Florida Senate - 2008 CS for SB 2626
By the Committee on Children, Families, and Elder Affairs; and Senator Storms
586-06454-08 20082626c1
1
A bill to be entitled
2
An act relating to mental health and substance abuse
3
services; amending s. 394.9082, F.S.; providing
4
legislative findings and intent; establishing goals;
5
specifying roles and responsibilities of the Department of
6
Children and Family Services; creating community-based
7
systems of care; authorizing the implementation of
8
managing entities by the Department of Children and Family
9
Services; establishing a process for contracting with
10
managing entities; specifying qualifying criteria for
11
managing entities; specifying responsibilities of managing
12
entities; specifying requirements for management
13
information systems; providing for evaluations and
14
reports; providing for a monitoring process; providing an
15
effective date.
16
17
Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida:
18
19
Section 1. Section 394.9082, Florida Statutes, is amended
20
to read:
21
(Substantial rewording of section. See
22
s. 394.9082, F.S., for present text.)
23
394.9082 Behavioral health managing entities.--
24
(1) LEGISLATIVE FINDINGS AND INTENT.--The Legislature finds
25
that untreated behavioral health disorders constitute major
26
health problems for residents of this state, are a major economic
27
burden to the citizens of this state, and substantially increase
28
demands on the state's juvenile and adult criminal justice
29
systems, the child welfare system, and health care systems. The
30
Legislature finds that behavioral health disorders respond to
31
appropriate treatment, rehabilitation, and supportive
32
intervention. The Legislature finds that it has made a
33
substantial long-term investment in the funding of the community-
34
based behavioral health prevention and treatment service systems
35
and facilities in order to provide critical emergency, acute
36
care, residential, outpatient, and rehabilitative and recovery-
37
based services. The Legislature finds that local communities have
38
also made substantial investments in behavioral health services,
39
contracting with safety net providers who by mandate and mission
40
provide specialized services to vulnerable and hard-to-serve
41
populations and have strong ties to local public health and
42
public safety agencies. The Legislature finds that a management
43
structure that places the responsibility for publicly financed
44
behavioral health treatment and prevention services within a
45
single private, nonprofit entity at the local level will promote
46
improved access to care, promote service continuity, and provide
47
for more efficient and effective delivery of substance abuse and
48
mental health services. The Legislature finds that the
49
transformation of existing data systems into effective
50
decisionmaking models is required in order to provide timely and
51
accurate information that is needed at the federal, state, and
52
local levels to support the integrated system of community-based
53
care. The Legislature finds that streamlining administrative
54
processes will create cost efficiencies and provide flexibility
55
to better match available services to consumers' identified
56
needs.
57
(2) DEFINITIONS.--As used in this section, the term:
58
(a) "Behavioral health services" means mental health
59
services and substance abuse prevention and treatment services as
60
defined in this chapter and chapter 397 which are provided using
61
state and federal funds.
62
(b) "Decisionmaking model" means a comprehensive management
63
information system needed to answer the following management
64
questions at the federal, state, region, circuit, and local
65
provider levels: who receives what services from which providers
66
with what outcomes and at what costs?
67
(c) "Geographic area" means a county, circuit, regional, or
68
multiregional area in this state.
69
(d) "Managing entity" means a corporation that is organized
70
in this state, is designated or filed as a nonprofit organization
71
under s. 501(c)3) of the Internal Revenue Service, and is under
72
contract to the department to manage the day-to-day operational
73
delivery of behavioral health services through an organized
74
system of care.
75
(e) "Provider networks" mean the direct service agencies
76
that are under contract with a managing entity and that together
77
constitute a comprehensive array of emergency, acute care,
78
residential, outpatient, recovery support, and consumer support
79
services.
80
(3) SERVICE DELIVERY STRATEGIES.--The department may work
81
through managing entities to develop service delivery strategies
82
that will improve the coordination, integration, and management
83
of the delivery of behavioral health services to people who have
84
mental or substance use disorders. It is the intent of the
85
Legislature that a well-managed service delivery system will
86
increase access for those in need of care, improve the
87
coordination and continuity of care for vulnerable and high-risk
88
populations, and redirect service dollars from restrictive care
89
settings to community-based recovery services.
90
(4) DATA INTEGRATION.--For the purpose of data integration
91
and cost-effectiveness, the department shall enter into data
92
sharing agreements with other state agencies in order to develop
93
a person-centered reporting system having uniform definitions and
94
reporting categories to determine behavioral health care services
95
provided, as well as the outcomes and costs of these services.
96
(5) CONTRACT FOR SERVICES.--
97
(a) The department may contract for the purchase and
98
management of behavioral health services with community-based
99
managing entities. The department may require a managing entity
100
to contract for specialized services that are not currently part
101
of the managing entity's network if the department determines
102
that it is in the best interests of consumers of services. The
103
Legislature may require that managing entities contract with
104
specific types of providers in order to carry out special
105
projects. The secretary shall determine the schedule for phasing
106
in contracts with managing entities. The managing entities shall
107
be accountable at a minimum for the operational oversight of the
108
delivery of behavioral health services funded by the department
109
and for the collection and submission of the required data
110
pertaining to these contracted services. A managing entity shall
111
serve a geographic area designated by the department. The
112
geographic area must be of sufficient size in population and have
113
enough public funds for behavioral health services to allow for
114
flexibility and maximum efficiency.
115
(b) The operating costs of the managing entity contract
116
shall be funded through funds from the department and any savings
117
and efficiencies achieved through the implementation of managing
118
entities when realized by their participating provider network
119
agencies. The department recognizes that managing entities will
120
have infrastructure development costs during start-up, so that
121
any efficiencies to be realized by providers from consolidation
122
of management functions, and the resulting savings, will not be
123
achieved during the early years of operation. The department
124
shall negotiate with the managing entity a reasonable and
125
appropriate administrative cost rate. The Legislature intends
126
that reduced local and state contract management and other
127
administrative duties passed on to the managing entity allows
128
funds previously allocated for these purposes to be
129
proportionately reduced and the savings used to purchase the
130
administrative functions of the managing entity. Policies and
131
procedures of the department for monitoring contracts with
132
managing entities shall include provisions for eliminating
133
duplication of the department's and the managing entities'
134
contract management and other administrative activities in order
135
to achieve the goals of cost-effectiveness and regulatory relief.
136
To the maximum extent possible, provider-monitoring activities
137
shall be assigned to the managing entity.
138
(c) Contracting and payment mechanisms for services must
139
promote clinical and financial flexibility and responsiveness
140
and must allow different categorical funds to be integrated at
141
the point of service. The contracted service array must be
142
determined by using public input, needs assessment, and evidence-
143
based and promising best-practice models. The department may
144
employ care-management methodologies, prepaid capitation, and
145
case rate or other methods of payment which promote flexibility,
146
efficiency, and accountability.
147
(6) GOALS.--The goal of the service delivery strategies is
148
to provide a design for an effective coordination, integration,
149
and management approach for delivering effective behavioral
150
health services to persons who are experiencing a mental health
151
or substance abuse crisis, who have a disabling mental illness or
152
a substance use or co-occurring disorder and will require
153
extended services in order to recover from their illness, or who
154
need brief treatment or longer-term supportive interventions to
155
avoid a crisis or disability. Other goals include:
156
(a) Improving accountability for a local system of
157
behavioral health care services to meet performance outcomes and
158
standards through the use of reliable and timely data.
159
(b) Enhancing the continuity of care for all children,
160
adolescents, and adults who enter the publicly funded behavioral
161
health service system.
162
(c) Preserving the "safety net" of publicly funded
163
behavioral health services and providers, and recognizing and
164
ensuring continued local contributions to these services, by
165
establishing locally designed and community-monitored systems of
166
care.
167
(d) Providing early diagnosis and treatment interventions
168
to enhance recovery and prevent hospitalization.
169
(e) Improving the assessment of local needs for behavioral
170
health services.
171
(f) Improving the overall quality of behavioral health
172
services through the use of evidence-based, best-practice, and
173
promising-practice models.
174
(g) Demonstrating improved service integration between
175
behavioral health programs and other programs, such as vocational
176
rehabilitation, education, child welfare, primary health care,
177
emergency services, juvenile justice, and criminal justice.
178
(h) Providing for additional testing of creative and
179
flexible strategies for financing behavioral health services to
180
enhance individualized treatment and support services.
181
(i) Promoting cost-effective quality care.
182
(j) Working with the state to coordinate the admissions and
183
discharges from state civil and forensic hospitals and
184
coordinating admissions and discharges from residential treatment
185
centers.
186
(k) Improving the integration, accessibility, and
187
dissemination of behavioral health data for planning and
188
monitoring purposes.
189
(l) Promoting specialized behavioral health services to
190
residents of assisted living facilities.
191
(m) Working with the state and other stakeholders to reduce
192
the admissions and the length of stay for dependent children in
193
residential treatment centers.
194
(n) Providing services to abused and neglected children and
195
their families as indicated in court-ordered case plans.
196
(o) Providing services to adults and children with co-
197
occurring disorders of mental illnesses and substance abuse
198
problems.
199
(p) Providing services to elder adults in crisis or at-risk
200
for placement in a more restrictive setting due to a serious
201
mental illness or substance abuse.
202
(7) ESSENTIAL ELEMENTS.--It is the intent of the
203
Legislature that the department may plan for and enter into
204
contracts with managing entities to manage care in geographical
205
areas throughout the state. Managing entities shall own and
206
operate information systems that have the capacities to provide,
207
at a minimum, information required for federal and state
208
reporting, monitoring care, assessing local needs, and measuring
209
outcomes.
210
(a) The managing entity must demonstrate the ability of its
211
network of providers to comply with the pertinent provisions of
212
this chapter and chapter 397 and to ensure the provision of
213
comprehensive behavioral health services. The network of
214
providers must include, but need not be limited to, community
215
mental health agencies, substance abuse treatment providers, and
216
best-practice consumer services providers.
217
(b) The department shall terminate its mental health or
218
substance abuse provider contracts for services to be provided by
219
the managing entity at the same time it contracts with the
220
managing entity.
221
(c) The managing entity shall ensure that its provider
222
network is broadly conceived. All mental health or substance
223
abuse treatment providers currently under contract with the
224
department shall be offered a contract by the managing entity.
225
(d) The department may contract with managing entities to
226
provide the following core functions:
227
1. Financial accountability;
228
2. Allocation of funds to network providers in a manner
229
that reflects the department's strategic direction and plans;
230
3. Provider monitoring to ensure compliance with federal
231
and state laws, rules, and regulations;
232
4. Data collection, reporting, and analysis;
233
5. Operational plans to implement objectives of the
234
department's strategic plan;
235
6. Contract compliance;
236
7. Performance management;
237
8. Collaboration with community stakeholders, including
238
local government;
239
9. System of care through network development;
240
10. Consumer care coordination;
241
11. Continuous quality improvement;
242
12. Timely access to appropriate services;
243
13. Cost-effectiveness and system improvements;
244
14. Assistance in the development of the department's
245
strategic plan;
246
15. Participation in community, circuit, regional, and state
247
planning;
248
16. Resource management and maximization, including pursuit
249
of third-party payments and grant applications;
250
17. Incentives for providers to improve quality and access;
251
18. Liaison with consumers;
252
19. Community needs assessment; and
253
20. Securing local matching funds.
254
(e) The managing entity shall ensure that written
255
cooperative agreements are developed and implemented among the
256
criminal and juvenile justice systems, the local community-based
257
care network, and the local behavioral health providers in the
258
geographic area which define strategies and alternatives for
259
diverting people who have mental illness and substance abuse
260
problems from the criminal justice system to the community. These
261
agreements must also address the provision of appropriate
262
services to persons who have behavioral health problems and leave
263
the criminal justice system.
264
(f) Managing entities must collect and submit data to the
265
department regarding persons served, outcomes of persons served,
266
and the costs of services provided through the department's
267
contract. The department shall evaluate managing entity services
268
based on consumer-centered outcome measures that reflect national
269
standards that can dependably be measured. The department shall
270
work with managing entities to establish performance standards
271
related to:
272
1. The extent to which individuals in the community receive
273
services.
274
2. The improvement of quality of care for individuals
275
served.
276
3. The success of strategies to divert jail, prison, and
277
forensic facility admissions.
278
4. Consumer and family satisfaction.
279
5. The satisfaction of key community constituents such as
280
law enforcement agencies, juvenile justice agencies, the courts,
281
the schools, local government entities, hospitals, and others as
282
appropriate for the geographical area of the managing entity.
283
(g) The Agency for Health Care Administration may establish
284
a certified match program, which must be voluntary. Under a
285
certified match program, reimbursement is limited to the federal
286
Medicaid share to Medicaid-enrolled strategy participants. The
287
agency shall take no action to implement a certified match
288
program without ensuring that the consultation provisions of
289
chapter 216 have been met. The agency may seek federal waivers
290
that are necessary to implement the behavioral health service
291
delivery strategies.
292
(8) MANAGING ENTITY REQUIREMENTS.--The department may adopt
293
rules and standards and a process for the qualification and
294
operation of managing entities which shall be based, in part, on
295
the following criteria:
296
(a) Managing entities must be corporations organized in
297
this state and designated or filed as nonprofit organizations
298
under s. 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code.
299
(b) A managing entity's governance structure shall be
300
representative and shall, at a minimum, include consumers and
301
family members, appropriate community stakeholders and
302
organizations, and providers of substance abuse and mental health
303
services as defined in this chapter and chapter 397.
304
(c) A managing entity that was originally formed primarily
305
by substance abuse or mental health providers must present and
306
demonstrate a detailed, consensus approach to expanding its
307
provider network and governance to include both substance abuse
308
and mental health providers.
309
(d) A managing entity must submit a network management plan
310
and budget in such form and manner as the department determines.
311
The plan must detail the means for implementing the duties to be
312
contracted to the managing entity and the efficiencies to be
313
anticipated by the department as a result of executing the
314
contract. The department may require modifications to the plan
315
and must approve the plan before contracting with a managing
316
entity. The department may contract with a managing entity that
317
demonstrates readiness to assume core functions, and may continue
318
to add functions and responsibilities to the managing entity's
319
contract over time as additional competencies are developed as
320
identified in paragraph (g). Notwithstanding other provisions of
321
this section, the department may continue and expand managing
322
entity contracts if the department determines that the managing
323
entity meets the requirements specified in this section.
324
(e) Managing entities shall operate in a transparent
325
manner, providing public access to information, notice of
326
meetings, and opportunities for broad public participation in
327
decisionmaking. The managing entity's network management plan
328
must detail policies and procedures that will ensure
329
transparency.
330
(f) Before contracting with a managing entity, the
331
department must perform an on-site readiness review of a managing
332
entity to determine its operational capacity to satisfactorily
333
perform the duties to be contracted.
334
(g) The department shall engage community stakeholders,
335
including providers and managing entities under contract with the
336
department, in the development of objective standards to measure
337
the competencies of managing entities, their readiness to assume
338
the responsibilities described in this section, and the outcomes
339
to hold them accountable.
340
(h) Notwithstanding other provisions in law, the Department
341
of Financial Services and the Department of Management Services
342
shall provide the department with the flexibility needed to
343
implement this section.
344
(9) DEPARTMENT RESPONSIBILITIES.--With the introduction of
345
managing entities to monitor department-contracted providers'
346
day-to-day operations, the department and its regional and
347
circuit offices will have increased ability to focus on broad
348
systemic substance abuse and mental health issues. After the
349
department enters into a managing entity contract in a geographic
350
area, the regional and circuit offices of the department in that
351
area shall direct their efforts primarily to monitoring the
352
managing entity contract, including negotiation of system quality
353
improvement goals each contract year and review of the managing
354
entity plans to execute department strategic plans; carrying out
355
statutorily mandated licensure functions; conducting community
356
and regional substance abuse and mental health planning;
357
communicating to the department the local needs assessed by the
358
managing entity; preparing department strategic plans;
359
coordinating with other state and local agencies; assisting the
360
department to assess local trends and issues and advising
361
departmental headquarters on local priorities; and providing
362
leadership in disaster planning and preparation.
363
(10) MANAGEMENT INFORMATION SYSTEM REQUIREMENTS.--
364
(a) The department, in collaboration with the managing
365
entities, shall design and implement a comprehensive behavioral
366
health management information system.
367
(b) Each managing entity shall develop and maintain a data
368
system that includes data from agencies under contract with the
369
managing entity. At a minimum, the managing entity's data system
370
shall provide information needed by the managing entity to
371
address the management and clinical care needs of the local
372
provider networks and information needed by the department to
373
meet state and federal data-reporting requirements, planning
374
requirements, and its system-of-care needs and evaluation.
375
(c) The department shall collaborate with managing entities
376
to develop business requirements that managing entities will use
377
to extract data required at the state and federal levels from
378
their local database systems and to submit these data
379
electronically into the department's central data system. The
380
Legislature recognizes that the department is not in the business
381
of application software development and maintenance and is not
382
adequately staffed to do so. The initial development and ongoing
383
maintenance and operation of the department's central data system
384
shall be outsourced through contract with an established third-
385
party information technology vendor to increase system access to
386
users and provide timely and accurate information to stakeholders
387
at all levels of management.
388
(d) The department shall use the central data system to
389
make nonconfidential data accessible to stakeholders for
390
planning, monitoring, evaluation, and research purposes.
391
(11) REPORTING.--Reports of the department's activities,
392
progress, and needs in achieving the goal of contracting with
393
managing entities in each circuit and region statewide must be
394
submitted to the appropriate substantive and appropriations
395
committees in the Senate and the House of Representatives on
396
January 1 and July 1 of each year until the full transition to
397
managing entities has been accomplished statewide. A section of
398
each report shall address accomplishments and barriers to
399
implementation of the Management Information System described in
400
this section as necessary to support decisionmaking, including
401
the department's actions and to assist managing entities
402
statewide to achieve the desired interoperability of their
403
information systems.
404
(12) RULES.--The department shall adopt rules to administer
405
this section and, as necessary, to further specify requirements
406
of managing entities.
407
Section 2. This act shall take effect July 1, 2008.
CODING: Words stricken are deletions; words underlined are additions.