public and private health care providers  | 
| 1599 | in a given geographic area. | 
| 1600 |      (14)  The agency shall operate or contract for the  | 
| 1601 | operation of utilization management and incentive systems  | 
| 1602 | designed to encourage cost-effective use services. | 
| 1603 |      (15)(a)  The agency shall operate the Comprehensive  | 
| 1604 | Assessment and Review (CARES) nursing facility preadmission  | 
| 1605 | screening program to ensure that Medicaid payment for nursing  | 
| 1606 | facility care is made only for individuals whose conditions  | 
| 1607 | require such care and to ensure that long-term care services are  | 
| 1608 | provided in the setting most appropriate to the needs of the  | 
| 1609 | person and in the most economical manner possible. The CARES  | 
| 1610 | program shall also ensure that individuals participating in  | 
| 1611 | Medicaid home and community-based waiver programs meet criteria  | 
| 1612 | for those programs, consistent with approved federal waivers. | 
| 1613 |      (b)  The agency shall operate the CARES program through an  | 
| 1614 | interagency agreement with the Department of Elderly Affairs. | 
| 1615 |      (c)  Prior to making payment for nursing facility services  | 
| 1616 | for a Medicaid recipient, the agency must verify that the  | 
| 1617 | nursing facility preadmission screening program has determined  | 
| 1618 | that the individual requires nursing facility care and that the  | 
| 1619 | individual cannot be safely served in community-based programs.  | 
| 1620 | The nursing facility preadmission screening program shall refer  | 
| 1621 | a Medicaid recipient to a community-based program if the  | 
| 1622 | individual could be safely served at a lower cost and the  | 
| 1623 | recipient chooses to participate in such program. | 
| 1624 |      (d)  By January 1 of each year, the agency shall submit a  | 
| 1625 | report to the Legislature and the Office of Long-Term-Care  | 
| 1626 | Policy describing the operations of the CARES program. The  | 
| 1627 | report must describe: | 
| 1628 |      1.  Rate of diversion to community alternative programs; | 
| 1629 |      2.  CARES program staffing needs to achieve additional  | 
| 1630 | diversions; | 
| 1631 |      3.  Reasons the program is unable to place individuals in  | 
| 1632 | less restrictive settings when such individuals desired such  | 
| 1633 | services and could have been served in such settings; | 
| 1634 |      4.  Barriers to appropriate placement, including barriers  | 
| 1635 | due to policies or operations of other agencies or state-funded  | 
| 1636 | programs; and | 
| 1637 |      5.  Statutory changes necessary to ensure that individuals  | 
| 1638 | in need of long-term care services receive care in the least  | 
| 1639 | restrictive environment. | 
| 1640 |      (16)(a)  The agency shall identify health care utilization  | 
| 1641 | and price patterns within the Medicaid program which are not  | 
| 1642 | cost-effective or medically appropriate and assess the  | 
| 1643 | effectiveness of new or alternate methods of providing and  | 
| 1644 | monitoring service, and may implement such methods as it  | 
| 1645 | considers appropriate. Such methods may include disease  | 
| 1646 | management initiatives, an integrated and systematic approach  | 
| 1647 | for managing the health care needs of recipients who are at risk  | 
| 1648 | of or diagnosed with a specific disease by using best practices,  | 
| 1649 | prevention strategies, clinical-practice improvement, clinical  | 
| 1650 | interventions and protocols, outcomes research, information  | 
| 1651 | technology, and other tools and resources to reduce overall  | 
| 1652 | costs and improve measurable outcomes. | 
| 1653 |      (b)  The responsibility of the agency under this subsection  | 
| 1654 | shall include the development of capabilities to identify actual  | 
| 1655 | and optimal practice patterns; patient and provider educational  | 
| 1656 | initiatives; methods for determining patient compliance with  | 
| 1657 | prescribed treatments; fraud, waste, and abuse prevention and  | 
| 1658 | detection programs; and beneficiary case management programs. | 
| 1659 |      1.  The practice pattern identification program shall  | 
| 1660 | evaluate practitioner prescribing patterns based on national and  | 
| 1661 | regional practice guidelines, comparing practitioners to their  | 
| 1662 | peer groups. The agency and its Drug Utilization Review Board  | 
| 1663 | shall consult with a panel of practicing health care  | 
| 1664 | professionals consisting of the following: the Speaker of the  | 
| 1665 | House of Representatives and the President of the Senate shall  | 
| 1666 | each appoint three physicians licensed under chapter 458 or  | 
| 1667 | chapter 459; and the Governor shall appoint two pharmacists  | 
| 1668 | licensed under chapter 465 and one dentist licensed under  | 
| 1669 | chapter 466 who is an oral surgeon. Terms of the panel members  | 
| 1670 | shall expire at the discretion of the appointing official. The  | 
| 1671 | panel shall begin its work by August 1, 1999, regardless of the  | 
| 1672 | number of appointments made by that date. The advisory panel  | 
| 1673 | shall be responsible for evaluating treatment guidelines and  | 
| 1674 | recommending ways to incorporate their use in the practice  | 
| 1675 | pattern identification program. Practitioners who are  | 
| 1676 | prescribing inappropriately or inefficiently, as determined by  | 
| 1677 | the agency, may have their prescribing of certain drugs subject  | 
| 1678 | to prior authorization. | 
| 1679 |      2.  The agency shall also develop educational interventions  | 
| 1680 | designed to promote the proper use of medications by providers  | 
| 1681 | and beneficiaries. | 
| 1682 |      3.  The agency shall implement a pharmacy fraud, waste, and  | 
| 1683 | abuse initiative that may include a surety bond or letter of  | 
| 1684 | credit requirement for participating pharmacies, enhanced  | 
| 1685 | provider auditing practices, the use of additional fraud and  | 
| 1686 | abuse software, recipient management programs for beneficiaries  | 
| 1687 | inappropriately using their benefits, and other steps that will  | 
| 1688 | eliminate provider and recipient fraud, waste, and abuse. The  | 
| 1689 | initiative shall address enforcement efforts to reduce the  | 
| 1690 | number and use of counterfeit prescriptions. | 
| 1691 |      4.  By September 30, 2002, the agency shall contract with  | 
| 1692 | an entity in the state to implement a wireless handheld clinical  | 
| 1693 | pharmacology drug information database for practitioners. The  | 
| 1694 | initiative shall be designed to enhance the agency's efforts to  | 
| 1695 | reduce fraud, abuse, and errors in the prescription drug benefit  | 
| 1696 | program and to otherwise further the intent of this paragraph. | 
| 1697 |      5.  The agency may apply for any federal waivers needed to  | 
| 1698 | implement this paragraph. | 
| 1699 |      (17)  An entity contracting on a prepaid or fixed-sum basis  | 
| 1700 | shall, in addition to meeting any applicable statutory surplus  | 
| 1701 | requirements, also maintain at all times in the form of cash,  | 
| 1702 | investments that mature in less than 180 days allowable as  | 
| 1703 | admitted assets by the Office of Insurance Regulation, and  | 
| 1704 | restricted funds or deposits controlled by the agency or the  | 
| 1705 | Office of Insurance Regulation, a surplus amount equal to one- | 
| 1706 | and-one-half times the entity's monthly Medicaid prepaid  | 
| 1707 | revenues. As used in this subsection, the term "surplus" means  | 
| 1708 | the entity's total assets minus total liabilities. If an  | 
| 1709 | entity's surplus falls below an amount equal to one-and-one-half  | 
| 1710 | times the entity's monthly Medicaid prepaid revenues, the agency  | 
| 1711 | shall prohibit the entity from engaging in marketing and  | 
| 1712 | preenrollment activities, shall cease to process new  | 
| 1713 | enrollments, and shall not renew the entity's contract until the  | 
| 1714 | required balance is achieved. The requirements of this  | 
| 1715 | subsection do not apply: | 
| 1716 |      (a)  Where a public entity agrees to fund any deficit  | 
| 1717 | incurred by the contracting entity; or | 
| 1718 |      (b)  Where the entity's performance and obligations are  | 
| 1719 | guaranteed in writing by a guaranteeing organization which: | 
| 1720 |      1.  Has been in operation for at least 5 years and has  | 
| 1721 | assets in excess of $50 million; or | 
| 1722 |      2.  Submits a written guarantee acceptable to the agency  | 
| 1723 | which is irrevocable during the term of the contracting entity's  | 
| 1724 | contract with the agency and, upon termination of the contract,  | 
| 1725 | until the agency receives proof of satisfaction of all  | 
| 1726 | outstanding obligations incurred under the contract. | 
| 1727 |      (18)(a)  The agency may require an entity contracting on a  | 
| 1728 | prepaid or fixed-sum basis to establish a restricted insolvency  | 
| 1729 | protection account with a federally guaranteed financial  | 
| 1730 | institution licensed to do business in this state. The entity  | 
| 1731 | shall deposit into that account 5 percent of the capitation  | 
| 1732 | payments made by the agency each month until a maximum total of  | 
| 1733 | 2 percent of the total current contract amount is reached. The  | 
| 1734 | restricted insolvency protection account may be drawn upon with  | 
| 1735 | the authorized signatures of two persons designated by the  | 
| 1736 | entity and two representatives of the agency. If the agency  | 
| 1737 | finds that the entity is insolvent, the agency may draw upon the  | 
| 1738 | account solely with the two authorized signatures of  | 
| 1739 | representatives of the agency, and the funds may be disbursed to  | 
| 1740 | meet financial obligations incurred by the entity under the  | 
| 1741 | prepaid contract. If the contract is terminated, expired, or not  | 
| 1742 | continued, the account balance must be released by the agency to  | 
| 1743 | the entity upon receipt of proof of satisfaction of all  | 
| 1744 | outstanding obligations incurred under this contract. | 
| 1745 |      (b)  The agency may waive the insolvency protection account  | 
| 1746 | requirement in writing when evidence is on file with the agency  | 
| 1747 | of adequate insolvency insurance and reinsurance that will  | 
| 1748 | protect enrollees if the entity becomes unable to meet its  | 
| 1749 | obligations. | 
| 1750 |      (19)  An entity that contracts with the agency on a prepaid  | 
| 1751 | or fixed-sum basis for the provision of Medicaid services shall  | 
| 1752 | reimburse any hospital or physician that is outside the entity's  | 
| 1753 | authorized geographic service area as specified in its contract  | 
| 1754 | with the agency, and that provides services authorized by the  | 
| 1755 | entity to its members, at a rate negotiated with the hospital or  | 
| 1756 | physician for the provision of services or according to the  | 
| 1757 | lesser of the following: | 
| 1758 |      (a)  The usual and customary charges made to the general  | 
| 1759 | public by the hospital or physician; or | 
| 1760 |      (b)  The Florida Medicaid reimbursement rate established  | 
| 1761 | for the hospital or physician. | 
| 1762 |      (20)  When a merger or acquisition of a Medicaid prepaid  | 
| 1763 | contractor has been approved by the Office of Insurance  | 
| 1764 | Regulation pursuant to s. 628.4615, the agency shall approve the  | 
| 1765 | assignment or transfer of the appropriate Medicaid prepaid  | 
| 1766 | contract upon request of the surviving entity of the merger or  | 
| 1767 | acquisition if the contractor and the other entity have been in  | 
| 1768 | good standing with the agency for the most recent 12-month  | 
| 1769 | period, unless the agency determines that the assignment or  | 
| 1770 | transfer would be detrimental to the Medicaid recipients or the  | 
| 1771 | Medicaid program. To be in good standing, an entity must not  | 
| 1772 | have failed accreditation or committed any material violation of  | 
| 1773 | the requirements of s. 641.52 and must meet the Medicaid  | 
| 1774 | contract requirements. For purposes of this section, a merger or  | 
| 1775 | acquisition means a change in controlling interest of an entity,  | 
| 1776 | including an asset or stock purchase. | 
| 1777 |      (21)  Any entity contracting with the agency pursuant to  | 
| 1778 | this section to provide health care services to Medicaid  | 
| 1779 | recipients is prohibited from engaging in any of the following  | 
| 1780 | practices or activities: | 
| 1781 |      (a)  Practices that are discriminatory, including, but not  | 
| 1782 | limited to, attempts to discourage participation on the basis of  | 
| 1783 | actual or perceived health status. | 
| 1784 |      (b)  Activities that could mislead or confuse recipients,  | 
| 1785 | or misrepresent the organization, its marketing representatives,  | 
| 1786 | or the agency. Violations of this paragraph include, but are not  | 
| 1787 | limited to: | 
| 1788 |      1.  False or misleading claims that marketing  | 
| 1789 | representatives are employees or representatives of the state or  | 
| 1790 | county, or of anyone other than the entity or the organization  | 
| 1791 | by whom they are reimbursed. | 
| 1792 |      2.  False or misleading claims that the entity is  | 
| 1793 | recommended or endorsed by any state or county agency, or by any  | 
| 1794 | other organization which has not certified its endorsement in  | 
| 1795 | writing to the entity. | 
| 1796 |      3.  False or misleading claims that the state or county  | 
| 1797 | recommends that a Medicaid recipient enroll with an entity. | 
| 1798 |      4.  Claims that a Medicaid recipient will lose benefits  | 
| 1799 | under the Medicaid program, or any other health or welfare  | 
| 1800 | benefits to which the recipient is legally entitled, if the  | 
| 1801 | recipient does not enroll with the entity. | 
| 1802 |      (c)  Granting or offering of any monetary or other valuable  | 
| 1803 | consideration for enrollment, except as authorized by subsection  | 
| 1804 | (24) (22). | 
| 1805 |      (d)  Door-to-door solicitation of recipients who have not  | 
| 1806 | contacted the entity or who have not invited the entity to make  | 
| 1807 | a presentation. | 
| 1808 |      (e)  Solicitation of Medicaid recipients by marketing  | 
| 1809 | representatives stationed in state offices unless approved and  | 
| 1810 | supervised by the agency or its agent and approved by the  | 
| 1811 | affected state agency when solicitation occurs in an office of  | 
| 1812 | the state agency. The agency shall ensure that marketing  | 
| 1813 | representatives stationed in state offices shall market their  | 
| 1814 | managed care plans to Medicaid recipients only in designated  | 
| 1815 | areas and in such a way as to not interfere with the recipients'  | 
| 1816 | activities in the state office. | 
| 1817 |      (f)  Enrollment of Medicaid recipients. | 
| 1818 |      (22)  The agency may impose a fine for a violation of this  | 
| 1819 | section or the contract with the agency by a person or entity  | 
| 1820 | that is under contract with the agency. With respect to any  | 
| 1821 | nonwillful violation, such fine shall not exceed $2,500 per  | 
| 1822 | violation. In no event shall such fine exceed an aggregate  | 
| 1823 | amount of $10,000 for all nonwillful violations arising out of  | 
| 1824 | the same action. With respect to any knowing and willful  | 
| 1825 | violation of this section or the contract with the agency, the  | 
| 1826 | agency may impose a fine upon the entity in an amount not to  | 
| 1827 | exceed $20,000 for each such violation. In no event shall such  | 
| 1828 | fine exceed an aggregate amount of $100,000 for all knowing and  | 
| 1829 | willful violations arising out of the same action. | 
| 1830 |      (23)  A health maintenance organization or a person or  | 
| 1831 | entity exempt from chapter 641 that is under contract with the  | 
| 1832 | agency for the provision of health care services to Medicaid  | 
| 1833 | recipients may not use or distribute marketing materials used to  | 
| 1834 | solicit Medicaid recipients, unless such materials have been  | 
| 1835 | approved by the agency. The provisions of this subsection do not  | 
| 1836 | apply to general advertising and marketing materials used by a  | 
| 1837 | health maintenance organization to solicit both non-Medicaid  | 
| 1838 | subscribers and Medicaid recipients. | 
| 1839 |      (24)  Upon approval by the agency, health maintenance  | 
| 1840 | organizations and persons or entities exempt from chapter 641  | 
| 1841 | that are under contract with the agency for the provision of  | 
| 1842 | health care services to Medicaid recipients may be permitted  | 
| 1843 | within the capitation rate to provide additional health benefits  | 
| 1844 | that the agency has found are of high quality, are practicably  | 
| 1845 | available, provide reasonable value to the recipient, and are  | 
| 1846 | provided at no additional cost to the state. | 
| 1847 |      (25)  The agency shall utilize the statewide health  | 
| 1848 | maintenance organization complaint hotline for the purpose of  | 
| 1849 | investigating and resolving Medicaid and prepaid health plan  | 
| 1850 | complaints, maintaining a record of complaints and confirmed  | 
| 1851 | problems, and receiving disenrollment requests made by  | 
| 1852 | recipients. | 
| 1853 |      (26)  The agency shall require the publication of the  | 
| 1854 | health maintenance organization's and the prepaid health plan's  | 
| 1855 | consumer services telephone numbers and the "800" telephone  | 
| 1856 | number of the statewide health maintenance organization  | 
| 1857 | complaint hotline on each Medicaid identification card issued by  | 
| 1858 | a health maintenance organization or prepaid health plan  | 
| 1859 | contracting with the agency to serve Medicaid recipients and on  | 
| 1860 | each subscriber handbook issued to a Medicaid recipient. | 
| 1861 |      (27)  The agency shall establish a health care quality  | 
| 1862 | improvement system for those entities contracting with the  | 
| 1863 | agency pursuant to this section, incorporating all the standards  | 
| 1864 | and guidelines developed by the Medicaid Bureau of the Health  | 
| 1865 | Care Financing Administration as a part of the quality assurance  | 
| 1866 | reform initiative. The system shall include, but need not be  | 
| 1867 | limited to, the following: | 
| 1868 |      (a)  Guidelines for internal quality assurance programs,  | 
| 1869 | including standards for: | 
| 1870 |      1.  Written quality assurance program descriptions. | 
| 1871 |      2.  Responsibilities of the governing body for monitoring,  | 
| 1872 | evaluating, and making improvements to care. | 
| 1873 |      3.  An active quality assurance committee. | 
| 1874 |      4.  Quality assurance program supervision. | 
| 1875 |      5.  Requiring the program to have adequate resources to  | 
| 1876 | effectively carry out its specified activities. | 
| 1877 |      6.  Provider participation in the quality assurance  | 
| 1878 | program. | 
| 1879 |      7.  Delegation of quality assurance program activities. | 
| 1880 |      8.  Credentialing and recredentialing. | 
| 1881 |      9.  Enrollee rights and responsibilities. | 
| 1882 |      10.  Availability and accessibility to services and care. | 
| 1883 |      11.  Ambulatory care facilities. | 
| 1884 |      12.  Accessibility and availability of medical records, as  | 
| 1885 | well as proper recordkeeping and process for record review. | 
| 1886 |      13.  Utilization review. | 
| 1887 |      14.  A continuity of care system. | 
| 1888 |      15.  Quality assurance program documentation. | 
| 1889 |      16.  Coordination of quality assurance activity with other  | 
| 1890 | management activity. | 
| 1891 |      17.  Delivering care to pregnant women and infants; to  | 
| 1892 | elderly and disabled recipients, especially those who are at  | 
| 1893 | risk of institutional placement; to persons with developmental  | 
| 1894 | disabilities; and to adults who have chronic, high-cost medical  | 
| 1895 | conditions. | 
| 1896 |      (b)  Guidelines which require the entities to conduct  | 
| 1897 | quality-of-care studies which: | 
| 1898 |      1.  Target specific conditions and specific health service  | 
| 1899 | delivery issues for focused monitoring and evaluation. | 
| 1900 |      2.  Use clinical care standards or practice guidelines to  | 
| 1901 | objectively evaluate the care the entity delivers or fails to  | 
| 1902 | deliver for the targeted clinical conditions and health services  | 
| 1903 | delivery issues. | 
| 1904 |      3.  Use quality indicators derived from the clinical care  | 
| 1905 | standards or practice guidelines to screen and monitor care and  | 
| 1906 | services delivered. | 
| 1907 |      (c)  Guidelines for external quality review of each  | 
| 1908 | contractor which require: focused studies of patterns of care;  | 
| 1909 | individual care review in specific situations; and followup  | 
| 1910 | activities on previous pattern-of-care study findings and  | 
| 1911 | individual-care-review findings. In designing the external  | 
| 1912 | quality review function and determining how it is to operate as  | 
| 1913 | part of the state's overall quality improvement system, the  | 
| 1914 | agency shall construct its external quality review organization  | 
| 1915 | and entity contracts to address each of the following: | 
| 1916 |      1.  Delineating the role of the external quality review  | 
| 1917 | organization. | 
| 1918 |      2.  Length of the external quality review organization  | 
| 1919 | contract with the state. | 
| 1920 |      3.  Participation of the contracting entities in designing  | 
| 1921 | external quality review organization review activities. | 
| 1922 |      4.  Potential variation in the type of clinical conditions  | 
| 1923 | and health services delivery issues to be studied at each plan. | 
| 1924 |      5.  Determining the number of focused pattern-of-care  | 
| 1925 | studies to be conducted for each plan. | 
| 1926 |      6.  Methods for implementing focused studies. | 
| 1927 |      7.  Individual care review. | 
| 1928 |      8.  Followup activities. | 
| 1929 |      (28)  In order to ensure that children receive health care  | 
| 1930 | services for which an entity has already been compensated, an  | 
| 1931 | entity contracting with the agency pursuant to this section  | 
| 1932 | shall achieve an annual Early and Periodic Screening, Diagnosis,  | 
| 1933 | and Treatment (EPSDT) Service screening rate of at least 60  | 
| 1934 | percent for those recipients continuously enrolled for at least  | 
| 1935 | 8 months. The agency shall develop a method by which the EPSDT  | 
| 1936 | screening rate shall be calculated. For any entity which does  | 
| 1937 | not achieve the annual 60 percent rate, the entity must submit a  | 
| 1938 | corrective action plan for the agency's approval. If the entity  | 
| 1939 | does not meet the standard established in the corrective action  | 
| 1940 | plan during the specified timeframe, the agency is authorized to  | 
| 1941 | impose appropriate contract sanctions. At least annually, the  | 
| 1942 | agency shall publicly release the EPSDT Services screening rates  | 
| 1943 | of each entity it has contracted with on a prepaid basis to  | 
| 1944 | serve Medicaid recipients. | 
| 1945 |      (29)  The agency shall perform enrollments and  | 
| 1946 | disenrollments for Medicaid recipients who are eligible for  | 
| 1947 | MediPass or managed care plans. Notwithstanding the prohibition  | 
| 1948 | contained in paragraph (21)(19)(f), managed care plans may  | 
| 1949 | perform preenrollments of Medicaid recipients under the  | 
| 1950 | supervision of the agency or its agents. For the purposes of  | 
| 1951 | this section, "preenrollment" means the provision of marketing  | 
| 1952 | and educational materials to a Medicaid recipient and assistance  | 
| 1953 | in completing the application forms, but shall not include  | 
| 1954 | actual enrollment into a managed care plan. An application for  | 
| 1955 | enrollment shall not be deemed complete until the agency or its  | 
| 1956 | agent verifies that the recipient made an informed, voluntary  | 
| 1957 | choice. The agency, in cooperation with the Department of  | 
| 1958 | Children and Family Services, may test new marketing initiatives  | 
| 1959 | to inform Medicaid recipients about their managed care options  | 
| 1960 | at selected sites. The agency shall report to the Legislature on  | 
| 1961 | the effectiveness of such initiatives. The agency may contract  | 
| 1962 | with a third party to perform managed care plan and MediPass  | 
| 1963 | enrollment and disenrollment services for Medicaid recipients  | 
| 1964 | and is authorized to adopt rules to implement such services. The  | 
| 1965 | agency may adjust the capitation rate only to cover the costs of  | 
| 1966 | a third-party enrollment and disenrollment contract, and for  | 
| 1967 | agency supervision and management of the managed care plan  | 
| 1968 | enrollment and disenrollment contract. | 
| 1969 |      (30)  Any lists of providers made available to Medicaid  | 
| 1970 | recipients, MediPass enrollees, or managed care plan enrollees  | 
| 1971 | shall be arranged alphabetically showing the provider's name and  | 
| 1972 | specialty and, separately, by specialty in alphabetical order. | 
| 1973 |      (31)  The agency shall establish an enhanced managed care  | 
| 1974 | quality assurance oversight function, to include at least the  | 
| 1975 | following components: | 
| 1976 |      (a)  At least quarterly analysis and followup, including  | 
| 1977 | sanctions as appropriate, of managed care participant  | 
| 1978 | utilization of services. | 
| 1979 |      (b)  At least quarterly analysis and followup, including  | 
| 1980 | sanctions as appropriate, of quality findings of the Medicaid  | 
| 1981 | peer review organization and other external quality assurance  | 
| 1982 | programs. | 
| 1983 |      (c)  At least quarterly analysis and followup, including  | 
| 1984 | sanctions as appropriate, of the fiscal viability of managed  | 
| 1985 | care plans. | 
| 1986 |      (d)  At least quarterly analysis and followup, including  | 
| 1987 | sanctions as appropriate, of managed care participant  | 
| 1988 | satisfaction and disenrollment surveys. | 
| 1989 |      (e)  The agency shall conduct regular and ongoing Medicaid  | 
| 1990 | recipient satisfaction surveys. | 
| 1991 | 
  | 
| 1992 | The analyses and followup activities conducted by the agency  | 
| 1993 | under its enhanced managed care quality assurance oversight  | 
| 1994 | function shall not duplicate the activities of accreditation  | 
| 1995 | reviewers for entities regulated under part III of chapter 641,  | 
| 1996 | but may include a review of the finding of such reviewers. | 
| 1997 |      (32)  Each managed care plan that is under contract with  | 
| 1998 | the agency to provide health care services to Medicaid  | 
| 1999 | recipients shall annually conduct a background check with the  | 
| 2000 | Florida Department of Law Enforcement of all persons with  | 
| 2001 | ownership interest of 5 percent or more or executive management  | 
| 2002 | responsibility for the managed care plan and shall submit to the  | 
| 2003 | agency information concerning any such person who has been found  | 
| 2004 | guilty of, regardless of adjudication, or has entered a plea of  | 
| 2005 | nolo contendere or guilty to, any of the offenses listed in s.  | 
| 2006 | 435.03. | 
| 2007 |      (33)  The agency shall, by rule, develop a process whereby  | 
| 2008 | a Medicaid managed care plan enrollee who wishes to enter  | 
| 2009 | hospice care may be disenrolled from the managed care plan  | 
| 2010 | within 24 hours after contacting the agency regarding such  | 
| 2011 | request. The agency rule shall include a methodology for the  | 
| 2012 | agency to recoup managed care plan payments on a pro rata basis  | 
| 2013 | if payment has been made for the enrollment month when  | 
| 2014 | disenrollment occurs. | 
| 2015 |      (34)  The agency and entities which contract with the  | 
| 2016 | agency to provide health care services to Medicaid recipients  | 
| 2017 | under this section or s. 409.9122 must comply with the  | 
| 2018 | provisions of s. 641.513 in providing emergency services and  | 
| 2019 | care to Medicaid recipients and MediPass recipients. | 
| 2020 |      (35)  All entities providing health care services to  | 
| 2021 | Medicaid recipients shall make available, and encourage all  | 
| 2022 | pregnant women and mothers with infants to receive, and provide  | 
| 2023 | documentation in the medical records to reflect, the following: | 
| 2024 |      (a)  Healthy Start prenatal or infant screening. | 
| 2025 |      (b)  Healthy Start care coordination, when screening or  | 
| 2026 | other factors indicate need. | 
| 2027 |      (c)  Healthy Start enhanced services in accordance with the  | 
| 2028 | prenatal or infant screening results. | 
| 2029 |      (d)  Immunizations in accordance with recommendations of  | 
| 2030 | the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices of the United  | 
| 2031 | States Public Health Service and the American Academy of  | 
| 2032 | Pediatrics, as appropriate. | 
| 2033 |      (e)  Counseling and services for family planning to all  | 
| 2034 | women and their partners. | 
| 2035 |      (f)  A scheduled postpartum visit for the purpose of  | 
| 2036 | voluntary family planning, to include discussion of all methods  | 
| 2037 | of contraception, as appropriate. | 
| 2038 |      (g)  Referral to the Special Supplemental Nutrition Program  | 
| 2039 | for Women, Infants, and Children (WIC). | 
| 2040 |      (36)  Any entity that provides Medicaid prepaid health plan  | 
| 2041 | services shall ensure the appropriate coordination of health  | 
| 2042 | care services with an assisted living facility in cases where a  | 
| 2043 | Medicaid recipient is both a member of the entity's prepaid  | 
| 2044 | health plan and a resident of the assisted living facility. If  | 
| 2045 | the entity is at risk for Medicaid targeted case management and  | 
| 2046 | behavioral health services, the entity shall inform the assisted  | 
| 2047 | living facility of the procedures to follow should an emergent  | 
| 2048 | condition arise. | 
| 2049 |      (37)  The agency may seek and implement federal waivers  | 
| 2050 | necessary to provide for cost-effective purchasing of home  | 
| 2051 | health services, private duty nursing services, transportation,  | 
| 2052 | independent laboratory services, and durable medical equipment  | 
| 2053 | and supplies through competitive bidding pursuant to s. 287.057.  | 
| 2054 | The agency may request appropriate waivers from the federal  | 
| 2055 | Health Care Financing Administration in order to competitively  | 
| 2056 | bid such services. The agency may exclude providers not selected  | 
| 2057 | through the bidding process from the Medicaid provider network. | 
| 2058 |      (38)  The Agency for Health Care Administration is directed  | 
| 2059 | to issue a request for proposal or intent to negotiate to  | 
| 2060 | implement on a demonstration basis an outpatient specialty  | 
| 2061 | services pilot project in a rural and urban county in the state.  | 
| 2062 | As used in this subsection, the term "outpatient specialty  | 
| 2063 | services" means clinical laboratory, diagnostic imaging, and  | 
| 2064 | specified home medical services to include durable medical  | 
| 2065 | equipment, prosthetics and orthotics, and infusion therapy. | 
| 2066 |      (a)  The entity that is awarded the contract to provide  | 
| 2067 | Medicaid managed care outpatient specialty services must, at a  | 
| 2068 | minimum, meet the following criteria: | 
| 2069 |      1.  The entity must be licensed by the Office of Insurance  | 
| 2070 | Regulation under part II of chapter 641. | 
| 2071 |      2.  The entity must be experienced in providing outpatient  | 
| 2072 | specialty services. | 
| 2073 |      3.  The entity must demonstrate to the satisfaction of the  | 
| 2074 | agency that it provides high-quality services to its patients. | 
| 2075 |      4.  The entity must demonstrate that it has in place a  | 
| 2076 | complaints and grievance process to assist Medicaid recipients  | 
| 2077 | enrolled in the pilot managed care program to resolve complaints  | 
| 2078 | and grievances. | 
| 2079 |      (b)  The pilot managed care program shall operate for a  | 
| 2080 | period of 3 years. The objective of the pilot program shall be  | 
| 2081 | to determine the cost-effectiveness and effects on utilization,  | 
| 2082 | access, and quality of providing outpatient specialty services  | 
| 2083 | to Medicaid recipients on a prepaid, capitated basis. | 
| 2084 |      (c)  The agency shall conduct a quality assurance review of  | 
| 2085 | the prepaid health clinic each year that the demonstration  | 
| 2086 | program is in effect. The prepaid health clinic is responsible  | 
| 2087 | for all expenses incurred by the agency in conducting a quality  | 
| 2088 | assurance review. | 
| 2089 |      (d)  The entity that is awarded the contract to provide  | 
| 2090 | outpatient specialty services to Medicaid recipients shall  | 
| 2091 | report data required by the agency in a format specified by the  | 
| 2092 | agency, for the purpose of conducting the evaluation required in  | 
| 2093 | paragraph (e). | 
| 2094 |      (e)  The agency shall conduct an evaluation of the pilot  | 
| 2095 | managed care program and report its findings to the Governor and  | 
| 2096 | the Legislature by no later than January 1, 2001. | 
| 2097 |      (39)  The agency shall enter into agreements with not-for- | 
| 2098 | profit organizations based in this state for the purpose of  | 
| 2099 | providing vision screening. | 
| 2100 |      (40)(a)  The agency shall implement a Medicaid prescribed- | 
| 2101 | drug spending-control program that includes the following  | 
| 2102 | components: | 
| 2103 |      1.  Medicaid prescribed-drug coverage for brand-name drugs  | 
| 2104 | for adult Medicaid recipients is limited to the dispensing of  | 
| 2105 | four brand-name drugs per month per recipient. Children are  | 
| 2106 | exempt from this restriction. Antiretroviral agents are excluded  | 
| 2107 | from this limitation. No requirements for prior authorization or  | 
| 2108 | other restrictions on medications used to treat mental illnesses  | 
| 2109 | such as schizophrenia, severe depression, or bipolar disorder  | 
| 2110 | may be imposed on Medicaid recipients. Medications that will be  | 
| 2111 | available without restriction for persons with mental illnesses  | 
| 2112 | include atypical antipsychotic medications, conventional  | 
| 2113 | antipsychotic medications, selective serotonin reuptake  | 
| 2114 | inhibitors, and other medications used for the treatment of  | 
| 2115 | serious mental illnesses. The agency shall also limit the amount  | 
| 2116 | of a prescribed drug dispensed to no more than a 34-day supply.  | 
| 2117 | The agency shall continue to provide unlimited generic drugs,  | 
| 2118 | contraceptive drugs and items, and diabetic supplies. Although a  | 
| 2119 | drug may be included on the preferred drug formulary, it would  | 
| 2120 | not be exempt from the four-brand limit. The agency may  | 
| 2121 | authorize exceptions to the brand-name-drug restriction based  | 
| 2122 | upon the treatment needs of the patients, only when such  | 
| 2123 | exceptions are based on prior consultation provided by the  | 
| 2124 | agency or an agency contractor, but the agency must establish  | 
| 2125 | procedures to ensure that: | 
| 2126 |      a.  There will be a response to a request for prior  | 
| 2127 | consultation by telephone or other telecommunication device  | 
| 2128 | within 24 hours after receipt of a request for prior  | 
| 2129 | consultation; | 
| 2130 |      b.  A 72-hour supply of the drug prescribed will be  | 
| 2131 | provided in an emergency or when the agency does not provide a  | 
| 2132 | response within 24 hours as required by sub-subparagraph a.; and | 
| 2133 |      c.  Except for the exception for nursing home residents and  | 
| 2134 | other institutionalized adults and except for drugs on the  | 
| 2135 | restricted formulary for which prior authorization may be sought  | 
| 2136 | by an institutional or community pharmacy, prior authorization  | 
| 2137 | for an exception to the brand-name-drug restriction is sought by  | 
| 2138 | the prescriber and not by the pharmacy. When prior authorization  | 
| 2139 | is granted for a patient in an institutional setting beyond the  | 
| 2140 | brand-name-drug restriction, such approval is authorized for 12  | 
| 2141 | months and monthly prior authorization is not required for that  | 
| 2142 | patient. | 
| 2143 |      2.  Reimbursement to pharmacies for Medicaid prescribed  | 
| 2144 | drugs shall be set at the lesser of: the average wholesale price  | 
| 2145 | (AWP) minus 15.4 percent, the wholesaler acquisition cost (WAC)  | 
| 2146 | plus 5.75 percent, the federal upper limit (FUL), the state  | 
| 2147 | maximum allowable cost (SMAC), or the usual and customary (UAC)  | 
| 2148 | charge billed by the provider the average wholesale price less  | 
| 2149 | 13.25 percent. | 
| 2150 |      3.  The agency shall develop and implement a process for  | 
| 2151 | managing the drug therapies of Medicaid recipients who are using  | 
| 2152 | significant numbers of prescribed drugs each month. The  | 
| 2153 | management process may include, but is not limited to,  | 
| 2154 | comprehensive, physician-directed medical-record reviews, claims  | 
| 2155 | analyses, and case evaluations to determine the medical  | 
| 2156 | necessity and appropriateness of a patient's treatment plan and  | 
| 2157 | drug therapies. The agency may contract with a private  | 
| 2158 | organization to provide drug-program-management services. The  | 
| 2159 | Medicaid drug benefit management program shall include  | 
| 2160 | initiatives to manage drug therapies for HIV/AIDS patients,  | 
| 2161 | patients using 20 or more unique prescriptions in a 180-day  | 
| 2162 | period, and the top 1,000 patients in annual spending. | 
| 2163 |      4.  The agency may limit the size of its pharmacy network  | 
| 2164 | based on need, competitive bidding, price negotiations,  | 
| 2165 | credentialing, or similar criteria. The agency shall give  | 
| 2166 | special consideration to rural areas in determining the size and  | 
| 2167 | location of pharmacies included in the Medicaid pharmacy  | 
| 2168 | network. A pharmacy credentialing process may include criteria  | 
| 2169 | such as a pharmacy's full-service status, location, size,  | 
| 2170 | patient educational programs, patient consultation, disease- | 
| 2171 | management services, and other characteristics. The agency may  | 
| 2172 | impose a moratorium on Medicaid pharmacy enrollment when it is  | 
| 2173 | determined that it has a sufficient number of Medicaid- | 
| 2174 | participating providers. | 
| 2175 |      5.  The agency shall develop and implement a program that  | 
| 2176 | requires Medicaid practitioners who prescribe drugs to use a  | 
| 2177 | counterfeit-proof prescription pad for Medicaid prescriptions.  | 
| 2178 | The agency shall require the use of standardized counterfeit- | 
| 2179 | proof prescription pads by Medicaid-participating prescribers or  | 
| 2180 | prescribers who write prescriptions for Medicaid recipients. The  | 
| 2181 | agency may implement the program in targeted geographic areas or  | 
| 2182 | statewide. | 
| 2183 |      6.  The agency may enter into arrangements that require  | 
| 2184 | manufacturers of generic drugs prescribed to Medicaid recipients  | 
| 2185 | to provide rebates of at least 15.1 percent of the average  | 
| 2186 | manufacturer price for the manufacturer's generic products.  | 
| 2187 | These arrangements shall require that if a generic-drug  | 
| 2188 | manufacturer pays federal rebates for Medicaid-reimbursed drugs  | 
| 2189 | at a level below 15.1 percent, the manufacturer must provide a  | 
| 2190 | supplemental rebate to the state in an amount necessary to  | 
| 2191 | achieve a 15.1-percent rebate level. | 
| 2192 |      7.  The agency may establish a preferred drug formulary in  | 
| 2193 | accordance with 42 U.S.C. s. 1396r-8, and, pursuant to the  | 
| 2194 | establishment of such formulary, it is authorized to negotiate  | 
| 2195 | supplemental rebates from manufacturers that are in addition to  | 
| 2196 | those required by Title XIX of the Social Security Act and at no  | 
| 2197 | less than 14 10 percent of the average manufacturer price as  | 
| 2198 | defined in 42 U.S.C. s. 1936 on the last day of a quarter unless  | 
| 2199 | the federal or supplemental rebate, or both, equals or exceeds  | 
| 2200 | 29 25 percent. There is no upper limit on the supplemental  | 
| 2201 | rebates the agency may negotiate. The agency may determine that  | 
| 2202 | specific products, brand-name or generic, are competitive at  | 
| 2203 | lower rebate percentages. Agreement to pay the minimum  | 
| 2204 | supplemental rebate percentage will guarantee a manufacturer  | 
| 2205 | that the Medicaid Pharmaceutical and Therapeutics Committee will  | 
| 2206 | consider a product for inclusion on the preferred drug  | 
| 2207 | formulary. However, a pharmaceutical manufacturer is not  | 
| 2208 | guaranteed placement on the formulary by simply paying the  | 
| 2209 | minimum supplemental rebate. Agency decisions will be made on  | 
| 2210 | the clinical efficacy of a drug and recommendations of the  | 
| 2211 | Medicaid Pharmaceutical and Therapeutics Committee, as well as  | 
| 2212 | the price of competing products minus federal and state rebates.  | 
| 2213 | The agency is authorized to contract with an outside agency or  | 
| 2214 | contractor to conduct negotiations for supplemental rebates. For  | 
| 2215 | the purposes of this section, the term "supplemental rebates"  | 
| 2216 | means may include, at the agency's discretion, cash rebates and  | 
| 2217 | other program benefits that offset a Medicaid expenditure.  | 
| 2218 | Effective July 1, 2004, value-added programs as a substitution  | 
| 2219 | for supplemental rebates are prohibited. Such other program  | 
| 2220 | benefits may include, but are not limited to, disease management  | 
| 2221 | programs, drug product donation programs, drug utilization  | 
| 2222 | control programs, prescriber and beneficiary counseling and  | 
| 2223 | education, fraud and abuse initiatives, and other services or  | 
| 2224 | administrative investments with guaranteed savings to the  | 
| 2225 | Medicaid program in the same year the rebate reduction is  | 
| 2226 | included in the General Appropriations Act. The agency is  | 
| 2227 | authorized to seek any federal waivers to implement this  | 
| 2228 | initiative. | 
| 2229 |      8.  The agency shall establish an advisory committee for  | 
| 2230 | the purposes of studying the feasibility of using a restricted  | 
| 2231 | drug formulary for nursing home residents and other  | 
| 2232 | institutionalized adults. The committee shall be comprised of  | 
| 2233 | seven members appointed by the Secretary of Health Care  | 
| 2234 | Administration. The committee members shall include two  | 
| 2235 | physicians licensed under chapter 458 or chapter 459; three  | 
| 2236 | pharmacists licensed under chapter 465 and appointed from a list  | 
| 2237 | of recommendations provided by the Florida Long-Term Care  | 
| 2238 | Pharmacy Alliance; and two pharmacists licensed under chapter  | 
| 2239 | 465. | 
| 2240 |      9.  The Agency for Health Care Administration shall expand  | 
| 2241 | home delivery of pharmacy products. To assist Medicaid patients  | 
| 2242 | in securing their prescriptions and reduce program costs, the  | 
| 2243 | agency shall expand its current mail-order-pharmacy diabetes- | 
| 2244 | supply program to include all generic and brand-name drugs used  | 
| 2245 | by Medicaid patients with diabetes. Medicaid recipients in the  | 
| 2246 | current program may obtain nondiabetes drugs on a voluntary  | 
| 2247 | basis. This initiative is limited to the geographic area covered  | 
| 2248 | by the current contract. The agency may seek and implement any  | 
| 2249 | federal waivers necessary to implement this subparagraph. | 
| 2250 |      10.  The agency shall limit to one dose per month any drug  | 
| 2251 | prescribed to treat erectile dysfunction. | 
| 2252 |      11.a.  The agency shall implement a Medicaid behavioral  | 
| 2253 | drug management system. The agency may contract with a vendor  | 
| 2254 | that has experience in operating behavioral drug management  | 
| 2255 | systems to implement this program. The agency is authorized to  | 
| 2256 | seek federal waivers to implement this program. | 
| 2257 |      b.  The agency, in conjunction with the Department of  | 
| 2258 | Children and Family Services, may implement the Medicaid  | 
| 2259 | behavioral drug management system that is designed to improve  | 
| 2260 | the quality of care and behavioral health prescribing practices  | 
| 2261 | based on best practice guidelines, improve patient adherence to  | 
| 2262 | medication plans, reduce clinical risk, and lower prescribed  | 
| 2263 | drug costs and the rate of inappropriate spending on Medicaid  | 
| 2264 | behavioral drugs. The program shall include the following  | 
| 2265 | elements: | 
| 2266 |      (I)  Provide for the development and adoption of best  | 
| 2267 | practice guidelines for behavioral health-related drugs such as  | 
| 2268 | antipsychotics, antidepressants, and medications for treating  | 
| 2269 | bipolar disorders and other behavioral conditions; translate  | 
| 2270 | them into practice; review behavioral health prescribers and  | 
| 2271 | compare their prescribing patterns to a number of indicators  | 
| 2272 | that are based on national standards; and determine deviations  | 
| 2273 | from best practice guidelines. | 
| 2274 |      (II)  Implement processes for providing feedback to and  | 
| 2275 | educating prescribers using best practice educational materials  | 
| 2276 | and peer-to-peer consultation. | 
| 2277 |      (III)  Assess Medicaid beneficiaries who are outliers in  | 
| 2278 | their use of behavioral health drugs with regard to the numbers  | 
| 2279 | and types of drugs taken, drug dosages, combination drug  | 
| 2280 | therapies, and other indicators of improper use of behavioral  | 
| 2281 | health drugs. | 
| 2282 |      (IV)  Alert prescribers to patients who fail to refill  | 
| 2283 | prescriptions in a timely fashion, are prescribed multiple same- | 
| 2284 | class behavioral health drugs, and may have other potential  | 
| 2285 | medication problems. | 
| 2286 |      (V)  Track spending trends for behavioral health drugs and  | 
| 2287 | deviation from best practice guidelines. | 
| 2288 |      (VI)  Use educational and technological approaches to  | 
| 2289 | promote best practices, educate consumers, and train prescribers  | 
| 2290 | in the use of practice guidelines. | 
| 2291 |      (VII)  Disseminate electronic and published materials. | 
| 2292 |      (VIII)  Hold statewide and regional conferences. | 
| 2293 |      (IX)  Implement a disease management program with a model  | 
| 2294 | quality-based medication component for severely mentally ill  | 
| 2295 | individuals and emotionally disturbed children who are high  | 
| 2296 | users of care. | 
| 2297 |      c.  If the agency is unable to negotiate a contract with  | 
| 2298 | one or more manufacturers to finance and guarantee savings  | 
| 2299 | associated with a behavioral drug management program by  | 
| 2300 | September 1, 2004, the four-brand drug limit and preferred drug  | 
| 2301 | list prior-authorization requirements shall apply to mental- | 
| 2302 | health-related drugs, notwithstanding any provision in  | 
| 2303 | subparagraph 1. The agency is authorized to seek federal waivers  | 
| 2304 | to implement this policy. | 
| 2305 |      12.  The agency is authorized to contract for drug rebate  | 
| 2306 | administration, including, but not limited to, calculating  | 
| 2307 | rebate amounts, invoicing manufacturers, negotiating disputes  | 
| 2308 | with manufacturers, and maintaining a database of rebate  | 
| 2309 | collections. | 
| 2310 |      13.  The agency may specify the preferred daily dosing form  | 
| 2311 | or strength for the purpose of promoting best practices with  | 
| 2312 | regard to the prescribing of certain drugs as specified in the  | 
| 2313 | General Appropriations Act and ensuring cost-effective  | 
| 2314 | prescribing practices. | 
| 2315 |      14.  The agency may require prior authorization for the  | 
| 2316 | off-label use of Medicaid-covered prescribed drugs as specified  | 
| 2317 | in the General Appropriations Act. The agency may, but is not  | 
| 2318 | required to, preauthorize the use of a product for an indication  | 
| 2319 | not in the approved labeling. Prior authorization may require  | 
| 2320 | the prescribing professional to provide information about the  | 
| 2321 | rationale and supporting medical evidence for the off-label use  | 
| 2322 | of a drug.  | 
| 2323 |      15.  The agency shall implement a return and reuse program  | 
| 2324 | for drugs dispensed by pharmacies to institutional recipients,  | 
| 2325 | which includes payment of a $5 restocking fee for the  | 
| 2326 | implementation and operation of the program. The return and  | 
| 2327 | reuse program shall be implemented electronically and in a  | 
| 2328 | manner that promotes efficiency. The program must permit a  | 
| 2329 | pharmacy to exclude drugs from the program if it is not  | 
| 2330 | practical or cost-effective for the drug to be included and must  | 
| 2331 | provide for the return to inventory of drugs that cannot be  | 
| 2332 | credited or returned in a cost-effective manner. | 
| 2333 |      (b)  The agency shall implement this subsection to the  | 
| 2334 | extent that funds are appropriated to administer the Medicaid  | 
| 2335 | prescribed-drug spending-control program. The agency may  | 
| 2336 | contract all or any part of this program to private  | 
| 2337 | organizations. | 
| 2338 |      (c)  The agency shall submit quarterly reports to the  | 
| 2339 | Governor, the President of the Senate, and the Speaker of the  | 
| 2340 | House of Representatives which must include, but need not be  | 
| 2341 | limited to, the progress made in implementing this subsection  | 
| 2342 | and its effect on Medicaid prescribed-drug expenditures. | 
| 2343 |      (41)  Notwithstanding the provisions of chapter 287, the  | 
| 2344 | agency may, at its discretion, renew a contract or contracts for  | 
| 2345 | fiscal intermediary services one or more times for such periods  | 
| 2346 | as the agency may decide; however, all such renewals may not  | 
| 2347 | combine to exceed a total period longer than the term of the  | 
| 2348 | original contract. | 
| 2349 |      (42)  The agency shall provide for the development of a  | 
| 2350 | demonstration project by establishment in Miami-Dade County of a  | 
| 2351 | long-term-care facility licensed pursuant to chapter 395 to  | 
| 2352 | improve access to health care for a predominantly minority,  | 
| 2353 | medically underserved, and medically complex population and to  | 
| 2354 | evaluate alternatives to nursing home care and general acute  | 
| 2355 | care for such population. Such project is to be located in a  | 
| 2356 | health care condominium and colocated with licensed facilities  | 
| 2357 | providing a continuum of care. The establishment of this project  | 
| 2358 | is not subject to the provisions of s. 408.036 or s. 408.039.  | 
| 2359 | The agency shall report its findings to the Governor, the  | 
| 2360 | President of the Senate, and the Speaker of the House of  | 
| 2361 | Representatives by January 1, 2003. | 
| 2362 |      (43)  The agency shall develop and implement a utilization  | 
| 2363 | management program for Medicaid-eligible recipients for the  | 
| 2364 | management of occupational, physical, respiratory, and speech  | 
| 2365 | therapies. The agency shall establish a utilization program that  | 
| 2366 | may require prior authorization in order to ensure medically  | 
| 2367 | necessary and cost-effective treatments. The program shall be  | 
| 2368 | operated in accordance with a federally approved waiver program  | 
| 2369 | or state plan amendment. The agency may seek a federal waiver or  | 
| 2370 | state plan amendment to implement this program. The agency may  | 
| 2371 | also competitively procure these services from an outside vendor  | 
| 2372 | on a regional or statewide basis. | 
| 2373 |      (44)  The agency may contract on a prepaid or fixed-sum  | 
| 2374 | basis with appropriately licensed prepaid dental health plans to  | 
| 2375 | provide dental services. | 
| 2376 |      (45)  The Agency for Health Care Administration shall  | 
| 2377 | ensure that any Medicaid managed care plan as defined in s.  | 
| 2378 | 409.9122(2)(h), whether paid on a capitated basis or a shared  | 
| 2379 | savings basis, is cost-effective. For purposes of this  | 
| 2380 | subsection, the term "cost-effective" means that a network's  | 
| 2381 | per-member, per-month costs to the state, including, but not  | 
| 2382 | limited to, fee-for-service costs, administrative costs, and  | 
| 2383 | case-management fees, must be no greater than the state's costs  | 
| 2384 | associated with contracts for Medicaid services established  | 
| 2385 | under subsection (3), which shall be actuarially adjusted for  | 
| 2386 | case mix, model, and service area. The agency shall conduct  | 
| 2387 | actuarially sound audits adjusted for case mix and model in  | 
| 2388 | order to ensure such cost-effectiveness and shall publish the  | 
| 2389 | audit results on its Internet website and submit the audit  | 
| 2390 | results annually to the Governor, the President of the Senate,  | 
| 2391 | and the Speaker of the House of Representatives no later than  | 
| 2392 | December 31 of each year. Contracts established pursuant to this  | 
| 2393 | subsection which are not cost-effective may not be renewed. | 
| 2394 |      Section 18.  Paragraphs (a) and (e) of subsection (2) of  | 
| 2395 | section 409.9122, Florida Statutes, are amended, and subsection  | 
| 2396 | (14) is added to said section, to read: | 
| 2397 |      409.9122  Mandatory Medicaid managed care enrollment;  | 
| 2398 | programs and procedures.-- | 
| 2399 |      (2)(a)  The agency shall enroll in a managed care plan or  | 
| 2400 | MediPass all Medicaid recipients, except those Medicaid  | 
| 2401 | recipients who are: in an institution; enrolled in the Medicaid  | 
| 2402 | medically needy program; or eligible for both Medicaid and  | 
| 2403 | Medicare. Upon enrollment, individuals will be able to change  | 
| 2404 | their managed care option during the 90-day opt out period  | 
| 2405 | required by federal Medicaid regulations. The agency is  | 
| 2406 | authorized to seek the necessary Medicaid state plan amendment  | 
| 2407 | to implement this policy. However, to the extent permitted by  | 
| 2408 | federal law, the agency may enroll in a managed care plan or  | 
| 2409 | MediPass a Medicaid recipient who is exempt from mandatory  | 
| 2410 | managed care enrollment, provided that: | 
| 2411 |      1.  The recipient's decision to enroll in a managed care  | 
| 2412 | plan or MediPass is voluntary; | 
| 2413 |      2.  If the recipient chooses to enroll in a managed care  | 
| 2414 | plan, the agency has determined that the managed care plan  | 
| 2415 | provides specific programs and services which address the  | 
| 2416 | special health needs of the recipient; and | 
| 2417 |      3.  The agency receives any necessary waivers from the  | 
| 2418 | federal Health Care Financing Administration. | 
| 2419 | 
  | 
| 2420 | The agency shall develop rules to establish policies by which  | 
| 2421 | exceptions to the mandatory managed care enrollment requirement  | 
| 2422 | may be made on a case-by-case basis. The rules shall include the  | 
| 2423 | specific criteria to be applied when making a determination as  | 
| 2424 | to whether to exempt a recipient from mandatory enrollment in a  | 
| 2425 | managed care plan or MediPass. School districts participating in  | 
| 2426 | the certified school match program pursuant to ss. 409.908(21)  | 
| 2427 | and 1011.70 shall be reimbursed by Medicaid, subject to the  | 
| 2428 | limitations of s. 1011.70(1), for a Medicaid-eligible child  | 
| 2429 | participating in the services as authorized in s. 1011.70, as  | 
| 2430 | provided for in s. 409.9071, regardless of whether the child is  | 
| 2431 | enrolled in MediPass or a managed care plan. Managed care plans  | 
| 2432 | shall make a good faith effort to execute agreements with school  | 
| 2433 | districts regarding the coordinated provision of services  | 
| 2434 | authorized under s. 1011.70. County health departments  | 
| 2435 | delivering school-based services pursuant to ss. 381.0056 and  | 
| 2436 | 381.0057 shall be reimbursed by Medicaid for the federal share  | 
| 2437 | for a Medicaid-eligible child who receives Medicaid-covered  | 
| 2438 | services in a school setting, regardless of whether the child is  | 
| 2439 | enrolled in MediPass or a managed care plan. Managed care plans  | 
| 2440 | shall make a good faith effort to execute agreements with county  | 
| 2441 | health departments regarding the coordinated provision of  | 
| 2442 | services to a Medicaid-eligible child. To ensure continuity of  | 
| 2443 | care for Medicaid patients, the agency, the Department of  | 
| 2444 | Health, and the Department of Education shall develop procedures  | 
| 2445 | for ensuring that a student's managed care plan or MediPass  | 
| 2446 | provider receives information relating to services provided in  | 
| 2447 | accordance with ss. 381.0056, 381.0057, 409.9071, and 1011.70. | 
| 2448 |      (e)  Medicaid recipients who are already enrolled in a  | 
| 2449 | managed care plan or MediPass shall be offered the opportunity  | 
| 2450 | to change managed care plans or MediPass providers on a  | 
| 2451 | staggered basis, as defined by the agency. All Medicaid  | 
| 2452 | recipients shall have 30 90 days in which to make a choice of  | 
| 2453 | managed care plans or MediPass providers. Those Medicaid  | 
| 2454 | recipients who do not make a choice shall be assigned to a  | 
| 2455 | managed care plan or MediPass in accordance with paragraph (f).  | 
| 2456 | To facilitate continuity of care, for a Medicaid recipient who  | 
| 2457 | is also a recipient of Supplemental Security Income (SSI), prior  | 
| 2458 | to assigning the SSI recipient to a managed care plan or  | 
| 2459 | MediPass, the agency shall determine whether the SSI recipient  | 
| 2460 | has an ongoing relationship with a MediPass provider or managed  | 
| 2461 | care plan, and if so, the agency shall assign the SSI recipient  | 
| 2462 | to that MediPass provider or managed care plan. Those SSI  | 
| 2463 | recipients who do not have such a provider relationship shall be  | 
| 2464 | assigned to a managed care plan or MediPass provider in  | 
| 2465 | accordance with paragraph (f). | 
| 2466 |      (14)  The agency shall include in its calculation of the  | 
| 2467 | hospital inpatient component of a Medicaid health maintenance  | 
| 2468 | organization's capitation rate any special payments, including,  | 
| 2469 | but not limited to, upper payment limit or disproportionate  | 
| 2470 | share hospital payments, made to qualifying hospitals through  | 
| 2471 | the fee-for-service program. The agency may seek federal waiver  | 
| 2472 | approval or state plan amendment as needed to implement this  | 
| 2473 | adjustment. | 
| 2474 |      Section 19.  Section 409.9124, Florida Statutes, is amended  | 
| 2475 | to read: | 
| 2476 |      409.9124  Managed care reimbursement.-- | 
| 2477 |      (1)  The agency shall develop and adopt by rule a  | 
| 2478 | methodology for reimbursing managed care plans. | 
| 2479 |      (2)  Final rates shall be published annually prior to  | 
| 2480 | September 1 of each year, based on methodology that: | 
| 2481 |      (a)  Uses Medicaid's fee-for-service expenditures. | 
| 2482 |      (b)  Is certified as an actuarially sound computation of  | 
| 2483 | Medicaid fee-for-service expenditures for comparable groups of  | 
| 2484 | Medicaid recipients and includes all fee-for-service  | 
| 2485 | expenditures, including those fee-for-service expenditures  | 
| 2486 | attributable to recipients who are enrolled for a portion of a  | 
| 2487 | year in a managed care plan or waiver program.   | 
| 2488 |      (c)  Is compliant with applicable federal laws and  | 
| 2489 | regulations, including, but not limited to, the requirements to  | 
| 2490 | include an allowance for administrative expenses and to account  | 
| 2491 | for all fee-for service expenditures, including fee-for-service  | 
| 2492 | expenditures for those groups enrolled for part of a year. | 
| 2493 |      (3)  Each year prior to establishing new managed care  | 
| 2494 | rates, the agency shall review all prior year adjustments for  | 
| 2495 | changes in trend, and shall reduce or eliminate those  | 
| 2496 | adjustments which are not reasonable and which reflect policies  | 
| 2497 | or programs which are not in effect. | 
| 2498 |      (4)(2)  The agency shall by rule prescribe those items of  | 
| 2499 | financial information which each managed care plan shall report  | 
| 2500 | to the agency, in the time periods prescribed by rule. In  | 
| 2501 | prescribing items for reporting and definitions of terms, the  | 
| 2502 | agency shall consult with the Office of Insurance Regulation of  | 
| 2503 | the Financial Services Commission wherever possible. | 
| 2504 |      (5)(3)  The agency shall quarterly examine the financial  | 
| 2505 | condition of each managed care plan, and its performance in  | 
| 2506 | serving Medicaid patients, and shall utilize examinations  | 
| 2507 | performed by the Office of Insurance Regulation wherever  | 
| 2508 | possible. | 
| 2509 |      Section 20.  Paragraph (b) of subsection (5) of section  | 
| 2510 | 624.91, Florida Statutes, as amended by chapter 2004-1, Laws of  | 
| 2511 | Florida, is amended to read: | 
| 2512 |      624.91  The Florida Healthy Kids Corporation Act.-- | 
| 2513 |      (5)  CORPORATION AUTHORIZATION, DUTIES, POWERS.-- | 
| 2514 |      (b)  The Florida Healthy Kids Corporation shall: | 
| 2515 |      1.  Arrange for the collection of any family, local  | 
| 2516 | contributions, or employer payment or premium, in an amount to  | 
| 2517 | be determined by the board of directors, to provide for payment  | 
| 2518 | of premiums for comprehensive insurance coverage and for the  | 
| 2519 | actual or estimated administrative expenses. | 
| 2520 |      2.  Arrange for the collection of any voluntary  | 
| 2521 | contributions to provide for payment of premiums for children  | 
| 2522 | who are not eligible for medical assistance under Title XXI of  | 
| 2523 | the Social Security Act. Each fiscal year, the corporation shall  | 
| 2524 | establish a local match policy for the enrollment of non-Title- | 
| 2525 | XXI-eligible children in the Healthy Kids program. By May 1 of  | 
| 2526 | each year, the corporation shall provide written notification of  | 
| 2527 | the amount to be remitted to the corporation for the following  | 
| 2528 | fiscal year under that policy. Local match sources may include,  | 
| 2529 | but are not limited to, funds provided by municipalities,  | 
| 2530 | counties, school boards, hospitals, health care providers,  | 
| 2531 | charitable organizations, special taxing districts, and private  | 
| 2532 | organizations. The minimum local match cash contributions  | 
| 2533 | required each fiscal year and local match credits shall be  | 
| 2534 | determined by the General Appropriations Act. The corporation  | 
| 2535 | shall calculate a county's local match rate based upon that  | 
| 2536 | county's percentage of the state's total non-Title-XXI  | 
| 2537 | expenditures as reported in the corporation's most recently  | 
| 2538 | audited financial statement. In awarding the local match  | 
| 2539 | credits, the corporation may consider factors including, but not  | 
| 2540 | limited to, population density, per capita income, and existing  | 
| 2541 | child-health-related expenditures and services. | 
| 2542 |      3.  Subject to the provisions of s. 409.8134, accept  | 
| 2543 | voluntary supplemental local match contributions that comply  | 
| 2544 | with the requirements of Title XXI of the Social Security Act  | 
| 2545 | for the purpose of providing additional coverage in contributing  | 
| 2546 | counties under Title XXI. | 
| 2547 |      4.  Establish the administrative and accounting procedures  | 
| 2548 | for the operation of the corporation. | 
| 2549 |      5.  Establish, with consultation from appropriate  | 
| 2550 | professional organizations, standards for preventive health  | 
| 2551 | services and providers and comprehensive insurance benefits  | 
| 2552 | appropriate to children, provided that such standards for rural  | 
| 2553 | areas shall not limit primary care providers to board-certified  | 
| 2554 | pediatricians. | 
| 2555 |      6.  Determine eligibility for children seeking to  | 
| 2556 | participate in the Title XXI-funded components of the Florida  | 
| 2557 | KidCare program consistent with the requirements specified in s.  | 
| 2558 | 409.814, as well as the non-Title-XXI-eligible children as  | 
| 2559 | provided in subsection (3). | 
| 2560 |      7.  Establish procedures under which providers of local  | 
| 2561 | match to, applicants to and participants in the program may have  | 
| 2562 | grievances reviewed by an impartial body and reported to the  | 
| 2563 | board of directors of the corporation. | 
| 2564 |      8.  Establish participation criteria and, if appropriate,  | 
| 2565 | contract with an authorized insurer, health maintenance  | 
| 2566 | organization, or third-party administrator to provide  | 
| 2567 | administrative services to the corporation. | 
| 2568 |      9.  Establish enrollment criteria which shall include  | 
| 2569 | penalties or waiting periods of not fewer than 60 days for  | 
| 2570 | reinstatement of coverage upon voluntary cancellation for  | 
| 2571 | nonpayment of family premiums. | 
| 2572 |      10.  Contract with authorized insurers or any provider of  | 
| 2573 | health care services, meeting standards established by the  | 
| 2574 | corporation, for the provision of comprehensive insurance  | 
| 2575 | coverage to participants. Such standards shall include criteria  | 
| 2576 | under which the corporation may contract with more than one  | 
| 2577 | provider of health care services in program sites. Health plans  | 
| 2578 | shall be selected through a competitive bid process. The Florida  | 
| 2579 | Healthy Kids Corporation shall purchase goods and services in  | 
| 2580 | the most cost-effective manner consistent with the delivery of  | 
| 2581 | quality medical care. The maximum administrative cost for a  | 
| 2582 | Florida Healthy Kids Corporation contract shall be 15 percent.  | 
| 2583 | For health care contracts, the minimum medical loss ratio for a  | 
| 2584 | Florida Healthy Kids Corporation contract shall be 85 percent.  | 
| 2585 | For dental contracts, the remaining compensation to be paid to  | 
| 2586 | the authorized insurer or provider under a Florida Healthy Kids  | 
| 2587 | Corporation contract shall be no less than an amount which is 85  | 
| 2588 | percent of premium; to the extent any contract provision does  | 
| 2589 | not provide for this minimum compensation, this section shall  | 
| 2590 | prevail. The health plan selection criteria and scoring system,  | 
| 2591 | and the scoring results, shall be available upon request for  | 
| 2592 | inspection after the bids have been awarded. | 
| 2593 |      11.  Establish disenrollment criteria in the event local  | 
| 2594 | matching funds are insufficient to cover enrollments. | 
| 2595 |      12.  Develop and implement a plan to publicize the Florida  | 
| 2596 | Healthy Kids Corporation, the eligibility requirements of the  | 
| 2597 | program, and the procedures for enrollment in the program and to  | 
| 2598 | maintain public awareness of the corporation and the program. | 
| 2599 |      13.  Secure staff necessary to properly administer the  | 
| 2600 | corporation. Staff costs shall be funded from state and local  | 
| 2601 | matching funds and such other private or public funds as become  | 
| 2602 | available. The board of directors shall determine the number of  | 
| 2603 | staff members necessary to administer the corporation. | 
| 2604 |      14.  Provide a report annually to the Governor, Chief  | 
| 2605 | Financial Officer, Commissioner of Education, Senate President,  | 
| 2606 | Speaker of the House of Representatives, and Minority Leaders of  | 
| 2607 | the Senate and the House of Representatives. | 
| 2608 |      15.  Establish benefit packages which conform to the  | 
| 2609 | provisions of the Florida KidCare program, as created in ss.  | 
| 2610 | 409.810-409.820. | 
| 2611 |      Section 21.  Notwithstanding s. 430.707, Florida Statutes,  | 
| 2612 | no later than September 1, 2005, subject to federal approval of  | 
| 2613 | the application to be a Program of All-inclusive Care for the  | 
| 2614 | Elderly site, the agency shall contract with one private, not- | 
| 2615 | for-profit hospice organization located in Lee County and one  | 
| 2616 | such organization in Martin County, such an entity shall be  | 
| 2617 | exempt from the requirements of chapter 641 Florida Statutes,  | 
| 2618 | each of which provides comprehensive services, including hospice  | 
| 2619 | care for frail and elderly persons. The agency shall approve 100  | 
| 2620 | initial enrollees in the Program of All-inclusive Care for the  | 
| 2621 | Elderly in Lee and Martin counties. There shall be 50 initial  | 
| 2622 | enrollees in each county. | 
| 2623 |      Section 22.  In order to improve affordability and provide  | 
| 2624 | coverage for more facilities for residents of the state, the  | 
| 2625 | agency shall renegotiate the terms, conditions, and duration of  | 
| 2626 | its loan to the Long Term Care Risk Retention Group to provide  | 
| 2627 | that participating skilled nursing facilities be required to pay  | 
| 2628 | no more than $65 per bed for capitalization costs and  | 
| 2629 | participating adult living facilities will be required to pay no  | 
| 2630 | more than $33 per bed for capitalization costs. | 
| 2631 |      Section 23.  The Office of Program Policy Analysis and  | 
| 2632 | Government Accountability shall perform a review of optional  | 
| 2633 | Medicaid coverage for pregnant women, adult dentures, and the  | 
| 2634 | medically needy. The review shall determine the cost benefit to  | 
| 2635 | the state of providing these optional Medicaid items to Medicaid  | 
| 2636 | recipients. A report on the findings of the review shall be  | 
| 2637 | provided to the Executive Office of the Governor, the President  | 
| 2638 | of the Senate, and the Speaker of the House of Representatives  | 
| 2639 | by February 1, 2005. | 
| 2640 |      Section 24.  The Agency for Health Care Administration may  | 
| 2641 | contract on a capitated, prepaid, or fixed-sum basis with a  | 
| 2642 | laboratory service provider to provide statewide laboratory  | 
| 2643 | services for Medicaid recipients. The contract is not subject to  | 
| 2644 | any requirement of the Florida Insurance Code. Whether or not  | 
| 2645 | the agency procures statewide laboratory services, the agency  | 
| 2646 | shall ensure that it secures laboratory values from Medicaid- | 
| 2647 | enrolled laboratories for all tests provided to Medicaid  | 
| 2648 | recipients. Such data shall be included in the Medicaid real- | 
| 2649 | time web-based reporting system that interfaces with a real-time  | 
| 2650 | web-based prescription ordering and tracking system as required  | 
| 2651 | by the 2003-2004 General Appropriations Act. | 
| 2652 |      Section 25.  Except as otherwise provided herein, this act  | 
| 2653 | shall take effect July 1, 2004. |