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Resources for States to Address Health Equity and Disparities
/in Policy Toolkits Accountable Health, Chronic Disease Prevention and Management, Community Benefit, Cost, Payment, and Delivery Reform, Featured Policy Home, Health Coverage and Access, Health Equity, Population Health, Social Determinants of Health Health Equity /by NASHP WritersMany states are transforming their health care delivery systems to improve health and control costs. Reducing health disparities — and addressing their social and economic causes — is at the heart of many of these efforts.
How States Can Advance Health Equity while Addressing Health System Costs
/in Health System Costs, Policy Blogs, Featured News Home Accountable Health, Chronic Disease Prevention and Management, Community Benefit, COVID-19, Health Equity, Health System Costs, Hospital/Health System Oversight, Making the Case for Action, Population Health, Quality and Measurement, Social Determinants of Health, Total Cost of Care Benchmark /by Adney RakotoniainaStates have long faced budget limitations, a history of systemic racism, and a mandate to contain costs while maintaining access to quality care. COVID-19 has exacerbated these issues as state revenues decline and communities of color are disproportionately impacted by the pandemic. These challenges raise an important question – how does a state advance health equity while addressing health system costs?
The rising cost of health care has created an additional barrier to accessing quality care, particularly for racial/ethnic minorities. In 2018, 13 percent of White patients reported going without needed care due to its prohibitively high cost. For nearly every other racial/ethnic group, this number ranged from 17 to 21 percent.
One contributing factor is that people of color are disproportionately uninsured. Not only are the uninsured solely responsible for their medical costs, but they are charged a higher rate for their care without the advantage of an insurer’s negotiated pricing with providers. Additionally, as millions of people have lost insurance coverage due to pandemic-related job loss, there remains a clear need for strategies that lower health care system costs rather than simply through insurance coverage.
Leveraging Payment Systems to Enable Community Investments
One such strategy discussed by state leaders at the National Academy for State Health Policy’s (NASHP) recent annual conference is a global hospital budget approach. Under this system, a state works with a hospital to determine the hospital’s allowed revenues for the year. As implemented in Maryland, a hospital’s deviation from its allowed revenues – whether by surplus or deficit – by more than a narrow 0.5 percent margin resulted in penalties against the hospital’s budget the following year.
Through this approach, a state offers predictable payments to hospitals and incentivizes them to avoid excess costs. While fee-for-service hospitals across the country express concerns of closures due to unpredictable revenue from the pandemic-related pause in elective procedures, participating global budget hospitals in Maryland have been able to rely on more consistent revenue despite a decline in care utilization.
This predictability better enables hospitals to retain revenue and invest those funds within the community to address the upstream determinants of health, as required of tax-exempt hospitals under community benefit laws. While research shows the majority of nonprofit hospitals do not address health disparities in their investments, Maryland is one of the states working to pivot hospital investments to meet equity goals. Maryland requires nonprofit hospitals to submit an annual report that includes a list of its community benefit initiatives and the cost of each one.
At NASHP’s conference, Katie Wunderlich, executive director of the Maryland Health Services Cost Review Commission, described a Baltimore hospital that has reduced its inpatient footprint and increased its spending on substance use disorder counseling, a healthy food market, and job training. Investments in the socioeconomic resources needed to foster good health (such as healthy housing, nutritious food, and sufficient income) are particularly important in communities of color, which have been historically deprived of these resources.
Just as global budgets enable hospitals to invest retained revenue in their communities, a growing number of states are utilizing cost-growth benchmark programs to avoid unnecessary public spending on health care, which can instead be invested in services beyond the scope of clinical care.
Utilizing Cost-Containment Strategies to Improve Chronic Care Management
While acute care provided in clinical settings is important for improving health, chronic conditions such as cardiovascular disease and cancer encompass a growing share of patient care needs and costs, particularly for patients of color. Managing these conditions – and preventing the costly care associated with them – require the engagement of the state, public and commercial payers, hospital and non-hospital providers, and community organizations alike.
Cost-growth benchmarks, in which a state sets a limit on annual per capita health spending growth, operate statewide and engage all stakeholders in managing a state’s total cost of care. State leaders can also use these as tools to improve health outcomes by including quality benchmarks.
Multiple entities work with the state oversight agency to set and meet these cost and quality benchmarks statewide, enhancing transparency, efficiency, and shared accountability for health care spending and quality. When it created its benchmark program through an executive order, Delaware established eight quality benchmarks, including:
- Adult obesity – A long-term benchmark of no more than 27.4 percent of adults with a body mass index greater than or equal to 30 kg/m2.
- Physical activity among high school students – A long-term benchmark of at least 48.7 percent of students engaging in physical activity for greater than or equal to 60 minutes per day five days a week.
- Statin therapy for patients with cardiovascular disease – A long-term benchmark of 82.1 percent of commercially insured and 68.3 percent of Medicaid-enrolled, at-risk individuals adhering to medication compliance greater than or equal to 80 percent of the treatment period.
- Persistence of beta blocker treatment after a heart attack – A long-term benchmark of 91.9 percent of commercially insured and 83.9 percent of Medicaid-enrolled individuals age 18 and older receiving beta-blockers for six months after discharge
Similarly, Maryland’s new total cost-of-care model seeks to reduce the burden of chronic disease – particularly diabetes – through a focus on chronic care management. The goal is to help providers pay specific attention to and provide additional resources for communities disproportionately affected by chronic diseases.
While meeting these statewide benchmarks would not inherently address equity issues within these health outcomes, the inclusion of these quality benchmarks can contain costs through effective management and prevention of chronic conditions. In turn, it would reduce health care spending among Black and Latinx adults as they are the most likely to suffer from cardiovascular disease risk factors, such as hypertension and obesity. As racial/ethnic minorities disproportionately lack health insurance coverage, it is crucial to prevent the development of inequitable health outcomes before costly clinical care intervention is needed, in addition to effectively managing these conditions in clinical settings.
As racial and ethnic minorities disproportionately lack health insurance coverage, it is crucial to prevent the development of inequitable health outcomes before costly clinical care intervention is needed, in addition to effectively managing these conditions in clinical settings.
Moving forward, states can use global budgets and cost-growth benchmarks as strategies to advance health equity while addressing health system costs. As states search for ways to better ingrain health equity into payment systems, these strategies offer states the ability to retain much needed revenues, focus upstream spending in non-clinical settings, better enable hospital community benefit spending, and manage chronic conditions that disproportionately impact people of color.
NASHP will be following the cost and health equity implications of these, and other, state efforts. For additional tools to help address health system costs, explore NASHP’s Model Act to Ensure Financial Transparency in Hospitals and Health Care Systems, designed to help state policymakers and the public access detailed hospital financial information to better analyze a hospital’s assets as well as its expenses and liabilities. Additionally, NASHP is also following state efforts to address health inequities highlighted by COVID-19.
States Explore Pivoting Hospital Community Benefit Requirements to Address Disparities Exposed by COVID-19
/in Health System Costs Blogs, Featured News Home Community Benefit, Consumer Affordability, Health Equity, Health System Costs, Hospital/Health System Oversight, Population Health, Social Determinants of Health /by Anne DeBiasi, Jill Rosenthal and Allie AtkesonStates are eager to address the inequities driving disparities in COVID-19 outcomes among racial and ethnic minorities and other historically marginalized populations. One lever available to state policymakers is to require nonprofit hospitals to address health inequities in the community investments they must make in exchange for their significant tax exemptions.
Federal regulations currently do not require nonprofit hospitals to address health disparities in their community benefit investments and research shows the majority do not. However, some states and hospitals are going beyond federal requirements to pivot hospital community benefit investments toward equity goals, particularly in light of COVID-19. Their initiatives demonstrate that state-level community benefit regulations are an opportunity to:
What are federal community benefit requirements?
In exchange for their federal tax-exempt status, nonprofit hospitals must conduct community health needs assessments every three years and provide community benefits. As the health care landscape changes, state policymakers are revisiting state policy levers to ensure that hospitals’ investments align with community needs and state health priorities, including addressing underlying inequities exposed by the pandemic.
- Align hospital investments with the needs of their communities;
- Address the lack of focus on equity in existing community benefit strategies and investments; and
- Ensure responsible use of the nonprofit hospital charitable tax exemption.
How Hospitals Address COVID-19 Inequities
Hospitals are on the front lines of this pandemic; many struggle to meet surge demands for care, which are straining hospital staff and budgets. Despite these challenges, some hospitals are also reaching out to their communities and creating partnerships to improve access to COVID-19 testing and treatment for populations that have been disproportionately impacted.
The Catholic Health Association has outlined how hospitals can shift their community benefit programs to respond to the pandemic through community health improvement activities, such as:
- Promoting awareness and education activities for the community and first responders (e.g., telephone hotlines, public service announcements, and media responses);
- Charging only nominal fees for services or screenings for COVID-19 and flu immunizations, and improving access through mobile units and off-site testing;
- Having executive and other employee time dedicated to planning for and recovering from the public health emergency;
- Providing community mental health services;
- Launching interventions to address the social needs of the community (e.g., social and environmental improvements, such as reducing food and housing insecurity); and
- Establishing command centers specific to disaster readiness.
These community health improvement activities have the potential to help address the underlying inequities leading to disparities in COVID-19 and other health outcomes. This represents a sea change as most hospitals have not addressed the equity concerns that communities raise, and community health improvement activities represent only 0.37 percent of total community benefit spending, according to 2014 IRS data.
There are some examples of hospitals that do address COVID-19 inequities though community health improvement services. These bright spots exemplify the importance of:
- Responding to community health needs identified by community residents;
- Partnering with community-based organizations that serve and have the trust of historically marginalized populations; and
- Leveraging hospital data to identify needs, as well as the critical importance of addressing social determinants of health, such as education and employment.
These examples demonstrate ways that hospitals can address equity.
- Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia partnered with the Philadelphia Housing Authority (PHA) and a local catering company to provide free family dinners at two PHA locations in West Philadelphia from April through June.
- MetroHealth (Cleveland) Institute for HOPE and the Greater Cleveland Food Bank are partnering to deliver fresh produce directly to patients’ homes. The hospital identified patients who most need the food deliveries by looking at its top utilizer zip codes and identifying people who had been regularly visiting its on-site food distribution.
- Kaiser Permanente has dedicated $1 million to increase capacity for preventing and treating COVID-19 among the homeless. Kaiser has partnered with National Health Care for the Homeless Council to make grants to local homeless shelters to increase their capacity for services and outreach.
Community Benefit Obligations of Nonprofit Hospitals during the Pandemic
Nonprofit hospitals have a mandated Internal Revenue Service (IRS) obligation to provide community benefit, even if they are struggling to meet the demands of COVID-19. In 2011, hospitals benefited from at least $24.6 billion in tax exemptions, according to a 2015 analysis that used the most recent data available. In lieu of these taxes, hospitals are required to provide community benefits. According to a recent study, community benefit spending remained flat between 2011 and 2017, and community benefits may shrink as hospitals grapple with diminishing bottom lines amid the pandemic.
Every three years, the IRS requires nonprofit hospitals to complete a community health needs assessment (CHNA) with input from a public health department and medically underserved, low-income, and minority populations in their communities.
It is particularly challenging to engage residents and community leaders in this time of social distancing when many hospital staff are working at or over capacity to respond to COVID-19. Some nonprofit hospitals have been granted an extension until the end of the year to complete their scheduled CHNAs. Others may choose to do a limited or rapid needs assessment to update their pre-COVID-19 assessments. However, if CHNAs are not completed or are not updated to take COVID-19 into account, it raises the question of how hospitals will respond to urgent community needs and continue to meet the requirements of their tax-exempt status.
CHNAs have been the key method states have used to ensure that hospital community benefit investments are directed toward current community needs, as expressed by communities. Some states, as detailed below, go beyond the federal requirements through legislation and licensure to explicitly require that hospitals tie their community benefit implementation plans to their needs assessments. As COVID-19 reveals long-standing health inequities, it is more important than ever that hospitals work with residents to identify and address community needs and underlying inequities.
Currently, a focus on equity in community benefit strategies and investments in CHNAs is lacking – though equity is raised when assessing community needs. A 2016 study of urban nonprofit hospital CHNAs found that 65 percent cited health disparities or health equity explicitly, 100 percent referenced health equity implicitly, and 75 percent reported that external stakeholders identified health equity as a need. Yet, only 46 percent prioritized health equity in their CHNAs and a mere 9 percent of the hospitals’ implementation strategies included activities explicitly designed to improve health equity.
States are beginning to address this disconnect because equity is a demonstrated, high-priority need that the pandemic has laid bare. Community benefit is a lever states are beginning to pull.
Current State Efforts to Leverage Community Benefit Investments
States are continuing, even now, to leverage hospital community benefit requirements and hold hospitals accountable to invest in community health improvement. They’re using a variety of state levers, including state licensure and certificate/determination-of-need approval processes.
This is especially important now because charity care – a component of community benefit – may increase due to the economic downturn. States that want hospital community benefit programs to also focus on addressing community needs and social determinants of health will need tools to communicate their expectations and monitor modifications.
States are going beyond the federal community benefit requirements to ensure:
- Authentic and meaningful community engagement and input;
- A focus on identifying, tracking, and reducing disparities identified in CHNAs;
- Community benefit spending advances state priorities as identified in CHNAs and statewide health improvement plans;
- Hospitals work with public health to align assessment and tap the capacity of public health to address health equity and social determinants of health;
- Investments in equity are in alignment with state-supported, local, cross-sector collaboratives addressing health equity; and
- Hospital community benefit reporting that makes transparent the connection between real investments and identified community needs.
Ensuring Authentic and Meaningful Community Engagement and Input
States can work to ensure that hospitals truly seek out and act on meaningful input from a wide range of community representatives. Prior to the outbreak of COVID-19, Maryland enacted legislation (effective July 1, 2020) requiring its Health Services Cost Review Commission to establish a Community Benefit Reporting Workgroup and to adopt regulations based on workgroup recommendations. This law expands on the federal requirements for community engagement by requiring that the workgroup include people impacted by hospital community benefit spending. The law also requires hospitals to not only solicit and take into account input from individuals who represent the interests of their communities, but also to conduct their CHNAs in consultation with community members, which may look different due to COVID-19, but remains critical.
In addition, four states (California, New Hampshire, New York, and Rhode Island) statutorily require that certain communities or groups, such as community organizations, members of the public, or racial and ethnic minorities, be represented in the CHNA, above and beyond what the federal government requires. A Texas statute encourages hospitals to consult with certain groups or entities when assessing community needs. Researchers have also recommended that states require engagement of community members and organizations in the development of community benefit implementation plans, in addition to the CHNA.
Community health improvement initiatives are proven to be more effective when communities are engaged throughout the process. The examples above illustrate some strategies for engaging the community in needs assessment and are feasible even during a pandemic. Hospitals can develop partnerships with community organizations that serve and have the trust of vulnerable communities. They can also analyze patient data to identify needs and combine them with direct input from community members.
Identifying and Tracking Reductions in Disparities in CHNAs
Maryland requires CHNAs to describe a hospital’s effort to track and reduce disparities in the community. Requiring efforts to address health disparities as part of state community benefit requirements is a critical policy to improve equity, yet is not a federal requirement nor are disparities even mentioned in the federal regulations.
Addressing Community Needs and Advancing State Priorities
States are working to ensure that community benefit implementation plans address the needs identified by the CHNA process using strategies for engaging the community in needs assessment. Maryland’s new law requires hospitals to submit an annual report describing how each of the activities undertaken by the hospital addresses the community health needs of the hospital’s community, a description of gaps in the availability of providers to serve the community, and a list of the unmet community health needs identified in the most recent CHNA. Although this law is new, other states may find it a useful model for tying community benefit investments to documented needs.
Some states have aligned their community benefit requirements with State Health Improvement Plans (SHIPs) developed by public health departments. New York requires that hospital Community Health Improvement Plans specifically address goals contained in its SHIP, known as the Prevention Agenda 2019-2024. New York also requires hospitals to report their community benefit spending, and how it relates to its prevention agenda. Improvement plan.
Massachusetts has aligned community benefit requirements with state health priorities by tying the Department of Public Health’s Determination of Need process to standards for community engagement and social determinant of health investing. While the process is currently underway, the Massachusetts Attorney General’s office is considering how to give nonprofit hospitals the flexibility to bring an equity lens to addressing the needs revealed by COVID-19.
Promoting Collaboration with Public Health Departments
New York encourages hospitals to work with public health departments on both their CHNAs and the related community health improvement plans. This link to public health is a key policy to ensure the capacity to address health equity, which is a foundational principle of public health. The authors of the 2016 study of CHNAs conclude that hospitals might have the will to promote health equity, but not necessarily the know-how.
Working with public health departments is also important to reduce duplication, considering both nonprofit hospitals and public health departments conduct regular community health needs assessments. Maryland requires hospitals to consider the most recent community needs assessment developed by the state or local health department when identifying community health needs. Five states go further (ME, MA, NH, NY, and TX), requiring or encouraging local public health officials to be involved in the community needs assessment process.
Aligning Community Benefit with Local Health Improvement Coalitions
In 2015, Rhode Island began implementing Health Equity Zones (HEZs) which now exist in 10 communities across the state. HEZs are geographic areas where the Rhode Island Department of Health invests a blend of funding streams to address differences in health outcomes. Local, cross-sector coalitions conduct a collaborative, community-driven needs assessment and implement a plan to address the identified needs. For example, the Southside, Elmwood, and West End Health Equity Zone in Providence galvanized residents to advocate for housing as a social determinant of health, achieving the remediation of several blighted properties, hosting a Neighborhood Housing Summit, and advancing equitable housing policy.
Rhode Island (prior to COVID-19) required two hospitals to invest in their local HEZs and collaborate with them on their CHNAs as a condition of approval for changes sought under the Hospital Conversions Act, which governs changes in hospital ownership and significant reductions in certain hospital services. Although not directly tied to community benefit, the advent of Rhode Island’s Health Equity Measures this year creates additional opportunities for alignment between the HEZs, the state’s health equity goals, measures, and hospital community benefit.
Establishing Transparent Reporting that Ties Investments to Community Need
Maryland requires nonprofit hospitals to submit an annual community benefit report including a list of the initiatives that were undertaken by the hospital and the cost of each. New York asks hospitals to report itemized community benefit spending. Connecticut, as a part of its certificate-of-need process, similarly requires that hospitals identify community benefit dollars spent on specific needs identified in their CHNAs. New Hampshire and Vermont also require hospitals to report community needs from the most recent CHNA and tie these to community benefit spending.
The Way Forward
COVID-19 has drastically altered the health care landscape in the United States. As states struggle with reduced budgets and revenue, they need to leverage every resource available for community health improvement, particularly for the most vulnerable residents. Hospitals are on the frontline in communities, leading testing and treatment. Community benefit provisions hold nonprofit hospitals accountable for investing in communities in return for the federal tax breaks they receive. As hospitals pivot community benefit investments to respond to COVID-19, states can ensure that the underlying inequities exposed by the pandemic are addressed. States can develop strategies that hold hospitals accountable while balancing the many COVID-19-related demands. States can and are going beyond federal community benefit regulations to ensure that the associated investments are responsive to the needs of their most at-risk populations to reduce glaring inequities and move, ultimately, toward long-term resilience for all communities.
Identifying Gaps in Federal Oversight of Hospitals’ Community Benefit Investments – Opportunities for State Policy
/in Policy Featured News Home Community Benefit, Health Equity, Hospital/Health System Oversight, Population Health, Social Determinants of Health /by Trish Riley, Amy Clary and Elinor HigginsStates Explore Emerging Evidence to Learn New, Innovative Uses of Telehealth
/in Policy Blogs Cost, Payment, and Delivery Reform, Health Coverage and Access, Health IT/Data, Health System Costs, Healthy Child Development, Integrated Care for Children, Maternal, Child, and Adolescent Health, Safety Net Providers and Rural Health, Workforce Capacity /by Johanna Butler and Christina CousartThe National Academy for State Health Policy (NASHP) recently launched the Telehealth Affinity Group, composed of state policymakers, that is examining emerging evidence from the Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute (PCORI) into innovative uses of telehealth to transform health care delivery systems in states.
State and federal policymakers are eager to explore emerging patient-centered outcomes research about new uses for telehealth beyond traditional care delivery, but they need additional information to evaluate PCORI studies and effectively apply their findings to the populations they serve.
For this study, a working group of parents and stakeholders from Federally Qualified Health Centers (FQHCs) and Community Mental Health Centers (CMHCs) in Los Angeles County designed a new referral process called the Telehealth-Coordinated Referral:
- After receiving a referral for mental health care from an FQHC, parents watched a five-minute video introducing them to the referred CMHC.
- At a follow-up appointment, the parent/s and child undergo the CMHC eligibility screening via a live teleconference with CMHC staff facilitated by a telehealth care coordinator, which is a new position funded by the grant.
States are motivated to implement telehealth policies that expand access to care and offer innovative approaches to care delivery. The importance of the topic is reflected in the robust investments that PCORI has made in its telehealth research portfolio. As of August 2019, PCORI has invested $381 million to support 88 comparative clinical effectiveness research studies in telehealth.
NASHP’s affinity group members represent nine states and a range of agencies, including Medicaid, state employee health plans, departments of insurance, offices of delivery system transformation, and departments of public health. These state officials offer extensive experience and expertise into telehealth and health care system innovations. The first convening of the group took place in August at NASHP’s 32nd Annual State Health Policy Conference in Chicago, where officials discussed a PCORI-funded study on a telehealth intervention that targeted behavioral health.
The study examined efforts to improve the mental health care referral process for children enrolled in Medicaid in Los Angeles County. This is how the intervention works:
- The primary care provider refers parent/s to a Community Mental Health Centers (CMHC).
- The parent/s watch a brief introductory video about the referred CMHC.
- The family then undergoes an eligibility screening through a teleconference (video chat) with a CMHC staff member during a follow-up appointment at their Federally Qualified Health Center (FQHC).
Compared with parents who had traditional referrals and screenings conducted over a follow-up phone call, the parents who watched the video and were screened by video chats at the FQHC were three-times more likely to complete the screening.
Patient-centered telehealth research, like this PCORI study, can help policymakers evaluate telehealth through a broader lens. Affinity group members explained that they often think of telehealth as “use of telecommunication technology to provide delivery of health care services,” but this study focused on telehealth as a tool to improve referrals and increase access to new services. As indicated by this study, new telehealth policies or investments may not necessarily dramatically change care delivery, but can greatly improve access or streamline existing processes.
Officials welcomed the opportunity to think about new and different uses of telehealth, and noted that telehealth can help address the practical challenges of any type of medical referrals – such as following up with providers or finding transportation to new health center locations – which can be even more onerous for families enrolled in Medicaid. Policymakers noted the study’s intervention offered a unique telehealth solution to referral challenges by creating a “warm,” technically streamlined hand-off between provider entities. The intervention also allowed new providers to connect with a family in a familiar location that the family already knew and trusted.
When considering new evidence, policymakers are interested in the return on investment (ROI) an intervention can provide. This is especially true in the case of telehealth interventions as substantial costs may be involved in setting up the technology infrastructure needed for its launch. For example, based on this study, affinity group members indicated it would be useful to understand the ROI of increased mental health care screening and subsequent access in order to make the case for funding the staffing and infrastructure needed for a similar intervention at an FQHC. Better understanding the challenges and context that a study addresses is also helpful for state officials who are considering emerging telehealth research. For example, members noted that reviewing the PCORI study alongside additional research findings into the importance of mental health care for young patients could enhance their understanding of how this study could be applied to future policy initiatives.
The cross-agency membership of the affinity group represents diverse patient interests, and when faced with new evidence, members are interested in how an intervention could effectively apply or translate to the specific populations they serve.
- Those representing commercially insured patients were interested in learning how this intervention could be implemented in the commercial sector.
- Officials serving rural communities and areas with provider shortages wondered if the intervention could include actual care delivery in another iteration to overcome access challenges.
Affinity group members also noted there was a lack of clarity on what specifically made this intervention successful — was it the introductory video, eligibility screening via teleconference, or having an additional staff member focused on the referral process? When considering how to implement new evidence-based approaches in their states, policymakers want to know which part of an intervention might be most impactful so they can effectively target populations and make the case for any related policies and investments.
When presenting new evidence on telehealth, researchers could improve the applicability of their findings by:
- Clearly describing the demographics of the population targeted in a study, including age, income, health status, etc.;
- Presenting contextual evidence to show the scope of the problem that an intervention seeks to address and the potential ROI of addressing the challenge; and
- Differentiating which part of a studied intervention is most effective and might be most successful if implemented in a policymaker’s community.
NASHP’s Telehealth Affinity Group will continue to meet and discuss emerging PCORI research on telehealth in the coming months. Affinity group members are interested in exploring new studies using telehealth to address behavioral health needs. Future blogs will highlight the group’s discussion of policy implications of new research into this topic and others.
Toolkit: State Strategies to Support Older Adults Aging in Place in Rural Areas
/in Policy Toolkits Care Coordination, Chronic and Complex Populations, Chronic Disease Prevention and Management, Community Health Workers, Cost, Payment, and Delivery Reform, Eligibility and Enrollment, Health Coverage and Access, Health Equity, Health System Costs, Housing and Health, Long-Term Care, Physical and Behavioral Health Integration, Population Health, Safety Net Providers and Rural Health, Social Determinants of Health, Workforce Capacity /by Neva Kaye and Kristina LongThis toolkit highlights state initiatives to help older rural adults age in place by increasing services that help people remain in their homes, expanding and professionalizing the caregiver workforce, improving transportation access and services, and making delivery system reforms within Medicaid programs.
Download the toolkit.
Introduction
Rural areas across the nation have higher concentrations of elderly residents than urban areas, 18 percent of rural populations are age 65 or older compared to only 13 percent in urban areas.1 These rural, older adults are poorer, have more complex health conditions, and experience the impact of health-related social factors such as lack of housing, transportation, and food more acutely than their urban peers.2 Rural adults are also more likely to be older (exceeding age 85), female, and white than their urban counterparts. Finally, rural older adults were also less likely to use home- and community-based services (HCBS) and more likely to use nursing facility services.3
State Medicaid programs, through HCBS waivers and the Medicaid nursing facility benefits, are the de facto long-term care system across the country. States are obviously committed to ensuring that older adults living in rural areas who need nursing facility care be able to access quality care in their communities. However, not only do more than 85 percent of older adults prefer to remain in their own homes and communities,4 but serving older adults in their homes is almost always less expensive than housing people in facilities.5 As a result, states are keenly interested in finding strategies that can help keep older, rural adults safely in their homes in their communities.
States can implement a wide range of strategies using differing combinations of policy levers to support rural older adults who age in place, including working across state agencies and with different partners. The strategies discussed in this toolkit were drawn from online research, as well as written correspondence and interviews with state officials. This toolkit showcases these three primary types of strategies that states are using to support aging in place:6
- Workforce and training;
- Facilitating access to services in rural areas; and
- Addressing the social determinants of health (SDOH).
This toolkit is designed to help state leaders, especially Medicaid officials, adapt and adopt existing strategies and develop new strategies that build on their peers’ experience and insights. While it does not offer a comprehensive compendium of state approaches, it instead provides examples of the types of strategies that states have implemented and presents emerging ideas for consideration. It also identifies and includes links to key documents used to implement these strategies, such as legislation, contracts, and program manuals. These are provided in order to offer officials a springboard for developing their own approaches and policies as they tackle the important issue of how to better support older individuals aging in place in rural areas.
Tools
There are a number of state agencies with responsibility for providing or overseeing services to older adults who live in rural areas — often this task is part of a broader scope of responsibilities. This situation creates the potential for cross-agency partnerships. Most of the strategies presented in this toolkit are led by Medicaid or include Medicaid as a partner, but other state partners include aging agencies and departments of rural health, licensing, and transportation. Some states also partner with colleges and universities as well as providers, families, and consumers. Finally, many of these strategies depend on engaging the support of community-based organizations.
States generally use three types of policy levers to implement their strategies — and implementing most strategies depend on more than one lever:
- States enact legislation that created or changed laws and authorized funding to better support older adults living in rural areas.
- States adopt regulations to implement legislation, including legislatively authorized programs such as Medicaid. This category includes guidance (e.g., Medicaid provider manuals) that states develop to share regulations with providers and other stakeholders.
- Sometimes states choose to contract for services through a process (e.g., request for proposals) that selects an organization or individual to deliver a service.
The state initiatives that informed this toolkit combined these tools in various ways to meet the needs of the target population. Sometimes they built strategies targeting only older adults in rural areas, but more often they developed strategies that addressed this group’s needs as part of a broader strategy. The table below draws on two of the strategies detailed in this toolkit to illustrate how states have used the resources at their disposal (partners, policy levers, and federal authorities) to build strategies that meet the needs of older, rural adults.
Table 1: Key elements of Minnesota and Georgia’s initiatives to meet the health needs of older, rural adults
| Strategy | Minnesota Community Emergency Medical Technician | Georgia Mobile Adult day Care Services |
| Trained emergency medical technicians deliver services, such as safe home evaluations, in the individual’s home. | Staff travel from a central location daily to provide adult day care services at various sites. | |
| Legislation | Minnesota Session Laws 2015, Chapter 71, Article 9, Sec. 18. Community Medical Response Emergency Medical Technician (CEMT) services covered under the Medical Assistance Program | Georgia HB 318 Adult Day Center Licensure Act provides for licensure of adult day center. |
| Regulation and Guidance | The Medicaid provider handbook sets out provider qualifications and billing guidelines CEMTs must meet to receive Medicaid payment. | Section 1103 of the Medicaid provider manual outlines provider requirements, policies, and procedures required for mobile adult day centers to receive Medicaid payment.
The Department Of Community Health 111-8-1, Rules And Regulations For Adult Day Centers licensing requirements. |
| Contracting | Medicaid managed care organization (MCO) contracts require MCOs to cover CEMT services. | The Area Plan for Aging Services, specifies the services area agencies on aging (AAAs) must provide under contract to the Division of Aging. |
| Partners | Medicaid, Office of Rural Health and Primary Care, Emergency Medical Services Regulatory Board, and the local colleges and universities that offer training. | Medicaid, Department of Human Services’ Division of Aging Services |
| Federal Authority | Medicaid State Plan Amendment for coverage of CEMTs | Medicaid 1915(c) waiver
State Plan on Aging |
Because several of the programs serving older adults in rural areas are state-federal partnerships — financed by both governments and operating under federal guidelines – a final, important element of each strategy is the federal authority to implement the change. Under Medicaid, these are mostly state plan amendments (SPAs) and waivers.
- Medicaid state plans define the parameters of the Medicaid program in each state, including defining who is eligible and what services are covered. States change these parameters by gaining federal approval of their SPAs.
- Waivers, when approved by the federal government, allow states to establish Medicaid policies that would not otherwise be allowed under federal rules, such as providing long-term services and supports (LTSS) only to a subset of Medicaid beneficiaries or limiting beneficiary choice of providers. Different waivers allow the waiver of different requirements and are approved for different lengths of time.
One challenge is there are simply not enough providers in rural communities to serve older adults. In rural areas, there are only 39.8 physicians per 100,000 people, compared to 53.3 physicians per 100,000 people in urban areas.7 There are often shortages of other critical service providers, such as home health providers.8 As people age they often become less able to drive safely, which make provider shortages even more problematic for this group as they become less able to travel to find care. States can implement strategies that increase access to providers, including increasing provider supply and enhancing the capabilities of existing providers.
Using Emergency Services Personnel in New Ways in Idaho and Minnesota
Minnesota uses both community paramedics and community emergency medical technicians (CEMTs)9 to meet the health needs of Medicaid beneficiaries living in underserved areas. Both of these professions were established in Minnesota by legislation. One of the reasons for creating the CEMT profession was that a pilot program had demonstrated its potential in rural areas.10 Minnesota Medicaid pays both CEMTs and community paramedics to deliver services in a beneficiary’s home. The Medicaid managed care organization (MCO) contract also requires coverage of these services. CEMTs may deliver post-discharge visits when a beneficiary is released from a hospital or skilled nursing facility as well as safe home evaluation visits. Community paramedics may deliver a broader range of services, including health assessments, medication compliance management, chronic disease monitoring and education, immunizations, lab specimen collection, and minor medical procedures. To qualify for payment, services must be provided by a qualified CEMT or paramedic under the direction of a primary care provider (PCP). Required qualifications for both providers include minimum experience, specialized training, and certification by Minnesota’s Emergency Medical Services Regulatory Board.
Minnesota officials report that building these new professions took time. Although legislation creating CEMTs passed in 2015, in 2017 the Medicaid agency reported that no CEMTs were billing for delivery of their services.11 However, state officials report that CEMT billings have steadily increased since early 2018 when the first technicians completed their training and became certified CEMTs. The Department of Health reports that more community paramedics are needed — as of May 2019 there were 127 certified community paramedics, half of whom worked in the urban Twin Cities and the other half in greater Minnesota.12
How Minnesota Created its Community Emergency Response Technician and Paramedic Programs
| Partners: | |
| · Medicaid · Department of Health, Office of Rural Health and Primary Care · Emergency Medical Services Regulatory Board · The state’s ambulance association · Colleges and universities that offer training |
|
| State policy levers: | Federal authority: |
| Legislation · Minnesota Session Laws 2015, Chapter 71, Article 9, Sec. 18. Community Medical Response Emergency Medical Technician Services Covered Under the Medical Assistance Program · Minnesota Statutes 256B.0625, subdivision 60 Community Emergency Medical Technician Services and Community Paramedic Services |
Medicaid State Plan Amendment for coverage of CEMTs and community paramedics |
| Regulation and guidance · Medicaid provider manual CEMT and community paramedic sections · Community Paramedic Toolkit |
|
| Contracts · CEMT and Community paramedic coverage was incorporated into all three types of contracts that served families and children, seniors, and people with disabilities. |
|
Idaho also sought to use emergency medical personnel in new ways, but took a different approach to implementation and payment. Idaho leveraged the State Innovation Model (SIM) award it received from the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid (CMS) in 2015 to establish a training and technical assistance program for community health emergency medical services (CHEMS) agencies. The Bureau of Rural Health and Primary Care, in partnership with the Bureau of Emergency Medical Services (EMS) and Preparedness, was responsible for developing the program. The program sought to prepare existing EMS agencies in rural and underserved areas to take on new roles in the state’s health care delivery system, such as providing vaccinations and transitional care after hospital stays, performing medication inventories, and serving as a health care navigator or advocate. Idaho’s EMS bureau made changes to the code governing licensure to support the expanded EMS role and is continuing to support CHEMS agencies, for example, developing CHEMS clinical integration protocols through its EMS advisory committee and maintaining an online resource center. The SIM award also enabled Idaho to reimburse the patient-centered medical homes (PCMHs) that participated in SIM up to $2,500 toward the cost of integrating CHEMS into their practices. As of July 2019, there were 11 CHEMS agencies in the state, several serving rural areas.13 Although the program does not target older adults, the CHEMS visit may include a fall risk assessment in the home. Also, agencies do not gather data about patients’ ages but do serve patients with conditions that indicate they are likely to be older adults (e.g., certain chronic diseases, dementia, falls, congestive heart failure, and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease – COPD).
Although SIM funding has ended, the Medicaid agency continues to encourage PCPs to work with CHEMS agencies. PCPs that integrate a CHEMS agency can qualify for Tier 3 (of four total tiers) of Medicaid’s Healthy Connections program, which features per member per month (PMPM) payments for PCMH services. Those who qualify for higher tiers receive higher payments. No payer, however, yet pays for CHEMS services and Idaho has found that to be a challenge. As one state official explained, “Providing training and technical assistance supports program development and implementation, however, additional elements, such as funding, reimbursement, and on-going active engagement with primary care clinicians and the local hospital, are critical to sustainability.”
How Idaho Created its Community Health Emergency Medical Services (CHEMS) Agencies
| Partners: | |
| · Division of Public Health’s Bureau of Rural Health and Primary Care and Bureau of EMS and Preparedness) · Division of Medicaid · Office of Healthcare Policy Initiatives · University of Idaho · Ada County paramedics |
|
| State policy levers: | Federal authority: |
| Legislation: · Legislation not required |
Medicaid State Plan Amendment for the Healthy Connections program. |
| Regulation and guidance: · IDAPA 16.01.03 and Idaho Code 56-1012 · Healthy Connections Tier III Requirements |
|
| Contract Each agency seeking to use SIM resources to become a CHEMS agency signed a contract with the Idaho Department of Health and Welfare (IDHW), which administered the SIM award. |
|
Emerging Professions: Community Health Workers in Minnesota
In 2007, Minnesota passed legislation officially establishing community health workers (CHWs) as a profession in Minnesota. In 2010, the Medicaid agency obtained state plan amendment approval enabling the agency to pay for diagnosis-related patient education services provided by qualified CHWs under the direction of a physician, advance practice registered nurse, certified public health nurse, dentist, mental health professional, or other registered nurse. Medicaid’s MCO contract also requires MCOs to cover these services. Minnesota’s provider manual defines CHWs as “a trained health educator who works with Minnesota Health Care Programs (MHCP) recipients who may have difficulty understanding providers due to cultural or language barriers.” CHWs work as part of a team to help patients learn how to manage their conditions and help them access services. Minnesota Medicaid specifies that it will only pay for provision of education services that support delivery of medical services.14 The CHW cannot bill for services directly, rather an enrolled medical or dental provider must bill for the service. To qualify to deliver Medicaid services, CHWs must, among other requirements, complete an approved curriculum and identify the medical professionals with whom they are affiliated.
Minnesota officials hoped CHWs would extend the reach of existing providers into underserved communities, including rural communities. Although state officials reported that start-up was slow, the number of members in this new profession is growing. CHWs have established both a peer network and a state-level organization to aid their efforts – the Minnesota Community Health Workers Alliance. CHWs operate in rural areas and some have developed expertise in gerontology — enabling them to better meet the health needs of older, rural adults.
How Minnesota Established its Community Health Worker Profession
| Partners: | |
| · Medicaid · Department of Health’s Office of Rural Health and Primary Care · Community and technical colleges · Minnesota Community Health Workers Alliance · Minnesota Community Health Worker Peer Network |
|
| State policy levers: | Federal authority: |
| Legislation · Minnesota Statutes 256B.0625, Subhead. 49., defining community health worker (CHW) |
Medicaid State Plan Amendment |
| Regulation and guidance · Medicaid provider manual, CHW section · Office of Rural Health and Primary Care CHW Toolkit |
|
| Contract · CHW services were incorporated into all three types of managed care organization contracts that served families and children, seniors, and people with disabilities. |
|
Project ECHO Used to Enhance New Mexico’s Rural Nursing Facility Staff Skills
Project ECHO (Extension for Community Healthcare Outcomes), using multi-point video conferencing, enables primary care providers in remote areas to better manage their patients’ chronic conditions by working with and learning from academic specialists. New Mexico is applying this approach to support nursing facility staff who serve people with complex conditions, including behavioral health conditions. In August 2018, the Medicaid agency, in partnership with the University of New Mexico (UNM), launched the 11-member pilot of the Medicaid Quality Improvement and Hospitalization Avoidance ECHO, which seeks to improve care delivered to Medicaid enrollees residing in rural and remote skilled nursing facilities (SNFs). New Mexico Medicaid plans to expand this program to include all SNFs in the state by 2023. The pilot included two ECHOs:
- Quality measures related to pain control, urinary tract infections, and antipsychotic use; and
- Hospitalizations, including SNF readmissions and long-term care admissions.
The pilot will be completed in the summer of 2019, after which project leaders will evaluate and if necessary recalibrate their approach.15 Medicaid MCO contracts require MCO participation in Project ECHO, including in this project and in working with the UNM’s Department of Geriatrics.
How New Mexico Used Project ECHO (Extension for Community Healthcare Outcomes) to Support Nursing Facility Staff
| Partners: | |
| · Medicaid · University of New Mexico |
|
| State policy levers: | Federal authority: |
| Legislation · No legislation required |
Section 1115 Research and Demonstration Waiver, authorizes Medicaid managed care programs and commits to use of Project ECHO |
| Regulation and guidance · None required |
|
| Contract · Section 4.8.16.2.4 of the Centennial Care 2.0 MCO contracts |
|
Alaska’s Comprehensive, Multi-sector Partnership for Health Workforce Planning
Alaska developed a comprehensive, multi-sector partnership for health workforce planning. An explicit goal of this process was to address rural workforce needs — several of the plan’s initiatives are designed to benefit older adults and people with long-term care needs. The Alaska Health Workforce Coalition was formed in 2008 by a broad group of organizations and individuals representing state agencies, health care employers, education providers, and professional associations, among others. The coalition was launched with funding from the departments of Health and Social Services (DHSS) and Labor and Workforce Development (DOLWD), and the Alaska Mental Health Trust Authority, a state agency governed by an independent board and functioning like a foundation. The Alaska Workforce Investment Board (AWIB) asked the coalition to develop a coordinated approach to addressing the state’s health workforce shortages. The Alaska Health Workforce Plan was presented to the AWIB in May 2010. Based on that plan, the coalition developed an action agenda that was updated in 2017 to cover the period 2017-2021. The coalition also maintains a “scorecard” that tracks progress on the agenda’s items. The coalition merged with the trust in 2017 and, under the trust’s leadership, coalition partners continue to work together to advance the strategies included in the plan. Key strategies include:
Apprenticeships: Alaska has leveraged the federal registered apprenticeship program to recruit Alaskans into the health care field, particularly in rural areas. In August 2018, about 300 Alaskans were in health care-related apprenticeships.16 There are apprenticeships for behavioral health counselors and aides, medical assistants, and others. Of particular relevance, the Alaska DHSS serves as an employee sponsor for a certified nurse assistant (CNA)-registered apprenticeship at its state-owned assisted living facilities. CNA apprentices receive on-the-job training specializing in dementia care over six to twelve months.
Non-traditional providers. Alaska Medicaid pays for services delivered by non-traditional providers, including behavioral health peer support specialists, community health aides,17 behavioral health aides, and dental health aide therapists. Some in these professions qualified as Medicaid providers through the apprenticeship program. According to state officials, many in these positions work in the frontier regions of the state.
Collaboration across organizations: One critical element of the plan was to more effectively deploy resources by helping participating organizations understand and build on each other’s work. For example, the trust and DHSS collaborated with the Alaska Training Cooperative to develop core competencies documents and a corresponding assessment tool for direct care workers. These resources are designed to give employers the information they need to build and assess the skills of direct care workers.
How Alaska Developed its Multi-sector Health Care Workforce
| Partners: | |
| · Departments of Health and Social Services, Labor and Workforce Development, and Education and Early Development · Alaska Mental Health Trust Authority · Alaska Workforce Investment Board · University of Alaska Anchorage · Alaska Area Health Education Centers · Alaska Native Tribal Health Consortium · Alaska Primary Care Association · Alaska State Hospital and Nursing Home Association · Alaska Behavioral Health Association · Alaska Alliance for Developmental Disabilities |
|
| State policy levers: | Federal authority: |
| · Implementing the plan has required the use of many state policy levers including legislation to establish a loan repayment program and, more recently, new legislation to expand that program to all areas of the state. | Each strategy engaged federal authorities relevant to the approach, including Medicaid State Plan Amendments to allow payment for non-traditional providers and Apprenticeship Program Registration with the US Department of Labor. |
Emerging Ideas: Tennessee and Washington Offer Distance Learning and a Career Pathway to High School Students
Tennessee and Washington are implementing statewide initiatives to enhance the home- and community-based services and the LTSS workforce. While neither initiative explicitly focus on older adults living in rural areas, both have potential to benefit this group.
Tennessee is launching a statewide LTSS workforce development initiative focused on competency-based learning and career pipeline development. Medicaid developed this initiative because it was experiencing escalating challenges in the recruitment and retention of LTSS workers in HCBS waiver programs. It also knew developing competent staff capable of delivering high-quality services as key to successful implementation of the managed LTSS program for people with developmental disabilities. The state plans to incentivize completion of the training program by establishing value-based payment (VBP) arrangements that reward workers with higher wages for increased competency and also rewards providers for employing a more highly trained workforce. Tennessee worked with experts to design this initiative to correspond to the set of core competencies for direct service workers produced by CMS in 2014. The Medicaid agency worked with the Tennessee Board of Regents to create a post-secondary certificate program and to leverage state last dollar funding programs to help cover training costs. Steps taken to ensure that the initiative would benefit rural areas included:
- Delivering training through Tennessee’s statewide system of community colleges and Colleges of Applied Technology;
- Distance learning; and
- A virtual assessment environment that allow for reliable and valid demonstration of competencies to be completed remotely in a more cost-efficient manner.
In Washington, many home care aides (referred to as individual providers or IPs) are hired and supervised by the person needing LTSS, but are paid by the state. The state is experiencing a shortage of aides, which it expects to grow. In September 2019, Washington plans to launch its High School Home Care Aide training program, which targets high school juniors and seniors. This program will allow high school students to take state-required courses before graduating and learn how to apply their new knowledge through practicums in facilities. Those who complete the course become certified by the state’s health department and will be eligible to work as aides starting when they are 18.18 State officials see this not only as a way to address the shortage of home care aides it currently faces, but as offering young people an opportunity to start a health care career.
State agencies can implement strategies that increase the availability of existing services in rural areas. Most of these strategies focus on modifying billing policies to make it easier for providers to deliver services in rural areas. But at least one state has also modified its Medicaid eligibility policies to begin serving older adults in rural communities before they need LTSS in hopes of delaying or preventing the need for such services.
Mobile Adult Day Care and Health Services to Better Serve Rural Georgia
Georgia pays for mobile adult day health services, which are provided by staff who travel from a central location on a daily basis to various sites, primarily (but not limited to) rural areas. The Department of Community Health (DCH) licenses adult day care, including mobile adult day care. The Medicaid program will pay for the service under two Medicaid 1915(c) waiver programs that serve the elderly and younger adults with disabilities. According to the Medicaid provider handbook, the purpose of these services is “to allow caregivers in rural and/or underserved areas a respite from 24-hour-a-day, care-giving responsibilities and to allow members the opportunity to participate in social, health, and rehabilitative services.”19 The Department of Human Services’ (DHS) Division of Aging Services will also pay for mobile day care services for older adults (60 and older) who do not qualify for Medicaid services. In Georgia, local Area Agencies on Aging (AAA) deliver non-Medicaid services under contract to the Division of Aging Services and at least one AAA that serves a largely rural area (Coastal Georgia AAA), provided the service during fiscal year 2019.
How Georgia Developed Mobile Adult Day Care and Health Services
| Partners: | |
| · Medicaid · DHS Division of Aging Services |
|
| State policy levers: | Federal authority: |
| Legislation · HB 318 Adult Day Center Licensure Act |
Medicaid 1915(c) waiver |
| Regulation and guidance · Department Of Community Health 111-8-1, Rules And Regulations For Adult Day Centers (defining licensing requirements) · Medicaid provider manual |
|
| Contract · Area Plan for Aging Services, which specifies the services AAAs provide under contract to the Division of Aging. |
|
Paying More for Services Delivered to Rural Residents in Arizona and Utah
The Arizona Health Care Cost Containment System (AHCCCS), which is Arizona’s Medicaid program, uses differential payments to reward providers “who have committed to supporting designated actions that improve patients’ care experience, improve members’ health, and reduce cost of care growth.” For example, nursing facilities that have fewer than average patients with pressure ulcers are eligible for a 2 percent increase in their reimbursement rates. Most relevant for older adults living in rural areas is a differential payment for Critical Access Hospitals – among other requirements, these hospitals must be more than 35 miles from any other hospital20. These providers qualify for a 0.5 percent increase in payments by joining the State Health Information Exchange, allowing them to access more complete information about the services their patients receive which, in turn, supports quality improvement and care coordination. MCO contracts require the MCOs to make these payments. The state, however, will reimburse MCOs for the added costs of the differential payments.
How Arizona Medicaid Implemented its Provider Incentive Program
| Partners: | |
| Arizona Health Care Cost Containment System | |
| State policy levers: | Federal authority: |
| Legislation · No legislation required |
Medicaid State Plan Amendment
Note: Although Arizona operates its Medicaid program under a Section 1115 Research and Demonstration waiver, it did not need to amend the waiver to make these payments.
|
| Regulation and guidance · R9-22-712.35, R9-22-712.61, and R9-22-712.71 govern standards for payments |
|
| Contract · MCO contracts, Section D.81 for all programs, including those serving people with long-term care needs |
|
Utah Medicaid implemented the Rural Home Health Travel Enhancement, under which higher rates are paid to those providers who deliver home health services in rural areas. In most of Utah’s rural counties, Home Health Service payment enhancements are offered for cases in which the provider must travel more than 50 miles. However, enhancement payments for services provided to residents of San Juan and Grand Counties vary by location within the county, with the largest enhancement offered for services delivered to residents of San Juan County’s Monument Valley region.
How Utah Implemented Enhanced Rural Home Health Rates
| Partners: | |
| · Medicaid | |
| State policy levers: | Federal authority: |
| Legislation · No legislation required |
Medicaid State Plan Amendment, page 10 |
| Regulation and guidance · Medicaid home health provider manual, p 15 |
|
| Contract · None |
|
Washington State: Helping Older Adults Delay or Avoid the Need for LTSS
In January 2017, the Washington Health Care Authority, which includes the state’s Medicaid agency, launched its Medicaid Transformation Project that operates under a Section 1115 Research and Demonstration Waiver. Through this waiver, Washington established two new Medicaid benefits designed to help older adults delay or avoid the need for LTSS – primarily by supporting older adults’ unpaid caregivers. The Medicaid Alternative Care (MAC) benefit is targeted to older adults (55 and older) who qualify for Medicaid-financed LTSS, but have chosen to wrap services around their unpaid caregiver rather than receive traditional Medicaid-funded services, such as personal care. The Tailored Supports for Older Adults (TSOA) benefit targets older adults who are not currently Medicaid-eligible but are at-risk for future Medicaid-financed LTSS use. TSOA offers two packages of services:
- If the older adult has an unpaid caregiver, the adult receives a package that consists solely of supports for the benefit of the caregiver, such as respite care or training in dementia care. Caregivers qualify for the support based on the financial and functional status of the older adult for whom they care.
- If the older adult does not have an unpaid caregiver, the package offers services, such as personal care, adult day services, home-delivered meals, and personal emergency response systems.
Both MAC and TSOA are administered by the Department of Social and Health Services’ (DSHS) Aging and Long-Term Support Administration (ALTSA). The ALTSA contracts with the AAAs to determine eligibility for services and help caregivers access approved services. This local presence helps ensure that staff determining eligibility are familiar with the caregiver resources available in their areas — a benefit for both rural and urban caregivers. Both benefits also feature presumptive eligibility that enables eligibility staff to begin delivering services quickly.
As of July 2019, state officials report that 2,493 people were participating in TSOA and MAC and almost 5,000 had participated since the start of the program in September 2017. Officials report that major challenges included developing and implementing a new eligibility system for the new benefits. They also found that many informal caregivers (who are often family members) do not think of themselves as caregivers until they become very stressed and, as a result, delay seeking these supports.21 MAC and TSOA are modeled after Washington’s Family Caregiver Support Program, which produced significant savings.22 State officials are optimistic that these new benefits will prove their value, enabling Washington to continue to fund the services after the end of the waiver.
How Washington Launched its Initiative to Help Older Adults Avoid or Delay the Need for LTSS
| Partners: | |
| · Health Care Authority’s Healthier Washington Initiative and Medicaid agency · Department of Social and Health Services’ Aging and Long-Term Support Administration (ALTSA) |
|
| State policy levers: | Federal authority: |
| Legislation · WAC 182-513-1600 (MAC) and WAC 182-513-1610 (TSOA) |
Section 1115 Research and Demonstration Waiver |
| Regulation and guidance · WSR 17-12-019 · Long-Term Services and Supports Manual for MAC, TSOA, and Presumptive Eligibility |
|
| Contract · The ALTSA AAA contract |
|
Legislation to Support Telehealth, Telemedicine, and Telemonitoring in Texas
Since 1997, the Texas legislature has enacted multiple bills that support the use of telehealth, telemedicine, and telemonitoring. Recently, in 2019, Texas enacted to remove barriers to the use of telehealth and telemedicine. Among other things, SB 670 directs the Health and Human Services Commission (HHSC) to ensure Medicaid MCOs do not deny reimbursement for a covered service solely because that service was not provided in an in-person consultation. A study by the state’s Health and Human Services Commission found that the use of telehealth services in Medicaid increased by 30 percent between FY 2016 and 2017 and that the use of telemonitoring services more than doubled.23 Texas Medicaid plans to implement its new legislation through medical policies, administrative rule-making, and MCO contract changes, which it plans to develop with the input of stakeholder workgroups that will include MCO representatives.
One technology-based service that may provide benefit to older adults is telemonitoring. Texas Medicaid will pay for telemonitoring provided by a hospital or home health agency to beneficiaries with diabetes or hypertension who also exhibit specified risk factors, such as two or more hospitalizations within the previous 12 months. In fiscal year 2017, 5,961 Medicaid beneficiaries received this service, which covers daily or weekly monitoring of a patient’s clinical data transmissions. Texas has developed extensive guidance material for providers of these services. Some expressed concern that older adults might not be comfortable using the telehealth equipment, so Texas established some requirements that could mitigate those concerns. Providers are required to have written protocols defining service provision that must discuss the provider’s process to ensure, “The client is able to operate the equipment or has a willing and able person to assist in completing electronic transmission of data.”24 Currently Texas’ MCO contracts, including those for programs serving older adults in rural areas, specify these services are covered as described in the Texas Medicaid Provider Procedures Manual.25
How Texas Launched its Telehealth, Telemedicine, and Telemonitoring Initiatives
| Partners: | |
| · Health and Human Services Commission (HHSC) | |
| State policy levers: | Federal authority: |
| Legislation · SB1107, defining scope-of-practice requirements and delivery modalities · SB670, most recent legislation, containing multiple changes to support use of telehealth and telemedicine · And others |
Current Medicaid State Plan authority will support these changes. |
| Regulation and guidance · Medicaid provider procedures manual |
|
| Contract · Telehealth, telemedicine, and telemonitoring is specified as a covered benefit in all MCO contracts (page 8-195) |
|
Emerging Ideas: Arizona Plans to Use Electronic Visit Verification System for Planning and MCO Oversight
Federal statute requires states to implement electronic visit verification (EVV) systems for all Medicaid-funded personal care services by Jan. 1, 2020 and home health services by Jan. 1, 2023.26 EVV systems must be able to verify specific information about each in-home visit, including type of service provided, person receiving the service, date of service, and start and end times of the service. 27 AHCCCS is leveraging this new requirement to gather data for planning and MCO oversight. MCOs are required to initiate home health services within 30 days of identifying the need for the service for new members or in 14 days for existing members in need of new services. The system will also allow better monitoring of the population’s access to care (i.e., gap reporting28) by tracking at a system level how often providers fail to arrive for their visits. For individual patients, AHCCCS intends for this new system to enable real-time resolution of missed visits — improving patient care by ensuring receipt of critical services.29 Finally, state officials plan to use the system to analyze provider networks by geographic region. Officials view this capability as particularly beneficial for older adults living in rural areas as they have anecdotal evidence that access to care is a large problem in rural areas and this system will enable them to assess the accuracy of the anecdotal information.
Transportation is one of the major barriers to care in rural areas. It particularly impacts older adults, as 21 percent of Americans age 65 or older do not drive.30 In addition, older adults in rural areas have other social concerns that affect their health, such as food insecurity. Many states are working to address transportation needs and some are moving to a more comprehensive approach to identify and address these social determinants of health (SDOH).
Using Technology to Address SDOH in North Carolina
North Carolina’s Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS) entered into a public/private partnership with the Foundation for Health Leadership and Innovation (FHLI) to build the North Carolina Resource Platform, a secure shared technology platform that manages referrals for social services (e.g., housing and food assistance), with the capability to “close the loop” on referrals. In 2018, FHLI selected NCCARE36031 to build a statewide, coordinated care network using this platform. NCCARE360 also includes a statewide resource directory (building on the state’s 2-1-1 program) and a call center. NCCARE360 plans to succeed by empowering the communities it serves to be key leaders in building the system. Therefore, NCCARE360 assigns a community engagement manager to each region in the state. The manager works with the community to implement NCCARE360 and then continues to work in that region to update the system and, along with a customer success team, ensures smooth operations. As of May 2019, one health system had embedded this platform into its electronic health records (EHR). As of August 2019, NCCARE360 was operating in eight rural counties and four urban/suburban counties. Implementation was underway in an additional 17 counties, 16 of which are rural. State officials anticipate NCCARE360 will be fully operating statewide by the end of 2020. Prepaid Health Plans (North Carolina Medicaid’s managed care organizations) are required to use the “NC Resource Platform” (NCCARE360) to identify and connect their members to community-based resources. While the system is not targeted specifically to older adults it was developed with a consideration of their needs and contains information about the resources available to them.
How North Carolina Launched the NCCARE360 Resource Platform
| Partners: | |
| · Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS)| · Foundation for Health Leadership and Innovation · And many others |
|
| State policy levers: | Federal authority: |
| Legislation · No legislation required |
Section 1115 Research and Demonstration Waiver allows implementation of managed care and Healthy Opportunities. |
| Regulation and guidance · Part of DHHS’ Healthy Opportunities Initiative and the State’s IT Roadmap |
|
| Contract · Prepaid Health Plan contract requires contractors to use NCCARE360, page 125 |
|
Community Health Teams Address the SDOH Needs of High-Risk Patients in Rhode Island
Rhode Island’s SIM Initiative fostered the growth of community health teams (CHTs) in Rhode Island as a way to address the SDOH of high-risk patients, including those with behavioral health needs. A CHT must include at least one licensed, community-based health professional (often a behavioral health clinician) and two certified CHWs, but they often include additional staff, such as a Screening, Brief Intervention, and Referral to Treatment screener.32 These multi-disciplinary teams work as extensions of PCPs in the community to provide comprehensive care plan development and coordination to high-risk patients, including identification and management of physical, behavioral, substance use, and social needs. CHTs conduct health assessments, develop and implement care plans, facilitate referrals, assist with medical appointments, and link patients to community resources. As of July 2019, there were eight CHTs operating in Rhode Island, some of whom serve rural areas. Most CHTs negotiate partnerships with multiple practices, including negotiating patient referral criteria and processes. The CHTs are designed as a “place-based” intervention, working in identified geographic regions, and CHT members do work within PCPs’ offices, but spend much of their time visiting patients in their homes or finding patients in community settings. An additional benefit is CHT members know local resources and have established relationships in the community.
One recent study found that over a six-month period in 2018, eight CHTs served 2,202 patients. Researchers examined detailed information about a subset of patients33 and found they:
- Ranged in age from 18 to 96;
- 60.1 percent were female; and
- 90 percent had at least one SDOH challenge.
CHT engagement lowered health risk and other screening scores.34 Four of the CHTs were established with the support of braided funding from the state’s SIM award, which ended in June 2019. Moving forward, CHTs are supported by braided funding that includes funding from:
- Medicaid Health System Transformation Project to enable CHTs to be a place-based support for accountable entities (AEs are Rhode Island Medicaid’s ACO-like provider organizations);
- State Opioid Response (SOR) grants to bolster the opioid related substance use response provided by the CHTs; and
- Commercially licensed health plan spending facilitated by the Office of the Health Insurance Commissioner (OHIC). (Note: Insurance regulations in Rhode Island incentivize health plans to make investments in primary care, and when primary care investment targets are missed by health plans, OHIC can assist with directing remaining funds toward activities, such as CHTs.)
How Rhode Island Launched Community Health Teams to Address SDOH
| Partners: | |
| · Rhode Island Department of Health · Executive Office of Health and Human Services (EOHHS) · EOHHS Division of Medicaid · Office of the Health Insurance Commissioner (OHIC) · Department of Behavioral Healthcare, Development Disabilities and Hospitals |
|
| State policy levers: | Federal authority: |
| Legislation · No legislation required. |
SIM award authorized funding to support CHTs
SOR grant funds support CHTs Section 1115 Waiver (Rhode Island operates its Medicaid program, including the Medicaid Health System Transformation Project, under the waiver but did not need to amend it to begin paying for CHTs) |
| Regulation and guidance · OHIC’s Regulation 2 establishes the requirement for health plans to invest in primary care |
|
| Contract · Contract for CHT support · MCO Contract |
|
Creation of Voluntary Transportation Programs in Tennessee
Tennessee enacted legislation in 2015 (Public Chapter #152) to limit the liability of volunteer drivers who provide rides for older residents through a charitable organization or human services organization. The state’s Commission on Aging and Disability worked to facilitate the formation of these programs, which offer rides to medical appointments as well as for other purposes, such as going to grocery stores. Among these programs are MyRide TN, which is sponsored by the Tennessee Commission on Aging and Disability and serves multiple counties in the state, including eight rural counties. The volunteer programs leverage the legislation when recruiting volunteer drivers. They also leverage Older Americans Act funding. In addition, riders who must be at least 60 years of age, pay a small fee for rides. According to state officials, 40 percent of the trips provided by the volunteer services are for doctor visits.35
How Tennessee Launched MyRide TN
| Partners: | |
| · Tennessee Commission on Aging and Disability | |
| State policy levers: | Federal authority: |
| Legislation · Public Chapter No. 152 (Senate Bill No. 117) |
Tennessee State Plan on Aging |
| Regulation and guidance · None |
|
| Contract · None |
|
Leveraging Federal Transportation Funding in Ohio
Ohio estimates that five state agencies (including Medicaid) spend about $228 million each year on client transportation.36 Ohio has taken several steps to better coordinate these transportation networks at the regional level, including providing tools and resources to help rural counties develop coordinated transportation plans. These plans are a requirement for three grant programs, including the federally funded Specialized Transportation Program, the Ohio Coordination Program, and the Ohio Mobility Management Program. These plans all consider the needs of older adults. State officials point to the mobility management program as particularly beneficial to older adults in rural areas. The state Department of Transportation oversees this program, which distributes federal funding authorized under the Elderly Individuals with Individuals with Disabilities (Section 5310) Program to private non-profit, as well as, designated state and local government authorities to support mobility management activities. This program supports local mobility managers across the state. These managers work with stakeholders to meet the transportation needs of older adults and people with disabilities by connecting individuals to available resources, promoting transportation resources, and working with stakeholders to identify and develop plans to meet local needs.
How Ohio Used Federal Transportation Funding
| Partners: | |
| · Ohio Department of Transportation | |
| State policy levers: | Federal authority: |
| Legislation · No legislation required |
Section 5310 Funding |
| Regulation and guidance · State program guidance for mobility management program |
|
| Contract None |
|
Emerging Ideas: Arizona Medicaid’s Ride-sharing Services and North Carolina’s SDOH pilots
Effective May 1, 2019, AHCCCS (Arizona’s Medicaid agency) allowed Transportation Network Companies (i.e., ride-share companies such as LYFT and Uber) to register to provide non-emergency medical transportation (NEMT) to Medicaid beneficiaries. The first ride-share company completed registration in June 2019. These companies may only provide medically necessary rides to beneficiaries who do not need personal assistance, which enabled AHCCCS to establish reduced training requirements for drivers (e.g., CPR training is not required for ride-share drivers). In Arizona, MCOs are responsible for delivering NEMT and they have, in turn, contracted with brokers to deliver the service. Therefore, the ride-share company will need to develop payment arrangements with the MCO’s broker before it can be paid for delivering NEMT services and the ride will need to be scheduled by the broker. One state official described the potential benefit to older adults living in rural areas this way, “Over a quarter of members reside in rural areas, and half of utilization occurs in rural areas. That would predict that there is disproportionate benefit [in this new NEMT option] for rural areas.”
North Carolina Medicaid is implementing the Healthy Opportunities pilot program in several, yet-to-be-determined, areas of the state. As part of this pilot, North Carolina will contract with competitively selected Lead Pilot Agencies that will serve as the connector between managed care entities and local social services agencies. These agencies will implement and test evidence-based interventions to address the SDOH needs of Medicaid beneficiaries, including housing, food insecurity, and transportation. North Carolina is implementing this program under its Section 1115 Waiver for Medicaid Transformation and has earmarked up to $650 million over five years for the pilot projects. If the pilots prove effective, the Medicaid agency anticipates establishing them across the state. As of August 2019, the Medicaid agency anticipated completing its Lead Pilot Agency selection process in early 2020.
Providing appropriate and timely patient care in the home along with assessment of other needed services can support older adults’ desires to remain in their homes and communities, support families, and limit more costly care in nursing facilities. This toolkit provides examples of state policies and programs that address the health care needs of older, rural adults. Many of these programs also facilitate older adults’ access to social services, which can bolster the health of the population. Several lessons learned and key findings emerged from this research and discussions with state officials and others involved in program implementation:
Designing strategies based on community-defined needs and involvement leads to success. Both Tennessee’s voluntary transportation program and North Carolina’s technology platform to address SDOH, for example, are implemented on a region-by-region basis as stakeholders are engaged. One Minnesota official observed that, “…Usually, that results in a faster uptake of the service if the provider community is driving the development.”
Using pilot programs to field-test strategies enabled states to gather data for building the case for wide-scale implementation and improve operations before expansion. Washington State’s new programs to support caregivers, for example, were built on the success of their Family Caregiver Support Program (FCSP) which, state officials report, was “found to have positive ROI [return on investment] when caregivers are supported and care receivers delay or avoid Medicaid LTSS.” Minnesota’s Community Paramedics program, Tennessee’s voluntary transportation program, and Georgia’s mobile day care program were each built on the success of a single local pilot.
While technology can facilitate service delivery, it still requires human resources and community engagement to be effective. North Carolina is implementing its shared technology platform that manages referrals between health and social services providers, which states that, “NCCARE360 will only be successful if it is built by the community it serves.”37 To turn that sentiment into action, NCCARE360 hires a locally-based community engagement manager to implement the system in each region. The manager brings together stakeholders to plan and work with health and social services providers to incorporate them into the system and, in turn, help them incorporate the platform into their workflows. A community-based organization in Missouri operates a transportation program (without state agency involvement) that relies on a cloud-based, similar platform to enable providers to book rides for their patients within two minutes. The leaders of these programs agree that the technology only succeeds in engaged communities where providers, transportation providers, and other stakeholders work together to populate and use the platform with the facilitation of a local coordinator.38
Professionalizing the caregiver workforce benefits both the people receiving services and the workers. Both Washington and Tennessee have made efforts to ensure that HCBS workers have a career path and are rewarded for increasing their capabilities through training. Washington State focuses on formal caregivers (those who are paid to provide personal care services). It offers caregivers who become certified as a home care aide training, health care coverage, paid time off, and retirement benefits. Aides are also represented by the Service Employees International Union (SEIU 775). State officials report they believe that building the knowledge of caregivers, who act as the eyes of the delivery system, results in better care. Also, offering aides a career path, including increased payment for increased capabilities, reduces caregiver burnout and, in some cases, serves as a stepping stone to other careers in health care.
States have chosen to keep the broad delivery system and payment reforms they implement focused on improving health outcomes statewide, including older adults living in rural areas. Some states did implement reforms that focused on LTSS providers and the Medicaid beneficiaries they serve, but none had a rural focus.39 Some states also implemented complementary strategies to ensure that the statewide programs operate with local knowledge, which would help ensure that the statewide reforms met rural needs. For example, Washington created regional Accountable Communities for Health (ACHs) throughout the state. The ACH’s bring together local leaders to plan for and support local implementation of statewide payment and delivery system reforms.
The Medicaid program offers states flexibility to design and implement a wide variety of strategies designed to support older adults living in rural areas. Nearly all strategies presented in this toolkit were implemented within Medicaid programs. States had to amend their Medicaid State plans or obtain a waiver to implement some of these strategies. Many, however, were implemented under the state’s existing federal authority — and Arizona leveraged the new federal requirement for electronic visit verification to create a new tool for planning. Most of the strategies however, required partners, drew on the resources and expertise of other agencies (e.g., aging), and relied on contractors (such as MCOs) and local agencies for implementation.
Conclusion
Not only are there higher concentrations of elderly residents in rural areas than in urban areas, but compared to their urban peers, older, rural adults are poorer, have more complex conditions, and experience the impact of health-related social factors more acutely. Older adults living in rural areas are also less likely than those in urban areas to use home- and community-based services and more likely to use nursing facility services. These factors, combined with provider shortages in rural areas, make it difficult for older adults to remain in their homes and communities as they age. States want to help older adults remain in their communities both because it is what older adults want and to contain cost. In recent years, states have implemented a number of strategies to help older adults remain in their communities. These strategies have been implemented by different agencies working with a wide variety of partners and leveraging multiple federal authorities. The examples presented are designed to help states learn from each other as they continue to work to meet the health needs of older adults living in the nation’s rural regions.
Notes
[1] “Shrinking share of Americans in rural communities,” Pew Research Center’s Social & Demographic Trends Project, Pew Research Center, May 22, 2018, https://www.pewsocialtrends.org/2018/05/22/demographic-and-economic-trends-in-urban-suburban-and-rural-communities/psd_05-22-18_community-type-01-00/ . (Accessed August 19, 2019).
[2] “Older Adults and Unmet Social Needs Prevalence and Health Implications,” AARP, November 2017, https://endseniorhunger.aarp.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/11/SDOH-among-older-adults-2017_IssueBrief_COR-Final.pdf .(accessed August 19, 2019).
[3] Andrew Coburn, Eileen Griffin, Deborah Thayer, Zachariah Croll, Erika C. Ziller. “Are Rural Older Adults Benefiting from Increased State Spending on Medicaid Home and Community Based Services?” Maine Rural Health Research Center, June 2016, https://muskie.usm.maine.edu/Publications/rural/Medicaid-Home-Community-Based-Services-Rural.pdf (accessed August 19, 2019).
[4] “Baby Boomer Facts on 50 Livable Communities and Aging in Place,” AARP, 2014, https://www.aarp.org/livable-communities/info-2014/livable-communities-facts-and-figures.html . (Accessed August 19, 2019).
[5] Karen Marek, Frank Stetzer, Scott Adams, Lori Popejoy, and Marilyn Rantz. “Aging in Place versus Nursing Home Care: Comparison of Costs to Medicare and Medicaid,” Research in Gerontological Nursing. U.S. National Library of Medicine, April 2012, https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21846081. (Accessed August 19, 2019).
[6] Although the primary focus of this paper is on the services that help older adults remain in their homes, some examples of state strategies to support nursing facilities are included as it is also important to ensure that older adults in rural areas that need that level of care can access high quality care in their own communities.
[7] Ester Hing, Chun-Ju Hsiao. “State Variability in Supply of Office-based Primary Care Providers: United States 2012. NCHS Data Brief” US Department of Health and Human Services, May 2014. https://www.ruralhealthweb.org/NRHA/media/Emerge_NRHA/PDFs/db151.pdf (Accessed August 19, 2019)
[8] Susan Jaffe. “Aging In Rural America,” Health Affairs, January 2015, https://www.healthaffairs.org/doi/full/10.1377/hlthaff.2014.1372 . (Accessed August 19, 2019).
[9] Paramedics have more training than EMTs and are, therefore, licensed to perform a broader range of services.
[10] “Community Emergency Medical Technician Services: Purchasing and Service Delivery,” Minnesota Department of Human Services, March 2016, https://www.leg.state.mn.us/docs/2016/mandated/160410.pdf . (Accessed August 19, 2019).
[11] “Community Emergency Medical Technician Services: Purchasing and Service Delivery,” Minnesota Department of Human Services, October 2017, https://mn.gov/dhs/assets/2017-12-cemt-report_tcm1053-319648.pdf . (Accessed August 19, 2019).
[12] “Minnesota In Need Of More Community Paramedics,” CBS local news, May 2019, https://minnesota.cbslocal.com/2019/05/20/minnesota-in-need-of-more-communit-paramedics/ . (Accessed August 19, 2019).
[13] Dawn Juker. “Community Health EMS.” CHEMS Roundtable Discussion, Idaho Office of Healthcare Policy Initiatives, https://ship.idaho.gov/WorkGroups/CommunityHealthEMS/tabid/3050/Default.aspx. (Accessed August 19, 2019).
[14] Note: Federal Medicaid rules allow Medicaid agencies to pay for care coordination services provide by CHWs, but Minnesota did not implement that policy.
[15] “Medicaid Quality Improvement and Hospitalization Avoidance (MQIHA),” MQIHA, Project ECHO. https://echo.unm.edu/teleecho-programs/mqiha. (Accessed August 20, 2019).
[16] “Alaska Apprenticeship Plan,” Alaska Department of Labor and Workforce Development, October 2018, https://labor.alaska.gov/awib/Alaska_Apprenticeship_Plan-10-2018.pdf. (Accessed August 20, 2019).
[17] Community Health Aides are certified by the Alaska Community Health Aide Program Certification Board, hired by their local community and, under the supervision of a licensed medical provider, serve as the primary source of health care in over 170 rural Alaska villages. (Source: www.akchap.org).
[18]Patti Killingsworth. “Shore It Up: Strengthening the LTSS Workforce,” TennCare, August 2018, https://custom.cvent.com/024D0492CF3C4ED1AEDC89C0490ECDEE/files/event/E097A8FCDDD34B0CAFD1DC01FFFFC9B8/d95885cf9327410683d59a030fb77136tmp.pdf . (Accessed August 20, 2019).
[19] “Policies and Procedures for CCSP and SOURCE Adult Day Health Services,” Georgia Department of Community Health, Division of Medicaid, July 2019, https://www.mmis.georgia.gov/portal/Portals/0/StaticContent/Public/ALL/HANDBOOKS/CCSP%20and%20SOURCE%20Adult%20Day%20Health%20Services%2020190625135647.pdf . (Accessed August 20, 2019).
[20] “Critical Access Hospital,” CMS, July 2019, https://www.cms.gov/outreach-and-education/medicare-learning-network-mln/mlnproducts/downloads/critaccesshospfctsht.pdf . (Accessed August 20, 2019).
[21] Additional resources to help identify caregiver needs include the Caregiver Self-Assessment Questionnaire developed by the American Medical Association and Selected Caregiver Assessment Measures: A Resource Inventory for Practitioners produced by the Family Caregiver Alliance.
[22] “Long Term Services and Supports FAQs,” Healthier Washington, Washington State Health Care Authority. August 2017, https://www.hca.wa.gov/assets/program/mtd-i2-faq.pdf . (Accessed August 20, 2019).
[23] “Telemedicine, Telehealth, and Home Telemonitoring Services in Texas Medicaid,” Texas Health and Human Services Commission, December, 2018, https://hhs.texas.gov/sites/default/files/documents/laws-regulations/reports-presentations/2018/sb-789-telemedicine-telehealth-hts-medicaid-dec-2018.pdf . (Accessed August 20, 2019).
[24]“Texas Medicaid Provider Procedures Manual,” The Texas Medicaid & Healthcare Partnership, August 2019, https://www.tmhp.com/Manuals_PDF/TMPPM/TMPPM_Living_Manual_Current/2_Telecommunication_Srvs.pdf . (Accessed August 20, 2019).
[25] “STAR+PLUS MRSA Contract Terms and Conditions,” Texas Health & Human Services Commission, April 2019, https://hhs.texas.gov/sites/default/files/documents/services/health/medicaid-chip/programs/contracts/starplus-mrsa-contract.pdf . (Accessed August 20, 2019).
[26] “Electronic Visit Verification (EVV),” Medicaid.gov, https://www.medicaid.gov/medicaid/hcbs/guidance/electronic-visit-verification/index.html . (Accessed August 20, 2019).
[27] “21st Century Cures Act,” Public Law No: 114-255. https://www.congress.gov/bill/114th-congress/house-bill/34/text
[28] “Chapter 400 – Operations,” AHCCCS Contractor Operations Manual, Arizona Health Care Cost Containment System, June 2018, https://www.azahcccs.gov/shared/Downloads/ACOM/PolicyFiles/400/413_Gap_in_Critical_Services.pdf . (Accessed August 20, 2019).
[29] “Chapter 500 – Care Coordination Requirements,” AHCCCS Medical Policy Manual, Arizona Health Care Cost Containment System, Unpublished, https://www.azahcccs.gov/PlansProviders/Downloads/RFPInfo/YH19/EVV/540_EVV.pdf . (Accessed August 20, 2019).
[30] Linda Bailey. “Aging Americans: Stranded Without Options,” TRID, March 31, 2004, https://trid.trb.org/view/697686 . (Accessed August 20, 2019).
[31]NCCares360 is a joint-venture of United Way of North Carolina; Unite Us, Expound Decision Systems, and Benefits Data Trust. (Source: https://foundationhli.org/2018/08/21/ncccare360-selected-to-build-a-new-tool-for-a-healthier-north-carolina-the-nc-resource-platform/)
[32] Screening, Brief Intervention, and Referral to Treatment (SBIRT) screeners are trained to use a standardized tool to quickly assess the severity of substance use and determine the appropriate level of treatment.
[33] The sample consisted of all new patients seen between October 1 and January 31, 2019 by seven of the eight CHTs. Source: https://www.rimed.org/rimedicaljournal/2019/04/2019-04-42-health-rajotte.pdf
[34] Rajotte, James C, Colleen A Redding , Catherine E Hunter, and Shayna S Bassett. “Initial Findings: Rhode Island’s Community Health Teams Address Complex Physical, Behavioral, and Social Needs of Patient Populations.” Rhode Island Medical Journal , April 2019, https://www.rimed.org/rimedicaljournal/2019/04/2019-04-42-health-rajotte.pdf . (Accessed August 20, 2019).
[35] “Aging and Transportation as a Necessity,” American Society on Aging, March 2018, . https://www.asaging.org/blog/aging-and-transportation-necessity . (Accessed August 20, 2019)..
[36] The Ohio Department of Transportation estimated this number based on reports from the state agencies. These reports covered different time periods between 2010 and 2014. Source: https://www.dot.state.oh.us/Divisions/Planning/Transit/TransitNeedsStudy/Documents/InitiativePaper-HumanServiceTransportation.pdf
[37] “NCCARE 360 Quarterly Report,” FHLI and DHHS, March 2019,https://foundationhli.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/NCCARE360-Quarterly-Report-January-March-2019.pdf (Accessed August 20, 2019)
[38] Missouri HealthTran is operated by the Missouri Rural Health Association without state agency involvement. Therefore it was not featured in this toolkit, but more information is available at: https://www.healthtran.org/
[39] We did not include these statewide reforms in this toolkit due to the lack of focus on older adults living in rural areas. The VBP programs we identified as having a focus on LTSS providers or the patients they serve were: Tennessee’s Quality Improvement in Long Term Services and Supports (QuILTSS) program, Arkansas’s Provider-led Arkansas Shared Savings Entity (PASSE) program, and Arizona ALTCS’ Alternative Payment Model Initiative.
Oregon and Connecticut Hold Hospitals Accountable for Meaningful Community Benefit Investment
/in Policy Connecticut, Oregon Blogs Community Benefit, Cost, Payment, and Delivery Reform, Health Equity, Health System Costs, Hospital/Health System Oversight, Population Health, Social Determinants of Health /by Amy Clary and Elinor HigginsTax exemptions for nonprofit hospitals cost states billions of dollars in lost tax revenue each year. In return, hospitals are required to invest in activities and services that benefit their communities. Some states, including Oregon and Connecticut, are going beyond federal requirements by holding hospitals accountable for making meaningful investments in the community’s health and well-being that meet genuine community needs — determined by the community itself — and align with state health priorities.
Oregon and Connecticut are holding hospitals accountable, through legislation and Certificate of Need conditions, for making meaningful investments in their communities’ health that meet genuine needs determined by the community itself and also align with state health priorities.
Background
The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) defines certain hospital investments as community benefit activities. Examples include providing financial assistance to patients (also called charity care), covering shortfalls resulting from Medicaid participation, funding health professionals’ education programs, and subsidizing services such as neonatal intensive care and trauma services. Hospitals can also count “community health improvement services,” or hospital programs that don’t generate revenue, as community benefits.
Of particular interest to states seeking to bolster population health by improving their residents’ social and economic conditions, is the fact that hospitals can also count some “community building” activities toward their community benefit investments, although some experts have identified a need to clarify the process by which those activities are counted as community benefit. The IRS defines “community building” activities as activities that “protect or improve the community’s health or safety,” including investments in:
- Housing (the IRS addressed these investments in a short update on Dec. 18, 2015);
- Economic development;
- Community support, such as child care and mentoring programs;
- Environmental improvements, such as addressing air or water pollution or protecting the community from other environmental hazards; and
- Leadership development, coalition building, community health improvement advocacy, or workforce development.
Some states — such as Oregon and Connecticut — are using the federal requirements for tax-exempt hospitals to invest in community benefit activities as a springboard to ensure robust and meaningful hospital investments that address the needs of the community.
Oregon
On June 25, 2019, Oregon Gov. Kate Brown signed HB 3076, which strengthens that state’s community benefits requirements in two ways:
- It requires hospitals to expand the range of income levels that qualify for charity care; and
- It establishes a minimum community benefit spending floor for nonprofit hospitals, set every two years by the Oregon Health Authority (OHA), in collaboration with the hospital or health system.
The law specifies that hospitals reduce to zero the cost to patients of medically necessary care for people whose incomes do not exceed 200 percent of the federal poverty level (FPL) guidelines. For people earning up to 400 percent of FPL, the law establishes a sliding scale – the hospital must reduce charges by at least 75 percent for people earning up to 300 percent of FPL, implement at least a 50 percent reduction for people earning up to 350 percent of FPL, and at least a 25 percent reduction for people earning under 400 percent of FPL. The law allows hospitals to seek reimbursement for those patient costs from other payers, such as those with third-party liability, and requires patients to share information to help hospitals collect payment from other payers.
This financial assistance standard is new for Oregon. Previously, state law did not mandate a minimum threshold that required hospitals to reduce eligible patients’ costs, although some hospitals had their own financial assistance policies.
Oregon HB 3076 defines “social determinants of health” as “the social, economic, and environmental conditions in which people are born, grow, work, live and age, shaped by the distribution of money, power and resources at local, national, and global levels, institutional bias, discrimination, racism, and other factors.”
In addition to the new standard for financial assistance, the law also holds hospitals accountable for investing in community benefits. The OHA must consider several factors when establishing the new community benefit spending floor, including:
- The community needs identified by the community needs assessment (CHNA);
- Community health improvement plans by regional Coordinated Care Organizations (CCOs);
- Current and historical expenditures on community benefits;
- The overall financial situation of the hospital; and
- The hospital’s spending on social determinants of health.
This requirement would make Oregon the sixth state to require a minimum level of community benefits spending, and the only one to tailor the minimum level for each hospital or health system according to a methodology. Another innovative facet of the law is that it requires the state to consider the needs identified in the CHNA when establishing the spending floor. This represents a step toward holding hospitals accountable for tying their community benefits spending to identified community needs, which is not currently an IRS requirement.
The OHA will convene a workgroup to define the methodology used to determine the minimum spending floors, which will be subject to the rule-making process and take effect in January 2021. The spending floors for each hospital or health system will be made public, and enforcement of the provision will largely rely on public scrutiny.
The Oregon bill had strong support from some key state legislators, including bill sponsor state Rep. Andrea Salinas, who participated in extensive stakeholder engagement leading up to the bill’s passage. Additionally, the bill had the support of the Service Employees International Union (SEIU), a union of hospital and other employees. The success of the bill’s champions put the spotlight on Oregon as the OHA crafts and implements a groundbreaking methodology for establishing the minimum for community benefits spending.
Connecticut
Connecticut is using a different, more specific and short-term approach to increase the effectiveness of community benefits investments. In recent hospital mergers and acquisitions, Connecticut used the certificate of need (CON) process to ensure that community benefit spending addresses community social needs and is directly tied to the CHNA and aligns with the State Health Improvement Plan (SHIP).
The hospital “shall ensure its community benefits and community-building activities directly address the health needs identified by the applicable CHNA in effect at the time and the population health management objectives, including social determinants of health, contained in the related Implementation Strategy.” Connecticut Office of Health Strategy Certificate of Need Settlement Agreement (Milford/Bridgeport)
In a CON agreement tied to the transfer of assets from Milford Health to Bridgeport Hospital between Yale New Haven Health Services Corp. and Health Quest Systems Inc., the Connecticut Office of Health Strategy (OHS) mandated that the Connecticut hospitals:
- Submit to OHS their CHNAs and CHNA Implementation Strategy, which require input from key community stakeholders, health organizations, and local health departments, as well as the use of data and priorities from the SHIP as a framework for the CHNA.
- Adopt evidence-based interventions detailed in the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s 6/18 initiative and provide information about how patient outcomes directly related to the Implementation Strategy will be measured and reported to the community.
- Increase the total dollars spent on community benefits by at least 1 percent every year for the next five years, and ensure that spending and activities directly address the health needs identified by the hospital’s CHNA. The five-year annual 1 percent increase in community benefits spending cannot go towards hospital expenses or include spending on Medicaid, but must be used to address the social determinants of health and the population health needs identified in the CHNA.
The hospital is required to submit documentation to OHS showing “how its community benefit and community building activity expenditures addressed each element identified in the applicable CHNA, with brief narrative explanation of relevant activity for that element, and dollars spent.” These CON requirements require hospitals to show in a public document how they are directly tying community benefit spending to community needs. While CON conditions are time-limited, they demonstrate what is possible when states use their policy levers to maximize community benefits investments. In this way, Connecticut’s CoN work may inform broader state community benefits work beyond the CON process.
Conclusion
Oregon and Connecticut provide examples of how states can go beyond the federal requirements to ensure that hospital community benefit spending is substantial, meets community needs, and addresses state goals in exchange for tax exemptions. To support states in this work, the National Academy for State Health Policy (NASHP) has convened a hospital community benefits workgroup of state officials, supported by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and the New England States Consortium Systems Organization. Additional NASHP resources are available in this chart, Hospital Community Benefits Comparison Table for Six New England States, and this infographic, How 10 States Keep the ‘Community’ in Hospitals’ Community Health Needs Assessments.
For information detailing how much specific hospitals invest in community benefits and community building activities, explore this Community Benefit Insight tool.
Support for this work was provided by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. The views expressed here do not necessarily reflect the views of the foundation.
How 10 States Keep the ‘Community’ in Hospitals’ Community Health Needs Assessments
/in Policy Charts Blending and Braiding Funding, Community Benefit, Health Equity, Health System Costs, Hospital/Health System Oversight, Population Health, Social Determinants of Health /by Elinor Higgins and Amy ClaryNon-profit hospitals are federally required to conduct community health needs assessments (CHNAs) every three years and develop a plan to meet those needs in exchange for their tax exempt status. Many states have laws or guidelines that are more detailed than the federal requirements. Scroll down to see 10 states’ guidelines for involving community members in the CHNA process, as well as their enforcement levers. This infographic draws on state documents, as well as CHNA statutes identified in the Hilltop Institute’s Community Benefit State Law Profiles Comparison.
Print this infographic.
How States Keep Community at the Center of Hospitals’ Community Health Needs Assessments
/in Policy Blogs Blending and Braiding Funding, Community Benefit, Health Equity, Health System Costs, Hospital/Health System Oversight, Population Health, Social Determinants of Health /by Amy ClaryTax-exempt hospitals receive billions of dollars in tax exemptions each year. In exchange, they are required to invest in the health of their communities. But to do that, hospitals must first identify the health needs of the communities they serve. States can work to make sure hospitals truly seek out and act on meaningful input from a wide range of community representatives — not just community members on a hospital’s board or leaders from one or two high-profile community groups.
State Requirements Can Exceed Federal Standards
To identify community needs, federal legislation requires tax-exempt hospitals to conduct community health needs assessments (CHNAs) every three years, and develop a plan to meet those needs. The US Internal Revenue Service (IRS) requires tax-exempt hospitals to solicit and take into account input from at least one state, local, or tribal public health department as well as from medically underserved, low-income, and minority populations in their communities. It also says that hospitals may solicit input from consumer advocates, community organizations, academics, local governments, school districts, providers, health plans, business, and labor representatives.
Many states have aligned their state CHNA requirements or guidelines with IRS requirements and/or with standards set by the Public Health Accreditation Board (PHAB), which accredits state and local health departments.
Many states also have statutes or guidelines governing the CHNA process that go beyond federal requirements. For example,
- New Hampshire’s statute requires hospitals to consult with service providers and local government officials, as well as many of the same entities that IRS and the PHAB mention;
- A Texas statute requires hospitals to consider consulting with health science centers; and
- Massachusetts voluntary guidelines identify neighborhood associations, schools, churches and clergy, law enforcement, and housing authorities as possible sources of community input.
This state action is significant in light of a 2018 study that found that state CHNA requirements are associated with higher hospital spending on community benefits, and suggesting that state-level community benefits regulations are associated with greater hospital spending on community benefits. See the National Academy for State Health Policy’s How 10 States Keep the ‘Community’ in Hospitals’ Community Health Needs Assessments infographic for examples of 10 states’ statutes and guidance.
Table 1 shows states that address community involvement in the CHNA process either through state statute (California, Maryland, New Hampshire, New York, Rhode Island, and Texas), or through voluntary guidance documents (Maine and Massachusetts).
- Four states (California, New Hampshire, New York, and Rhode Island) statutorily require that certain communities or groups be represented in the CHNA.
- Two states (Maryland and Texas) explain in their statutes that hospitals “may consult with” (Maryland) or “shall consider consulting with” (Texas) certain groups or entities when assessing community needs.
- At least five states (Idaho, Illinois, Indiana, Vermont, Washington State) have state CHNA statutory requirements that do not specify any required representation.
Table 1. Representation Required (or Encouraged*) in the Hospital Community Health Needs Assessment Process
| CA | ME* | MA* | MD* | NH | NY | RI | TX* | |
| Any appropriate person | √ | |||||||
| Churches/clergy | √ | |||||||
| Community leaders | √ | √ | ||||||
| Community organizations | √ | √ | √ | √† | ||||
| Community (unspecified) | √ | |||||||
| Consumers | √ | |||||||
| Health care providers | √ | √† | √ | |||||
| Health science centers | √ | |||||||
| Housing authorities | √ | |||||||
| Insurance companies/plans | √ | |||||||
| Local government officials | √ | √ | √ | √† | √ | |||
| Local health department or public health authority | √ | √ | √** | √† | √ | |||
| Medically underserved | √ | |||||||
| Members of the public | √ | √ | ||||||
| Police | √ | |||||||
| Private business | √† | √ | ||||||
| Racial or ethnic minority groups | √ | √ | ||||||
| Disadvantaged populations, including low-income | √ | √ | ||||||
| Schools | √ | √† | ||||||
| Service providers | √ | √ |
*State statute or guidance recommends but does not require representation in the CHNA process
**New Hampshire established Regional Public Health Networks
†Encouraged in the New York State Prevention Agenda
How States Enforce Community Benefits
While hospitals that fail to meet IRS community health needs assessment requirements may ultimately have their federal tax-exempt status revoked — as happened to a hospital in 2017— states have wide latitude to use other levers to enforce their own community benefits guidelines. Currently, few states codify enforcement levers in their statutes. Among those that don’t, some report success in gaining hospital compliance through transparency measures. For example, many states post hospitals’ community health needs assessments on state websites. An annual press release from the Massachusetts Office of the Attorney General also draws attention to the hospitals’ community benefits reports, which encourages hospitals’ timely compliance.
Table 2. State Statutory Levers for Enforcing Community Benefits
| CA | MA | MD | NH | NY | RI | TX | VT | WA | |
| Fines | √ | √ | √ | ||||||
| Hearings | √ | √ | |||||||
| Violators must provide an explanation | √ |
With new governors recently taking office in 20 states in early 2019, states have an opportunity to consider hospital community benefits and community health needs assessment policies as part of a statewide, cross-agency effort to improve health using all the levers at a state’s disposal, including tax policy and enforcement. Meaningful investments in community health are possible when states hold hospitals accountable for keeping the community at the center of community health needs assessments.
The National Academy for State Health Policy convenes a Hospital Community Benefits Workgroup composed primarily of officials from state attorneys general offices and state Medicaid and public health departments. The workgroup is currently exploring how states can develop more meaningful hospital community benefits investments that align with state public health priorities and address the health-related needs of communities.
For more information about this initiative, or to share information on your state’s work in this area, please contact Amy Clary at aclary@oldsite.nashp.org. Thanks to the following states’ officials for their help with these materials: California, Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New York, Rhode Island, and Vermont.
Produced in partnership with the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and the New England States Consortium Systems Organization.
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For individuals living with complex, often chronic conditions, and their families, palliative care can provide relief from symptoms, improve satisfaction and outcomes, and help address critical mental and spiritual needs during difficult times. Now more than ever, there is growing recognition of the importance of palliative care services for individuals with serious illness, such as advance care planning, pain and symptom management, care coordination, and team-based, multi-disciplinary support. These services can help patients and families cope with the symptoms and stressors of disease, better anticipate and avoid crises, and reduce unnecessary and/or unwanted care. While this model is grounded in evidence that demonstrates improved quality of life, better outcomes, and reduced cost for patients, only a fraction of individuals who could benefit from palliative care receive it. 























































































































































