Sec. 3. Establishment of Medicaid and CHIP Care Coordination program for children with medically complex conditions as Medicaid State option
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Title XIX of the Social Security Act ( 42 U.S.C. 1396 et seq. ) is amended by adding at the end the following new section: Beginning January 1, 2016, a State, at its option as a State plan amendment, may elect to provide medical assistance for items and services furnished to eligible children enrolled in an MCCC program that meets the requirements of this section. As a condition on an eligible child’s receipt of medical assistance under this title, the State shall require, under such an amendment, that the eligible child be enrolled in an MCCC program that meets the requirements of this section.
An MCCC program meets the requirements of this section if the MCCC program— coordinates, integrates, and provides for the furnishing of the full range of MCCC program services to eligible children enrolled in the program ; enrolls eligible children in accordance with subsection (c); is operating under a program agreement that meets the requirements of subsection (d); and meets the pediatric network adequacy standards developed under subsection (e). Subject to the assignment requirements of paragraph (2), the enrollment and disenrollment of eligible children in an MCCC program shall be carried out in accordance with the requirements of this section and the applicable program agreement.
Eligible children shall be prospectively enrolled in an MCCC program by the State by assigning such eligible children to a nationally designated children’s hospital network for an initial period of up to 90 days beginning on the date on which the child is assigned to such hospital network, unless the child opts not to participate in any MCCC program in accordance with a process established by the State. Such an assignment shall be made as follows: First, by considering the prevalence of visits by the child to a pediatrician or other specialist who is participating in the nationally designated children’s hospital network.
Second, by considering the selection of the child’s family. Third, by considering the location of the primary residence of the child. Fourth, by considering the proximity of the child to regional referral networks established by the nationally designated children’s hospital network. In the case of the assignment of a child under subparagraph
(A)through the consideration of a factor specified in clause
(iii)or
(iv)of subparagraph (B), such an assignment may only be made to a nationally designated children’s hospital network that ensures access to a medical home that is located not more than 30 miles of the primary residence of the child. Following the 90-day period referred to in subparagraph (A), the child may elect— to be assigned to the nationally designated children’s hospital network of their choice that has a program agreement in effect with respect to an MCCC program in which the child is eligible to enroll; or to not participate in any MCCC program and receive care through enrollment in the State plan under this title or the State child health plan under title XXI. The Secretary, in close cooperation with the State administering agencies electing to provide the medical assistance described in subsection (a), shall establish procedures for entering into, extending, and terminating program agreements under this section. A program agreement entered into under this section by the Secretary, a State administering agency, and a nationally designated children’s hospital network shall provide for each of the following terms: The agreement shall designate the service area of the MCCC program that is the subject of the agreement. The agreement shall be effective for a contract year, but may be extended for additional contract years in the absence of a notice by a party to terminate, and is subject to termination by the Secretary and the State administering agency at any time for cause (as provided under the agreement) . The agreement shall require that the nationally designated children’s hospital network submit care management network and coverage plans to the Secretary that are centered around medical home models and that describe the governance of the network. The agreement shall require the hospital network to meet all applicable requirements imposed by State and local laws. The agreement shall require such State, in the case of eligible children who are residents of the State, to make payments to the hospital network, regardless of whether MCCC program services are furnished to such eligible children in another State. The agreement shall require that the standards and measures developed under subsection
(e)be applied to the hospital network, including measures requiring, with respect to network adequacy standards, that the hospital network establish such provider networks for primary, secondary, and tertiary care as are necessary to ensure the adequate furnishing of MCCC program services to eligible children enrolled in the MCCC program that is the subject of the agreement. The agreement shall require the hospital network to comply with the data collection and recordkeeping requirements of subparagraph (C). The agreement shall require the hospital network to accept as payment any payment made using the risk-based methodology developed under subsection (g). The agreement shall contain such additional terms and conditions as the parties may agree to, so long as such terms and conditions are consistent with this section. In designating a service area under subparagraph (A)(i), the Secretary (in consultation with the relevant State administering agency) shall— ensure that such service area provides convenient access for eligible children to MCCC program services, without limiting the size of, or number of, nationally designated children’s hospital networks providing such services; ensure that such hospital networks and the population of eligible children in the proposed service area are sufficient to support the delivery of MCCC program services and to avoid the unnecessary duplication of services and the impairment of the financial and service viability of another MCCC program. The data collection and recordkeeping requirements under this subparagraph, with respect to a nationally designated children’s hospital network, are as follows: The hospital network shall collect claims data on claims submitted with respect to eligible children who are furnished MCCC program services under an MCCC program. Such data shall be reported in a standardized format and made available to the public for purposes of establishing a national database on such claims. The hospital network shall maintain, and provide the Secretary and the State administering agency access to, the records relating to the MCCC program operated by the hospital network, including pertinent financial, medical, and personnel records. The hospital network shall submit to the Secretary and the State administering agency such reports as the Secretary finds (in consultation with the State administering agency) necessary to monitor the operation, cost, and effectiveness of the MCCC program operated by the hospital network. The Secretary shall issue regulations establishing the circumstances under which— the Secretary or a State administering agency may terminate an MCCC program agreement for cause; and a nationally designated children’s hospital network may terminate such an agreement after appropriate notice to the Secretary, the State administering agency, and enrollees. The Secretary shall, in consultation with nationally designated children’s hospital networks and national pediatric policy organizations (such as the Children’s Hospital Association and the American Academy of Pediatrics) — establish a national set of quality assurance and improvement protocols and procedures to apply under MCCC programs; develop pediatric quality measures; develop pediatric network adequacy standards for access by eligible children to MCCC program services; and develop criteria for national pediatric-focused care coordination for eligible children. In carrying out paragraph (1), the Secretary shall apply, to the extent applicable, child health quality measures and measures for centers of excellence for children with complex needs developed under this title, title XXI, and section 1139A and take into account HEDIS quality measures as required under section 1852(e)(3) and other quality measures. The Secretary, the States, and the nationally designated children’s hospital networks shall collaborate to obtain consistent and verifiable Medicaid Analytic Extract data or a comparable data set and shall establish data-sharing agreements to further support collaborative planning and care coordination for medically complex children. The Secretary shall— perform claims analysis on the data set developed under paragraph
(1)to determine the utilization of items and services furnished under an MCCC program to eligible children; and for purposes of building a national database, submit to Congress, and make publicly available on the Internet site of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, a report on such claims in a standardized format. The State plan may provide for pay-for-reporting incentives during the first two years of any program agreement entered into under this section to ensure participation and analysis of consistent data under this paragraph to enable the development of an appropriate risk-based payment methodology under subsection (g). The State plan shall provide for payment to nationally designated children’s hospital networks pursuant to the terms of a program agreement using a risk-based payment methodology (or methodologies) established in accordance with this subsection. Subject to subparagraph (B), payment to nationally designated children’s hospital networks under this subsection shall be based initially on a fee-for-service payment model and shall gradually transition, over a 5-year period, to an equitable, risk-based payment model using a methodology developed under paragraph (3). For the first two years of such period, a nationally designated children’s hospital network may receive, in addition to any fee-for-service payments made to such hospital network, per capita care coordination payments with respect to expenditures for items and services furnished to eligible children enrolled in the MCCC program operated by the hospital network through medical home programs and other care coordination activities for which an all-inclusive payment model is more suitable than fee-for-service reimbursement. Subparagraph
(A)shall not apply in the case of a State that, as of the date of the enactment of this section, uses a risk-based payment methodology with respect to payments made for items and services furnished to eligible children under the State plan or State child health plan. During the first two years of the implementation of an MCCC program, the Secretary shall analyze data collected under subsection
(f)for purposes of developing a risk-based payment methodology that would be implemented beginning with the third year of implementation of the MCCC program. The relevant State administering agency shall develop, in coordination with the Medicaid and CHIP Payment and Access Commission and the pediatric health care provider community, payment methodologies for payment under the State plan in accordance with this subsection that— take into account the data analyzed under paragraph (2)(C); are actuarially sound, determined using an actuarial method that ensures that such methodologies reflect historic pediatric claims data; include— a risk adjustment method, re-insurance system, or risk-corridor procedure to account for variations in acuity of the eligible children enrolled in MCCC programs; and a shared savings approach, which may include a form of bundled payment or risk-reward payment model that aligns payment with both cost savings and quality improvement; and may provide for a model for making payments other than payments made on a per-member, per-month basis. With respect to carrying out an MCCC program under this section, the following provisions of law shall not apply: Section 1902(a)(1), relating to statewideness. Section 1902(a)(10), insofar as such section relates to comparability of services among different population groups. Sections 1902(a)(23) and 1915(b)(4), relating to freedom of choice of providers. Section 1903(m)(2)(A), insofar as such section would prohibit a nationally designated children’s hospital network from receiving certain payments. Such other provisions of this title, title XVIII, sections 1128A and 1128B, and any provisions of the Federal antitrust laws as the Secretary determines are inapplicable or the waiver of which are necessary for purposes of carrying out an MCCC program under this section. In the case of any State which is providing medical assistance to its residents under a waiver described in subparagraph (B), the Secretary shall not require that the State meet the requirements of this section in the same manner as the State would be required to meet such requirements if the State had in effect a plan approved under this title. A waiver described in this subparagraph is a waiver granted under section 1115 under which a State— provides for coverage through a medicaid managed care plan of all or a certain proportion of MCCC program services furnished to eligible children in the State through a nationally designated children’s hospital network; assigns such eligible children to such a network in accordance with subsection (c); requires that the State and such network enter into a program agreement that meets the requirements applicable to program agreements under subsection (d); and uses a payment methodology to make payments made for MCCC program services furnished to eligible children that is consistent with the requirements of subsection (g). A State may not impose any requirement on the nationally qualified children’s hospital network’s operation of an MCCC program under a program agreement that meets the requirements of this section that is inconsistent with or would otherwise impede the satisfaction by such hospital network of the requirements of this section (including the requirements of such program agreement). In this section: The term eligible child means, with respect to an MCCC program, an individual who is under the age of 18 and who— is eligible for medical assistance under the State plan under this title or child health assistance under the State child health plan under title XXI; and has a chronic, physical, developmental, behavioral, or emotional condition that— affects two or more body systems; requires intensive care coordination to avoid excessive hospitalizations or emergency department visits; or meets the criteria for medical complexity using risk adjustment methodologies (such as Clinical Risk Groups or another recognized pediatric population grouping system) agreed upon by the Secretary in coordination with a national panel of pediatric experts. The term MCCC program means a Medicaid coordinated care program that provides eligible children with MCCC program services through a nationally designated children’s hospital network in accordance with a program agreement that meets the requirements of subsection (d). The term MCCC program services means the full range of items and services for which medical assistance is available under a State plan for children, including pediatric care management services and pediatric-focused care coordination and health promotion, as specified in the program agreement. The term nationally designated children’s hospital network means a network of hospitals and health care providers — anchored by a qualified children’s hospital or hospitals with principal governance responsibility over the hospital network; in which the full complement of health care providers needed to provide the best care for children in the network participate; and that represents the interests of physicians, other health care providers, parents of medically complex children, and other relatives of such children. The term program agreement means an agreement between a nationally designated children’s hospital network, the Secretary, and a State administering agency for the operation of an MCCC program by the hospital network in the State that meets the requirements of this section. The term qualified children’s hospital means a children’s hospital that— qualifies to receive payment under section 340E of the Public Health Service Act (relating to children’s hospitals that operate graduate medical education programs); or meets 3 or more of the following criteria: The hospital has at least 5,000 annual pediatric discharges (including neonates, but excluding obstetrics and normal newborns) for the most recent cost reporting period for which data are available. The hospital has 100 licensed pediatric beds, not including beds in neonatal intensive care units but including beds in pediatric intensive care units and other acute care beds. The hospital has access (through ownership or otherwise) to pediatric emergency services. At least 30 percent of the pediatric discharges or inpatient days (excluding observation days) in the hospital for the most recent cost reporting period for which data are available were children eligible for medical assistance under this title or for children’s health assistance under title XXI. The hospital sponsors or is affiliated with a pediatric residency program that is accredited by the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education. The hospital has established and implemented demonstrable pediatric medical home programs dedicated to medically complex children. The term State administering agency means, with respect to the operation of an MCCC program in a State, the agency of that State (which may be the single agency responsible for administration of the State plan under this title in the State) responsible for administering program agreements under this section. . Section 1905(a) of the Social Security Act ( 42 U.S.C. 1396d(a) ) is amended— in paragraph (28), by striking and at the end; by redesignating paragraph
(29)as paragraph (30); and by inserting after paragraph
(28)the following new paragraph: items and services furnished under an MCCC program under section 1947 to eligible children enrolled in an MCCC program under such section; and . Section 2107(e)(1) of the Social Security Act ( 42 U.S.C. 1397gg(e)(1) ) is amended by adding at the end the following new subparagraph: Section 1947 (relating to Medicaid Children’s Care Coordination programs for children with complex medical conditions). . Not later than 120 days after the date of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Health and Human Services shall make rules on the record, after opportunity for an agency hearing to carry out the amendments made by this section in accordance with sections 556 and 557 of title 5, United States Code.
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Sec. 3
Establishment of Medicaid and CHIP Care Coordination program for children with medically complex conditions as Medicaid State option
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