1 | A bill to be entitled |
2 | An act relating to health care; amending s. 400.179, F.S.; |
3 | authorizing the Agency for Health Care Administration to |
4 | transfer funds to the Grants and Donations Trust Fund for |
5 | certain repayments; amending s. 409.017, F.S.; revising |
6 | the short title; providing additional legislative intent; |
7 | requiring the agency to develop a procurement document and |
8 | procedure to claim certain federal matching funds; |
9 | amending s. 409.904, F.S.; discontinuing optional Medicaid |
10 | payments for certain persons age 65 or over or who are |
11 | blind or disabled; revising certain eligibility criteria |
12 | for pregnant women and children younger than age 21; |
13 | amending s. 409.906, F.S.; authorizing payment of a |
14 | specified amount for Medicaid services provided by an |
15 | anesthesiologist assistant; amending s. 409.908, F.S.; |
16 | deleting a provision prohibiting Medicaid from making any |
17 | payment toward deductibles and coinsurance for services |
18 | not covered by Medicaid; providing limitations on Medicaid |
19 | payments for coinsurance; providing for Medicaid to pay |
20 | for certain X-ray services in a nursing home; revising |
21 | reimbursement rates for providers of Medicaid prescribed |
22 | drugs; requiring the agency to revise reimbursement rates |
23 | for hospitals, nursing homes, county health departments, |
24 | and community intermediate care facilities for the |
25 | developmentally disabled for 2 fiscal years; requiring the |
26 | agency to apply the effect of the revised reimbursement |
27 | rates to set payment rates for managed care plans and |
28 | nursing home diversion programs; requiring the agency to |
29 | establish workgroups to evaluate alternative reimbursement |
30 | and payment methodologies for hospitals, nursing |
31 | facilities, and managed care plans; requiring a report; |
32 | providing for future repeal of the suspension of the use |
33 | of cost data to set certain rates; amending s. 409.911, |
34 | F.S.; revising the share data used to calculate |
35 | disproportionate share payments to hospitals; amending s. |
36 | 409.9112, F.S.; revising the time period during which the |
37 | agency is prohibited from distributing disproportionate |
38 | share payments to regional perinatal intensive care |
39 | centers; amending s. 409.9113, F.S.; requiring the agency |
40 | to distribute moneys provided in the General |
41 | Appropriations Act to statutorily defined teaching |
42 | hospitals and family practice teaching hospitals under the |
43 | teaching hospital disproportionate share program for the |
44 | 2008-2009 fiscal year; amending s. 409.9117, F.S.; |
45 | prohibiting the agency from distributing moneys under the |
46 | primary care disproportionate share program for the 2008- |
47 | 2009 fiscal year; amending s. 409.912, F.S.; adding a |
48 | county for participation in the Medicaid behavioral health |
49 | care services specialty prepaid plan; revising |
50 | reimbursement rates to pharmacies for Medicaid prescribed |
51 | drugs; requiring the agency to notify the Legislature |
52 | before seeking an amendment to the state plan in order to |
53 | implement programs authorized by the Deficit Reduction Act |
54 | of 2005; creating s. 409.91206, F.S.; providing for |
55 | proposed alternatives for health and long-term care |
56 | reforms; amending s. 409.9122, F.S.; revising enrollment |
57 | requirements relating to Medicaid managed care programs |
58 | and the agency's authority to assign persons to MediPass |
59 | or a managed care plan; amending s. 409.9124, F.S.; |
60 | removing the limitation on the application of certain |
61 | rates and rate reductions used by the agency to reimburse |
62 | managed care plans; amending s. 409.913, F.S.; prohibiting |
63 | mailing of the explanation of benefits for certain |
64 | Medicaid services; repealing s. 409.9061, F.S., relating |
65 | to authority for a statewide laboratory services contract; |
66 | repealing s. 430.83, F.S., relating to the Sunshine for |
67 | Seniors Program; providing an effective date. |
68 |
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69 | Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida: |
70 |
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71 | Section 1. Paragraph (d) of subsection (2) of section |
72 | 400.179, Florida Statutes, is amended to read: |
73 | 400.179 Liability for Medicaid underpayments and |
74 | overpayments.-- |
75 | (2) Because any transfer of a nursing facility may expose |
76 | the fact that Medicaid may have underpaid or overpaid the |
77 | transferor, and because in most instances, any such underpayment |
78 | or overpayment can only be determined following a formal field |
79 | audit, the liabilities for any such underpayments or |
80 | overpayments shall be as follows: |
81 | (d) Where the transfer involves a facility that has been |
82 | leased by the transferor: |
83 | 1. The transferee shall, as a condition to being issued a |
84 | license by the agency, acquire, maintain, and provide proof to |
85 | the agency of a bond with a term of 30 months, renewable |
86 | annually, in an amount not less than the total of 3 months' |
87 | Medicaid payments to the facility computed on the basis of the |
88 | preceding 12-month average Medicaid payments to the facility. |
89 | 2. A leasehold licensee may meet the requirements of |
90 | subparagraph 1. by payment of a nonrefundable fee, paid at |
91 | initial licensure, paid at the time of any subsequent change of |
92 | ownership, and paid annually thereafter, in the amount of 1 |
93 | percent of the total of 3 months' Medicaid payments to the |
94 | facility computed on the basis of the preceding 12-month average |
95 | Medicaid payments to the facility. If a preceding 12-month |
96 | average is not available, projected Medicaid payments may be |
97 | used. The fee shall be deposited into the Health Care Trust Fund |
98 | and shall be accounted for separately as a Medicaid nursing home |
99 | overpayment account. These fees shall be used at the sole |
100 | discretion of the agency to repay nursing home Medicaid |
101 | overpayments. The agency is authorized to transfer funds to the |
102 | Grants and Donations Trust Fund for such repayments. Payment of |
103 | this fee shall not release the licensee from any liability for |
104 | any Medicaid overpayments, nor shall payment bar the agency from |
105 | seeking to recoup overpayments from the licensee and any other |
106 | liable party. As a condition of exercising this lease bond |
107 | alternative, licensees paying this fee must maintain an existing |
108 | lease bond through the end of the 30-month term period of that |
109 | bond. The agency is herein granted specific authority to |
110 | promulgate all rules pertaining to the administration and |
111 | management of this account, including withdrawals from the |
112 | account, subject to federal review and approval. This provision |
113 | shall take effect upon becoming law and shall apply to any |
114 | leasehold license application. The financial viability of the |
115 | Medicaid nursing home overpayment account shall be determined by |
116 | the agency through annual review of the account balance and the |
117 | amount of total outstanding, unpaid Medicaid overpayments owing |
118 | from leasehold licensees to the agency as determined by final |
119 | agency audits. |
120 | 3. The leasehold licensee may meet the bond requirement |
121 | through other arrangements acceptable to the agency. The agency |
122 | is herein granted specific authority to promulgate rules |
123 | pertaining to lease bond arrangements. |
124 | 4. All existing nursing facility licensees, operating the |
125 | facility as a leasehold, shall acquire, maintain, and provide |
126 | proof to the agency of the 30-month bond required in |
127 | subparagraph 1., above, on and after July 1, 1993, for each |
128 | license renewal. |
129 | 5. It shall be the responsibility of all nursing facility |
130 | operators, operating the facility as a leasehold, to renew the |
131 | 30-month bond and to provide proof of such renewal to the agency |
132 | annually. |
133 | 6. Any failure of the nursing facility operator to |
134 | acquire, maintain, renew annually, or provide proof to the |
135 | agency shall be grounds for the agency to deny, revoke, and |
136 | suspend the facility license to operate such facility and to |
137 | take any further action, including, but not limited to, |
138 | enjoining the facility, asserting a moratorium pursuant to part |
139 | II of chapter 408, or applying for a receiver, deemed necessary |
140 | to ensure compliance with this section and to safeguard and |
141 | protect the health, safety, and welfare of the facility's |
142 | residents. A lease agreement required as a condition of bond |
143 | financing or refinancing under s. 154.213 by a health facilities |
144 | authority or required under s. 159.30 by a county or |
145 | municipality is not a leasehold for purposes of this paragraph |
146 | and is not subject to the bond requirement of this paragraph. |
147 | Section 2. Section 409.017, Florida Statutes, is amended |
148 | to read: |
149 | 409.017 Local Funding Revenue Maximization Act; |
150 | legislative intent; revenue maximization program.-- |
151 | (1) SHORT TITLE.--This section may be cited as the "Local |
152 | Funding Revenue Maximization Act." |
153 | (2) LEGISLATIVE INTENT.-- |
154 | (a) The Legislature recognizes that state funds do not |
155 | fully utilize federal funding matching opportunities for health |
156 | and human services needs. It is the intent of the Legislature to |
157 | authorize the use of certified local funding for federal |
158 | matching programs to the fullest extent possible to maximize |
159 | federal funding of local preventive services and local child |
160 | development programs in this state. To that end, the Legislature |
161 | expects that state agencies will take a proactive approach in |
162 | implementing this legislative priority. It is the further intent |
163 | of the Legislature that this act shall be revenue neutral with |
164 | respect to state funds. |
165 | (b) It is the intent of the Legislature that revenue |
166 | maximization opportunities using certified local funding shall |
167 | occur only after available state funds have been utilized to |
168 | generate matching federal funding for the state. |
169 | (c) It is the intent of the Legislature that participation |
170 | in revenue maximization is to be voluntary for local political |
171 | subdivisions. |
172 | (d) Except for funds expended pursuant to Title XIX of the |
173 | Social Security Act, it is the intent of the Legislature that |
174 | certified local funding for federal matching programs not |
175 | supplant or replace state funds. Beginning July 1, 2004, any |
176 | state funds supplanted or replaced with local tax revenues for |
177 | Title XIX funds shall be expressly approved in the General |
178 | Appropriations Act or by the Legislative Budget Commission |
179 | pursuant to chapter 216. |
180 | (e) It is the intent of the Legislature that revenue |
181 | maximization shall not divert existing funds from state agencies |
182 | that are currently using local funds to maximize matching |
183 | federal and state funds to the greatest extent possible. |
184 | (f) It is the intent of the legislature to encourage and |
185 | allow any agency to engage, through a competitive procurement |
186 | process, an entity with expertise in claiming justifiable and |
187 | appropriate federal funds through revenue maximization efforts |
188 | both retrospectively and prospectively. This claiming may |
189 | include, but not be limited to, administrative and services |
190 | activities that are eligible under federal matching programs. |
191 | (3) REVENUE MAXIMIZATION PROGRAM.-- |
192 | (a) For purposes of this section, the term "agency" means |
193 | any state agency or department that is involved in providing |
194 | health, social, or human services, including, but not limited |
195 | to, the Agency for Health Care Administration, the Agency for |
196 | Workforce Innovation, the Department of Children and Family |
197 | Services, the Department of Elderly Affairs, the Department of |
198 | Juvenile Justice, the Department of Education, and the State |
199 | Board of Education. |
200 | (b) The Agency for Health Care Administration may develop |
201 | a procurement document and procedure to claim administrative |
202 | federal matching funds for state provided educational services. |
203 | The agency shall then competitively procure an entity with |
204 | appropriate expertise and experience to retrospectively and |
205 | prospectively maximize federal revenues through administrative |
206 | claims for federal matching funds for state provided educational |
207 | services. |
208 | (c)(b) Each agency shall establish programs and mechanisms |
209 | designed to maximize the use of local funding for federal |
210 | programs in accordance with this section. |
211 | (d)(c) The use of local matching funds under this section |
212 | must be limited to public revenue funds of local political |
213 | subdivisions, including, but not limited to, counties, |
214 | municipalities, and special districts. To the extent permitted |
215 | by federal law, funds donated to such local political |
216 | subdivisions by private entities, such as, but not limited to, |
217 | the United Way, community foundations or other foundations, and |
218 | businesses, or by individuals are considered to be public |
219 | revenue funds available for matching federal funding. |
220 | (e)(d) Subject to paragraph (g) (f), any federal |
221 | reimbursement received as a result of the certification of local |
222 | matching funds must, unless specifically prohibited by federal |
223 | law or state law, including the General Appropriations Act, and |
224 | subject to the availability of specific appropriation and |
225 | release authority, be returned within 30 days after receipt by |
226 | the agency by the most expedient means possible to the local |
227 | political subdivision providing such funding, and the local |
228 | political subdivision must be provided an annual accounting of |
229 | federal reimbursements received by the state or its agencies as |
230 | a result of the certification of the local political |
231 | subdivision's matching funds. The receipt by a local political |
232 | subdivision of such matching funds must not in any way influence |
233 | or be used as a factor in developing any agency's annual |
234 | operating budget allocation methodology or formula or any |
235 | subsequent budget amendment allocations or formulas. If |
236 | necessary, agreements must be made between an agency and the |
237 | local political subdivision to accomplish that purpose. Such an |
238 | agreement may provide that the local political subdivision must: |
239 | verify the eligibility of the local program or programs and the |
240 | individuals served thereby to qualify for federal matching |
241 | funds; shall develop and maintain the financial records |
242 | necessary for documenting the appropriate use of federal funds; |
243 | shall comply with all applicable state and federal laws, |
244 | regulations, and rules that regulate such federal services; and |
245 | shall reimburse the cost of any disallowance of federal funding |
246 | previously provided to a local political subdivision resulting |
247 | from the failure of that local political subdivision to comply |
248 | with applicable state or federal laws, rules, or regulations. |
249 | (f)(e) Each agency, as applicable, shall work with local |
250 | political subdivisions to modify any state plans and to seek and |
251 | implement any federal waivers necessary to implement this |
252 | section. If such modifications or waivers require the approval |
253 | of the Legislature, the agency, as applicable, shall draft such |
254 | legislation and present it to the President of the Senate and |
255 | the Speaker of the House of Representatives and to the |
256 | respective committee chairs of the Senate and the House of |
257 | Representatives by January 1, 2004, and, as applicable, annually |
258 | thereafter. |
259 | (g)(f) Each agency, as applicable, before funds generated |
260 | under this section are distributed to any local political |
261 | subdivision, may deduct the actual administrative cost for |
262 | implementing and monitoring the local match program; however, |
263 | such administrative costs may not exceed 5 percent of the total |
264 | federal reimbursement funding to be provided to the local |
265 | political subdivision under paragraph (e) (d). To the extent |
266 | that any other provision of state law applies to the |
267 | certification of local matching funds for a specific program, |
268 | the provisions of that statute which relate to administrative |
269 | costs apply in lieu of the provisions of this paragraph. The |
270 | failure to remit reimbursement to the local political |
271 | subdivision will result in the payment of interest, in addition |
272 | to the amount to be reimbursed at a rate pursuant to s. 55.03(1) |
273 | on the unpaid amount from the expiration of the 30-day period |
274 | until payment is received. |
275 | (h)(g) Each agency, respectively, shall annually submit to |
276 | the Governor, the President of the Senate, and the Speaker of |
277 | the House of Representatives, no later than January 1, a report |
278 | that documents the specific activities undertaken during the |
279 | previous fiscal year under this section. The report must |
280 | include, but is not limited to, a statement of the total amount |
281 | of federal matching funds generated by local matching funds |
282 | under this section, reported by federal funding source; the |
283 | total amount of block grant funds expended during the previous |
284 | fiscal year, reported by federal funding source; the total |
285 | amount for federal matching fund programs, including, but not |
286 | limited to, Temporary Assistance for Needy Families and Child |
287 | Care and Development Fund, of unobligated funds and unliquidated |
288 | funds, both as of the close of the previous federal fiscal year; |
289 | the amount of unliquidated funds that is in danger of being |
290 | returned to the Federal Government at the end of the current |
291 | federal fiscal year; and a detailed plan and timeline for |
292 | spending any unobligated and unliquidated funds by the end of |
293 | the current federal fiscal year. |
294 | Section 3. Subsections (1) and (2) of section 409.904, |
295 | Florida Statutes, are amended to read: |
296 | 409.904 Optional payments for eligible persons.--The |
297 | agency may make payments for medical assistance and related |
298 | services on behalf of the following persons who are determined |
299 | to be eligible subject to the income, assets, and categorical |
300 | eligibility tests set forth in federal and state law. Payment on |
301 | behalf of these Medicaid eligible persons is subject to the |
302 | availability of moneys and any limitations established by the |
303 | General Appropriations Act or chapter 216. |
304 | (1)(a) From July 1, 2005, through December 31, 2005, a |
305 | person who is age 65 or older or is determined to be disabled, |
306 | whose income is at or below 88 percent of federal poverty level, |
307 | and whose assets do not exceed established limitations. |
308 | (b) Effective January 1, 2006, and subject to federal |
309 | waiver approval, a person who is age 65 or older or is |
310 | determined to be disabled, whose income is at or below 88 |
311 | percent of the federal poverty level, whose assets do not exceed |
312 | established limitations, and who is not eligible for Medicare |
313 | or, if eligible for Medicare, is also eligible for and receiving |
314 | Medicaid-covered institutional care services, hospice services, |
315 | or home and community-based services. The agency shall seek |
316 | federal authorization through a waiver to provide this coverage. |
317 | This subsection expires June 30, 2009. |
318 | (2)(a) A family, a pregnant woman, a child under age 21, a |
319 | person age 65 or over, or a blind or disabled person, who would |
320 | be eligible under any group listed in s. 409.903(1), (2), or |
321 | (3), except that the income or assets of such family or person |
322 | exceed established limitations. For a family or person in one of |
323 | these coverage groups, medical expenses are deductible from |
324 | income in accordance with federal requirements in order to make |
325 | a determination of eligibility. A family or person eligible |
326 | under the coverage known as the "medically needy," is eligible |
327 | to receive the same services as other Medicaid recipients, with |
328 | the exception of services in skilled nursing facilities and |
329 | intermediate care facilities for the developmentally disabled. |
330 | This subsection expires June 30, 2009. |
331 | (b) Effective July 1, 2009, a pregnant woman or a child |
332 | younger than 21 years of age who would be eligible under any |
333 | group listed in s. 409.903, except that the income or assets of |
334 | such group exceed established limitations. For a person in one |
335 | of these coverage groups, medical expenses are deductible from |
336 | income in accordance with federal requirements in order to make |
337 | a determination of eligibility. A person eligible under the |
338 | coverage known as the "medically needy" is eligible to receive |
339 | the same services as other Medicaid recipients, with the |
340 | exception of services in skilled nursing facilities and |
341 | intermediate care facilities for the developmentally disabled. |
342 | Section 4. Subsection (26) is added to section 409.906, |
343 | Florida Statutes, to read: |
344 | 409.906 Optional Medicaid services.--Subject to specific |
345 | appropriations, the agency may make payments for services which |
346 | are optional to the state under Title XIX of the Social Security |
347 | Act and are furnished by Medicaid providers to recipients who |
348 | are determined to be eligible on the dates on which the services |
349 | were provided. Any optional service that is provided shall be |
350 | provided only when medically necessary and in accordance with |
351 | state and federal law. Optional services rendered by providers |
352 | in mobile units to Medicaid recipients may be restricted or |
353 | prohibited by the agency. Nothing in this section shall be |
354 | construed to prevent or limit the agency from adjusting fees, |
355 | reimbursement rates, lengths of stay, number of visits, or |
356 | number of services, or making any other adjustments necessary to |
357 | comply with the availability of moneys and any limitations or |
358 | directions provided for in the General Appropriations Act or |
359 | chapter 216. If necessary to safeguard the state's systems of |
360 | providing services to elderly and disabled persons and subject |
361 | to the notice and review provisions of s. 216.177, the Governor |
362 | may direct the Agency for Health Care Administration to amend |
363 | the Medicaid state plan to delete the optional Medicaid service |
364 | known as "Intermediate Care Facilities for the Developmentally |
365 | Disabled." Optional services may include: |
366 | (26) ANESTHESIOLOGIST ASSISTANT SERVICES.--The agency may |
367 | pay for all services provided to a recipient by an |
368 | anesthesiologist assistant licensed under s. 458.3475 or s. |
369 | 459.023. Reimbursement for such services must be not less than |
370 | 80 percent of the reimbursement that would be paid to a |
371 | physician who provided the same services. |
372 | Section 5. Subsections (13) and (14) of section 409.908, |
373 | Florida Statutes, as amended by chapter 2007-331, Laws of |
374 | Florida, are amended, and subsection (23) is added to that |
375 | section, to read: |
376 | 409.908 Reimbursement of Medicaid providers.--Subject to |
377 | specific appropriations, the agency shall reimburse Medicaid |
378 | providers, in accordance with state and federal law, according |
379 | to methodologies set forth in the rules of the agency and in |
380 | policy manuals and handbooks incorporated by reference therein. |
381 | These methodologies may include fee schedules, reimbursement |
382 | methods based on cost reporting, negotiated fees, competitive |
383 | bidding pursuant to s. 287.057, and other mechanisms the agency |
384 | considers efficient and effective for purchasing services or |
385 | goods on behalf of recipients. If a provider is reimbursed based |
386 | on cost reporting and submits a cost report late and that cost |
387 | report would have been used to set a lower reimbursement rate |
388 | for a rate semester, then the provider's rate for that semester |
389 | shall be retroactively calculated using the new cost report, and |
390 | full payment at the recalculated rate shall be effected |
391 | retroactively. Medicare-granted extensions for filing cost |
392 | reports, if applicable, shall also apply to Medicaid cost |
393 | reports. Payment for Medicaid compensable services made on |
394 | behalf of Medicaid eligible persons is subject to the |
395 | availability of moneys and any limitations or directions |
396 | provided for in the General Appropriations Act or chapter 216. |
397 | Further, nothing in this section shall be construed to prevent |
398 | or limit the agency from adjusting fees, reimbursement rates, |
399 | lengths of stay, number of visits, or number of services, or |
400 | making any other adjustments necessary to comply with the |
401 | availability of moneys and any limitations or directions |
402 | provided for in the General Appropriations Act, provided the |
403 | adjustment is consistent with legislative intent. |
404 | (13) Medicare premiums for persons eligible for both |
405 | Medicare and Medicaid coverage shall be paid at the rates |
406 | established by Title XVIII of the Social Security Act. For |
407 | Medicare services rendered to Medicaid-eligible persons, |
408 | Medicaid shall pay Medicare deductibles and coinsurance as |
409 | follows: |
410 | (a) Medicaid shall make no payment toward deductibles and |
411 | coinsurance for any service that is not covered by Medicaid. |
412 | (a)(b) Medicaid's financial obligation for deductibles and |
413 | coinsurance payments shall be based on Medicare allowable fees, |
414 | not on a provider's billed charges. |
415 | (b)(c) Medicaid will pay no portion of Medicare |
416 | deductibles and coinsurance when payment that Medicare has made |
417 | for the service equals or exceeds what Medicaid would have paid |
418 | if it had been the sole payor. The combined payment of Medicare |
419 | and Medicaid shall not exceed the amount Medicaid would have |
420 | paid had it been the sole payor. The Legislature finds that |
421 | there has been confusion regarding the reimbursement for |
422 | services rendered to dually eligible Medicare beneficiaries. |
423 | Accordingly, the Legislature clarifies that it has always been |
424 | the intent of the Legislature before and after 1991 that, in |
425 | reimbursing in accordance with fees established by Title XVIII |
426 | for premiums, deductibles, and coinsurance for Medicare services |
427 | rendered by physicians to Medicaid eligible persons, physicians |
428 | be reimbursed at the lesser of the amount billed by the |
429 | physician or the Medicaid maximum allowable fee established by |
430 | the Agency for Health Care Administration, as is permitted by |
431 | federal law. It has never been the intent of the Legislature |
432 | with regard to such services rendered by physicians that |
433 | Medicaid be required to provide any payment for deductibles, |
434 | coinsurance, or copayments for Medicare cost sharing, or any |
435 | expenses incurred relating thereto, in excess of the payment |
436 | amount provided for under the State Medicaid plan for such |
437 | service. This payment methodology is applicable even in those |
438 | situations in which the payment for Medicare cost sharing for a |
439 | qualified Medicare beneficiary with respect to an item or |
440 | service is reduced or eliminated. This expression of the |
441 | Legislature is in clarification of existing law and shall apply |
442 | to payment for, and with respect to provider agreements with |
443 | respect to, items or services furnished on or after the |
444 | effective date of this act. This paragraph applies to payment by |
445 | Medicaid for items and services furnished before the effective |
446 | date of this act if such payment is the subject of a lawsuit |
447 | that is based on the provisions of this section, and that is |
448 | pending as of, or is initiated after, the effective date of this |
449 | act. |
450 | (c)(d) Notwithstanding paragraphs (a) and (b) (a)-(c): |
451 | 1. Medicaid payments for Nursing Home Medicare part A |
452 | coinsurance are shall be limited to the Medicaid nursing home |
453 | per diem rate less any amounts paid by Medicare, but only up to |
454 | the amount of Medicare coinsurance. The Medicaid per diem rate |
455 | shall be the rate in effect for the dates of service of the |
456 | crossover claims and may not be subsequently adjusted due to |
457 | subsequent per diem rate adjustments. |
458 | 2. Medicaid shall pay all deductibles and coinsurance for |
459 | Medicare-eligible recipients receiving freestanding end stage |
460 | renal dialysis center services. |
461 | 3. Medicaid payments for general and specialty hospital |
462 | inpatient services are shall be limited to the Medicare |
463 | deductible and coinsurance per spell of illness. Medicaid |
464 | payments for hospital Medicare Part A coinsurance shall be |
465 | limited to the Medicaid hospital per diem rate less any amounts |
466 | paid by Medicare, but only up to the amount of Medicare |
467 | coinsurance. Medicaid payments for coinsurance shall be limited |
468 | to the Medicaid per diem rate in effect for the dates of service |
469 | of the crossover claims and may not be subsequently adjusted due |
470 | to subsequent per diem adjustments. Medicaid shall make no |
471 | payment toward coinsurance for Medicare general hospital |
472 | inpatient services. |
473 | 4. Medicaid shall pay all deductibles and coinsurance for |
474 | Medicare emergency transportation services provided by |
475 | ambulances licensed pursuant to chapter 401. |
476 | 5. Medicaid shall pay all deductibles and coinsurance for |
477 | portable X-ray Medicare Part B services provided in a nursing |
478 | home. |
479 | (14) A provider of prescribed drugs shall be reimbursed |
480 | the least of the amount billed by the provider, the provider's |
481 | usual and customary charge, or the Medicaid maximum allowable |
482 | fee established by the agency, plus a dispensing fee. The |
483 | Medicaid maximum allowable fee for ingredient cost will be based |
484 | on the lower of: average wholesale price (AWP) minus 16.4 15.4 |
485 | percent, wholesaler acquisition cost (WAC) plus 4.75 5.75 |
486 | percent, the federal upper limit (FUL), the state maximum |
487 | allowable cost (SMAC), or the usual and customary (UAC) charge |
488 | billed by the provider. Medicaid providers are required to |
489 | dispense generic drugs if available at lower cost and the agency |
490 | has not determined that the branded product is more cost- |
491 | effective, unless the prescriber has requested and received |
492 | approval to require the branded product. The agency is directed |
493 | to implement a variable dispensing fee for payments for |
494 | prescribed medicines while ensuring continued access for |
495 | Medicaid recipients. The variable dispensing fee may be based |
496 | upon, but not limited to, either or both the volume of |
497 | prescriptions dispensed by a specific pharmacy provider, the |
498 | volume of prescriptions dispensed to an individual recipient, |
499 | and dispensing of preferred-drug-list products. The agency may |
500 | increase the pharmacy dispensing fee authorized by statute and |
501 | in the annual General Appropriations Act by $0.50 for the |
502 | dispensing of a Medicaid preferred-drug-list product and reduce |
503 | the pharmacy dispensing fee by $0.50 for the dispensing of a |
504 | Medicaid product that is not included on the preferred drug |
505 | list. The agency may establish a supplemental pharmaceutical |
506 | dispensing fee to be paid to providers returning unused unit- |
507 | dose packaged medications to stock and crediting the Medicaid |
508 | program for the ingredient cost of those medications if the |
509 | ingredient costs to be credited exceed the value of the |
510 | supplemental dispensing fee. The agency is authorized to limit |
511 | reimbursement for prescribed medicine in order to comply with |
512 | any limitations or directions provided for in the General |
513 | Appropriations Act, which may include implementing a prospective |
514 | or concurrent utilization review program. |
515 | (23)(a) The agency shall establish rates at a level that |
516 | ensures no increase in statewide expenditures resulting from a |
517 | change in unit costs for 2 fiscal years effective July 1, 2009. |
518 | Reimbursement rates for the 2 fiscal years shall be as provided |
519 | in the General Appropriations Act. |
520 | (b) This subsection applies to the following provider |
521 | types: |
522 | 1. Inpatient hospitals. |
523 | 2. Outpatient hospitals. |
524 | 3. Nursing homes. |
525 | 4. County health departments. |
526 | 5. Community intermediate care facilities for the |
527 | developmentally disabled. |
528 | 6. Prepaid health plans. |
529 | |
530 | The agency shall apply the effect of this subsection to the |
531 | reimbursement rates for nursing home diversion programs. |
532 | (c) The agency shall create a workgroup on hospital |
533 | reimbursement, a workgroup on nursing facility reimbursement, |
534 | and a workgroup on managed care plan payment. The workgroups |
535 | shall evaluate alternative reimbursement and payment |
536 | methodologies for hospitals, nursing facilities, and managed |
537 | care plans, including prospective payment methodologies for |
538 | hospitals and nursing facilities. The nursing facility workgroup |
539 | shall also consider price-based methodologies for indirect care |
540 | and acuity adjustments for direct care. The agency shall submit |
541 | a report on the evaluated alternative reimbursement |
542 | methodologies to the relevant committees of the Senate and the |
543 | House of Representatives by November 1, 2009. |
544 | (d) This subsection expires June 30, 2011. |
545 | Section 6. Paragraph (a) of subsection (2) of section |
546 | 409.911, Florida Statutes, is amended to read: |
547 | 409.911 Disproportionate share program.--Subject to |
548 | specific allocations established within the General |
549 | Appropriations Act and any limitations established pursuant to |
550 | chapter 216, the agency shall distribute, pursuant to this |
551 | section, moneys to hospitals providing a disproportionate share |
552 | of Medicaid or charity care services by making quarterly |
553 | Medicaid payments as required. Notwithstanding the provisions of |
554 | s. 409.915, counties are exempt from contributing toward the |
555 | cost of this special reimbursement for hospitals serving a |
556 | disproportionate share of low-income patients. |
557 | (2) The Agency for Health Care Administration shall use |
558 | the following actual audited data to determine the Medicaid days |
559 | and charity care to be used in calculating the disproportionate |
560 | share payment: |
561 | (a) The average of the 2002, 2003, and 2004 2000, 2001, |
562 | and 2002 audited disproportionate share data to determine each |
563 | hospital's Medicaid days and charity care for the 2008-2009 |
564 | 2006-2007 state fiscal year. |
565 | Section 7. Section 409.9112, Florida Statutes, is amended |
566 | to read: |
567 | 409.9112 Disproportionate share program for regional |
568 | perinatal intensive care centers.--In addition to the payments |
569 | made under s. 409.911, the Agency for Health Care Administration |
570 | shall design and implement a system of making disproportionate |
571 | share payments to those hospitals that participate in the |
572 | regional perinatal intensive care center program established |
573 | pursuant to chapter 383. This system of payments shall conform |
574 | with federal requirements and shall distribute funds in each |
575 | fiscal year for which an appropriation is made by making |
576 | quarterly Medicaid payments. Notwithstanding the provisions of |
577 | s. 409.915, counties are exempt from contributing toward the |
578 | cost of this special reimbursement for hospitals serving a |
579 | disproportionate share of low-income patients. For the state |
580 | fiscal year 2008-2009 2005-2006, the agency shall not distribute |
581 | moneys under the regional perinatal intensive care centers |
582 | disproportionate share program. |
583 | (1) The following formula shall be used by the agency to |
584 | calculate the total amount earned for hospitals that participate |
585 | in the regional perinatal intensive care center program: |
586 |
|
587 | TAE = HDSP/THDSP |
588 |
|
589 | Where: |
590 | TAE = total amount earned by a regional perinatal intensive |
591 | care center. |
592 | HDSP = the prior state fiscal year regional perinatal |
593 | intensive care center disproportionate share payment to the |
594 | individual hospital. |
595 | THDSP = the prior state fiscal year total regional |
596 | perinatal intensive care center disproportionate share payments |
597 | to all hospitals. |
598 | (2) The total additional payment for hospitals that |
599 | participate in the regional perinatal intensive care center |
600 | program shall be calculated by the agency as follows: |
601 |
|
602 | TAP = TAE x TA |
603 |
|
604 | Where: |
605 | TAP = total additional payment for a regional perinatal |
606 | intensive care center. |
607 | TAE = total amount earned by a regional perinatal intensive |
608 | care center. |
609 | TA = total appropriation for the regional perinatal |
610 | intensive care center disproportionate share program. |
611 | (3) In order to receive payments under this section, a |
612 | hospital must be participating in the regional perinatal |
613 | intensive care center program pursuant to chapter 383 and must |
614 | meet the following additional requirements: |
615 | (a) Agree to conform to all departmental and agency |
616 | requirements to ensure high quality in the provision of |
617 | services, including criteria adopted by departmental and agency |
618 | rule concerning staffing ratios, medical records, standards of |
619 | care, equipment, space, and such other standards and criteria as |
620 | the department and agency deem appropriate as specified by rule. |
621 | (b) Agree to provide information to the department and |
622 | agency, in a form and manner to be prescribed by rule of the |
623 | department and agency, concerning the care provided to all |
624 | patients in neonatal intensive care centers and high-risk |
625 | maternity care. |
626 | (c) Agree to accept all patients for neonatal intensive |
627 | care and high-risk maternity care, regardless of ability to pay, |
628 | on a functional space-available basis. |
629 | (d) Agree to develop arrangements with other maternity and |
630 | neonatal care providers in the hospital's region for the |
631 | appropriate receipt and transfer of patients in need of |
632 | specialized maternity and neonatal intensive care services. |
633 | (e) Agree to establish and provide a developmental |
634 | evaluation and services program for certain high-risk neonates, |
635 | as prescribed and defined by rule of the department. |
636 | (f) Agree to sponsor a program of continuing education in |
637 | perinatal care for health care professionals within the region |
638 | of the hospital, as specified by rule. |
639 | (g) Agree to provide backup and referral services to the |
640 | department's county health departments and other low-income |
641 | perinatal providers within the hospital's region, including the |
642 | development of written agreements between these organizations |
643 | and the hospital. |
644 | (h) Agree to arrange for transportation for high-risk |
645 | obstetrical patients and neonates in need of transfer from the |
646 | community to the hospital or from the hospital to another more |
647 | appropriate facility. |
648 | (4) Hospitals which fail to comply with any of the |
649 | conditions in subsection (3) or the applicable rules of the |
650 | department and agency shall not receive any payments under this |
651 | section until full compliance is achieved. A hospital which is |
652 | not in compliance in two or more consecutive quarters shall not |
653 | receive its share of the funds. Any forfeited funds shall be |
654 | distributed by the remaining participating regional perinatal |
655 | intensive care center program hospitals. |
656 | Section 8. Section 409.9113, Florida Statutes, is amended |
657 | to read: |
658 | 409.9113 Disproportionate share program for teaching |
659 | hospitals.--In addition to the payments made under ss. 409.911 |
660 | and 409.9112, the Agency for Health Care Administration shall |
661 | make disproportionate share payments to statutorily defined |
662 | teaching hospitals for their increased costs associated with |
663 | medical education programs and for tertiary health care services |
664 | provided to the indigent. This system of payments shall conform |
665 | with federal requirements and shall distribute funds in each |
666 | fiscal year for which an appropriation is made by making |
667 | quarterly Medicaid payments. Notwithstanding s. 409.915, |
668 | counties are exempt from contributing toward the cost of this |
669 | special reimbursement for hospitals serving a disproportionate |
670 | share of low-income patients. For the state fiscal year 2008- |
671 | 2009 2006-2007, the agency shall distribute the moneys provided |
672 | in the General Appropriations Act to statutorily defined |
673 | teaching hospitals and family practice teaching hospitals under |
674 | the teaching hospital disproportionate share program. The funds |
675 | provided for statutorily defined teaching hospitals shall be |
676 | distributed in the same proportion as the state fiscal year |
677 | 2003-2004 teaching hospital disproportionate share funds were |
678 | distributed or as otherwise provided in the General |
679 | Appropriations Act. The funds provided for family practice |
680 | teaching hospitals shall be distributed equally among family |
681 | practice teaching hospitals. |
682 | (1) On or before September 15 of each year, the Agency for |
683 | Health Care Administration shall calculate an allocation |
684 | fraction to be used for distributing funds to state statutory |
685 | teaching hospitals. Subsequent to the end of each quarter of the |
686 | state fiscal year, the agency shall distribute to each statutory |
687 | teaching hospital, as defined in s. 408.07, an amount determined |
688 | by multiplying one-fourth of the funds appropriated for this |
689 | purpose by the Legislature times such hospital's allocation |
690 | fraction. The allocation fraction for each such hospital shall |
691 | be determined by the sum of three primary factors, divided by |
692 | three. The primary factors are: |
693 | (a) The number of nationally accredited graduate medical |
694 | education programs offered by the hospital, including programs |
695 | accredited by the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical |
696 | Education and the combined Internal Medicine and Pediatrics |
697 | programs acceptable to both the American Board of Internal |
698 | Medicine and the American Board of Pediatrics at the beginning |
699 | of the state fiscal year preceding the date on which the |
700 | allocation fraction is calculated. The numerical value of this |
701 | factor is the fraction that the hospital represents of the total |
702 | number of programs, where the total is computed for all state |
703 | statutory teaching hospitals. |
704 | (b) The number of full-time equivalent trainees in the |
705 | hospital, which comprises two components: |
706 | 1. The number of trainees enrolled in nationally |
707 | accredited graduate medical education programs, as defined in |
708 | paragraph (a). Full-time equivalents are computed using the |
709 | fraction of the year during which each trainee is primarily |
710 | assigned to the given institution, over the state fiscal year |
711 | preceding the date on which the allocation fraction is |
712 | calculated. The numerical value of this factor is the fraction |
713 | that the hospital represents of the total number of full-time |
714 | equivalent trainees enrolled in accredited graduate programs, |
715 | where the total is computed for all state statutory teaching |
716 | hospitals. |
717 | 2. The number of medical students enrolled in accredited |
718 | colleges of medicine and engaged in clinical activities, |
719 | including required clinical clerkships and clinical electives. |
720 | Full-time equivalents are computed using the fraction of the |
721 | year during which each trainee is primarily assigned to the |
722 | given institution, over the course of the state fiscal year |
723 | preceding the date on which the allocation fraction is |
724 | calculated. The numerical value of this factor is the fraction |
725 | that the given hospital represents of the total number of full- |
726 | time equivalent students enrolled in accredited colleges of |
727 | medicine, where the total is computed for all state statutory |
728 | teaching hospitals. |
729 |
|
730 | The primary factor for full-time equivalent trainees is computed |
731 | as the sum of these two components, divided by two. |
732 | (c) A service index that comprises three components: |
733 | 1. The Agency for Health Care Administration Service |
734 | Index, computed by applying the standard Service Inventory |
735 | Scores established by the Agency for Health Care Administration |
736 | to services offered by the given hospital, as reported on |
737 | Worksheet A-2 for the last fiscal year reported to the agency |
738 | before the date on which the allocation fraction is calculated. |
739 | The numerical value of this factor is the fraction that the |
740 | given hospital represents of the total Agency for Health Care |
741 | Administration Service Index values, where the total is computed |
742 | for all state statutory teaching hospitals. |
743 | 2. A volume-weighted service index, computed by applying |
744 | the standard Service Inventory Scores established by the Agency |
745 | for Health Care Administration to the volume of each service, |
746 | expressed in terms of the standard units of measure reported on |
747 | Worksheet A-2 for the last fiscal year reported to the agency |
748 | before the date on which the allocation factor is calculated. |
749 | The numerical value of this factor is the fraction that the |
750 | given hospital represents of the total volume-weighted service |
751 | index values, where the total is computed for all state |
752 | statutory teaching hospitals. |
753 | 3. Total Medicaid payments to each hospital for direct |
754 | inpatient and outpatient services during the fiscal year |
755 | preceding the date on which the allocation factor is calculated. |
756 | This includes payments made to each hospital for such services |
757 | by Medicaid prepaid health plans, whether the plan was |
758 | administered by the hospital or not. The numerical value of this |
759 | factor is the fraction that each hospital represents of the |
760 | total of such Medicaid payments, where the total is computed for |
761 | all state statutory teaching hospitals. |
762 |
|
763 | The primary factor for the service index is computed as the sum |
764 | of these three components, divided by three. |
765 | (2) By October 1 of each year, the agency shall use the |
766 | following formula to calculate the maximum additional |
767 | disproportionate share payment for statutorily defined teaching |
768 | hospitals: |
769 |
|
770 | TAP = THAF x A |
771 |
|
772 | Where: |
773 | TAP = total additional payment. |
774 | THAF = teaching hospital allocation factor. |
775 | A = amount appropriated for a teaching hospital |
776 | disproportionate share program. |
777 | Section 9. Section 409.9117, Florida Statutes, is amended |
778 | to read: |
779 | 409.9117 Primary care disproportionate share program.--For |
780 | the state fiscal year 2008-2009 2006-2007, the agency shall not |
781 | distribute moneys under the primary care disproportionate share |
782 | program. |
783 | (1) If federal funds are available for disproportionate |
784 | share programs in addition to those otherwise provided by law, |
785 | there shall be created a primary care disproportionate share |
786 | program. |
787 | (2) The following formula shall be used by the agency to |
788 | calculate the total amount earned for hospitals that participate |
789 | in the primary care disproportionate share program: |
790 |
|
791 | TAE = HDSP/THDSP |
792 |
|
793 | Where: |
794 | TAE = total amount earned by a hospital participating in |
795 | the primary care disproportionate share program. |
796 | HDSP = the prior state fiscal year primary care |
797 | disproportionate share payment to the individual hospital. |
798 | THDSP = the prior state fiscal year total primary care |
799 | disproportionate share payments to all hospitals. |
800 | (3) The total additional payment for hospitals that |
801 | participate in the primary care disproportionate share program |
802 | shall be calculated by the agency as follows: |
803 |
|
804 | TAP = TAE x TA |
805 |
|
806 | Where: |
807 | TAP = total additional payment for a primary care hospital. |
808 | TAE = total amount earned by a primary care hospital. |
809 | TA = total appropriation for the primary care |
810 | disproportionate share program. |
811 | (4) In the establishment and funding of this program, the |
812 | agency shall use the following criteria in addition to those |
813 | specified in s. 409.911, payments may not be made to a hospital |
814 | unless the hospital agrees to: |
815 | (a) Cooperate with a Medicaid prepaid health plan, if one |
816 | exists in the community. |
817 | (b) Ensure the availability of primary and specialty care |
818 | physicians to Medicaid recipients who are not enrolled in a |
819 | prepaid capitated arrangement and who are in need of access to |
820 | such physicians. |
821 | (c) Coordinate and provide primary care services free of |
822 | charge, except copayments, to all persons with incomes up to 100 |
823 | percent of the federal poverty level who are not otherwise |
824 | covered by Medicaid or another program administered by a |
825 | governmental entity, and to provide such services based on a |
826 | sliding fee scale to all persons with incomes up to 200 percent |
827 | of the federal poverty level who are not otherwise covered by |
828 | Medicaid or another program administered by a governmental |
829 | entity, except that eligibility may be limited to persons who |
830 | reside within a more limited area, as agreed to by the agency |
831 | and the hospital. |
832 | (d) Contract with any federally qualified health center, |
833 | if one exists within the agreed geopolitical boundaries, |
834 | concerning the provision of primary care services, in order to |
835 | guarantee delivery of services in a nonduplicative fashion, and |
836 | to provide for referral arrangements, privileges, and |
837 | admissions, as appropriate. The hospital shall agree to provide |
838 | at an onsite or offsite facility primary care services within 24 |
839 | hours to which all Medicaid recipients and persons eligible |
840 | under this paragraph who do not require emergency room services |
841 | are referred during normal daylight hours. |
842 | (e) Cooperate with the agency, the county, and other |
843 | entities to ensure the provision of certain public health |
844 | services, case management, referral and acceptance of patients, |
845 | and sharing of epidemiological data, as the agency and the |
846 | hospital find mutually necessary and desirable to promote and |
847 | protect the public health within the agreed geopolitical |
848 | boundaries. |
849 | (f) In cooperation with the county in which the hospital |
850 | resides, develop a low-cost, outpatient, prepaid health care |
851 | program to persons who are not eligible for the Medicaid |
852 | program, and who reside within the area. |
853 | (g) Provide inpatient services to residents within the |
854 | area who are not eligible for Medicaid or Medicare, and who do |
855 | not have private health insurance, regardless of ability to pay, |
856 | on the basis of available space, except that nothing shall |
857 | prevent the hospital from establishing bill collection programs |
858 | based on ability to pay. |
859 | (h) Work with the Florida Healthy Kids Corporation, the |
860 | Florida Health Care Purchasing Cooperative, and business health |
861 | coalitions, as appropriate, to develop a feasibility study and |
862 | plan to provide a low-cost comprehensive health insurance plan |
863 | to persons who reside within the area and who do not have access |
864 | to such a plan. |
865 | (i) Work with public health officials and other experts to |
866 | provide community health education and prevention activities |
867 | designed to promote healthy lifestyles and appropriate use of |
868 | health services. |
869 | (j) Work with the local health council to develop a plan |
870 | for promoting access to affordable health care services for all |
871 | persons who reside within the area, including, but not limited |
872 | to, public health services, primary care services, inpatient |
873 | services, and affordable health insurance generally. |
874 |
|
875 | Any hospital that fails to comply with any of the provisions of |
876 | this subsection, or any other contractual condition, may not |
877 | receive payments under this section until full compliance is |
878 | achieved. |
879 | Section 10. Paragraph (b) of subsection (4) and paragraph |
880 | (a) of subsection (39) of section 409.912, Florida Statutes, as |
881 | amended by chapter 2007-331, Laws of Florida, are amended, and |
882 | subsection (53) is added to that section, to read: |
883 | 409.912 Cost-effective purchasing of health care.--The |
884 | agency shall purchase goods and services for Medicaid recipients |
885 | in the most cost-effective manner consistent with the delivery |
886 | of quality medical care. To ensure that medical services are |
887 | effectively utilized, the agency may, in any case, require a |
888 | confirmation or second physician's opinion of the correct |
889 | diagnosis for purposes of authorizing future services under the |
890 | Medicaid program. This section does not restrict access to |
891 | emergency services or poststabilization care services as defined |
892 | in 42 C.F.R. part 438.114. Such confirmation or second opinion |
893 | shall be rendered in a manner approved by the agency. The agency |
894 | shall maximize the use of prepaid per capita and prepaid |
895 | aggregate fixed-sum basis services when appropriate and other |
896 | alternative service delivery and reimbursement methodologies, |
897 | including competitive bidding pursuant to s. 287.057, designed |
898 | to facilitate the cost-effective purchase of a case-managed |
899 | continuum of care. The agency shall also require providers to |
900 | minimize the exposure of recipients to the need for acute |
901 | inpatient, custodial, and other institutional care and the |
902 | inappropriate or unnecessary use of high-cost services. The |
903 | agency shall contract with a vendor to monitor and evaluate the |
904 | clinical practice patterns of providers in order to identify |
905 | trends that are outside the normal practice patterns of a |
906 | provider's professional peers or the national guidelines of a |
907 | provider's professional association. The vendor must be able to |
908 | provide information and counseling to a provider whose practice |
909 | patterns are outside the norms, in consultation with the agency, |
910 | to improve patient care and reduce inappropriate utilization. |
911 | The agency may mandate prior authorization, drug therapy |
912 | management, or disease management participation for certain |
913 | populations of Medicaid beneficiaries, certain drug classes, or |
914 | particular drugs to prevent fraud, abuse, overuse, and possible |
915 | dangerous drug interactions. The Pharmaceutical and Therapeutics |
916 | Committee shall make recommendations to the agency on drugs for |
917 | which prior authorization is required. The agency shall inform |
918 | the Pharmaceutical and Therapeutics Committee of its decisions |
919 | regarding drugs subject to prior authorization. The agency is |
920 | authorized to limit the entities it contracts with or enrolls as |
921 | Medicaid providers by developing a provider network through |
922 | provider credentialing. The agency may competitively bid single- |
923 | source-provider contracts if procurement of goods or services |
924 | results in demonstrated cost savings to the state without |
925 | limiting access to care. The agency may limit its network based |
926 | on the assessment of beneficiary access to care, provider |
927 | availability, provider quality standards, time and distance |
928 | standards for access to care, the cultural competence of the |
929 | provider network, demographic characteristics of Medicaid |
930 | beneficiaries, practice and provider-to-beneficiary standards, |
931 | appointment wait times, beneficiary use of services, provider |
932 | turnover, provider profiling, provider licensure history, |
933 | previous program integrity investigations and findings, peer |
934 | review, provider Medicaid policy and billing compliance records, |
935 | clinical and medical record audits, and other factors. Providers |
936 | shall not be entitled to enrollment in the Medicaid provider |
937 | network. The agency shall determine instances in which allowing |
938 | Medicaid beneficiaries to purchase durable medical equipment and |
939 | other goods is less expensive to the Medicaid program than long- |
940 | term rental of the equipment or goods. The agency may establish |
941 | rules to facilitate purchases in lieu of long-term rentals in |
942 | order to protect against fraud and abuse in the Medicaid program |
943 | as defined in s. 409.913. The agency may seek federal waivers |
944 | necessary to administer these policies. |
945 | (4) The agency may contract with: |
946 | (b) An entity that is providing comprehensive behavioral |
947 | health care services to certain Medicaid recipients through a |
948 | capitated, prepaid arrangement pursuant to the federal waiver |
949 | provided for by s. 409.905(5). Such an entity must be licensed |
950 | under chapter 624, chapter 636, or chapter 641 and must possess |
951 | the clinical systems and operational competence to manage risk |
952 | and provide comprehensive behavioral health care to Medicaid |
953 | recipients. As used in this paragraph, the term "comprehensive |
954 | behavioral health care services" means covered mental health and |
955 | substance abuse treatment services that are available to |
956 | Medicaid recipients. The secretary of the Department of Children |
957 | and Family Services shall approve provisions of procurements |
958 | related to children in the department's care or custody prior to |
959 | enrolling such children in a prepaid behavioral health plan. Any |
960 | contract awarded under this paragraph must be competitively |
961 | procured. In developing the behavioral health care prepaid plan |
962 | procurement document, the agency shall ensure that the |
963 | procurement document requires the contractor to develop and |
964 | implement a plan to ensure compliance with s. 394.4574 related |
965 | to services provided to residents of licensed assisted living |
966 | facilities that hold a limited mental health license. Except as |
967 | provided in subparagraph 8., and except in counties where the |
968 | Medicaid managed care pilot program is authorized pursuant to s. |
969 | 409.91211, the agency shall seek federal approval to contract |
970 | with a single entity meeting these requirements to provide |
971 | comprehensive behavioral health care services to all Medicaid |
972 | recipients not enrolled in a Medicaid managed care plan |
973 | authorized under s. 409.91211 or a Medicaid health maintenance |
974 | organization in an AHCA area. In an AHCA area where the Medicaid |
975 | managed care pilot program is authorized pursuant to s. |
976 | 409.91211 in one or more counties, the agency may procure a |
977 | contract with a single entity to serve the remaining counties as |
978 | an AHCA area or the remaining counties may be included with an |
979 | adjacent AHCA area and shall be subject to this paragraph. Each |
980 | entity must offer sufficient choice of providers in its network |
981 | to ensure recipient access to care and the opportunity to select |
982 | a provider with whom they are satisfied. The network shall |
983 | include all public mental health hospitals. To ensure unimpaired |
984 | access to behavioral health care services by Medicaid |
985 | recipients, all contracts issued pursuant to this paragraph |
986 | shall require 80 percent of the capitation paid to the managed |
987 | care plan, including health maintenance organizations, to be |
988 | expended for the provision of behavioral health care services. |
989 | In the event the managed care plan expends less than 80 percent |
990 | of the capitation paid pursuant to this paragraph for the |
991 | provision of behavioral health care services, the difference |
992 | shall be returned to the agency. The agency shall provide the |
993 | managed care plan with a certification letter indicating the |
994 | amount of capitation paid during each calendar year for the |
995 | provision of behavioral health care services pursuant to this |
996 | section. The agency may reimburse for substance abuse treatment |
997 | services on a fee-for-service basis until the agency finds that |
998 | adequate funds are available for capitated, prepaid |
999 | arrangements. |
1000 | 1. By January 1, 2001, the agency shall modify the |
1001 | contracts with the entities providing comprehensive inpatient |
1002 | and outpatient mental health care services to Medicaid |
1003 | recipients in Hillsborough, Highlands, Hardee, Manatee, and Polk |
1004 | Counties, to include substance abuse treatment services. |
1005 | 2. By July 1, 2003, the agency and the Department of |
1006 | Children and Family Services shall execute a written agreement |
1007 | that requires collaboration and joint development of all policy, |
1008 | budgets, procurement documents, contracts, and monitoring plans |
1009 | that have an impact on the state and Medicaid community mental |
1010 | health and targeted case management programs. |
1011 | 3. Except as provided in subparagraph 8., by July 1, 2006, |
1012 | the agency and the Department of Children and Family Services |
1013 | shall contract with managed care entities in each AHCA area |
1014 | except area 6 or arrange to provide comprehensive inpatient and |
1015 | outpatient mental health and substance abuse services through |
1016 | capitated prepaid arrangements to all Medicaid recipients who |
1017 | are eligible to participate in such plans under federal law and |
1018 | regulation. In AHCA areas where eligible individuals number less |
1019 | than 150,000, the agency shall contract with a single managed |
1020 | care plan to provide comprehensive behavioral health services to |
1021 | all recipients who are not enrolled in a Medicaid health |
1022 | maintenance organization or a Medicaid capitated managed care |
1023 | plan authorized under s. 409.91211. The agency may contract with |
1024 | more than one comprehensive behavioral health provider to |
1025 | provide care to recipients who are not enrolled in a Medicaid |
1026 | capitated managed care plan authorized under s. 409.91211 or a |
1027 | Medicaid health maintenance organization in AHCA areas where the |
1028 | eligible population exceeds 150,000. In an AHCA area where the |
1029 | Medicaid managed care pilot program is authorized pursuant to s. |
1030 | 409.91211 in one or more counties, the agency may procure a |
1031 | contract with a single entity to serve the remaining counties as |
1032 | an AHCA area or the remaining counties may be included with an |
1033 | adjacent AHCA area and shall be subject to this paragraph. |
1034 | Contracts for comprehensive behavioral health providers awarded |
1035 | pursuant to this section shall be competitively procured. Both |
1036 | for-profit and not-for-profit corporations shall be eligible to |
1037 | compete. Managed care plans contracting with the agency under |
1038 | subsection (3) shall provide and receive payment for the same |
1039 | comprehensive behavioral health benefits as provided in AHCA |
1040 | rules, including handbooks incorporated by reference. In AHCA |
1041 | area 11, the agency shall contract with at least two |
1042 | comprehensive behavioral health care providers to provide |
1043 | behavioral health care to recipients in that area who are |
1044 | enrolled in, or assigned to, the MediPass program. One of the |
1045 | behavioral health care contracts shall be with the existing |
1046 | provider service network pilot project, as described in |
1047 | paragraph (d), for the purpose of demonstrating the cost- |
1048 | effectiveness of the provision of quality mental health services |
1049 | through a public hospital-operated managed care model. Payment |
1050 | shall be at an agreed-upon capitated rate to ensure cost |
1051 | savings. Of the recipients in area 11 who are assigned to |
1052 | MediPass under the provisions of s. 409.9122(2)(k), a minimum of |
1053 | 50,000 of those MediPass-enrolled recipients shall be assigned |
1054 | to the existing provider service network in area 11 for their |
1055 | behavioral care. |
1056 | 4. By October 1, 2003, the agency and the department shall |
1057 | submit a plan to the Governor, the President of the Senate, and |
1058 | the Speaker of the House of Representatives which provides for |
1059 | the full implementation of capitated prepaid behavioral health |
1060 | care in all areas of the state. |
1061 | a. Implementation shall begin in 2003 in those AHCA areas |
1062 | of the state where the agency is able to establish sufficient |
1063 | capitation rates. |
1064 | b. If the agency determines that the proposed capitation |
1065 | rate in any area is insufficient to provide appropriate |
1066 | services, the agency may adjust the capitation rate to ensure |
1067 | that care will be available. The agency and the department may |
1068 | use existing general revenue to address any additional required |
1069 | match but may not over-obligate existing funds on an annualized |
1070 | basis. |
1071 | c. Subject to any limitations provided for in the General |
1072 | Appropriations Act, the agency, in compliance with appropriate |
1073 | federal authorization, shall develop policies and procedures |
1074 | that allow for certification of local and state funds. |
1075 | 5. Children residing in a statewide inpatient psychiatric |
1076 | program, or in a Department of Juvenile Justice or a Department |
1077 | of Children and Family Services residential program approved as |
1078 | a Medicaid behavioral health overlay services provider shall not |
1079 | be included in a behavioral health care prepaid health plan or |
1080 | any other Medicaid managed care plan pursuant to this paragraph. |
1081 | 6. In converting to a prepaid system of delivery, the |
1082 | agency shall in its procurement document require an entity |
1083 | providing only comprehensive behavioral health care services to |
1084 | prevent the displacement of indigent care patients by enrollees |
1085 | in the Medicaid prepaid health plan providing behavioral health |
1086 | care services from facilities receiving state funding to provide |
1087 | indigent behavioral health care, to facilities licensed under |
1088 | chapter 395 which do not receive state funding for indigent |
1089 | behavioral health care, or reimburse the unsubsidized facility |
1090 | for the cost of behavioral health care provided to the displaced |
1091 | indigent care patient. |
1092 | 7. Traditional community mental health providers under |
1093 | contract with the Department of Children and Family Services |
1094 | pursuant to part IV of chapter 394, child welfare providers |
1095 | under contract with the Department of Children and Family |
1096 | Services in areas 1 and 6, and inpatient mental health providers |
1097 | licensed pursuant to chapter 395 must be offered an opportunity |
1098 | to accept or decline a contract to participate in any provider |
1099 | network for prepaid behavioral health services. |
1100 | 8. All Medicaid-eligible children, except children in area |
1101 | 1 and children in Highlands, Hardee, Polk, or Manatee County of |
1102 | area 6 For fiscal year 2004-2005, all Medicaid eligible |
1103 | children, except children in areas 1 and 6, whose cases are open |
1104 | for child welfare services in the HomeSafeNet system, shall be |
1105 | enrolled in MediPass or in Medicaid fee-for-service and all |
1106 | their behavioral health care services including inpatient, |
1107 | outpatient psychiatric, community mental health, and case |
1108 | management shall be reimbursed on a fee-for-service basis. |
1109 | Beginning July 1, 2005, such children, who are open for child |
1110 | welfare services in the HomeSafeNet system, shall receive their |
1111 | behavioral health care services through a specialty prepaid plan |
1112 | operated by community-based lead agencies either through a |
1113 | single agency or formal agreements among several agencies. The |
1114 | specialty prepaid plan must result in savings to the state |
1115 | comparable to savings achieved in other Medicaid managed care |
1116 | and prepaid programs. Such plan must provide mechanisms to |
1117 | maximize state and local revenues. The specialty prepaid plan |
1118 | shall be developed by the agency and the Department of Children |
1119 | and Family Services. The agency is authorized to seek any |
1120 | federal waivers to implement this initiative. Medicaid-eligible |
1121 | children whose cases are open for child welfare services in the |
1122 | HomeSafeNet system and who reside in AHCA area 10 are exempt |
1123 | from the specialty prepaid plan upon the development of a |
1124 | service delivery mechanism for children who reside in area 10 as |
1125 | specified in s. 409.91211(3)(dd). |
1126 | (39)(a) The agency shall implement a Medicaid prescribed- |
1127 | drug spending-control program that includes the following |
1128 | components: |
1129 | 1. A Medicaid preferred drug list, which shall be a |
1130 | listing of cost-effective therapeutic options recommended by the |
1131 | Medicaid Pharmacy and Therapeutics Committee established |
1132 | pursuant to s. 409.91195 and adopted by the agency for each |
1133 | therapeutic class on the preferred drug list. At the discretion |
1134 | of the committee, and when feasible, the preferred drug list |
1135 | should include at least two products in a therapeutic class. The |
1136 | agency may post the preferred drug list and updates to the |
1137 | preferred drug list on an Internet website without following the |
1138 | rulemaking procedures of chapter 120. Antiretroviral agents are |
1139 | excluded from the preferred drug list. The agency shall also |
1140 | limit the amount of a prescribed drug dispensed to no more than |
1141 | a 34-day supply unless the drug products' smallest marketed |
1142 | package is greater than a 34-day supply, or the drug is |
1143 | determined by the agency to be a maintenance drug in which case |
1144 | a 100-day maximum supply may be authorized. The agency is |
1145 | authorized to seek any federal waivers necessary to implement |
1146 | these cost-control programs and to continue participation in the |
1147 | federal Medicaid rebate program, or alternatively to negotiate |
1148 | state-only manufacturer rebates. The agency may adopt rules to |
1149 | implement this subparagraph. The agency shall continue to |
1150 | provide unlimited contraceptive drugs and items. The agency must |
1151 | establish procedures to ensure that: |
1152 | a. There is will be a response to a request for prior |
1153 | consultation by telephone or other telecommunication device |
1154 | within 24 hours after receipt of a request for prior |
1155 | consultation; and |
1156 | b. A 72-hour supply of the drug prescribed is will be |
1157 | provided in an emergency or when the agency does not provide a |
1158 | response within 24 hours as required by sub-subparagraph a. |
1159 | 2. Reimbursement to pharmacies for Medicaid prescribed |
1160 | drugs shall be set at the lesser of: the average wholesale price |
1161 | (AWP) minus 16.4 15.4 percent, the wholesaler acquisition cost |
1162 | (WAC) plus 4.75 5.75 percent, the federal upper limit (FUL), the |
1163 | state maximum allowable cost (SMAC), or the usual and customary |
1164 | (UAC) charge billed by the provider. |
1165 | 3. The agency shall develop and implement a process for |
1166 | managing the drug therapies of Medicaid recipients who are using |
1167 | significant numbers of prescribed drugs each month. The |
1168 | management process may include, but is not limited to, |
1169 | comprehensive, physician-directed medical-record reviews, claims |
1170 | analyses, and case evaluations to determine the medical |
1171 | necessity and appropriateness of a patient's treatment plan and |
1172 | drug therapies. The agency may contract with a private |
1173 | organization to provide drug-program-management services. The |
1174 | Medicaid drug benefit management program shall include |
1175 | initiatives to manage drug therapies for HIV/AIDS patients, |
1176 | patients using 20 or more unique prescriptions in a 180-day |
1177 | period, and the top 1,000 patients in annual spending. The |
1178 | agency shall enroll any Medicaid recipient in the drug benefit |
1179 | management program if he or she meets the specifications of this |
1180 | provision and is not enrolled in a Medicaid health maintenance |
1181 | organization. |
1182 | 4. The agency may limit the size of its pharmacy network |
1183 | based on need, competitive bidding, price negotiations, |
1184 | credentialing, or similar criteria. The agency shall give |
1185 | special consideration to rural areas in determining the size and |
1186 | location of pharmacies included in the Medicaid pharmacy |
1187 | network. A pharmacy credentialing process may include criteria |
1188 | such as a pharmacy's full-service status, location, size, |
1189 | patient educational programs, patient consultation, disease |
1190 | management services, and other characteristics. The agency may |
1191 | impose a moratorium on Medicaid pharmacy enrollment when it is |
1192 | determined that it has a sufficient number of Medicaid- |
1193 | participating providers. The agency must allow dispensing |
1194 | practitioners to participate as a part of the Medicaid pharmacy |
1195 | network regardless of the practitioner's proximity to any other |
1196 | entity that is dispensing prescription drugs under the Medicaid |
1197 | program. A dispensing practitioner must meet all credentialing |
1198 | requirements applicable to his or her practice, as determined by |
1199 | the agency. |
1200 | 5. The agency shall develop and implement a program that |
1201 | requires Medicaid practitioners who prescribe drugs to use a |
1202 | counterfeit-proof prescription pad for Medicaid prescriptions. |
1203 | The agency shall require the use of standardized counterfeit- |
1204 | proof prescription pads by Medicaid-participating prescribers or |
1205 | prescribers who write prescriptions for Medicaid recipients. The |
1206 | agency may implement the program in targeted geographic areas or |
1207 | statewide. |
1208 | 6. The agency may enter into arrangements that require |
1209 | manufacturers of generic drugs prescribed to Medicaid recipients |
1210 | to provide rebates of at least 15.1 percent of the average |
1211 | manufacturer price for the manufacturer's generic products. |
1212 | These arrangements shall require that if a generic-drug |
1213 | manufacturer pays federal rebates for Medicaid-reimbursed drugs |
1214 | at a level below 15.1 percent, the manufacturer must provide a |
1215 | supplemental rebate to the state in an amount necessary to |
1216 | achieve a 15.1-percent rebate level. |
1217 | 7. The agency may establish a preferred drug list as |
1218 | described in this subsection, and, pursuant to the establishment |
1219 | of such preferred drug list, it is authorized to negotiate |
1220 | supplemental rebates from manufacturers that are in addition to |
1221 | those required by Title XIX of the Social Security Act and at no |
1222 | less than 14 percent of the average manufacturer price as |
1223 | defined in 42 U.S.C. s. 1936 on the last day of a quarter unless |
1224 | the federal or supplemental rebate, or both, equals or exceeds |
1225 | 29 percent. There is no upper limit on the supplemental rebates |
1226 | the agency may negotiate. The agency may determine that specific |
1227 | products, brand-name or generic, are competitive at lower rebate |
1228 | percentages. Agreement to pay the minimum supplemental rebate |
1229 | percentage will guarantee a manufacturer that the Medicaid |
1230 | Pharmaceutical and Therapeutics Committee will consider a |
1231 | product for inclusion on the preferred drug list. However, a |
1232 | pharmaceutical manufacturer is not guaranteed placement on the |
1233 | preferred drug list by simply paying the minimum supplemental |
1234 | rebate. Agency decisions will be made on the clinical efficacy |
1235 | of a drug and recommendations of the Medicaid Pharmaceutical and |
1236 | Therapeutics Committee, as well as the price of competing |
1237 | products minus federal and state rebates. The agency is |
1238 | authorized to contract with an outside agency or contractor to |
1239 | conduct negotiations for supplemental rebates. For the purposes |
1240 | of this section, the term "supplemental rebates" means cash |
1241 | rebates. Effective July 1, 2004, value-added programs as a |
1242 | substitution for supplemental rebates are prohibited. The agency |
1243 | is authorized to seek any federal waivers to implement this |
1244 | initiative. |
1245 | 8. The Agency for Health Care Administration shall expand |
1246 | home delivery of pharmacy products. To assist Medicaid patients |
1247 | in securing their prescriptions and reduce program costs, the |
1248 | agency shall expand its current mail-order-pharmacy diabetes- |
1249 | supply program to include all generic and brand-name drugs used |
1250 | by Medicaid patients with diabetes. Medicaid recipients in the |
1251 | current program may obtain nondiabetes drugs on a voluntary |
1252 | basis. This initiative is limited to the geographic area covered |
1253 | by the current contract. The agency may seek and implement any |
1254 | federal waivers necessary to implement this subparagraph. |
1255 | 9. The agency shall limit to one dose per month any drug |
1256 | prescribed to treat erectile dysfunction. |
1257 | 10.a. The agency may implement a Medicaid behavioral drug |
1258 | management system. The agency may contract with a vendor that |
1259 | has experience in operating behavioral drug management systems |
1260 | to implement this program. The agency is authorized to seek |
1261 | federal waivers to implement this program. |
1262 | b. The agency, in conjunction with the Department of |
1263 | Children and Family Services, may implement the Medicaid |
1264 | behavioral drug management system that is designed to improve |
1265 | the quality of care and behavioral health prescribing practices |
1266 | based on best practice guidelines, improve patient adherence to |
1267 | medication plans, reduce clinical risk, and lower prescribed |
1268 | drug costs and the rate of inappropriate spending on Medicaid |
1269 | behavioral drugs. The program may include the following |
1270 | elements: |
1271 | (I) Provide for the development and adoption of best |
1272 | practice guidelines for behavioral health-related drugs such as |
1273 | antipsychotics, antidepressants, and medications for treating |
1274 | bipolar disorders and other behavioral conditions; translate |
1275 | them into practice; review behavioral health prescribers and |
1276 | compare their prescribing patterns to a number of indicators |
1277 | that are based on national standards; and determine deviations |
1278 | from best practice guidelines. |
1279 | (II) Implement processes for providing feedback to and |
1280 | educating prescribers using best practice educational materials |
1281 | and peer-to-peer consultation. |
1282 | (III) Assess Medicaid beneficiaries who are outliers in |
1283 | their use of behavioral health drugs with regard to the numbers |
1284 | and types of drugs taken, drug dosages, combination drug |
1285 | therapies, and other indicators of improper use of behavioral |
1286 | health drugs. |
1287 | (IV) Alert prescribers to patients who fail to refill |
1288 | prescriptions in a timely fashion, are prescribed multiple same- |
1289 | class behavioral health drugs, and may have other potential |
1290 | medication problems. |
1291 | (V) Track spending trends for behavioral health drugs and |
1292 | deviation from best practice guidelines. |
1293 | (VI) Use educational and technological approaches to |
1294 | promote best practices, educate consumers, and train prescribers |
1295 | in the use of practice guidelines. |
1296 | (VII) Disseminate electronic and published materials. |
1297 | (VIII) Hold statewide and regional conferences. |
1298 | (IX) Implement a disease management program with a model |
1299 | quality-based medication component for severely mentally ill |
1300 | individuals and emotionally disturbed children who are high |
1301 | users of care. |
1302 | 11.a. The agency shall implement a Medicaid prescription |
1303 | drug management system. The agency may contract with a vendor |
1304 | that has experience in operating prescription drug management |
1305 | systems in order to implement this system. Any management system |
1306 | that is implemented in accordance with this subparagraph must |
1307 | rely on cooperation between physicians and pharmacists to |
1308 | determine appropriate practice patterns and clinical guidelines |
1309 | to improve the prescribing, dispensing, and use of drugs in the |
1310 | Medicaid program. The agency may seek federal waivers to |
1311 | implement this program. |
1312 | b. The drug management system must be designed to improve |
1313 | the quality of care and prescribing practices based on best |
1314 | practice guidelines, improve patient adherence to medication |
1315 | plans, reduce clinical risk, and lower prescribed drug costs and |
1316 | the rate of inappropriate spending on Medicaid prescription |
1317 | drugs. The program must: |
1318 | (I) Provide for the development and adoption of best |
1319 | practice guidelines for the prescribing and use of drugs in the |
1320 | Medicaid program, including translating best practice guidelines |
1321 | into practice; reviewing prescriber patterns and comparing them |
1322 | to indicators that are based on national standards and practice |
1323 | patterns of clinical peers in their community, statewide, and |
1324 | nationally; and determine deviations from best practice |
1325 | guidelines. |
1326 | (II) Implement processes for providing feedback to and |
1327 | educating prescribers using best practice educational materials |
1328 | and peer-to-peer consultation. |
1329 | (III) Assess Medicaid recipients who are outliers in their |
1330 | use of a single or multiple prescription drugs with regard to |
1331 | the numbers and types of drugs taken, drug dosages, combination |
1332 | drug therapies, and other indicators of improper use of |
1333 | prescription drugs. |
1334 | (IV) Alert prescribers to patients who fail to refill |
1335 | prescriptions in a timely fashion, are prescribed multiple drugs |
1336 | that may be redundant or contraindicated, or may have other |
1337 | potential medication problems. |
1338 | (V) Track spending trends for prescription drugs and |
1339 | deviation from best practice guidelines. |
1340 | (VI) Use educational and technological approaches to |
1341 | promote best practices, educate consumers, and train prescribers |
1342 | in the use of practice guidelines. |
1343 | (VII) Disseminate electronic and published materials. |
1344 | (VIII) Hold statewide and regional conferences. |
1345 | (IX) Implement disease management programs in cooperation |
1346 | with physicians and pharmacists, along with a model quality- |
1347 | based medication component for individuals having chronic |
1348 | medical conditions. |
1349 | 12. The agency is authorized to contract for drug rebate |
1350 | administration, including, but not limited to, calculating |
1351 | rebate amounts, invoicing manufacturers, negotiating disputes |
1352 | with manufacturers, and maintaining a database of rebate |
1353 | collections. |
1354 | 13. The agency may specify the preferred daily dosing form |
1355 | or strength for the purpose of promoting best practices with |
1356 | regard to the prescribing of certain drugs as specified in the |
1357 | General Appropriations Act and ensuring cost-effective |
1358 | prescribing practices. |
1359 | 14. The agency may require prior authorization for |
1360 | Medicaid-covered prescribed drugs. The agency may, but is not |
1361 | required to, prior-authorize the use of a product: |
1362 | a. For an indication not approved in labeling; |
1363 | b. To comply with certain clinical guidelines; or |
1364 | c. If the product has the potential for overuse, misuse, |
1365 | or abuse. |
1366 |
|
1367 | The agency may require the prescribing professional to provide |
1368 | information about the rationale and supporting medical evidence |
1369 | for the use of a drug. The agency may post prior authorization |
1370 | criteria and protocol and updates to the list of drugs that are |
1371 | subject to prior authorization on an Internet website without |
1372 | amending its rule or engaging in additional rulemaking. |
1373 | 15. The agency, in conjunction with the Pharmaceutical and |
1374 | Therapeutics Committee, may require age-related prior |
1375 | authorizations for certain prescribed drugs. The agency may |
1376 | preauthorize the use of a drug for a recipient who may not meet |
1377 | the age requirement or may exceed the length of therapy for use |
1378 | of this product as recommended by the manufacturer and approved |
1379 | by the Food and Drug Administration. Prior authorization may |
1380 | require the prescribing professional to provide information |
1381 | about the rationale and supporting medical evidence for the use |
1382 | of a drug. |
1383 | 16. The agency shall implement a step-therapy prior |
1384 | authorization approval process for medications excluded from the |
1385 | preferred drug list. Medications listed on the preferred drug |
1386 | list must be used within the previous 12 months prior to the |
1387 | alternative medications that are not listed. The step-therapy |
1388 | prior authorization may require the prescriber to use the |
1389 | medications of a similar drug class or for a similar medical |
1390 | indication unless contraindicated in the Food and Drug |
1391 | Administration labeling. The trial period between the specified |
1392 | steps may vary according to the medical indication. The step- |
1393 | therapy approval process shall be developed in accordance with |
1394 | the committee as stated in s. 409.91195(7) and (8). A drug |
1395 | product may be approved without meeting the step-therapy prior |
1396 | authorization criteria if the prescribing physician provides the |
1397 | agency with additional written medical or clinical documentation |
1398 | that the product is medically necessary because: |
1399 | a. There is not a drug on the preferred drug list to treat |
1400 | the disease or medical condition which is an acceptable clinical |
1401 | alternative; |
1402 | b. The alternatives have been ineffective in the treatment |
1403 | of the beneficiary's disease; or |
1404 | c. Based on historic evidence and known characteristics of |
1405 | the patient and the drug, the drug is likely to be ineffective, |
1406 | or the number of doses have been ineffective. |
1407 |
|
1408 | The agency shall work with the physician to determine the best |
1409 | alternative for the patient. The agency may adopt rules waiving |
1410 | the requirements for written clinical documentation for specific |
1411 | drugs in limited clinical situations. |
1412 | 17. The agency shall implement a return and reuse program |
1413 | for drugs dispensed by pharmacies to institutional recipients, |
1414 | which includes payment of a $5 restocking fee for the |
1415 | implementation and operation of the program. The return and |
1416 | reuse program shall be implemented electronically and in a |
1417 | manner that promotes efficiency. The program must permit a |
1418 | pharmacy to exclude drugs from the program if it is not |
1419 | practical or cost-effective for the drug to be included and must |
1420 | provide for the return to inventory of drugs that cannot be |
1421 | credited or returned in a cost-effective manner. The agency |
1422 | shall determine if the program has reduced the amount of |
1423 | Medicaid prescription drugs which are destroyed on an annual |
1424 | basis and if there are additional ways to ensure more |
1425 | prescription drugs are not destroyed which could safely be |
1426 | reused. The agency's conclusion and recommendations shall be |
1427 | reported to the Legislature by December 1, 2005. |
1428 | (53) Before seeking an amendment to the state plan for |
1429 | purposes of implementing programs authorized by the Deficit |
1430 | Reduction Act of 2005, the agency shall notify the Legislature. |
1431 | Section 11. Section 409.91206, Florida Statutes, is |
1432 | created to read: |
1433 | 409.91206 Alternatives for health and long-term care |
1434 | reforms.--The Governor, the President of the Senate, and the |
1435 | Speaker of the House of Representatives may convene workgroups |
1436 | to propose alternatives for cost-effective health and long-term |
1437 | care reforms, including, but not limited to, reforms for |
1438 | Medicaid. |
1439 | Section 12. Paragraphs (c), (e), (f), and (i) of |
1440 | subsection (2) of section 409.9122, Florida Statutes, are |
1441 | amended to read: |
1442 | 409.9122 Mandatory Medicaid managed care enrollment; |
1443 | programs and procedures.-- |
1444 | (2) |
1445 | (c) Medicaid recipients shall have a choice of managed |
1446 | care plans or MediPass. The Agency for Health Care |
1447 | Administration, the Department of Health, the Department of |
1448 | Children and Family Services, and the Department of Elderly |
1449 | Affairs shall cooperate to ensure that each Medicaid recipient |
1450 | receives clear and easily understandable information that meets |
1451 | the following requirements: |
1452 | 1. Explains the concept of managed care, including |
1453 | MediPass. |
1454 | 2. Provides information on the comparative performance of |
1455 | managed care plans and MediPass in the areas of quality, |
1456 | credentialing, preventive health programs, network size and |
1457 | availability, and patient satisfaction. |
1458 | 3. Explains where additional information on each managed |
1459 | care plan and MediPass in the recipient's area can be obtained. |
1460 | 4. Explains that recipients have the right to choose their |
1461 | own managed care coverage at the time they first enroll in |
1462 | Medicaid and again at regular intervals set by the agency plans |
1463 | or MediPass. However, if a recipient does not choose a managed |
1464 | care plan or MediPass, the agency will assign the recipient to a |
1465 | managed care plan or MediPass according to the criteria |
1466 | specified in this section. |
1467 | 5. Explains the recipient's right to complain, file a |
1468 | grievance, or change managed care plans or MediPass providers if |
1469 | the recipient is not satisfied with the managed care plan or |
1470 | MediPass. |
1471 | (e) Medicaid recipients who are already enrolled in a |
1472 | managed care plan or MediPass shall be offered the opportunity |
1473 | to change managed care plans or MediPass providers on a |
1474 | staggered basis, as defined by the agency. All Medicaid |
1475 | recipients shall have 30 days in which to make a choice of |
1476 | managed care plans or MediPass providers. In counties that have |
1477 | two or more managed care plans, a recipient already enrolled in |
1478 | MediPass who fails to make a choice during the annual period |
1479 | shall be assigned to a managed care plan if he or she is |
1480 | eligible for enrollment in the managed care plan. The agency |
1481 | shall apply for a state plan amendment or federal waiver |
1482 | authority, if necessary, to implement the provisions of this |
1483 | paragraph. All newly eligible Medicaid recipients shall have 30 |
1484 | days in which to make a choice of managed care plans or Medipass |
1485 | providers. Those Medicaid recipients who do not make a choice |
1486 | shall be assigned to a managed care plan or MediPass in |
1487 | accordance with paragraph (f). To facilitate continuity of care, |
1488 | for a Medicaid recipient who is also a recipient of Supplemental |
1489 | Security Income (SSI), prior to assigning the SSI recipient to a |
1490 | managed care plan or MediPass, the agency shall determine |
1491 | whether the SSI recipient has an ongoing relationship with a |
1492 | MediPass provider or managed care plan, and if so, the agency |
1493 | shall assign the SSI recipient to that MediPass provider or |
1494 | managed care plan. If the SSI recipient has an ongoing |
1495 | relationship with a managed care plan, the agency shall assign |
1496 | the recipient to that managed care plan. Those SSI recipients |
1497 | who do not have such a provider relationship shall be assigned |
1498 | to a managed care plan or MediPass provider in accordance with |
1499 | paragraph (f). |
1500 | (f) If When a Medicaid recipient does not choose a managed |
1501 | care plan or MediPass provider, the agency shall assign the |
1502 | Medicaid recipient to a managed care plan or MediPass provider. |
1503 | Medicaid recipients eligible for managed care plan enrollment |
1504 | who are subject to mandatory assignment but who fail to make a |
1505 | choice shall be assigned to managed care plans until an |
1506 | enrollment of 35 percent in MediPass and 65 percent in managed |
1507 | care plans, of all those eligible to choose managed care, is |
1508 | achieved. Once this enrollment is achieved, the assignments |
1509 | shall be divided in order to maintain an enrollment in MediPass |
1510 | and managed care plans which is in a 35 percent and 65 percent |
1511 | proportion, respectively. Thereafter, assignment of Medicaid |
1512 | recipients who fail to make a choice shall be based |
1513 | proportionally on the preferences of recipients who have made a |
1514 | choice in the previous period. Such proportions shall be revised |
1515 | at least quarterly to reflect an update of the preferences of |
1516 | Medicaid recipients. The agency shall disproportionately assign |
1517 | Medicaid-eligible recipients who are required to but have failed |
1518 | to make a choice of managed care plan or MediPass, including |
1519 | children, and who would are to be assigned to the MediPass |
1520 | program to children's networks as described in s. 409.912(4)(g), |
1521 | Children's Medical Services Network as defined in s. 391.021, |
1522 | exclusive provider organizations, provider service networks, |
1523 | minority physician networks, and pediatric emergency department |
1524 | diversion programs authorized by this chapter or the General |
1525 | Appropriations Act, in such manner as the agency deems |
1526 | appropriate, until the agency has determined that the networks |
1527 | and programs have sufficient numbers to be operated economically |
1528 | operated. For purposes of this paragraph, when referring to |
1529 | assignment, the term "managed care plans" includes health |
1530 | maintenance organizations, exclusive provider organizations, |
1531 | provider service networks, minority physician networks, |
1532 | Children's Medical Services Network, and pediatric emergency |
1533 | department diversion programs authorized by this chapter or the |
1534 | General Appropriations Act. When making assignments, the agency |
1535 | shall take into account the following criteria: |
1536 | 1. A managed care plan has sufficient network capacity to |
1537 | meet the need of members. |
1538 | 2. The managed care plan or MediPass has previously |
1539 | enrolled the recipient as a member, or one of the managed care |
1540 | plan's primary care providers or MediPass providers has |
1541 | previously provided health care to the recipient. |
1542 | 3. The agency has knowledge that the member has previously |
1543 | expressed a preference for a particular managed care plan or |
1544 | MediPass provider as indicated by Medicaid fee-for-service |
1545 | claims data, but has failed to make a choice. |
1546 | 4. The managed care plan's or MediPass primary care |
1547 | providers are geographically accessible to the recipient's |
1548 | residence. |
1549 | (i) After a recipient has made his or her a selection or |
1550 | has been enrolled in a managed care plan or MediPass, the |
1551 | recipient shall have 90 days to exercise the opportunity in |
1552 | which to voluntarily disenroll and select another managed care |
1553 | plan or MediPass provider. After 90 days, no further changes may |
1554 | be made except for good cause. Good cause includes shall |
1555 | include, but is not be limited to, poor quality of care, lack of |
1556 | access to necessary specialty services, an unreasonable delay or |
1557 | denial of service, or fraudulent enrollment. The agency shall |
1558 | develop criteria for good cause disenrollment for chronically |
1559 | ill and disabled populations who are assigned to managed care |
1560 | plans if more appropriate care is available through the MediPass |
1561 | program. The agency must make a determination as to whether |
1562 | cause exists. However, the agency may require a recipient to use |
1563 | the managed care plan's or MediPass grievance process prior to |
1564 | the agency's determination of cause, except in cases in which |
1565 | immediate risk of permanent damage to the recipient's health is |
1566 | alleged. The grievance process, when utilized, must be completed |
1567 | in time to permit the recipient to disenroll by no later than |
1568 | the first day of the second month after the month the |
1569 | disenrollment request was made. If the managed care plan or |
1570 | MediPass, as a result of the grievance process, approves an |
1571 | enrollee's request to disenroll, the agency is not required to |
1572 | make a determination in the case. The agency must make a |
1573 | determination and take final action on a recipient's request so |
1574 | that disenrollment occurs no later than the first day of the |
1575 | second month after the month the request was made. If the agency |
1576 | fails to act within the specified timeframe, the recipient's |
1577 | request to disenroll is deemed to be approved as of the date |
1578 | agency action was required. Recipients who disagree with the |
1579 | agency's finding that cause does not exist for disenrollment |
1580 | shall be advised of their right to pursue a Medicaid fair |
1581 | hearing to dispute the agency's finding. |
1582 | Section 13. Subsection (2) of section 409.9124, Florida |
1583 | Statutes, is amended to read: |
1584 | 409.9124 Managed care reimbursement.--The agency shall |
1585 | develop and adopt by rule a methodology for reimbursing managed |
1586 | care plans. |
1587 | (2) Each year prior to establishing new managed care |
1588 | rates, the agency shall review all prior year adjustments for |
1589 | changes in trend, and shall reduce or eliminate those |
1590 | adjustments which are not reasonable and which reflect policies |
1591 | or programs which are not in effect. In addition, the agency |
1592 | shall apply only those policy reductions applicable to the |
1593 | fiscal year for which the rates are being set, which can be |
1594 | accurately estimated and verified by an independent actuary, and |
1595 | which have been implemented prior to or will be implemented |
1596 | during the fiscal year. The agency shall pay rates at per- |
1597 | member, per-month averages that do not exceed the amounts |
1598 | allowed for in the General Appropriations Act applicable to the |
1599 | fiscal year for which the rates will be in effect. |
1600 | Section 14. Subsection (36) of section 409.913, Florida |
1601 | Statutes, is amended to read: |
1602 | 409.913 Oversight of the integrity of the Medicaid |
1603 | program.--The agency shall operate a program to oversee the |
1604 | activities of Florida Medicaid recipients, and providers and |
1605 | their representatives, to ensure that fraudulent and abusive |
1606 | behavior and neglect of recipients occur to the minimum extent |
1607 | possible, and to recover overpayments and impose sanctions as |
1608 | appropriate. Beginning January 1, 2003, and each year |
1609 | thereafter, the agency and the Medicaid Fraud Control Unit of |
1610 | the Department of Legal Affairs shall submit a joint report to |
1611 | the Legislature documenting the effectiveness of the state's |
1612 | efforts to control Medicaid fraud and abuse and to recover |
1613 | Medicaid overpayments during the previous fiscal year. The |
1614 | report must describe the number of cases opened and investigated |
1615 | each year; the sources of the cases opened; the disposition of |
1616 | the cases closed each year; the amount of overpayments alleged |
1617 | in preliminary and final audit letters; the number and amount of |
1618 | fines or penalties imposed; any reductions in overpayment |
1619 | amounts negotiated in settlement agreements or by other means; |
1620 | the amount of final agency determinations of overpayments; the |
1621 | amount deducted from federal claiming as a result of |
1622 | overpayments; the amount of overpayments recovered each year; |
1623 | the amount of cost of investigation recovered each year; the |
1624 | average length of time to collect from the time the case was |
1625 | opened until the overpayment is paid in full; the amount |
1626 | determined as uncollectible and the portion of the uncollectible |
1627 | amount subsequently reclaimed from the Federal Government; the |
1628 | number of providers, by type, that are terminated from |
1629 | participation in the Medicaid program as a result of fraud and |
1630 | abuse; and all costs associated with discovering and prosecuting |
1631 | cases of Medicaid overpayments and making recoveries in such |
1632 | cases. The report must also document actions taken to prevent |
1633 | overpayments and the number of providers prevented from |
1634 | enrolling in or reenrolling in the Medicaid program as a result |
1635 | of documented Medicaid fraud and abuse and must recommend |
1636 | changes necessary to prevent or recover overpayments. |
1637 | (36) The agency shall provide to each Medicaid recipient |
1638 | or his or her representative an explanation of benefits in the |
1639 | form of a letter that is mailed to the most recent address of |
1640 | the recipient on the record with the Department of Children and |
1641 | Family Services. The explanation of benefits must include the |
1642 | patient's name, the name of the health care provider and the |
1643 | address of the location where the service was provided, a |
1644 | description of all services billed to Medicaid in terminology |
1645 | that should be understood by a reasonable person, and |
1646 | information on how to report inappropriate or incorrect billing |
1647 | to the agency or other law enforcement entities for review or |
1648 | investigation. The explanation of benefits may not be mailed for |
1649 | Medicaid independent laboratory services as described in s. |
1650 | 409.905(7) or for Medicaid certified match services as described |
1651 | in ss. 409.9071 and 1011.70. |
1652 | Section 15. Sections 409.9061 and 430.83, Florida |
1653 | Statutes, are repealed. |
1654 | Section 16. This act shall take effect July 1, 2008. |