TITLE 12. HEALTH
Titles of Regulations: 12VAC30-10. State Plan under
Title XIX of the Social Security Act Medical Assistance Program; General Provisions (amending 12VAC30-10-540).
12VAC30-50. Amount, Duration, and Scope of Medical and
Remedial Care Services (amending 12VAC30-50-130).
12VAC30-60. Standards Established and Methods Used to Assure
High Quality Care (amending 12VAC30-60-5, 12VAC30-60-50,
12VAC30-60-61).
12VAC30-130. Amount, Duration and Scope of Selected Services (amending 12VAC30-130-3000; repealing
12VAC30-130-850, 12VAC30-130-860, 12VAC30-130-870, 12VAC30-130-880,
12VAC30-130-890, 12VAC30-130-3020).
Statutory Authority: § 32.1-325 of the Code of
Virginia; 42 USC § 1396 et seq.
Effective Dates: July 1, 2017, through December 31,
2018.
Agency Contact: Emily McClellan, Regulatory Supervisor,
Policy Division, Department of Medical Assistance Services, 600 East Broad
Street, Suite 1300, Richmond, VA 23219, telephone (804) 371-4300, FAX (804)
786-1680, or email emily.mcclellan@dmas.virginia.gov.
Preamble:
The psychiatric residential treatment service was
implemented in 2001. The existing regulations are not adequate to ensure
successful treatment outcomes are attained for the individuals who receive high
cost high intensity residential treatment services. Since moving behavioral
health services to Magellan (the DMAS behavioral health service administrator
or BHSA) there has been enhanced supervision of these services. The enhanced
supervision has led to an increased awareness of some safety challenges and
administrative challenges in this high level of care. The proposed revisions
will serve to better clarify policy interpretations that revise program
standards to allow for more evidence-based service delivery, allow DMAS to
implement more effective utilization management in collaboration with the BHSA,
enhance individualized coordination of care, implement standardized
coordination of individualized aftercare resources by ensuring access to
medical and behavioral health service providers in the individual's home
community, and support DMAS audit practices. The changes will move toward a
service model that will reduce lengths of stay for and facilitate an
evidence-based treatment approach to better support the individual's discharge
into his home environment.
The emergency action, pursuant to § 2.2-4011 of the Code of
Virginia, includes changes to the following areas: (i) provider qualifications
including acceptable licensing standards, (ii) preadmission assessment requirements,
(iii) program requirements, (iv) new discharge planning and care coordination
requirements, and (iv) language enhancements for utilization review
requirements to clarify program requirements and help providers avoid payment
retractions. These changes are part of a review of the services to ensure that
they are effectively delivered and utilized for individuals who meet the
medical necessity criteria. For each individual seeking residential treatment
their treatment needs will be assessed with enhanced requirements by the
current independent certification teams who must coordinate clinical assessment
information and assess local resources for each person requesting residential
care to determine an appropriate level of care. The certification teams will
also be more able to coordinate referrals for care to determine, in accordance
with Department of Justice requirements, whether or not the individual seeking
services can be safely served using community-based services in the least
restrictive setting. Independent team certifications will be conducted prior to
the onset of specified services, as required by Centers for Medicare and
Medicaid Services guidelines, by the DMAS behavioral health services
administrator.
The proposal includes changes to program requirements that
ensure that effective levels of care coordination and discharge planning occurs
for each individual during his residential stay by enhancing program rules and
utilization management principles that facilitate effective discharge planning
and establish community-based services prior to the individual's discharge from
residential care. The proposal requires enhanced care coordination to provide
the necessary, objective evaluations of treatment progress and to facilitate
evidence-based practices during the treatment to reduce the length of stay by
ensuring that medical necessity indicates the correct level of care and that
appropriate and effective care is delivered in a person-centered manner. The
proposal requires that service providers and local systems will use
standardized preadmission and discharge processes to ensure effective services
are delivered.
This emergency action is in compliance with provisions of
Item 301 OO and Item 301 PP of Chapter 665 of the 2015 Acts of Assembly, as follows:
Item 301 OO c 7, 8, 9, 14, 15, 16, 17, and 18 directed that
DMAS shall develop a blueprint for a care coordination model for individuals in
need of behavioral health services that includes the following principles:
"7. Develops direct linkages between medical and
behavioral services in order to make it easier for consumers to obtain timely
access to care and services, which could include up to full integration.
8. Builds upon current best practices in the delivery of
behavioral health services.
9. Accounts for local services and reflects familiarity
with the community where services are provided.
…
14. Achieves cost savings through decreasing avoidable
episodes of care and hospitalizations, strengthening the discharge planning
process, improving adherence to medication regimens, and utilizing community
alternatives to hospitalizations and institutionalization.
15. Simplifies the administration of acute psychiatric,
community and mental health rehabilitation, and medical health services for the
coordinating entity, providers, and consumers.
16. Requires standardized data collection, outcome
measures, customer satisfaction surveys, and reports to track costs,
utilization of services, and outcomes. Performance data should be explicit,
benchmarked, standardized, publicly available, and validated.
17. Provides actionable data and feedback to providers.
18. In accordance with federal and state regulations,
includes provisions for effective and timely grievances and appeals for
consumers."
Item 301 OO d states:
"The department may seek the necessary waiver(s) or
State Plan authorization under Titles XIX and XXI of the Social Security Act to
develop and implement a care coordination model … This model may be applied to
individuals on a mandatory basis. The department shall have authority to
promulgate emergency regulations to implement this amendment within 280 days or
less from the enactment date of this act."
Item 301 PP states:
"The Department of Medical Assistance Services shall
make programmatic changes in the provision of Residential Treatment Facility
(Level C) and Levels A and B residential services (group homes) for children
with serious emotional disturbances in order [to] ensure appropriate
utilization and cost efficiency. The department shall consider all available
options including, but not limited to, prior authorization, utilization review
and provider qualifications. The department shall have authority to promulgate
regulations to implement these changes within 280 days or less from the enactment
date of this act."
In response to Item 301 OO c 14, DMAS is proposing new
requirements to ensure that comprehensive discharge planning begins at
admission to a therapeutic group home or residential treatment facility so that
the individual can return to the community setting with appropriate supports at
the soonest possible time.
DMAS is responding to the legislative mandates in Item 301
OO c 7 through 9, 14, and 15 by sunsetting the Virginia Independent Assessment
Program (VICAP) regulation at 12VAC30-130-3020. The VICAP program is no longer
needed, as the BHSA is now conducting thorough reviews of medical necessity for
each requested service, and the funds allocated to the VICAP program can be
more effectively used elsewhere.
DMAS is responding to the legislative mandates in Item 301
OO c 16 through 18 by creating a single point of contact at the BHSA for
families and caregivers who will increase timely access to residential
behavioral health services, promote effective service delivery, and decrease
wait times for medical necessity and placement decisions that previously have
been managed by local family assessment and planning teams (FAPT). The FAPTs
are not DMAS-enrolled service providers, and the individuals who must use the
FAPT process to gain access to Medicaid covered residential treatment are not
subject to the established Medicaid grievance process and choice options as
mandated by CMS. The enhanced interaction of the families and the BHSA will
enable more thorough data collection to ensure freedom of choice in service
providers, and to measure locality trends, service provider trends, and
population trends to facilitate evidence-based decisions in both the clinical
service delivery and administration of the program. The enhanced family interaction
will enable the BHSA to complete individual family surveys and monitor care
more effectively after discharge from services to assess the family and
individual perspective on service delivery and enable DMAS to more effectively
manage evidence-based residential treatment services.
Since 2001, when residential treatment services were
implemented by DMAS, individuals have not had access to standardized methods of
effective care coordination upon entry into residential treatment due to
locality influence and DMAS reimbursement limitations. This has resulted in a
fragmented coordination approach for these individuals who are at risk for high
levels of care and remain at risk of repeated placements at this level of care.
The residential treatment prior authorization and utilization management
structures require an enhanced care coordination model to support the
individuals who receive this level of service to ensure an effective return to
the family or caregiver home environment with follow-up services to facilitate
ongoing treatment progress in the least restrictive environment. The added
coordination is required to navigate a very complex service environment for the
individual as the individual returns to a community setting to establish an
effective aftercare environment that involves service providers who may be
contracted with a variety of entities such as DMAS contracted managed care
organizations (MCOs), BHSA enrolled providers, the local FAPT, local school
divisions, and the local community services board (CSB). This regulation will
allow DMAS to implement a contracted care coordination team that will focus on
attaining specific clinical outcomes for all residential care episodes and
provide a new single liaison who will ensure coordination of care in a complex
service environment for individuals upon discharge from residential treatment
and prior to the time when they will enroll in an MCO. During this transition
period the individual is very vulnerable to repeated admissions to residential
or inpatient care and must also be supported in the fee for service (FFS)
environment with resources from the local CSB and BHSA enrolled services
providers and requires ongoing support and coordination with the local FAPT to
provide aftercare services consisting of post-discharge follow-up and
transition services provided by the BHSA coordination team.
The care coordination team will (i) provide increased
standardization of preadmission assessment activity, (ii) provide facilitation
of an effective independent certification team process, (iii) ensure that MCO
and medical home resources are used to provide accurate psychosocial assessment
and clinical/medical history to the certification team and BHSA, (iv)
facilitate accurate authorization decisions and consider community-based
service options prior to any out-of-home placement, (v) facilitate high levels
of family involvement, (vi) provide aggressive discharge planning that ensures
smooth transition into community-based services and MCO-funded health services,
and (vii) provide meaningful, coordinated post-discharge follow-up for up to 90
days after discharge with the youth and family.
The residential care coordination team will ensure
meaningful communication across all parts of the Comprehensive Services Act,
Department of Behavioral Health and Developmental Services, MCO, and FFS
service systems to maximize efficiency of activities, eliminate duplicative or
conflicting efforts, and ensure established timelines are met (e.g., regular
assessment of progress).
These enclosed proposed utilization control requirements
are recommended consistent with the federal requirements at 42 CFR Part 456
Utilization Control. Specifically, 42 CFR 456.3, "Statewide surveillance
and utilization control program" provides: "The Medicaid agency must
implement a statewide surveillance and utilization control program that—
(a) Safeguards against unnecessary or inappropriate use of
Medicaid services and against excess payments;
(b) Assesses the quality of those services;
(c) Provides for the control of the utilization of all
services provided under the plan in accordance with subpart B of this part, and
(d) Provides for the control of the utilization of
inpatient services in accordance with subparts C through I of this part."
The Code of Federal Regulations also provides, at 42 CFR
430.10, "...The State plan contains all information necessary for CMS to
determine whether the plan can be approved to serve as a basis for Federal
financial participation (FFP) in the State program." FFP is the federal
matching funds that DMAS receives from the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid
Services. Not performing utilization control of the services affected by these
proposed regulations, as well as all Medicaid covered services, could subject
DMAS' federal matching funds to a CMS recovery action.
Purpose. This regulatory action is essential to protect the
health, safety, or welfare of individuals with Medicaid who require behavioral
health services. In addition, these proposed changes are intended to promote improved
quality of Medicaid-covered behavioral health services provided to individuals.
This regulatory action is also essential to ensure that
Medicaid individuals and their families are well informed about their
behavioral health condition and service options prior to receiving these
services. This ensures the services are medically necessary for the individual
and are rendered by providers who use evidence-based treatment approaches.
While residential treatment is not a service that should be
approved with great frequency for a large number of individuals, it is a
service that should be accessible to the families and individuals who require
that level of care. The current service model has significant operational
layers that must be navigated to access residential services. The current
program processes involve coordination of care by local FAPT teams who have,
over time, demonstrated some influence on determining an individual's
eligibility for FAPT funded services. The local influence on the program's administration
causes limitations on individualized freedom of provider choice and
inconsistent authorization of funding for persons deemed to need psychiatric
care out of the home setting. This local administration of the primary referral
source for residential treatment lies outside the purview of DMAS and this
situation produces outcomes that are inadequate to meet CMS requirements on
ensuring the individual freedom of choice of providers. In addition, local FAPT
administrators do not enforce the Department of Justice settlement requirements
in a uniform manner.
DMAS has added content to program requirements and covered
services portions of the regulations to better clarify the benefit coverage and
utilization criteria. The emergency regulations allow the use of additional
information collection to better assess ways to reduce the average length of
stay for individuals in residential care, and to better coordinate educational
funding for those who require medically necessary services in a psychiatric
treatment setting by using enhanced Medicaid supports.
The goal is that individuals receive the correct level of
service at the correct time for the treatment (service) needs related to the
individual's medical/psychiatric condition. Residential treatment services
consist of behavioral health interventions and are intended to provide high
intensity clinical treatment that should be provided for a short duration.
Stakeholder feedback supported DMAS observations of lengthy durations of stay
for many individuals. Residential treatment services will benefit from
clarification of the service definition and eligibility requirements to ensure
that residential treatment does not evolve into a long-term level of support
instead of the high intensity psychiatric treatment modality that defines this
level of care.
Substance. The sections of the State Plan for Medical
Assistance that are affected by this action are 12VAC30-10-540 (Inspection of
care in intermediate care facilities); 12VAC30-50-130 (Skilled nursing facility
services, EPSDT, school health services, and family planning); 12VAC30-60-5
(Applicability of utilization review requirements); 12VAC30-60-50 (Utilization
control: Intermediate Care Facilities for the Mentally Retarded (ICF/MR) and
Institutions for Mental Disease (IMD); 12VAC30-60-61 (Services related to the
Early and Periodic Screening, Diagnosis and Treatment Program (EPSDT);
community mental health services for children). The state-only regulations that
are affected by this action are 12VAC30-130-850 through 12VAC30-130-890 (Part
XIV - Residential Psychiatric Treatment for Children and Adolescents).
12VAC30-10-540. Inspection of care in intermediate care
facilities for the mentally retarded persons with intellectual and
developmental disabilities, facilities providing inpatient psychiatric
services for individuals under 21, and mental hospitals.
All applicable requirements of 42 CFR 456, Subpart I, are met
with respect to periodic inspections of care and services.*
Inpatient psychiatric services for individuals under age
21 are not provided under this plan.
*Inspection of Care care (IOC) in Intermediate
Care Facilities intermediate care facilities for the Mentally
Retarded and Institutions for Mental Diseases are persons with
intellectual and developmental disabilities is completed through
contractual arrangements with the Virginia Department of Health.
12VAC30-50-130. Skilled nursing facility services, EPSDT,
school health services, and family planning.
A. Skilled nursing facility services (other than services in
an institution for mental diseases) for individuals 21 years of age or older.
Service must be ordered or prescribed and directed or
performed within the scope of a license of the practitioner of the healing
arts.
B. Early and periodic screening and, diagnosis,
and treatment (EPSDT) of individuals under 21 years of age, and treatment
of conditions found - general provisions.
1. Payment of medical assistance services shall be made on
behalf of individuals under 21 years of age, who are Medicaid eligible, for
medically necessary stays in acute care facilities, and the accompanying
attendant physician care, in excess of 21 days per admission when such services
are rendered for the purpose of diagnosis and treatment of health conditions
identified through a physical examination.
2. Routine physicals and immunizations (except as provided
through EPSDT) are not covered except that well-child examinations in a private
physician's office are covered for foster children of the local social services
departments on specific referral from those departments.
3. Orthoptics services shall only be reimbursed if medically
necessary to correct a visual defect identified by an EPSDT examination or
evaluation. The department shall place appropriate utilization controls upon
this service.
4. Consistent with the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of
1989 § 6403, early and periodic screening, diagnostic, and treatment services
means the following services: screening services, vision services, dental
services, hearing services, and such other necessary health care, diagnostic
services, treatment, and other measures described in Social Security Act §
1905(a) to correct or ameliorate defects and physical and mental illnesses and
conditions discovered by the screening services and which are medically
necessary, whether or not such services are covered under the State Plan and
notwithstanding the limitations, applicable to recipients ages 21 and over,
provided for by the Act § 1905(a).
5. Community C. Early and periodic screening
diagnosis and treatment (EPSDT) of individuals younger than 21 years of age -
community mental health services. These services in order to be covered (i)
shall meet medical necessity criteria based upon diagnoses made by LMHPs who
are practicing within the scope of their licenses and (ii) are reflected in
provider records and on providers' provider claims for services
by recognized diagnosis codes that support and are consistent with the
requested professional services.
a. 1. Definitions. The following words and terms
when used in this section shall have the following meanings unless the context
clearly indicates otherwise:
"Activities of daily living" means personal care
activities and includes bathing, dressing, transferring, toileting, feeding,
and eating.
"Adolescent or child" means the individual
receiving the services described in this section. For the purpose of the use of
these terms this term, adolescent means an individual 12-20 years
of age; a child means an individual from birth up to 12 years of age.
"Behavioral health services administrator" or
"BHSA" means an entity that manages or directs a behavioral health
benefits program under contract with DMAS.
"Care coordination" means collaboration and sharing
of information among health care providers, who are involved with an
individual's health care, to improve the care.
"Certified prescreener" means an employee of the
local community services board or behavioral health authority, or its designee,
who is skilled in the assessment and treatment of mental illness and has
completed a certification program approved by the Department of Behavioral
Health and Developmental Services.
"Clinical experience" means providing direct
behavioral health services on a full-time basis or equivalent hours of
part-time work to children and adolescents who have diagnoses of mental illness
and includes supervised internships, supervised practicums, and supervised
field experience for the purpose of Medicaid reimbursement of (i) intensive
in-home services, (ii) day treatment for children and adolescents, (iii)
community-based residential services for children and adolescents who are
younger than 21 years of age (Level A), or (iv) therapeutic behavioral services
(Level B). Experience shall not include unsupervised internships, unsupervised
practicums, and unsupervised field experience. The equivalency of part-time
hours to full-time hours for the purpose of this requirement shall be as
established by DBHDS in the document entitled Human Services and Related Fields
Approved Degrees/Experience, issued March 12, 2013, revised May 3, 2013.
"Child" means the individual receiving the
services described in this section; an individual from birth up to 12 years of
age.
"DBHDS" means the Department of Behavioral Health
and Developmental Services.
"DMAS" means the Department of Medical Assistance
Services and its contractor or contractors.
"Human services field" means the same as the term
is defined by DBHDS in the document entitled Human Services and Related Fields
Approved Degrees/Experience, issued March 12, 2013, revised May 3, 2013.
"Individual service plan" or "ISP" means
the same as the term is defined in 12VAC30-50-226.
"Licensed mental health professional" or
"LMHP" means a licensed physician, licensed clinical psychologist,
licensed professional counselor, licensed clinical social worker, licensed
substance abuse treatment practitioner, licensed marriage and family therapist,
or certified psychiatric clinical nurse specialist the same as defined
in 12VAC35-105-20.
"LMHP-resident" or "LMHP-R" means the same
as "resident" as defined in (i) 18VAC115-20-10 for licensed
professional counselors; (ii) 18VAC115-50-10 for licensed marriage and family
therapists; or (iii) 18VAC115-60-10 for licensed substance abuse treatment
practitioners. An LMHP-resident shall be in continuous compliance with the
regulatory requirements of the applicable counseling profession for supervised
practice and shall not perform the functions of the LMHP-R or be considered a
"resident" until the supervision for specific clinical duties at a
specific site has been preapproved in writing by the Virginia Board of
Counseling. For purposes of Medicaid reimbursement to their supervisors for
services provided by such residents, they shall use the title
"Resident" in connection with the applicable profession after their
signatures to indicate such status.
"LMHP-resident in psychology" or "LMHP-RP"
means the same as an individual in a residency, as that term is defined in
18VAC125-20-10, program for clinical psychologists. An LMHP-resident in
psychology shall be in continuous compliance with the regulatory requirements
for supervised experience as found in 18VAC125-20-65 and shall not perform the
functions of the LMHP-RP or be considered a "resident" until the
supervision for specific clinical duties at a specific site has been
preapproved in writing by the Virginia Board of Psychology. For purposes of
Medicaid reimbursement by supervisors for services provided by such residents,
they shall use the title "Resident in Psychology" after their
signatures to indicate such status.
"LMHP-supervisee in social work,"
"LMHP-supervisee," or "LMHP-S" means the same as
"supervisee" as defined in 18VAC140-20-10 for licensed clinical
social workers. An LMHP-supervisee in social work shall be in continuous
compliance with the regulatory requirements for supervised practice as found in
18VAC140-20-50 and shall not perform the functions of the LMHP-S or be
considered a "supervisee" until the supervision for specific clinical
duties at a specific site is preapproved in writing by the Virginia Board of
Social Work. For purposes of Medicaid reimbursement to their supervisors for
services provided by supervisees, these persons shall use the title "Supervisee
in Social Work" after their signatures to indicate such status.
"Progress notes" means individual-specific
documentation that contains the unique differences particular to the
individual's circumstances, treatment, and progress that is also signed and
contemporaneously dated by the provider's professional staff who have prepared
the notes. Individualized and member-specific progress notes are part of the
minimum documentation requirements and shall convey the individual's status,
staff interventions, and, as appropriate, the individual's progress, or lack of
progress, toward goals and objectives in the ISP. The progress notes shall also
include, at a minimum, the name of the service rendered, the date of the
service rendered, the signature and credentials of the person who rendered the
service, the setting in which the service was rendered, and the amount of time
or units/hours required to deliver the service. The content of each progress
note shall corroborate the time/units billed. Progress notes shall be
documented for each service that is billed.
"Psychoeducation" means (i) a specific form of
education aimed at helping individuals who have mental illness and their family
members or caregivers to access clear and concise information about mental
illness and (ii) a way of accessing and learning strategies to deal with mental
illness and its effects in order to design effective treatment plans and
strategies.
"Psychoeducational activities" means systematic
interventions based on supportive and cognitive behavior therapy that
emphasizes an individual's and his family's needs and focuses on increasing the
individual's and family's knowledge about mental disorders, adjusting to mental
illness, communicating and facilitating problem solving and increasing coping
skills.
"Qualified mental health professional-child" or
"QMHP-C" means the same as the term is defined in 12VAC35-105-20.
"Qualified mental health professional-eligible" or
"QMHP-E" means the same as the term is defined in 12VAC35-105-20 and
consistent with the requirements of 12VAC35-105-590.
"Qualified paraprofessional in mental health" or
"QPPMH" means the same as the term is defined in
12VAC35-105-20 and consistent with the requirements of 12VAC35-105-1370.
"Service-specific provider intake" means the
face-to-face interaction in which the provider obtains information from the
child or adolescent, and parent or other family member or members, as
appropriate, about the child's or adolescent's mental health status. It
includes documented history of the severity, intensity, and duration of mental
health care problems and issues and shall contain all of the following
elements: (i) the presenting issue/reason for referral, (ii) mental health
history/hospitalizations, (iii) previous interventions by providers and
timeframes and response to treatment, (iv) medical profile, (v) developmental
history including history of abuse, if appropriate, (vi) educational/vocational
status, (vii) current living situation and family history and relationships,
(viii) legal status, (ix) drug and alcohol profile, (x) resources and
strengths, (xi) mental status exam and profile, (xii) diagnosis, (xiii)
professional summary and clinical formulation, (xiv) recommended care and
treatment goals, and (xv) the dated signature of the LMHP, LMHP-supervisee,
LMHP-resident, or LMHP-RP.
b. 2. Intensive in-home services (IIH) to
children and adolescents under age 21 shall be time-limited interventions
provided in the individual's residence and when clinically necessary in
community settings. All interventions and the settings of the intervention
shall be defined in the Individual Service Plan. All IIH services shall be
designed to specifically improve family dynamics, provide modeling, and the
clinically necessary interventions that increase functional and therapeutic
interpersonal relations between family members in the home. IIH services are
designed to promote psychoeducational benefits in the home setting of an
individual who is at risk of being moved into an out-of-home placement or who
is being transitioned to home from an out-of-home placement due to a documented
medical need of the individual. These services provide crisis treatment;
individual and family counseling; communication skills (e.g., counseling to
assist the individual and his parents or guardians, as appropriate, to
understand and practice appropriate problem solving, anger management, and
interpersonal interaction, etc.); care coordination with other required
services; and 24-hour emergency response.
(1) These services shall be limited annually to 26 weeks.
a. Service authorization shall be required for Medicaid reimbursement
prior to the onset of services. Services rendered before the date of
authorization shall not be reimbursed.
(2) b. Service authorization shall be required
for services to continue beyond the initial 26 weeks.
(3) c. Service-specific provider intakes shall
be required at the onset of services and ISPs shall be required during the
entire duration of services. Services based upon incomplete, missing, or
outdated service-specific provider intakes or ISPs shall be denied reimbursement.
Requirements for service-specific provider intakes and ISPs are set out in this
section.
(4) d. These services may shall
only be rendered by an LMHP, LMHP-supervisee, LMHP-resident, LMHP-RP, a QMHP-C,
or a QMHP-E.
c. 3. Therapeutic day treatment (TDT) shall be
provided two or more hours per day in order to provide therapeutic
interventions. Day treatment programs, limited annually to 780 units, (a
unit is defined in 12VAC30-60-61 D 11) provide evaluation; medication education
and management; opportunities to learn and use daily living skills and to
enhance social and interpersonal skills (e.g., problem solving, anger
management, community responsibility, increased impulse control, and
appropriate peer relations, etc.); and individual, group and family counseling.
(1) a. Service authorization shall be required
for Medicaid reimbursement.
(2) b. Service-specific provider intakes shall
be required at the onset of services and ISPs shall be required during the
entire duration of services. Services based upon incomplete, missing, or
outdated service-specific provider intakes or ISPs shall be denied
reimbursement. Requirements for service-specific provider intakes and ISPs are
set out in this section.
(3) c. These services may shall be
rendered only by an LMHP, LMHP-supervisee, LMHP-resident, LMHP-RP, a QMHP-C, or
a QMHP-E.
d. Community-based services for children and adolescents
under 21 years of age (Level A).
(1) Such services shall be a combination of therapeutic
services rendered in a residential setting. The residential services will
provide structure for daily activities, psychoeducation, therapeutic
supervision, care coordination, and psychiatric treatment to ensure the
attainment of therapeutic mental health goals as identified in the individual
service plan (plan of care). Individuals qualifying for this service must
demonstrate medical necessity for the service arising from a condition due to
mental, behavioral or emotional illness that results in significant functional impairments
in major life activities in the home, school, at work, or in the community. The
service must reasonably be expected to improve the child's condition or prevent
regression so that the services will no longer be needed. The application of a
national standardized set of medical necessity criteria in use in the industry,
such as McKesson InterQual® Criteria or an equivalent standard
authorized in advance by DMAS, shall be required for this service.
(2) In addition to the residential services, the child must
receive, at least weekly, individual psychotherapy that is provided by an LMHP,
LMHP-supervisee, LMHP-resident, or LMHP-RP.
(3) Individuals shall be discharged from this service when
other less intensive services may achieve stabilization.
(4) Authorization shall be required for Medicaid
reimbursement. Services that were rendered before the date of service
authorization shall not be reimbursed.
(5) Room and board costs shall not be reimbursed. DMAS
shall reimburse only for services provided in facilities or programs with no
more than 16 beds.
(6) These residential providers must be licensed by the
Department of Social Services, Department of Juvenile Justice, or Department of
Behavioral Health and Developmental Services under the Standards for Licensed
Children's Residential Facilities (22VAC40-151), Standards for Interim
Regulation of Children's Residential Facilities (6VAC35-51), or Regulations for
Children's Residential Facilities (12VAC35-46).
(7) Daily progress notes shall document a minimum of seven
psychoeducational activities per week. Psychoeducational programming must
include, but is not limited to, development or maintenance of daily living
skills, anger management, social skills, family living skills, communication
skills, stress management, and any care coordination activities.
(8) The facility/group home must coordinate services with
other providers. Such care coordination shall be documented in the individual's
medical record. The documentation shall include who was contacted, when the
contact occurred, and what information was transmitted.
(9) Service-specific provider intakes shall be required at
the onset of services and ISPs shall be required during the entire duration of
services. Services based upon incomplete, missing, or outdated service-specific
provider intakes or ISPs shall be denied reimbursement. Requirements for
intakes and ISPs are set out in 12VAC30-60-61.
(10) These services may only be rendered by an LMHP,
LMHP-supervisee, LMHP-resident, LMHP-RP, a QMHP-C, a QMHP-E, or a QPPMH.
D. Early and periodic screening diagnosis and treatment
(EPSDT) of individuals younger than 21 years of age - therapeutic group home
services and residential treatment services.
1. Definitions. The following words and terms when used in
this subsection shall have the following meanings:
"Active treatment" means implementation of an
initial plan of care (IPOC) and comprehensive individual plan of care (CIPOC)
that shall be developed, supervised, and approved by the family or legally
authorized representative, treating physician, psychiatrist, or LMHP
responsible for the overall supervision of the CIPOC. Each plan of care shall
be designed to improve the individual's condition and to achieve the
individual's safe discharge from residential care at the earliest possible
time.
"Assessment" means a service conducted within
seven calendar days of admission by an LMHP, LMHP-R, LMHP-RP, or LMHP-S
utilizing a tool or series of tools to provide a comprehensive evaluation and
review of an individual's current mental health status in order to make
recommendations; provide diagnosis; identify strengths, needs, and risk level;
and describe the severity of symptoms.
"Behavioral health services administrator" or
"BHSA" means an entity that manages or directs a behavioral health
benefits program under contract with DMAS.
"Certificate of need" or "CON" means a
written statement by an independent certification team that services in a
residential treatment facility are or were needed.
"Combined treatment services" means a structured,
therapeutic milieu and planned interventions that promote (i) the development
or restoration of adaptive functioning, self-care, and social skills; (ii)
community integrated activities and community living skills that each
individual requires to live in less restrictive environments; (iii) behavioral
consultation; (iv) individual and group therapy; (v) recreation therapy, (vi)
family education and family therapy; and (vii) individualized treatment
planning.
"Comprehensive individual plan of care" or
"CIPOC" means a person-centered plan of care that meets all of the
requirements of this subsection and is specific to the individual's unique
treatment needs and acuity levels as identified in the clinical assessment and
information gathered during the referral process.
"Crisis" means a deteriorating or unstable
situation, often developing suddenly that produces an acute, heightened
emotional, mental, physical, medical, or behavioral event.
"Crisis management" means immediately provided
activities and interventions designed to rapidly manage a crisis.
"Daily supervision" means the supervision
provided in a residential treatment facility through a resident-to-staff ratio
approved by the Office of Licensure at the Department of Behavioral Health and
Developmental Services with documented supervision checks every 15 minutes
throughout the 24-hour period.
"Discharge planning" means family and
locality-based care coordination that begins upon admission to a residential
treatment facility or therapeutic group home with the goal of transitioning the
individual out of the residential treatment facility or therapeutic group home
to a less restrictive care setting with continued, clinically-appropriate, and
possibly intensive, services as soon as possible upon discharge. Discharge
plans shall be recommended by the treating physician, psychiatrist, or treating
LMHP responsible for the overall supervision of the CIPOC and shall be approved
by the BHSA.
"DSM-5" means the Diagnostic and Statistical
Manual of Mental Disorders, Fifth Edition, copyright 2013, American Psychiatric
Association.
"Emergency admissions" means those admissions
that are made when, pending a review for the certificate of need, it appears
that the individual is in need of an immediate admission to group home or
residential treatment and likely does not meet the medical necessity criteria
to receive crisis intervention, crisis stabilization, or acute psychiatric
inpatient services.
"Emergency services" means unscheduled and
sometimes scheduled crisis intervention, stabilization, acute psychiatric
inpatient services, and referral assistance provided over the telephone or
face-to-face if indicated, and available 24 hours a day, seven days per week.
"Family engagement" means a family-centered and strengths-based
approach to partnering with families in making decisions, setting goals,
achieving desired outcomes, and promoting safety, permanency, and well-being
for children, youth, and families. Family engagement requires ongoing
opportunities for an individual to build and maintain meaningful relationships
with family members, for example, frequent, unscheduled, and noncontingent
phone calls and visits between an individual and family members. Family
engagement may also include enhancing or facilitating the development of the
individual's relationship with other family members and supportive adults
responsible for the individual's care and well-being upon discharge.
"Family engagement activity" means an
intervention consisting of family psychoeducational training or coaching,
transition planning with the family, family and independent living skills, and
training on accessing community supports as identified in the IPOC and CIPOC.
Family engagement activity does not include and is not the same as family
therapy.
"Independent certification team" means a team
that has competence in diagnosis and treatment of mental illness, preferably in
child psychiatry; has knowledge of the individual's situation; and is composed
of at least one physician and one LMHP. The independent certification team
shall be a DMAS-authorized contractor with contractual or employment
relationships with the required team members.
"Individual" means the child or adolescent
younger than 21 years of age who is receiving therapeutic group home or
residential treatment facility services.
"Initial plan of care" or "IPOC" means
a person-centered plan of care established at admission that meets all of the
requirements of this subsection and is specific to the individual's unique
treatment needs and acuity levels as identified in the clinical assessment and
information gathered during the referral process.
"Intervention" means scheduled therapeutic
treatment such as individual or group psychoeducation; psychoeducational
activities with specific topics focused to address individualized needs;
structured behavior support and training activities; recreation, art, and music
therapies; community integration activities that promote or assist in the
youth's ability to acquire coping and functional or self-regulating behavior
skills; day and overnight passes; and family engagement activities.
Interventions shall not include individual, group, and family therapy,
medical, or dental appointments, physician services, medication evaluation or
management provided by a licensed clinician or physician and shall not include
school attendance. Interventions shall be provided in the therapeutic group
home or residential treatment facility and, when clinically necessary, in a
community setting or as part of a therapeutic leave activity. All interventions
and settings of the intervention shall be established in the CIPOC.
"Physician" means an individual licensed to
practice medicine or osteopathic medicine in Virginia, as defined in §
54.1-2900 of the Code of Virginia.
"Psychoeducational activities" means systematic
interventions based on supportive and cognitive behavior therapy that
emphasizes an individual's and his family's needs and focuses on increasing the
individual's and family's knowledge about mental disorders, adjusting to mental
illness, communicating and facilitating problem solving, and increasing coping
skills.
"Recertification" means a certification for each
applicant or recipient for whom residential treatment facility services are
needed.
"Residential case management" means providing
care coordination, maintaining records, making calls, sending emails, compiling
monthly reports, scheduling meetings, and performing other administrative tasks
related to the individual. Residential case management is a component of the
combined treatment services provided in a group home setting or residential
treatment facility.
"Residential medical supervision" means
around-the-clock nursing and medical care through onsite nurses and onsite or
on-call physicians, as well as nurse and physician attendance at each treatment
planning meeting. Residential medical supervision is a component of the
combined treatment services provided in a congregate residential care facility
and is included in the reimbursement for residential services.
"Residential supplemental therapies" means a
specified minimum of daily interventions and other professional therapies.
Residential supplemental therapies are a component of the combined treatment
services provided in a congregate residential care facility and are included in
the reimbursement for residential services. Residential providers shall not
bill other payment sources in addition to DMAS for these covered services as
part of a residential stay.
"Residential treatment facility" means the same
as defined in 42 CFR 483.352 and is a 24-hour, supervised, clinically and
medically necessary, out-of-home active treatment program designed to provide
necessary support and address mental health, behavioral, substance abuse,
cognitive, and training needs of an individual younger than 21 years of age in
order to prevent or minimize the need for more intensive inpatient treatment.
"Room and board" means a component of the total
daily cost for placement in a licensed residential treatment facility. Residential
room and board costs are maintenance costs associated with placement in a
licensed residential treatment facility and include a semi-private room, three
meals and two snacks per day, and personal care items. Room and board costs are
reimbursed only for residential treatment settings.
"Therapeutic group home" means a congregate
residential service providing 24-hour supervision in a community-based home
having eight or fewer residents.
"Therapeutic leave" and "therapeutic
passes" mean time at home or time with family consisting of partial
or entire days of time away from the group home or treatment facility with
identified goals as approved by the treating physician, psychiatrist, or LMHP
responsible for the overall supervision of the CIPOC and documented in the
CIPOC that facilitate or measure treatment progress, facilitate aftercare
designed to promote family/community engagement, connection and permanency, and
provide for goal-directed family engagement.
e. 2. Therapeutic behavioral group
home services (Level B).
(1) Such services must be therapeutic services rendered in
a residential setting that provides structure for daily activities,
psychoeducation, therapeutic supervision, care coordination, and psychiatric
treatment to ensure the attainment of therapeutic mental health goals as
identified in the individual service plan (plan of care). Individuals
qualifying for this service must demonstrate medical necessity for the service
arising from a condition due to mental, behavioral or emotional illness that
results in significant functional impairments in major life activities in the
home, school, at work, or in the community. The service must reasonably be
expected to improve the child's condition or prevent regression so that the
services will no longer be needed. The application of a national standardized
set of medical necessity criteria in use in the industry, such as McKesson
InterQual® Criteria, or an equivalent standard authorized in advance
by DMAS shall be required for this service.
a. Therapeutic group home services for children and
adolescents younger than the age of 21 years are combined treatment services.
The combination of therapeutic services rendered in a residential setting
provides a therapeutic structure of daily psychoeducational activities,
therapeutic supervision, behavioral modification, and mental health care to
ensure the attainment of therapeutic goals. The therapeutic group home shall
provide therapeutic services to restore, develop, or maintain appropriate
skills necessary to promote prosocial behavior and healthy living to include
the development of coping skills, family living and health awareness,
interpersonal skills, communication skills, and stress management skills.
Treatment for substance use disorders shall be addressed as clinically
indicated. The program shall include individualized activities provided in
accordance with the IPOC and CIPOC including a minimum of one intervention per
24-hour period in addition to individual, group, and family therapies. Daily
interventions are not required when there is documentation to justify clinical
or medical reasons for the individual's deviations from the service plan.
Interventions shall be documented on a progress note and shall be outlined in
and aligned with the treatment goals and objectives in the IPOC and CIPOC. Any
deviation from the IPOC or CIPOC shall be documented along with a clinical or
medical justification for the deviation.
b. Medical necessity criteria for admission to a
therapeutic group home. The following requirements for severity of need and
intensity and quality of service shall be met to satisfy the medical necessity
criteria for admission.
(1) Admission - severity of need. The following criteria
shall be met to satisfy the criteria for severity of need:
(a) The individual's behavioral health condition can only
be safely and effectively treated in a 24-hour therapeutic milieu with onsite
behavioral health therapy due to significant impairments in home, school, and
community functioning caused by current mental health symptoms consistent with
a DSM-5 diagnosis.
(b) The certificate of need must demonstrate all of the
following: (i) ambulatory care resources (all available modalities of treatment
less restrictive than inpatient treatment) available in the community do not
meet the treatment needs of the individual; (ii) proper treatment of the
individual's psychiatric condition requires services on an inpatient basis
under the direction of a physician; and (iii) the services can reasonably be
expected to improve the individual's condition or prevent further regression so
that the services will no longer be needed.
(c) An assessment that demonstrates at least two areas of
moderate impairment in major life activities. A moderate impairment is defined
as a major or persistent disruption in major life activities. The state uniform
assessment tool must be completed. A moderate impairment is evidenced by, but
not limited to (i) frequent conflict in the family setting such as credible
threats of physical harm. "Frequent" is defined as more than expected
for the individual's age and developmental level; (ii) frequent inability to
accept age-appropriate direction and supervision from caretakers, from family
members, at school, or in the home or community; (iii) severely limited
involvement in social support, which means significant avoidance of appropriate
social interaction, deterioration of existing relationships, or refusal to
participate in therapeutic interventions; (iv) impaired ability to form a
trusting relationship with at least one caretaker in the home, school, or
community; (v) limited ability to consider the effect of one's inappropriate
conduct on others; and (vi) interactions consistently involving conflict, which
may include impulsive or abusive behaviors.
(d) Less restrictive community-based services have been
given a fully adequate trial and were unsuccessful or, if not attempted, have
been considered, but in either situation were determined to be to be unable to
meet the individual's treatment needs and the reasons for that are discussed in
the application.
(e) The individual's symptoms, or the need for treatment in
a 24 hours a day, seven days a week level of care (LOC), are not primarily due
to any of the following: (i) intellectual disability, developmental disability,
or autistic spectrum disorder; (ii) organic mental disorders, traumatic brain
injury, or other medical condition; or (iii) the individual does not require a
more intensive level of care.
(f) The individual does not require primary medical or
surgical treatment.
(2) Admission - intensity and quality of service. All of
the following criteria shall be met to satisfy the criteria for intensity and
quality of service.
(a) The therapeutic group home service has been prescribed
by a psychiatrist, psychologist, or other LMHP who has documented that a
residential setting is the least restrictive clinically appropriate service
that can meet the specifically identified treatment needs of the individual
(b) Therapeutic group home is not being used for clinically
inappropriate reasons, including: (i) an alternative to incarceration, and/or
preventative detention; (ii) an alternative to parents', guardian's or agency's
capacity to provide a place of residence for the individual; or, (iii) a
treatment intervention, when other less restrictive alternatives are available.
(c) The individual's treatment goals are included in the
service specific provider intake and include behaviorally defined objectives
that require, and can reasonably be achieved within, a therapeutic group home
setting.
(d) The therapeutic group home is required to coordinate
with the individual's community resources, including schools, with the goal of
transitioning the individual out of the program to a less restrictive care
setting for continued, sometimes intensive, services as soon as possible and
appropriate.
(e) The therapeutic group home program must incorporate
nationally established, evidence-based, trauma informed services and supports
that promote recovery and resiliency.
(f) Discharge planning begins upon admission, with concrete
plans for the individual to transition back into the community beginning within
the first week of admission, with clear action steps and target dates outlined
in the treatment plan.
(3) Continued stay criteria. The following criteria shall
be met in order to satisfy the criteria for continued stay:
(a) All of the admission guidelines continue to be met and
this is supported by the written clinical documentation.
(b) The individual shall meet one of the following: (i) the
desired outcome or level of functioning has not been restored or improved in
the timeframe outlined in the individual's CIPOC or the individual continues to
be at risk for relapse based on history or (ii) the tenuous nature of the
functional gains and use of less intensive services will not achieve
stabilization.
(c) The individual shall meet one of the following: (i) the
individual has achieved initial CIPOC goals but additional goals are indicated
that cannot be met at a lower level of care; (ii) the individual is making
satisfactory progress toward meeting goals but has not attained CIPOC goals,
and the goals cannot be addressed at a lower level of care; (iii) the
individual is not making progress, and the CIPOC has been modified to identify
more effective interventions; or (iv) there are current indications that the
individual requires this level of treatment to maintain level of functioning as
evidenced by failure to achieve goals identified for therapeutic visits or
stays in a nontreatment residential setting or in a lower level of residential
treatment.
(d) There is a written, up-to-date discharge plan that (i)
identifies the custodial parent or custodial caregiver at discharge; (ii)
identifies the school the individual will attend at discharge; (iii) includes
individualized education program (IEP) recommendations, if necessary; (iv)
outlines the aftercare treatment plan (discharge to another residential LOC is
not an acceptable discharge goal); and (v) lists barriers to community
reintegration and progress made on resolving these barriers since last review.
(e) The active treatment plan includes structure for daily
activities, psychoeducation, and therapeutic supervision and activities to
ensure the attainment of therapeutic mental health goals as identified in the
treatment plan. In addition to the daily therapeutic residential services, the
child/adolescent must also receive psychotherapy services, care coordination,
family-based discharge planning, and locality-based transition activities.
Intensive family interventions, with a recommended frequency of one family
therapy session per week, although twice per month is minimally acceptable.
Family involvement begins immediately upon admission to therapeutic group home.
If the minimum requirement cannot be met, the reasons must be reported, and
continued efforts to involve family members must also be documented. Under
certain circumstances an alternate plan, aimed at enhancing the individual's
connections with other family members and/or supportive adults may be an
appropriate substitute.
(f) Less restrictive treatment options have been
considered, but cannot yet meet the individual's treatment needs. There is
sufficient current clinical documentation/evidence to show that therapeutic
group home LOC continues to be the least restrictive level of care that can
meet the individual's mental health treatment needs.
(4) Discharge criteria are as follows:
(a) Medicaid reimbursement is not available when other less
intensive services may achieve stabilization.
(b) Reimbursement shall not be made for this level of care
if any of the following applies: (i) the level of functioning has improved with
respect to the goals outlined in the CIPOC and the individual can reasonably be
expected to maintain these gains at a lower level of treatment or (ii) the
individual no longer benefits from service as evidenced by absence of progress
toward CIPOC goals for a period of 60 days.
c. The following clinical interventions shall be required
for each therapeutic group home resident:
(1) Preadmission service-specific provider intake shall be
performed by an LMHP, LMHP-R, LMHP-RP, or LMHP-S.
(2) A face-to-face behavioral health assessment shall be
performed by an LMHP, LMHP-R, LMHP-RP, or LMHP-S within 30 days prior to
admission and shall document a DSM-5/ICD-10 diagnosis.
(3) A certificate of need shall be completed by an
independent certification team according to the requirements of 12VAC30-50-130
D 4. Recertification shall occur at least every 60 days by a LMHP, LMHP-R,
LMHP-RP, or LMHP-S acting within their scope of practice.
(4) An initial plan of care shall be completed on the day
of admission by an LMHP, LMHP-R, LMHP-RP, or LMHP-S and shall be signed by the
LMHP, LMHP-R, LMHP-RP, or LMHP-S and the individual and a family member or
legally authorized representative. The initial plan of care shall include all
of the following:
(a) Individual and family strengths and personal traits
that would facilitate recovery and opportunities to develop motivational
strategies and treatment alliance;
(b) Diagnoses, symptoms, complaints, and complications
indicating the need for admission;
(c) A description of the functional level of the
individual;
(d) Treatment objectives with short-term and long-term
goals;
(e) Orders for medications, psychiatric, medical, dental,
and any special health care needs whether or not provided in the facilities,
treatments, restorative and rehabilitative services, activities, therapies,
social services, community integration, diet, and special procedures
recommended for the health and safety of the individual;
(f) Plans for continuing care, including review and
modification to the plan of care; and
(g) Plans for discharge.
(5) The CIPOC shall be completed no later than 14 calendar
days after admission and shall meet all of the following criteria:
(a) Be based on a diagnostic evaluation that includes
examination of the medical, psychological, social, behavioral, and
developmental aspects of the individual's situation and shall reflect the need
for therapeutic group home care;
(b) Be based on input from school, home, other health care
providers, the individual, and the family or legal guardian;
(c) Shall state treatment objectives that include
measurable short-term and long-term goals and objectives, with target dates for
achievement;
(d) Prescribe an integrated program of therapies,
activities, and experiences designed to meet the treatment objectives related
to the diagnosis; and
(e) Include a comprehensive discharge plan with necessary,
clinically appropriate community services to ensure continuity of care upon
discharge with the child's family, school, and community.
(6) The CIPOC shall be reviewed, signed, and dated every 30
calendar days by the LMHP, LMHP-R, LMHP-RP, or LMHP-S and the individual or a
family member or primary caregiver. Updates shall be signed and dated by the
LMHP, LMHP-R, LMHP-RP, or LMHP-S and the individual or a family member or
legally authorized representative. The review shall include all of the
following:
(a) The individual's response to the services provided;
(b) Recommended changes in the plan as indicated by the
individual's overall response to the CIPOC interventions; and
(c) Determinations regarding whether the services being
provided continue to be required.
(7) Crisis management, clinical assessment, and
individualized therapy shall be provided as indicated in the IPOC and CIPOC to
address intermittent crises and challenges within the group home setting or
community settings as defined in the plan of care and to avoid a higher level
of care.
(8) Care coordination shall be provided with medical,
educational, and other behavioral health providers and other entities involved
in the care and discharge planning for the individual as included in the IPOC
and CIPOC.
(9) Weekly individual therapy shall be provided in the
therapeutic group home, or other settings as appropriate for the individual's
needs, by an LMHP, LMHP-R, LMHP-RP, or LMHP-S, which shall be documented in
progress notes in accordance with the requirements in 12VAC30-60-61.
(10) Weekly (or more frequently if clinically indicated)
group therapy shall be provided by an LMHP, LMHP-R, LMHP-RP, or LMHP-S, which
shall be documented in progress notes in accordance with the requirements in
12VAC30-60-61 and as planned and documented in the IPOC or CIPOC.
(11) Family treatment shall be provided as clinically
indicated, provided by an LMHP, LMHP-R, LMHP-RP, or LMHP-S, which shall be
documented in progress notes in accordance with the requirements in
12VAC30-60-61 and as planned and documented in the IPOC or CIPOC.
(12) Family engagement activities shall be provided in
addition to family therapy/counseling. Family engagement activities shall be
provided at least weekly as outlined in the IPOC and CIPOC, and daily
communication with the family or legally authorized representative shall be
part of the family engagement strategies in the IPOC or CIPOC. For each
service authorization period when family engagement is not possible, the
therapeutic group home shall identify and document the specific barriers to the
individual's engagement with his family or legally authorized representatives.
The therapeutic group home shall document on a weekly basis the reasons why
family engagement is not occurring as required. The therapeutic group home
shall document alternative family engagement strategies to be used as part of
the interventions in the IPOC or CIPOC and request approval of the revised IPOC
or CIPOC by DMAS or its contractor. When family engagement is not possible, the
therapeutic group home shall collaborate with DMAS or its contractor on a
weekly basis to develop individualized family engagement strategies and
document the revised strategies in the IPOC or CIPOC.
(13) Therapeutic passes shall be provided as clinically
indicated and as paired with facility-based and community-based interventions
and combined treatment services to promote discharge planning, community
integration, and family engagement activities. Twenty-four therapeutic passes
shall be permitted per individual, per admission, without authorization as
approved by the treating LMHP and documented in the CIPOC. Additional
therapeutic leave passes shall require service authorization. Any unauthorized
therapeutic leave passes shall result in retraction for those days of service.
(14) Discharge planning. Beginning at admission and
continuing throughout the individual's stay at the therapeutic group home, the
family or guardian, the community services board (CSB), the family assessment
and planning team (FAPT) case manager, and either the managed care organization
(MCO) or BHSA care manager shall be involved in treatment planning and shall
identify the anticipated needs of the individual and family upon discharge and
available services in the community. Prior to discharge, the therapeutic group
home shall submit an active and viable discharge plan to the BHSA for review.
Once the BHSA approves the discharge plan, the provider shall begin actively
collaborating with the family or legally authorized representative and the
treatment team to identify behavioral health and medical providers and schedule
appointments for service-specific provider intakes as needed. The therapeutic
group home shall request permission from the parent or legally authorized
representative to share treatment information with these providers and shall
share information pursuant to a valid release. The therapeutic group home shall
request information from post-discharge providers to establish that the
planning of pending services and transition planning activities have begun,
shall establish that active transition planning has begun, shall establish that
the individual has been enrolled in school, and shall provide IEP recommendations
to the school if necessary. The therapeutic group home shall inform the BHSA of
all scheduled appointments within 30 days of discharge and shall notify the
BHSA within one business day of the individual's discharge date from the
therapeutic group home.
(2) Authorization is required for Medicaid reimbursement.
Services that are rendered before the date of service authorization shall not
be reimbursed.
(3) (15) Room and board costs shall not be
reimbursed. Facilities that only provide independent living services or
nonclinical services that do not meet the requirements of this subsection
are not reimbursed eligible for reimbursement. DMAS shall
reimburse only for services provided in facilities or programs with no more
than 16 beds.
(4) These residential (16) Therapeutic group home
services providers must shall be licensed by the Department
of Behavioral Health and Developmental Services (DBHDS) under the Regulations
for Children's Residential Facilities (12VAC35-46).
(5) Daily progress notes shall document that a minimum of
seven psychoeducational activities per week occurs. Psychoeducational
programming must include, but is not limited to, development or maintenance of
daily living skills, anger management, social skills, family living skills,
communication skills, and stress management. This service may be provided in a
program setting or a community-based group home.
(6) The individual must receive, at least weekly,
individual psychotherapy and, at least weekly, group psychotherapy that is
provided as part of the program.
(7) (17) Individuals shall be discharged from
this service when treatment goals are met or other less intensive
services may achieve stabilization.
(8) Service-specific provider intakes shall be required at
the onset of services and ISPs shall be required during the entire duration of
services. (18) Services that are based upon incomplete, missing, or
outdated service-specific provider intakes or ISPs CIPOCs shall
be denied reimbursement. Requirements for intakes and ISPs are set out in
12VAC30-60-61.
(9)These (19) Therapeutic group home services
may only be rendered by an LMHP, LMHP-supervisee, LMHP-resident, LMHP-RP, a
QMHP-C, a QMHP-E, or a QPPMH qualified paraprofessional in mental
health.
(10) (20) The facility / or group
home shall coordinate necessary services and discharge planning with
other providers as medically and clinically necessary. Documentation of
this care coordination shall be maintained by the facility / or
group home in the individual's record. The documentation shall include who was
contacted, when the contact occurred, and what information was
transmitted, and recommended next steps.
(21) Failure to perform any of the items described in this
subsection shall result in a retraction of the per diem for each day of
noncompliance.
6. Inpatient psychiatric 3. Residential
treatment facility services shall are a 24-hour, supervised,
clinically and medically necessary out-of-home program designed to provide
necessary support and address mental health, behavioral, substance use,
cognitive, or other treatment needs of an individual younger than the age of 21
years in order to prevent or minimize the need for more intensive inpatient
treatment. Active treatment and comprehensive discharge planning shall begin
prior to admission. In order to be covered for individuals younger
than age 21 for medically necessary stays for the purpose of diagnosis and
treatment of mental health and behavioral disorders identified under EPSDT when
such services are rendered by: these services shall (i) meet
DMAS-approved psychiatric medical necessity criteria or be approved as an EPSDT
service based upon a diagnosis made by an LMHP, LMHP-R, LMHP-RP, or LMHP-S who
is practicing within the scope of his license and (ii) be reflected in provider
records and on the provider's claims for services by recognized diagnosis codes
that support and are consistent with the requested professional services.
a. A psychiatric hospital or an inpatient psychiatric
program in a hospital accredited by the Joint Commission on Accreditation of
Healthcare Organizations; or a psychiatric facility that is accredited by the
Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations, the Commission
on Accreditation of Rehabilitation Facilities, the Council on Accreditation of
Services for Families and Children or the Council on Quality and Leadership.
b. Inpatient psychiatric hospital admissions at general
acute care hospitals and freestanding psychiatric hospitals shall also be
subject to the requirements of 12VAC30-50-100, 12VAC30-50-105, and
12VAC30-60-25. Inpatient psychiatric admissions to residential treatment
facilities shall also be subject to the requirements of Part XIV
(12VAC30-130-850 et seq.) of Amount, Duration and Scope of Selected Services.
c. Inpatient psychiatric services are reimbursable only
when the treatment program is fully in compliance with 42 CFR Part 441 Subpart
D, as contained in 42 CFR 441.151 (a) and (b) and 441.152 through 441.156. Each
admission must be preauthorized and the treatment must meet DMAS requirements
for clinical necessity.
a. Residential treatment facility services shall be covered
for the purpose of diagnosis and treatment of mental health and behavioral
disorders when such services are rendered by:
(1) A psychiatric hospital or an inpatient psychiatric
program in a hospital accredited by the Joint Commission; or a psychiatric
facility that is accredited by the Joint Commission, the Commission on
Accreditation of Rehabilitation Facilities, the Council on Accreditation of
Services for Families and Children, or the Council on Quality and Leadership.
Providers of residential treatment facility services shall be licensed by
DBHDS.
(2) Inpatient psychiatric hospital admissions at general
acute care hospitals and freestanding psychiatric hospitals shall also be
subject to the requirements of 12VAC30-50-100, 12VAC30-50-105, and
12VAC30-60-25. Inpatient psychiatric admissions to residential treatment
facilities shall also be subject to the requirements of 12VAC30-130 (Amount,
Duration and Scope of Selected Services).
(3) Residential treatment facility services are
reimbursable only when the treatment program is fully in compliance with (i)
the Code of Federal Regulations at 42 CFR Part 441 Subpart D, specifically 42
CFR 441.151 (a) and (b) and 42 CFR 441.152 through 42 CFR 441.156 and (ii) the
Conditions of Participation in 42 CFR Part 483 Subpart G. Each admission must
be preauthorized and the treatment must meet DMAS requirements for clinical
necessity.
b. Residential treatment facility services shall
include assessment and re-assessment; room and board; daily supervision;
combined treatment services; individual, family, and group therapy; residential
care coordination; interventions; general or special education; medical
treatment (including medication, coordination of necessary medical services,
and 24-hour onsite nursing); specialty services; and discharge planning that
meets the medical and clinical needs of the individual.
c. Medical necessity criteria for admission to a
psychiatric residential treatment facility. The following requirements for
severity of need and intensity and quality of service shall be met to satisfy
the medical necessity criteria for admission:
(1) Admission - severity of need. The following criteria
shall be met to satisfy the criteria for severity of need:
(a) There is clinical evidence that the patient has a DSM-5
disorder that is amenable to active psychiatric treatment.
(b) There is a high degree of potential of the condition
leading to acute psychiatric hospitalization in the absence of residential
treatment.
(c) Either (i) there is clinical evidence that the
individual would be a risk to self or others if he were not in a residential
treatment program or (ii) as a result of the individual's mental disorder, there
is an inability to adequately care for one's physical needs, and
caretakers/guardians/family members are unable to safely fulfill these needs,
representing potential serious harm to self.
(d) The individual requires supervision seven days per
week, 24 hours per day to develop skills necessary for daily living; to assist
with planning and arranging access to a range of educational, therapeutic, and
aftercare services; and to develop the adaptive and functional behavior that
will allow him to live outside of a residential setting.
(e) The individual's current living environment does not
provide the support and access to therapeutic services needed.
(f) The individual is medically stable and does not require
the 24-hour medical or nursing monitoring or procedures provided in a hospital
level of care.
(2) Admission - intensity and quality of service. The
following criteria shall be met to satisfy the criteria for intensity and
quality of service:
(a) The evaluation and assignment of a DSM-5 diagnosis must
result from a face-to-face psychiatric evaluation.
(b) The program provides supervision seven days per week,
24 hours per day to assist with the development of skills necessary for daily
living; to assist with planning and arranging access to a range of educational,
therapeutic, and aftercare services; and to assist with the development of the
adaptive and functional behavior that will allow the patient to live outside of
a residential setting.
(c) An individualized plan of active psychiatric treatment
and residential living support is provided in a timely manner. This treatment
must be medically monitored, with 24-hour medical availability and 24-hour
nursing services availability. This plan includes (i) at least once-a-week
psychiatric reassessments; (ii) intensive family and/or support system
involvement occurring at least once per week, or identifies valid reasons why
such a plan is not clinically appropriate or feasible; (iii) psychotropic
medications, when used, are to be used with specific target symptoms
identified; (iv) evaluation for current medical problems; (v) evaluation for
concomitant substance use issues; (vi) linkage and/or coordination with the
patient's community resources with the goal of returning the patient to his
regular social environment as soon as possible, unless contraindicated. School
contact should address an individualized educational plan as appropriate.
(d) A urine drug screen is considered at the time of
admission, when progress is not occurring, when substance misuse is suspected,
or when substance use and medications may have a potential adverse interaction.
After a positive screen, additional random screens are considered and referral
to a substance use disorder provider is considered.
(3) Criteria for continued stay. The following criteria
shall be met to satisfy the criteria for continued stay:
(a) Despite reasonable therapeutic efforts, clinical
evidence indicates at least one of the following: (i) the persistence of
problems that caused the admission to a degree that continues to meet the
admission criteria (both severity of need and intensity of service needs); (ii)
the emergence of additional problems that meet the admission criteria (both
severity of need and intensity of service needs); (iii) that disposition planning
and/or attempts at therapeutic re-entry into the community have resulted in or
would result in exacerbation of the psychiatric illness to the degree that
would necessitate continued residential treatment. Subjective opinions without
objective clinical information or evidence are not sufficient to meet severity
of need based on justifying the expectation that there would be a
decompensation.
(b) There is evidence of objective, measurable, and
time-limited therapeutic clinical goals that must be met before the patient can
return to a new or previous living situation. There is evidence that attempts
are being made to secure timely access to treatment resources and housing in
anticipation of discharge, with alternative housing contingency plans also
being addressed.
(c) There is evidence that the treatment plan is focused on
the alleviation of psychiatric symptoms and precipitating psychosocial
stressors that are interfering with the patient's ability to return to a
less-intensive level of care.
(d) The current or revised treatment plan can be reasonably
expected to bring about significant improvement in the problems meeting the
criteria in subdivision 3 c (3) (a) of this subsection, and this is documented
in weekly progress notes written and signed by the provider.
(e) There is evidence of intensive family and/or support
system involvement occurring at least once per week, unless there is an
identified, valid reason why it is not clinically appropriate or feasible.
(f) A discharge plan is formulated that is directly linked
to the behaviors and/or symptoms that resulted in admission, and begins to
identify appropriate post-residential treatment resources.
(g) All applicable elements in admission-intensity and
quality of service criteria are applied as related to assessment and treatment
if clinically relevant and appropriate.
d. The following clinical activities shall be required
for each residential treatment facility resident:
(1) A face-to-face assessment shall be performed by an
LMHP, LMHP-R, LMHP-RS, or LMHP-S within 30 days prior to admission and weekly
thereafter and shall document a DSM-5/ICD-10 diagnosis.
(2) A certificate of need shall be completed by an
independent certification team according to the requirements of 12VAC30-50-130
D 4. Recertification shall occur at least every 30 days by a physician acting
within his scope of practice.
(3) The initial plan of care (IPOC) shall be completed
within 24 hours of admission by the treatment team. The initial plan of care
shall include:
(a) Individual and family strengths and personal traits
that would facilitate recovery and opportunities to develop motivational
strategies and treatment alliance;
(b) Diagnoses, symptoms, complaints, and complications
indicating the need for admission;
(c) A description of the functional level of the
individual;
(d) Treatment objectives with short-term and long-term
goals;
(e) Any orders for medications, psychiatric, medical,
dental, and any special health care needs, whether or not provided in the
facility, education or special education, treatments, interventions,
restorative and rehabilitative services, activities, therapies, social
services, diet, and special procedures recommended for the health and safety of
the individual;
(f) Plans for continuing care, including review and
modification to the plan of care;
(g) Plans for discharge; and
(h) Signature and date by the individual, parent, or
legally authorized representative, a physician, and treatment team members.
(4) The CIPOC shall be completed no later than 14 calendar
days after admission by the treatment team. The residential treatment facility
shall request authorizations from families to release confidential information
to collect information from medical and behavioral health treatment providers,
schools, social services, court services, and other relevant parties. This
information shall be used when considering changes and updating the CIPOC. The
CIPOC shall meet all of the following criteria:
(a) Be based on a diagnostic evaluation that includes
examination of the medical, psychological, social, behavioral, and
developmental aspects of the individual's situation and must reflect the need
for residential treatment facility care;
(b) Be developed by an interdisciplinary team of physicians
and other personnel specified in this subdivision 3 d of this subsection who
are employed by or provide services to the individual in the facility in
consultation with the individual, family member, or legally authorized
representative, or appropriate others into whose care the individual will be
released after discharge;
(c) Shall state treatment objectives that shall include
measurable, evidence-based, short-term and long-term goals and objectives;
family engagement activities; and the design of community-based aftercare with target
dates for achievement;
(d) Prescribe an integrated program of therapies,
interventions, activities, and experiences designed to meet the treatment
objectives related to the individual and family treatment needs; and
(e) Describe comprehensive transition plans and
coordination of current care and post-discharge plans with related community
services to ensure continuity of care upon discharge with the recipient's
family, school, and community.
(5) The CIPOC shall be reviewed every 30 calendar days by the
team specified in this subdivision 3 d of this subsection to determine that
services being provided are or were required from a residential treatment
facility and to recommend changes in the plan as indicated by the individual's
overall adjustment during the time away from home. The CIPOC shall include the
signature and date from the individual, parent, or legally authorized
representative, a physician, and treatment team members.
(6) Individual therapy shall be provided three times
per week (or more frequently based upon the individual's needs) provided by an
LMHP, LMHP-R, LMHP-RP, or LMHP-S and shall be documented in the IPOC, CIPOC,
and progress notes in accordance with the requirements in this subsection.
(7) Group therapy shall be provided as clinically indicated
by an LMHP, LMHP-R, LMHP-RP, or LMHP-S and shall be documented in the IPOC,
CIPOC, and progress notes in accordance with the requirements in this
subsection.
(8) Family therapy shall be provided as clinically
indicated by an LMHP, LMHP-R, LMHP-RP, or LMHP-S and shall be documented in the
IPOC, CIPOC, and progress notes in accordance with the individual and family or
legally authorized representative's goals and the requirements in this
subsection.
(9) Family engagement shall be provided in addition to
family therapy/counseling. Family engagement shall be provided at least weekly
as outlined in the IPOC and CIPOC, and daily communication with the family or
legally authorized representative shall be part of the family engagement
strategies in the IPOC and CIPOC. For each service authorization period
when family engagement is not possible, the psychiatric residential treatment
facility shall identify and document the specific barriers to the individual's
engagement with his family or legally authorized representatives. The
psychiatric residential treatment facility shall document on a weekly basis,
the reasons that family engagement is not occurring as required. The
psychiatric residential treatment facility shall document alternate family
engagement strategies to be used as part of the interventions in the IPOC or
CIPOC and request approval of the revised IPOC or CIPOC by DMAS or its
contractor. When family engagement is not possible, the psychiatric residential
treatment facility shall collaborate with DMAS or its contractor on a weekly
basis to develop individualized family engagement strategies and document the
revised strategies in the IPOC or CIPOC.
(10) Three interventions shall be provided per 24-hour
period including nights and weekends. Family engagement activities are
considered to be an intervention and shall occur based on the treatment and
visitation goals and scheduling needs of the family or legally authorized
representative. Interventions shall be documented on a progress note and shall
be outlined in and aligned with the treatment goals and objectives in the IPOC
and CIPOC. Any deviation from the IPOC or CIPOC shall be documented along with
a clinical or medical justification for the deviation based on the needs of the
individual.
(11) Therapeutic passes shall be provided as clinically
indicated and as paired with community and facility-based interventions and
combined treatment services to promote discharge planning, community
integration, and family engagement. Twenty-four therapeutic passes shall be
permitted per individual, per admission, without authorization as approved by
the treating physician and documented in the CIPOC. Additional therapeutic
leave passes shall require service authorization. Any unauthorized therapeutic
leave passes shall result in retraction for those days of service.
(12) Discharge planning. Beginning at admission and
continuing throughout the individual's placement at the residential treatment
facility, the parent or legally authorized representative, the community
services board (CSB), the family assessment planning team (FAPT) case manager,
if appropriate, and either the managed care organization (MCO) or BHSA care
manager shall be involved in treatment planning and shall identify the
anticipated needs of the individual and family upon discharge and identify the
available services in the community. Prior to discharge, the residential
treatment facility shall submit an active discharge plan to the BHSA for
review. Once the BHSA approves the discharge plan, the provider shall begin
collaborating with the parent or legally authorized representative and the
treatment team to identify behavioral health and medical providers and schedule
appointments for service-specific provider intakes as needed. The residential
treatment facility shall request written permission from the parent or legally
authorized representative to share treatment information with these providers
and shall share information pursuant to a valid release. The residential
treatment facility shall request information from post-discharge providers to
establish that the planning of services and activities has begun, shall
establish that the individual has been enrolled in school, and shall provide
individualized education program (IEP) recommendations to the school if
necessary. The residential treatment facility shall inform the BHSA of all
scheduled appointments within 30 calendar days of discharge and shall notify
the BHSA within one business day of the individual's discharge date from the
residential treatment facility.
(13) Failure to perform any of the items as described in
subdivisions 3 d (1) through 3 d (12) of this subsection up until the discharge
of the individual shall result in a retraction of the per diem and all other
contracted and coordinated service payments for each day of noncompliance.
e. The team developing the CIPOC shall meet the following
requirements:
(1) At least one member of the team must have expertise in
pediatric behavioral health. Based on education and experience, preferably
including competence in child/adolescent psychiatry, the team must be capable
of all of the following: assessing the individual's immediate and long-range
therapeutic needs, developmental priorities, and personal strengths and
liabilities; assessing the potential resources of the individual's family or
legally authorized representative; setting treatment objectives; and
prescribing therapeutic modalities to achieve the plan's objectives.
(2) The team shall include either:
(a) A board-eligible or board-certified psychiatrist;
(b) A licensed clinical psychologist and a physician
licensed to practice medicine or osteopathy; or
(c) A physician licensed to practice medicine or osteopathy
with specialized training and experience in the diagnosis and treatment of
mental diseases and a licensed clinical psychologist.
(3) The team shall also include one of the
following: an LMHP, LMHP-supervisee, LMHP-resident, or LMHP-RP.
4. Requirements applicable to both therapeutic group homes
and residential treatment facilities: independent certification teams.
a. The independent certification team shall certify the
need for residential treatment or therapeutic group home services and issue a
certificate of need document within the process and timeliness standards as approved
by DMAS under contractual agreement with the BHSA.
b. The independent certification team shall be approved by
DMAS through a memorandum of understanding with a locality or be approved under
contractual agreement with the BHSA. The team shall initiate and coordinate
referral to the family assessment and planning team (FAPT) as defined in §§
2.2-5207 and 2.2-5208 of the Code of Virginia to facilitate care coordination
and for consideration of educational coverage and other supports not covered by
DMAS.
c. The independent certification team shall assess the
individual's and family's strengths and needs in addition to diagnoses,
behaviors, and symptoms that indicate the need for behavioral health treatment
and also consider whether local resources and community-based care are
sufficient to meet the individual's treatment needs, as presented within the
previous 30 calendar days, within the least restrictive environment.
d. The LMHP, LMHP-supervisee, LMHP-resident, or LMHP-RP, as
part of the independent certification team, shall meet with an individual and
his parent or legally authorized representative within two business days from a
request to assess the individual's needs and begin the process to certify the
need for an out-of-home placement.
e. The independent certification team shall meet with an
individual and his parent or legally authorized representative within 10
business days from a request to certify the need for an out-of-home placement.
f. The independent certification team shall assess the treatment
needs of the individual to issue a certificate of need (CON) for the most
appropriate medically-necessary services. The certification shall include the
dated signature and credentials for each of the team members who rendered the
certification. Referring or treatment providers shall not actively participate
during the certification process but may provide supporting clinical
documentation to the certification team.
g. The CON shall be effective for 30 calendar days prior to
admission.
h. The independent certification team shall provide the
completed CON to the facility within one calendar day of completing the CON.
i. The individual and his parent or legally authorized
representative shall have the right to freedom of choice of service providers.
j. If the individual or his parent or legally authorized
representative disagrees with the independent certification team's
recommendation, the parent or legally authorized representative may appeal the
recommendation in accordance with 12VAC30-110-10.
k. If the LMHP, as part of the independent certification
team, determines that the individual is in immediate need of treatment, the
LMHP shall refer the individual to an appropriate Medicaid-enrolled emergency
services provider in accordance with 12VAC30-50-226 or shall refer the
individual for emergency admission to a residential treatment facility or
therapeutic group home under subdivision 4 m of this subsection, and shall also
alert the individual's managed care organization.
l. For individuals who are already eligible for Medicaid at
the time of admission, the independent certification team shall be a
DMAS-authorized contractor with competence in the diagnosis and treatment of
mental illness, preferably in child psychiatry, and have knowledge of the individual's
situation and service availability in the individual's local service area. The
team shall be composed of at least one physician and one LMHP, including
LMHP-S, LMHP-R, and LMHP-RP. An individual's parent or legally authorized
representative shall be included in the certification process.
m. For emergency admissions, an assessment must be made by
the team responsible for the comprehensive individual plan of care (CIPOC).
Reimbursement shall only occur when a certificate of need is issued by the team
responsible for the comprehensive individual plan of care within 14 days after
admission. The certification shall cover any period of time after admission and
before for which claims are made for reimbursement by Medicaid. After
processing an emergency admission the residential treatment facility or
institution for mental diseases (IMD) shall notify the BHSA of the individual's
status as being under the care of the facility within five days.
n. For all individuals who apply and become eligible for
Medicaid while an inpatient in a facility or program, the certification team
shall refer the case to the DMAS-contracted BHSA for referral to the local FAPT
to facilitate care coordination and consideration of educational coverage and
other supports not covered by DMAS.
o. For individuals who apply and become eligible for
Medicaid while an inpatient in the facility or program, the certification shall
be made by the team responsible for the comprehensive individual plan of care
and shall cover any period of time before the application for Medicaid
eligibility for which claims are made for reimbursement by Medicaid. Upon the
individual's enrollment into the Medicaid program, the residential treatment
facility or IMD shall notify the BHSA of the individual's status as being under
the care of the facility within five days of the individual becoming eligible
for Medicaid benefits.
5. Requirements applicable to both therapeutic group homes
and residential treatment facilities - service authorization.
a. Authorization shall be required and shall be conducted
by DMAS, its behavioral health services administrator, or its utilization
management contractor using medical necessity criteria specified in this
subsection.
b. An individual shall have a valid psychiatric diagnosis
and meet the medical necessity criteria as defined in this subsection to
satisfy the criteria for admission. The diagnosis shall be current, as
documented within the past 12 months. If a current diagnosis is not available,
the individual will require a mental health evaluation by an LMHP employed or
contracted with the independent certification team to establish a diagnosis,
and recommend and coordinate referral to the available treatment options.
c. At authorization, an initial length of stay shall be agreed
upon by the individual and parent or legally authorized representative with the
treating provider, and the treating provider shall be responsible for
evaluating and documenting evidence of treatment progress, assessing the need
for ongoing out-of-home placement, and obtaining authorization for continued
stay.
d. Information that is required to obtain authorization for
these services shall include:
(1) A completed state-designated uniform assessment
instrument approved by DMAS;
(2) A certificate of need completed by an independent
certification team specifying all of the following:
(a) The ambulatory care and Medicaid or FAPT-funded
services available in the community do not meet the specific treatment needs of
the individual;
(b) Alternative community-based care was not successful;
(c) Proper treatment of the individual's psychiatric
condition requires services in a 24-hour supervised setting under the direction
of a physician; and
(d) The services can reasonably be expected to improve the
individual's condition or prevent further regression so that a more intensive
level of care will not be needed;
(3) Diagnosis as defined in the DSM-5 and based on (i) an
evaluation by a psychiatrist or LMHP that has been completed within 30 days of
admission or (ii) a diagnosis confirmed in writing by an LMHP after review of a
previous evaluation completed within one year of admission;
(4) A description of the individual's behavior during the
seven days immediately prior to admission;
(5) A description of alternate placements and community
mental health and rehabilitation services and traditional behavioral health
services pursued and attempted and the outcomes of each service.
(6) The individual's level of functioning and clinical
stability.
(7) The level of family involvement and supports available.
(8) The initial plan of care (IPOC).
6. Requirements applicable to both therapeutic group homes
and residential treatment facilities - continued stay criteria. For a continued
stay authorization or a reauthorization to occur, the individual shall meet the
medical necessity criteria as defined in this subsection to satisfy the
criteria for continuing care. The length of the authorized stay shall be
determined by DMAS, the behavioral health services administrator, or the utilization
management contractor. A current CIPOC and a current (within 30 days) summary
of progress related to the goals and objectives of the CIPOC shall be submitted
to DMAS, the behavioral health services administrator, or the utilization
management contractor for continuation of the service. The service provider
shall also submit:
a. A state uniform assessment instrument, completed no more
than 30 business days prior to the date of submission;
b. Documentation that the required services have been provided
as defined in the CIPOC;
c. Current (within the last 14 days) information on
progress related to the achievement of all treatment and discharge-related
goals; and
d. A description of the individual's continued impairment
and treatment needs, problem behaviors, family engagement activities,
community-based discharge planning and care coordination, and need for a
residential level of care.
7. Requirements applicable to therapeutic group homes and
residential treatment facilities - EPSDT services. EPSDT services may involve
service modalities not available to other individuals, such as applied
behavioral analysis and neuro-rehabilitative services. Individualized services
to address specific clinical needs identified in an EPSDT screening shall
require authorization by DMAS, a DMAS contractor, or the BHSA. In unique EPSDT
cases, DMAS, the DMAS contractor, or the BHSA may authorize specialized
services beyond the standard therapeutic group home or residential treatment
medical necessity criteria and program requirements, as medically and
clinically indicated to ensure the most appropriate treatment is available to
each individual. Treating service providers authorized to deliver medically
necessary EPSDT services in inpatient settings, therapeutic group homes, and
residential treatment facilities on behalf of a Medicaid-enrolled individual
shall adhere to the individualized interventions and evidence-based progress
measurement criteria described in the CIPOC and approved for reimbursement by
DMAS, the DMAS contractor, or the BHSA. All documentation, independent
certification team, family engagement activity, therapeutic pass, and discharge
planning requirements shall apply to cases approved as EPSDT inpatient,
residential treatment, or therapeutic group home service.
7. 8. Hearing aids shall be reimbursed for
individuals younger than 21 years of age according to medical necessity when
provided by practitioners licensed to engage in the practice of fitting or
dealing in hearing aids under the Code of Virginia.
C. E. School health services.
1. School health assistant services are repealed effective
July 1, 2006.
2. School divisions may provide routine well-child screening
services under the State Plan. Diagnostic and treatment services that are
otherwise covered under early and periodic screening, diagnosis and treatment
services, shall not be covered for school divisions. School divisions to
receive reimbursement for the screenings shall be enrolled with DMAS as clinic
providers.
a. Children enrolled in managed care organizations shall
receive screenings from those organizations. School divisions shall not receive
reimbursement for screenings from DMAS for these children.
b. School-based services are listed in a recipient's
individualized education program (IEP) and covered under one or more of the
service categories described in § 1905(a) of the Social Security Act. These
services are necessary to correct or ameliorate defects of physical or mental
illnesses or conditions.
3. Service providers shall be licensed under the applicable
state practice act or comparable licensing criteria by the Virginia Department
of Education, and shall meet applicable qualifications under 42 CFR Part 440.
Identification of defects, illnesses or conditions and services necessary to
correct or ameliorate them shall be performed by practitioners qualified to
make those determinations within their licensed scope of practice, either as a
member of the IEP team or by a qualified practitioner outside the IEP team.
a. Service providers shall be employed by the school division
or under contract to the school division.
b. Supervision of services by providers recognized in
subdivision 4 of this subsection shall occur as allowed under federal
regulations and consistent with Virginia law, regulations, and DMAS provider
manuals.
c. The services described in subdivision 4 of this subsection
shall be delivered by school providers, but may also be available in the community
from other providers.
d. Services in this subsection are subject to utilization
control as provided under 42 CFR Parts 455 and 456.
e. The IEP shall determine whether or not the services
described in subdivision 4 of this subsection are medically necessary and that
the treatment prescribed is in accordance with standards of medical practice.
Medical necessity is defined as services ordered by IEP providers. The IEP
providers are qualified Medicaid providers to make the medical necessity
determination in accordance with their scope of practice. The services must be
described as to the amount, duration and scope.
4. Covered services include:
a. Physical therapy, occupational therapy and services for
individuals with speech, hearing, and language disorders, performed by, or
under the direction of, providers who meet the qualifications set forth at 42
CFR 440.110. This coverage includes audiology services.
b. Skilled nursing services are covered under 42 CFR 440.60.
These services are to be rendered in accordance to the licensing standards and
criteria of the Virginia Board of Nursing. Nursing services are to be provided
by licensed registered nurses or licensed practical nurses but may be delegated
by licensed registered nurses in accordance with the regulations of the
Virginia Board of Nursing, especially the section on delegation of nursing
tasks and procedures. The licensed practical nurse is under the supervision of
a registered nurse.
(1) The coverage of skilled nursing services shall be of a
level of complexity and sophistication (based on assessment, planning,
implementation and evaluation) that is consistent with skilled nursing services
when performed by a licensed registered nurse or a licensed practical nurse.
These skilled nursing services shall include, but not necessarily be limited to
dressing changes, maintaining patent airways, medication
administration/monitoring and urinary catheterizations.
(2) Skilled nursing services shall be directly and
specifically related to an active, written plan of care developed by a
registered nurse that is based on a written order from a physician, physician
assistant or nurse practitioner for skilled nursing services. This order shall
be recertified on an annual basis.
c. Psychiatric and psychological services performed by
licensed practitioners within the scope of practice are defined under state law
or regulations and covered as physicians' services under 42 CFR 440.50 or
medical or other remedial care under 42 CFR 440.60. These outpatient services
include individual medical psychotherapy, group medical psychotherapy coverage,
and family medical psychotherapy. Psychological and neuropsychological testing
are allowed when done for purposes other than educational diagnosis, school
admission, evaluation of an individual with intellectual or developmental
disability prior to admission to a nursing facility, or any placement issue.
These services are covered in the nonschool settings also. School providers who
may render these services when licensed by the state include psychiatrists,
licensed clinical psychologists, school psychologists, licensed clinical social
workers, professional counselors, psychiatric clinical nurse specialist,
marriage and family therapists, and school social workers.
d. Personal care services are covered under 42 CFR
440.167 and performed by persons qualified under this subsection. The personal
care assistant is supervised by a DMAS recognized school-based health
professional who is acting within the scope of licensure. This practitioner develops
a written plan for meeting the needs of the child, which is implemented by the
assistant. The assistant must have qualifications comparable to those for other
personal care aides recognized by the Virginia Department of Medical Assistance
Services. The assistant performs services such as assisting with toileting,
ambulation, and eating. The assistant may serve as an aide on a specially
adapted school vehicle that enables transportation to or from the school or
school contracted provider on days when the student is receiving a
Medicaid-covered service under the IEP. Children requiring an aide during
transportation on a specially adapted vehicle shall have this stated in the
IEP.
e. Medical evaluation services are covered as physicians'
services under 42 CFR 440.50 or as medical or other remedial care under 42 CFR
440.60. Persons performing these services shall be licensed physicians,
physician assistants, or nurse practitioners. These practitioners shall
identify the nature or extent of a child's medical or other health related
condition.
f. Transportation is covered as allowed under 42 CFR
431.53 and described at State Plan Attachment 3.1-D. Transportation shall be
rendered only by school division personnel or contractors. Transportation is
covered for a child who requires transportation on a specially adapted school
vehicle that enables transportation to or from the school or school contracted
provider on days when the student is receiving a Medicaid-covered service under
the IEP. Transportation shall be listed in the child's IEP. Children requiring
an aide during transportation on a specially adapted vehicle shall have this
stated in the IEP.
g. Assessments are covered as necessary to assess or reassess
the need for medical services in a child's IEP and shall be performed by any of
the above licensed practitioners within the scope of practice. Assessments and
reassessments not tied to medical needs of the child shall not be covered.
5. DMAS will ensure through quality management review that
duplication of services will be monitored. School divisions have a
responsibility to ensure that if a child is receiving additional therapy
outside of the school, that there will be coordination of services to avoid
duplication of service.
D. F. Family planning services and supplies for
individuals of child-bearing age.
1. Service must be ordered or prescribed and directed or
performed within the scope of the license of a practitioner of the healing
arts.
2. Family planning services shall be defined as those services
that delay or prevent pregnancy. Coverage of such services shall not include
services to treat infertility nor services to promote fertility.
12VAC30-60-5. Applicability of utilization review requirements.
A. These utilization requirements shall apply to all Medicaid
covered services unless otherwise specified.
B. Some Medicaid covered services require an approved service
authorization prior to service delivery in order for reimbursement to occur.
1. To obtain service authorization, all providers' information
supplied to the Department of Medical Assistance Services (DMAS), service
authorization contractor, or the behavioral health service authorization
contractor shall be fully substantiated throughout individuals' medical
records.
2. Providers shall be required to maintain documentation
detailing all relevant information about the Medicaid individuals who are in
providers' care. Such documentation shall fully disclose the extent of services
provided in order to support providers' claims for reimbursement for services
rendered. This documentation shall be written, signed, and dated at the time
the services are rendered unless specified otherwise.
C. DMAS, or its designee, shall perform reviews of the
utilization of all Medicaid covered services pursuant to 42 CFR 440.260
and 42 CFR Part 456.
D. DMAS shall recover expenditures made for covered services
when providers' documentation does not comport with standards specified in all
applicable regulations.
E. Providers who are determined not to be in compliance with
DMAS requirements shall be subject to 12VAC30-80-130 for the repayment of those
overpayments to DMAS.
F. Utilization review requirements specific to community
mental health services, as set out in 12VAC30-50-130 and 12VAC30-50-226, shall be
as follows:
1. To apply to be reimbursed as a Medicaid provider, the
required Department of Behavioral Health and Developmental Services (DBHDS)
license shall be either a full, annual, triennial, or conditional license.
Providers must be enrolled with DMAS or the BHSA behavioral health
services administrator (BHSA) to be reimbursed. Once a health care entity
has been enrolled as a provider, it shall maintain, and update periodically as
DMAS requires, a current Provider Enrollment Agreement for each Medicaid
service that the provider offers.
2. Health care entities with provisional licenses shall not be
reimbursed as Medicaid providers of community mental health services.
3. Payments shall not be permitted to health care entities
that either hold provisional licenses or fail to enter into a Medicaid Provider
Enrollment Agreement including a BHSA contract for a service prior to
rendering that service.
4. The DMAS-contracted behavioral health service
authorization contractor services administrator shall apply a
national standardized set of medical necessity criteria in use in the industry,
such as McKesson InterQual Criteria, or an equivalent standard authorized
in advance by DMAS. Services that fail to meet medical necessity criteria shall
be denied service authorization.
5. For purposes of Medicaid reimbursement for services
provided by staff in residency, the following terms shall be used after their
signatures to indicate such status:
a. LMHP-Rs shall use the term "Resident" after
their signatures.
b. LMHP-RPs shall use the term "Resident in
Psychology" after their signatures.
c. LMHP-Ss shall use the term "Supervisee in Social
Work" after their signatures.
12VAC30-60-50. Utilization control: Intermediate Care
Facilities care facilities for the Mentally Retarded (ICF/MR)
persons with intellectual and developmental disabilities and Institutions
institutions for Mental Disease mental disease (IMD).
A. "Institution for mental disease" or
"IMD" means the same as that term is defined in the Social Security
Act, § 1905(i).
A. B. With respect to each Medicaid-eligible
resident in an ICF/MR intermediate care facility for persons with
intellectual and developmental disabilities (ICF/ID) or IMD in Virginia, a
written plan of care must be developed prior to admission to or authorization
of benefits in such facility, and a regular program of independent professional
review (including a medical evaluation) shall be completed periodically for
such services. The purpose of the review is to determine: the adequacy of the services
available to meet his current health needs and promote his maximum physical
well being; the necessity and desirability of his continued placement in the
facility; and the feasibility of meeting his health care needs through
alternative institutional or noninstitutional services. Long-term care of
residents in such facilities will be provided in accordance with federal law
that is based on the resident's medical and social needs and requirements.
B. C. With respect to each ICF/MR ICF/ID
or IMD, periodic on-site onsite inspections of the care being
provided to each person receiving medical assistance, by one or more
independent professional review teams (composed of a physician or registered
nurse and other appropriate health and social service personnel), shall be
conducted. The review shall include, with respect to each recipient, a
determination of the adequacy of the services available to meet his current
health needs and promote his maximum physical well-being, the necessity and
desirability of continued placement in the facility, and the feasibility of
meeting his health care needs through alternative institutional or
noninstitutional services. Full reports shall be made to the state agency by
the review team of the findings of each inspection, together with any
recommendations.
C. D. In order for reimbursement to be made to
a facility for the mentally retarded persons with intellectual and
developmental disabilities, the resident must meet criteria for placement
in such facility as described in 12VAC30-60-360 and the facility must provide
active treatment for mental retardation intellectual or developmental
disabilities.
D. E. In each case for which payment for
nursing facility services for the mentally retarded persons with
intellectual or developmental disabilities or institution for mental
disease services is made under the State Plan:
1. A physician must certify for each applicant or recipient
that inpatient care is needed in a facility for the mentally retarded or an
institution for mental disease. A certificate of need shall be completed
by an independent certification team according to the requirements of
12VAC30-50-130 D 5. Recertification shall occur at least every 60 days by a
physician, or by a physician assistant or nurse practitioner acting within
their scope of practice as defined by state law and under the supervision of a
physician. The certification must be made at the time of admission or, if
an individual applies for assistance while in the facility, before the Medicaid
agency authorizes payment; and
2. A physician, or physician assistant or nurse practitioner
acting within the scope of the practice as defined by state law and under the
supervision of a physician, must recertify for each applicant at least every 365
60 days that services are needed in a facility for the mentally
retarded persons with intellectual disability or institution for
mental disease.
E. F. When a resident no longer meets criteria
for facilities for the mentally retarded persons with intellectual or
developmental disabilities, or an institution for mental disease or no
longer requires active treatment in a facility for the mentally retarded
persons with intellectual or developmental disabilities, then the
resident must shall be discharged.
F. G. All services provided in an IMD and in
an ICF/MR ICF/ID shall be provided in accordance with guidelines
found in the Virginia Medicaid Nursing Home Manual.
H. All services provided in an IMD shall be provided with
the applicable provider agreement and all documents referenced therein.
I. Psychiatric services in IMDs shall only be covered for
eligible individuals younger than 21 years of age.
J. IMD services provided without service authorization
shall not be covered.
K. Absence of any of the required IMD documentation shall
result in denial or retraction of reimbursement.
L. In each case for which payment for IMD services is made
under the State Plan:
1. A physician shall certify at the time of admission, or
at the time the IMD is notified of an individuals' retroactive eligibility
status, that the individual requires or required inpatient services in an IMD
consistent with 42 CFR 456.160.
2. The physician or physician assistant or nurse
practitioner acting within the scope of practice as defined by state law and
under the supervision of a physician, shall recertify at least every 60 days
that the individual continues to require inpatient services in an IMD.
3. Before admission to an IMD or before authorization
for payment, the attending physician or staff physician shall perform a medical
evaluation of the individual, and appropriate personnel shall complete a
psychiatric and social evaluation as described in 42 CFR 456.170.
4. Before admission to a residential treatment facility or
before authorization for payment, the attending physician or staff physician
shall establish a written plan of care for each individual as described in 42
CFR 441.155 and 42 CFR 456.180.
M. It shall be documented that the individual requiring
admission to an IMD is younger than 21 years of age, that treatment is
medically necessary, and that the necessity was identified as a result of an
independent certification of need team review. Required documentation shall
include the following:
1. Diagnosis, as defined in the Diagnostic and Statistical
Manual of Mental Disorders, Fifth Edition 2013, American Psychiatric
Association, and based on an evaluation by a psychiatrist completed within 30
days of admission or if the diagnosis is confirmed, in writing, by a previous
evaluation completed within one year within admission.
2. A certification of the need for services as defined in
42 CFR 441.152 by an interdisciplinary team meeting the requirements of 42
CFR 441.153 or 42 CFR 441.156 and the Psychiatric Treatment of Minors Act (§
16.1-335 et seq. of the Code of Virginia).
N. The use of seclusion and restraint in an IMD shall be
in accordance with 42 CFR 483.350 through 42 CFR 483.376. Each use of a
seclusion or restraint, as defined in 42 CFR 483.350 through 42 CFR 483.376,
shall be reported by the service provider to DMAS or the BHSA within one
calendar day of the incident.
12VAC30-60-61. Services related to the Early and Periodic
Screening, Diagnosis and Treatment Program (EPSDT); community mental health
services for children.
A. Definitions. The following words and terms when used in
this section shall have the following meanings unless the context indicates
otherwise:
"At risk" means one or more of the following: (i)
within the two weeks before the intake, the individual shall be screened by an
LMHP for escalating behaviors that have put either the individual or others at
immediate risk of physical injury; (ii) the parent/guardian is unable to manage
the individual's mental, behavioral, or emotional problems in the home and is
actively, within the past two to four weeks, seeking an out-of-home placement;
(iii) a representative of either a juvenile justice agency, a department of
social services (either the state agency or local agency), a community services
board/behavioral health authority, the Department of Education, or an LMHP, as
defined in 12VAC35-105-20, and who is neither an employee of nor consultant to
the intensive in-home (IIH) services or therapeutic day treatment (TDT)
provider, has recommended an out-of-home placement absent an immediate change
of behaviors and when unsuccessful mental health services are evident; (iv) the
individual has a history of unsuccessful services (either crisis intervention,
crisis stabilization, outpatient psychotherapy, outpatient substance abuse
services, or mental health support) within the past 30 days; (v) the treatment
team or family assessment planning team (FAPT) recommends IIH services or TDT
for an individual currently who is either: (a) transitioning out of residential
treatment facility Level C services, (b) transitioning out of a therapeutic
group home Level A or B services, (c) transitioning out of acute
psychiatric hospitalization, or (d) transitioning between foster homes, mental
health case management, crisis intervention, crisis stabilization, outpatient
psychotherapy, or outpatient substance abuse services.
"Clinical experience" means providing direct
behavioral health services on a full-time basis or equivalent hours of
part-time work to children and adolescents who have diagnoses of mental illness
and includes supervised internships, supervised practicums, and supervised
field experience for the purpose of Medicaid reimbursement of (i) intensive
in-home services, (ii) therapeutic day treatment for children and adolescents,
and (iii) therapeutic group homes. Experience shall not include unsupervised
internships, unsupervised practicums, or unsupervised field experience. The
equivalency of part-time hours to full-time hours for the purpose of this
requirement shall be as established by DBHDS in the document entitled
"Human Services and Related Fields Approved Degrees/Experience"
issued March 12, 2013, revised May 3, 2013.
"Failed services" or "unsuccessful
services" means, as measured by ongoing behavioral, mental, or physical
distress, that the service or services did not treat or resolve the
individual's mental health or behavioral issues.
"Individual" means the Medicaid-eligible person
receiving these services and for the purpose of this section includes children
from birth up to 12 years of age or adolescents ages 12 through 20 years.
"New service" means a community mental health
rehabilitation service for which the individual does not have a current service
authorization in effect as of July 17, 2011.
"Out-of-home placement" means placement in one or
more of the following: (i) either a Level A or Level B therapeutic
group home; (ii) regular foster home if the individual is currently residing
with his biological family and, due to his behavior problems, is at risk of
being placed in the custody of the local department of social services; (iii)
treatment foster care if the individual is currently residing with his
biological family or a regular foster care family and, due to the individual's
behavioral problems, is at risk of removal to a higher level of care; (iv) Level
C residential treatment facility; (v) emergency shelter for the
individual only due either to his mental health or behavior or both; (vi)
psychiatric hospitalization; or (vii) juvenile justice system or incarceration.
"Progress notes" means individual-specific
documentation that contains the unique differences particular to the
individual's circumstances, treatment, and progress that is also signed and
contemporaneously dated by the provider's professional staff who have prepared
the notes. Individualized and individual-specific progress notes are part of
the minimum documentation requirements and shall convey the individual's
status, staff interventions, and, as appropriate, the individual's progress or
lack of progress toward goals and objectives in the ISP. The progress notes
shall also include, at a minimum, the name of the service rendered, the date of
the service rendered, the signature and credentials of the person who rendered
the service, the setting in which the service was rendered, and the amount of
time or units/hours required to deliver the service. The content of each
progress note shall corroborate the time/units billed. Progress notes shall be
documented for each service that is billed.
"Service-specific provider intake" means the
evaluation that is conducted according to the Department of Medical Assistance
Services (DMAS) intake definition set out in 12VAC30-50-130.
B. The services described in this section shall be rendered
consistent with the definitions, service limits, and requirements described in
this section and in 12VAC30-50-130.
C. Intensive in-home (IIH) services for children and
adolescents.
1. The service definition for intensive in-home (IIH) services
is contained in 12VAC30-50-130.
2. Individuals qualifying for this service shall demonstrate a
clinical necessity for the service arising from mental, behavioral or emotional
illness which results in significant functional impairments in major life
activities. Individuals must meet at least two of the following criteria on a
continuing or intermittent basis to be authorized for these services:
a. Have difficulty in establishing or maintaining normal
interpersonal relationships to such a degree that they are at risk of
hospitalization or out-of-home placement because of conflicts with family or
community.
b. Exhibit such inappropriate behavior that documented,
repeated interventions by the mental health, social services or judicial system
are or have been necessary.
c. Exhibit difficulty in cognitive ability such that they are
unable to recognize personal danger or recognize significantly inappropriate
social behavior.
3. Prior to admission, an appropriate service-specific
provider intake, as defined in 12VAC30-50-130, shall be conducted by the
licensed mental health professional (LMHP), LMHP-supervisee, LMHP-resident, or
LMHP-RP, documenting the individual's diagnosis and describing how service
needs can best be met through intervention provided typically but not solely in
the individual's residence. The service-specific provider intake shall describe
how the individual's clinical needs put the individual at risk of out-of-home
placement and shall be conducted face-to-face in the individual's residence.
Claims for services that are based upon service-specific provider intakes that
are incomplete, outdated (more than 12 months old), or missing shall not be
reimbursed.
4. An individual service plan (ISP) shall be fully completed,
signed, and dated by either an LMHP, LMHP-supervisee, LMHP-resident, LMHP-RP, a
QMHP-C, or a QMHP-E and the individual and individual's parent/guardian within
30 days of initiation of services. The ISP shall meet all of the requirements
as defined in 12VAC30-50-226.
5. DMAS shall not reimburse for dates of services in which the
progress notes are not individualized and child-specific. Duplicated progress
notes shall not constitute the required child-specific individualized progress
notes. Each progress note shall demonstrate unique differences particular to
the individual's circumstances, treatment, and progress. Claim payments shall
be retracted for services that are supported by documentation that does not
demonstrate unique differences particular to the individual.
6. Services shall be directed toward the treatment of the
eligible individual and delivered primarily in the family's residence with the
individual present. As clinically indicated, the services may be rendered
in the community if there is documentation, on that date of service, of the
necessity of providing services in the community. The documentation shall
describe how the alternative community service location supports the identified
clinical needs of the individual and describe how it facilitates the
implementation of the ISP. For services provided outside of the home, there
shall be documentation reflecting therapeutic treatment as set forth in the ISP
provided for that date of service in the appropriately signed and dated
progress notes.
7. These services shall be provided when the clinical needs of
the individual put him at risk for out-of-home placement, as these terms are
defined in this section:
a. When services that are far more intensive than outpatient
clinic care are required to stabilize the individual in the family situation,
or
b. When the individual's residence as the setting for services
is more likely to be successful than a clinic.
The service-specific provider intake shall describe how the
individual meets either subdivision a or b of this subdivision.
8. Services shall not be provided if the individual is no
longer a resident of the home.
9. Services shall also be used to facilitate the transition to
home from an out-of-home placement when services more intensive than outpatient
clinic care are required for the transition to be successful. The individual
and responsible parent/guardian shall be available and in agreement to
participate in the transition.
10. At least one parent/legal guardian or responsible adult
with whom the individual is living must be willing to participate in the
intensive in-home services with the goal of keeping the individual with the
family. In the instance of this service, a responsible adult shall be an adult
who lives in the same household with the child and is responsible for engaging
in therapy and service-related activities to benefit the individual.
11. The enrolled service provider shall be licensed by the Department
of Behavioral Health and Developmental Services (DBHDS) as a provider of
intensive in-home services. The provider shall also have a provider enrollment
agreement with DMAS or its contractor in effect prior to the delivery of this
service that indicates that the provider will offer intensive in-home services.
12. Services must only be provided by an LMHP,
LMHP-supervisee, LMHP-resident, LMHP-RP, QMHP-C, or QMHP-E. Reimbursement shall
not be provided for such services when they have been rendered by a QPPMH as
defined in 12VAC35-105-20.
13. The billing unit for intensive in-home service shall be
one hour. Although the pattern of service delivery may vary, intensive in-home
services is an intensive service provided to individuals for whom there is an ISP
in effect which demonstrates the need for a minimum of three hours a week of
intensive in-home service, and includes a plan for service provision of a
minimum of three hours of service delivery per individual/family per week in
the initial phase of treatment. It is expected that the pattern of service
provision may show more intensive services and more frequent contact with the
individual and family initially with a lessening or tapering off of intensity
toward the latter weeks of service. Service plans shall incorporate an
individualized discharge plan that describes transition from intensive in-home
to less intensive or nonhome based services.
14. The ISP, as defined in 12VAC30-50-226, shall be updated as
the individual's needs and progress changes and signed by either the parent or
legal guardian and the individual. Documentation shall be provided if the
individual, who is a minor child, is unable or unwilling to sign the ISP. If
there is a lapse in services that is greater than 31 consecutive calendar days
without any communications from family members/legal guardian or the individual
with the service provider, the provider shall discharge the individual. If the
individual continues to need services, then a new intake/admission shall be
documented and a new service authorization shall be required.
15. The provider shall ensure that the maximum
staff-to-caseload ratio fully meets the needs of the individual.
16. If an individual receiving services is also receiving case
management services pursuant to 12VAC30-50-420 or 12VAC30-50-430,
the service provider shall contact the case manager and provide
notification of the provision of services. In addition, the provider shall send
monthly updates to the case manager on the individual's status. A discharge
summary shall be sent to the case manager within 30 days of the service
discontinuation date. Service providers and case managers who are using the
same electronic health record for the individual shall meet requirements for
delivery of the notification, monthly updates, and discharge summary upon entry
of the information in the electronic health records.
17. Emergency assistance shall be available 24 hours per day,
seven days a week.
18. Providers shall comply with DMAS marketing requirements at
12VAC30-130-2000. Providers that DMAS determines violate these marketing
requirements shall be terminated as a Medicaid provider pursuant to
12VAC30-130-2000 E.
19. The provider shall determine who the primary care provider
is and, upon receiving written consent from the individual or guardian, shall
inform him of the individual's receipt of IIH services. The documentation shall
include who was contacted, when the contact occurred, and what information was
transmitted.
D. Therapeutic day treatment for children and adolescents.
1. The service definition for therapeutic day treatment (TDT)
for children and adolescents is contained in 12VAC30-50-130.
2. Therapeutic day treatment is appropriate for children and
adolescents who meet one of the following:
a. Children and adolescents who require year-round treatment
in order to sustain behavior or emotional gains.
b. Children and adolescents whose behavior and emotional
problems are so severe they cannot be handled in self-contained or resource
emotionally disturbed (ED) classrooms without:
(1) This programming during the school day; or
(2) This programming to supplement the school day or school
year.
c. Children and adolescents who would otherwise be placed on
homebound instruction because of severe emotional/behavior problems that
interfere with learning.
d. Children and adolescents who (i) have deficits in social
skills, peer relations or dealing with authority; (ii) are hyperactive; (iii)
have poor impulse control; (iv) are extremely depressed or marginally connected
with reality.
e. Children in preschool enrichment and early intervention
programs when the children's emotional/behavioral problems are so severe that
they cannot function in these programs without additional services.
3. The service-specific provider intake shall document the
individual's behavior and describe how the individual meets these specific
service criteria in subdivision 2 of this subsection.
4. Prior to admission to this service, a service-specific
provider intake shall be conducted by the LMHP as defined in 12VAC35-105-20.
5. An ISP shall be fully completed, signed, and dated by an
LMHP, LMHP-supervisee, LMHP-resident, LMHP-RP, a QMHP-C, or QMHP-E and by the
individual or the parent/guardian within 30 days of initiation of services and
shall meet all requirements of an ISP as defined in 12VAC30-50-226. Individual
progress notes shall be required for each contact with the individual and shall
meet all of the requirements as defined in 12VAC30-50-130 12VAC30-60-61.
6. Such services shall not duplicate those services provided
by the school.
7. Individuals qualifying for this service shall demonstrate a
clinical necessity for the service arising from a condition due to mental,
behavioral or emotional illness which results in significant functional
impairments in major life activities. Individuals shall meet at least two of
the following criteria on a continuing or intermittent basis:
a. Have difficulty in establishing or maintaining normal
interpersonal relationships to such a degree that they are at risk of
hospitalization or out-of-home placement because of conflicts with family or
community.
b. Exhibit such inappropriate behavior that documented,
repeated interventions by the mental health, social services, or judicial
system are or have been necessary.
c. Exhibit difficulty in cognitive ability such that they are
unable to recognize personal danger or recognize significantly inappropriate
social behavior.
8. The enrolled provider of therapeutic day treatment for
child and adolescent services shall be licensed by DBHDS to provide day support
services. The provider shall also have a provider enrollment agreement in
effect with DMAS prior to the delivery of this service that indicates that the
provider offers therapeutic day treatment services for children and
adolescents.
9. Services shall be provided by an LMHP, LMHP-supervisee,
LMHP-resident, LMHP-RP, QMHP-C or QMHP-E.
10. The minimum staff-to-individual ratio as defined by DBHDS
licensing requirements shall ensure that adequate staff is available to meet
the needs of the individual identified on the ISP.
11. The program shall operate a minimum of two hours per day
and may offer flexible program hours (i.e., before or after school or during
the summer). One unit of service shall be defined as a minimum of two hours but
less than three hours in a given day. Two units of service shall be defined as
a minimum of three but less than five hours in a given day. Three units of
service shall be defined as five or more hours of service in a given day.
12. Time required for academic instruction when no treatment
activity is going on shall not be included in the billing unit.
13. Services shall be provided following a service-specific
provider intake that is conducted by an LMHP, LMHP-supervisee, LMHP-resident,
or LMHP-RP. An LMHP, LMHP-supervisee, or LMHP-resident shall make and document
the diagnosis. The service-specific provider intake shall include the elements
as defined in 12VAC30-50-130.
14. If an individual receiving services is also receiving case
management services pursuant to 12VAC30-50-420 or 12VAC30-50-430, the provider
shall collaborate with the case manager and provide notification of the
provision of services. In addition, the provider shall send monthly updates to
the case manager on the individual's status. A discharge summary shall be sent
to the case manager within 30 days of the service discontinuation date. Service
providers and case managers using the same electronic health record for the
individual shall meet requirements for delivery of the notification, monthly
updates, and discharge summary upon entry of this documentation into the
electronic health record.
15. The provider shall determine who the primary care provider
is and, upon receiving written consent from the individual or parent/legal
guardian, shall inform him of the child's receipt of community mental health
rehabilitative services. The documentation shall include who was contacted,
when the contact occurred, and what information was transmitted. The
parent/legal guardian shall be required to give written consent that this
provider has permission to inform the primary care provider of the child's or adolescent's
receipt of community mental health rehabilitative services.
16. Providers shall comply with DMAS marketing requirements as
set out in 12VAC30-130-2000. Providers that DMAS determines have violated these
marketing requirements shall be terminated as a Medicaid provider pursuant to
12VAC30-130-2000 E.
17. If there is a lapse in services greater than 31
consecutive calendar days, the provider shall discharge the individual. If the
individual continues to need services, a new intake/admission documentation
shall be prepared and a new service authorization shall be required.
E. Community-based services
for children and adolescents under 21 years of age (Level A).
1. The staff ratio must be at least 1 to 6 during the day
and at least 1 to 10 between 11 p.m. and 7 a.m. The program director
supervising the program/group home must be, at minimum, a QMHP-C or QMHP-E (as
defined in 12VAC35-105-20). The program director must be employed full time.
2. In order for Medicaid reimbursement to be approved, at least
50% of the provider's direct care staff at the group home must meet DBHDS
paraprofessional staff criteria, defined in 12VAC35-105-20.
3. Authorization is required for Medicaid reimbursement.
All community-based services for children and adolescents under 21 (Level A)
require authorization prior to reimbursement for these services. Reimbursement
shall not be made for this service when other less intensive services may
achieve stabilization.
4. Services must be provided in accordance with an
individual service plan (ISP), which must be fully completed within 30 days of
authorization for Medicaid reimbursement.
5. Prior to admission, a service-specific provider intake
shall be conducted according to DMAS specifications described in
12VAC30-50-130.
6. Such service-specific provider intakes shall be
performed by an LMHP, an LMHP-supervisee, LMHP-resident, or LMHP-RP.
7. If an individual receiving community-based services for
children and adolescents under 21 (Level A) is also receiving case management
services, the provider shall collaborate with the case manager by notifying the
case manager of the provision of Level A services and shall send monthly
updates on the individual's progress. When the individual is discharged from
Level A services, a discharge summary shall be sent to the case manager within
30 days of the service discontinuation date. Service providers and case
managers who are using the same electronic health record for the individual
shall meet requirements for the delivery of the notification, monthly updates,
and discharge summary upon entry of this documentation into the electronic
health record.
F. E. Therapeutic behavioral services group
home for children and adolescents under 21 years of age (Level B).
1. The staff ratio must be at least 1 to 4 during the day
and at least 1 to 8 between 11 p.m. and 7 a.m. approved by the
Office of Licensure at the Department of Behavioral Health and Developmental
Services. The clinical director must shall be a licensed
mental health professional. The caseload of the clinical director must not
exceed 16 individuals including all sites for which the same clinical director
is responsible.
2. The program director must shall be full time
and be a QMHP-C or QMHP-E with a bachelor's degree and at least one year's
clinical experience.
3. For Medicaid reimbursement to be approved, at least 50% of
the provider's direct care staff at the therapeutic group home shall
meet DBHDS paraprofessional staff qualified paraprofessional in
mental health (QPPMH) criteria, as defined in 12VAC35-105-20. The program/group
therapeutic group home must shall coordinate services with
other providers.
4. All therapeutic behavioral group home
services (Level B) shall be authorized prior to reimbursement for these
services. Services rendered without such prior authorization shall not be
covered.
5. Services must be provided in accordance with an ISP a
CIPOC, as defined in 12VAC30-50-130, which shall be fully completed within
30 days of authorization for Medicaid reimbursement.
6. Prior to admission, a service-specific provider intake
shall be performed using all elements specified by DMAS in 12VAC30-50-130.
7. Such service-specific provider intakes shall be performed
by an LMHP, an LMHP-supervisee, LMHP-resident, or LMHP-RP.
8. If an individual receiving therapeutic behavioral group
home services for children and adolescents under 21 (Level B) is
also receiving case management services, the therapeutic behavioral group
home services provider must collaborate with the care coordinator/case
manager by notifying him of the provision of Level B therapeutic
group home services and the Level B therapeutic group home
services provider shall send monthly updates on the individual's treatment
status. When the individual is discharged from Level B services, a discharge
summary shall be sent to the care coordinator/case manager within 30 days of
the discontinuation date.
9. The provider shall determine who the primary care provider
is and, upon receiving written consent from the individual or parent/legal
guardian parent or legally authorized representative, shall inform
him of the individual's receipt of these Level B therapeutic group
home services. The documentation shall include who was contacted, when the
contact occurred, and what information was transmitted. If these individuals
are children or adolescents, then the parent/legal guardian parent or
legally authorized representative shall be required to give written consent
that this provider has permission to inform the primary care provider of the
individual's receipt of community mental health rehabilitative services.
G. Utilization review. Utilization reviews for
community-based therapeutic group home services for children and adolescents
under 21 years of age (Level A) and therapeutic behavioral services for
children and adolescents under 21 years of age (Level B) shall include
determinations whether providers meet all DMAS requirements, including
compliance with DMAS marketing requirements. Providers that DMAS determines
have violated the DMAS marketing requirements shall be terminated as a Medicaid
provider pursuant to 12VAC30-130-2000 E.
DOCUMENTS INCORPORATED BY REFERENCE (12VAC30-60)
Department of Medical Assistance Services Provider Manuals (https://www.virginiamedicaid.dmas.virginia.gov/wps/portal/ProviderManuals):
Virginia Medicaid Nursing Home Manual
Virginia Medicaid Rehabilitation Manual
Virginia Medicaid Hospice Manual
Virginia Medicaid School Division Manual
Development of Special Criteria for the Purposes
of Pre-Admission Screening, Medicaid Memo, October 3, 2012, Department of
Medical Assistance Services
Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fourth
Edition (DSM-IV-TR), copyright 2000, American Psychiatric Association
Patient Placement Criteria for the Treatment of
Substance-Related Disorders (ASAM PPC-2R), Second Edition, copyright 2001,
American Society on Addiction Medicine, Inc.
Medicaid Special Memo, Subject: New Service
Authorization Requirement for an Independent Clinical Assessment for Medicaid
and FAMIS Children's Community Mental Health Rehabilitative Services, dated
June 16, 2011, Department of Medical Assistance Services
Medicaid Special Memo, Subject: Changes to
Children Community Mental Health Rehabilitative Services - Children's Services,
July 1, 2010 & September 1, 2010, dated July 23, 2010, Department of
Medical Assistance Services
Medicaid Special Memo, Subject: Changes to
Community Mental Health Rehabilitative Services - Adult-Oriented Services, July
1, 2010 & September 1, 2010, dated July 23, 2010, Department of Medical
Assistance Services
Human
Services and Related Fields Approved Degrees/Experience, updated May 3, 2013,
Department of Behavioral Health and Human Services
Part XIV
Residential Psychiatric Treatment for Children and Adolescents (Repealed)
12VAC30-130-850. Definitions. (Repealed.)
The following words and terms when used in this part shall
have the following meanings, unless the context clearly indicates otherwise:
"Active treatment" means implementation of a
professionally developed and supervised individual plan of care that must be
designed to achieve the recipient's discharge from inpatient status at the
earliest possible time.
"Certification" means a statement signed by a
physician that inpatient services in a residential treatment facility are or
were needed. The certification must be made at the time of admission, or, if an
individual applies for assistance while in a mental hospital or residential
treatment facility, before the Medicaid agency authorizes payment.
"Comprehensive individual plan of care" or
"CIPOC" means a written plan developed for each recipient in
accordance with 12VAC30-130-890 to improve his condition to the extent that
inpatient care is no longer necessary.
"Initial plan of care" means a plan of care
established at admission, signed by the attending physician or staff physician,
that meets the requirements in 12VAC30-130-890.
"Recertification" means a certification for each
applicant or recipient that inpatient services in a residential treatment
facility are needed. Recertification must be made at least every 60 days by a
physician, or physician assistant or nurse practitioner acting within the scope
of practice as defined by state law and under the supervision of a physician.
"Recipient" or "recipients" means the
child or adolescent younger than 21 years of age receiving this covered
service.
12VAC30-130-860. Service coverage; eligible individuals;
service certification. (Repealed.)
A. Residential treatment programs (Level C) shall be
24-hour, supervised, medically necessary, out-of-home programs designed to
provide necessary support and address the special mental health and behavioral
needs of a child or adolescent in order to prevent or minimize the need for
more intensive inpatient treatment. Services must include, but shall not be
limited to, assessment and evaluation, medical treatment (including drugs),
individual and group counseling, and family therapy necessary to treat the child.
B. Residential treatment programs (Level C) shall provide
a total, 24 hours per day, specialized form of highly organized, intensive and
planned therapeutic interventions that shall be utilized to treat some of the
most severe mental, emotional, and behavioral disorders. Residential treatment
is a definitive therapeutic modality designed to deliver specified results for
a defined group of problems for children or adolescents for whom outpatient day
treatment or other less intrusive levels of care are not appropriate, and for
whom a protected, structured milieu is medically necessary for an extended
period of time.
C. Therapeutic Behavioral Services for Children and
Adolescents under 21 (Level B) and Community-Based Services for Children and
Adolescents under 21 (Level A) must be therapeutic services rendered in a
residential type setting such as a group home or program that provides
structure for daily activities, psychoeducation, therapeutic supervision and
mental health care to ensure the attainment of therapeutic mental health goals
as identified in the individual service plan (plan of care). The child or
adolescent must have a medical need for the service arising from a condition
due to mental, behavioral or emotional illness that results in significant
functional impairments in major life activities.
D. Active treatment shall be required. Residential
Treatment, Therapeutic Behavioral and Community-Based Services for Children and
Adolescents under age 21 shall be designed to serve the mental health needs of
children. In order to be reimbursed for Residential Treatment (Level C),
Therapeutic Behavioral Services for Children and Adolescents under 21 (Level
B), and Community-Based Services for Children and Adolescents under 21 (Level
A), the facility must provide active mental health treatment beginning at
admission and it must be related to the recipient's principle diagnosis and
admitting symptoms. To the extent that any recipient needs mental health
treatment and his needs meet the medical necessity criteria for the service, he
will be approved for these services. These services do not include
interventions and activities designed only to meet the supportive nonmental
health special needs, including but not limited to personal care, habilitation
or academic educational needs of the recipients.
E. An individual eligible for Residential Treatment
Services (Level C) is a recipient under the age of 21 years whose treatment
needs cannot be met by ambulatory care resources available in the community,
for whom proper treatment of his psychiatric condition requires services on an
inpatient basis under the direction of a physician.
An individual eligible for Therapeutic Behavioral Services
for Children and Adolescents under 21 (Level B) is a child, under the age of 21
years, for whom proper treatment of his psychiatric condition requires less
intensive treatment in a structured, therapeutic residential program under the
direction of a Licensed Mental Health Professional.
An individual eligible for Community-Based Services for
Children and Adolescents under 21 (Level A) is a child, under the age of 21
years, for whom proper treatment of his psychiatric condition requires less
intensive treatment in a structured, therapeutic residential program under the
direction of a qualified mental health professional. The services for all three
levels can reasonably be expected to improve the child's or adolescent's
condition or prevent regression so that the services will no longer be needed.
F. In order for Medicaid to reimburse for Residential
Treatment (Level C), Therapeutic Behavioral Services for Children and
Adolescents under 21 (Level B), and Community-Based Services for Children and
Adolescents under 21 (Level A), the need for the service must be certified
according to the standards and requirements set forth in subdivisions 1 and 2
of this subsection. At least one member of the independent certifying team must
have pediatric mental health expertise.
1. For an individual who is already a Medicaid recipient
when he is admitted to a facility or program, certification must:
a. Be made by an independent certifying team that includes
a licensed physician who:
(1) Has competence in diagnosis and treatment of pediatric
mental illness; and
(2) Has knowledge of the recipient's mental health history
and current situation.
b. Be signed and dated by a physician and the team.
2. For a recipient who applies for Medicaid while an
inpatient in the facility or program, the certification must:
a. Be made by the team responsible for the plan of care;
b. Cover any period of time before the application for
Medicaid eligibility for which claims for reimbursement by Medicaid are made;
and
c. Be signed and dated by a physician and the team.
12VAC30-130-870. Preauthorization. (Repealed.)
A. Authorization for Residential Treatment (Level C) shall
be required within 24 hours of admission and shall be conducted by DMAS or its
utilization management contractor using medical necessity criteria specified by
DMAS. At preauthorization, an initial length of stay shall be assigned and the
residential treatment provider shall be responsible for obtaining authorization
for continued stay.
B. DMAS will not pay for admission to or continued stay in
residential facilities (Level C) that were not authorized by DMAS.
C. Information that is required in order to obtain
admission preauthorization for Medicaid payment shall include:
1. A completed state-designated uniform assessment
instrument approved by the department.
2. A certification of the need for this service by the team
described in 12VAC30-130-860 that:
a. The ambulatory care resources available in the community
do not meet the specific treatment needs of the recipient;
b. Proper treatment of the recipient's psychiatric
condition requires services on an inpatient basis under the direction of a
physician; and
c. The services can reasonably be expected to improve the
recipient's condition or prevent further regression so that the services will
not be needed.
3. Additional required written documentation shall include
all of the following:
a. Diagnosis, as defined in the Diagnostic and Statistical
Manual of Mental Disorders, Fourth Edition (DSM-IV, effective October 1, 1996),
including Axis I (Clinical Disorders), Axis II (Personality Disorders/Mental
Retardation, Axis III (General Medical Conditions), Axis IV (Psychosocial and
Environmental Problems), and Axis V (Global Assessment of Functioning);
b. A description of the child's behavior during the seven
days immediately prior to admission;
c. A description of alternative placements tried or
explored and the outcomes of each placement;
d. The child's functional level and clinical stability;
e. The level of family support available; and
f. The initial plan of care as defined and specified at
12VAC30-130-890.
D. Continued stay criteria for Residential Treatment
(Level C): information for continued stay authorization (Level C) for Medicaid
payment must include:
1. A state uniform assessment instrument, completed no more
than 90 days prior to the date of submission;
2. Documentation that the required services are provided as
indicated;
3. Current (within the last 30 days) information on
progress related to the achievement of treatment goals. The treatment goals
must address the reasons for admission, including a description of any new
symptoms amenable to treatment;
4. Description of continued impairment, problem behaviors,
and need for Residential Treatment level of care.
E. Denial of service may be appealed by the recipient
consistent with 12VAC30-110-10 et seq.; denial of reimbursement may be appealed
by the provider consistent with the Administrative Process Act (§ 2.2-4000 et
seq. of the Code of Virginia).
F. DMAS will not pay for services for Therapeutic
Behavioral Services for Children and Adolescents under 21 (Level B), and
Community-Based Services for Children and Adolescents under 21 (Level A) that
are not prior authorized by DMAS.
G. Authorization for Level A and Level B residential
treatment shall be required within three business days of admission.
Authorization for services shall be based upon the medical necessity criteria
described in 12VAC30-50-130. The authorized length of stay must not exceed six
months and may be reauthorized. The provider shall be responsible for
documenting the need for a continued stay and providing supporting
documentation.
H. Information that is required in order to obtain
admission authorization for Medicaid payment must include:
1. A current completed state-designated uniform assessment
instrument approved by the department. The state designated uniform assessment
instrument must indicate at least two areas of moderate impairment for Level B
and two areas of moderate impairment for Level A. A moderate impairment is
evidenced by, but not limited to:
a. Frequent conflict in the family setting, for example,
credible threats of physical harm.
b. Frequent inability to accept age appropriate direction
and supervision from caretakers, family members, at school, or in the home or
community.
c. Severely limited involvement in social support; which
means significant avoidance of appropriate social interaction, deterioration of
existing relationships, or refusal to participate in therapeutic interventions.
d. Impaired ability to form a trusting relationship with at
least one caretaker in the home, school or community.
e. Limited ability to consider the effect of one's
inappropriate conduct on others, interactions consistently involving conflict,
which may include impulsive or abusive behaviors.
2. A certification of the need for the service by the team
described in 12VAC30-130-860 that:
a. The ambulatory care resources available in the community
do not meet the specific treatment needs of the child;
b. Proper treatment of the child's psychiatric condition requires
services in a community-based residential program; and
c. The services can reasonably be expected to improve the
child's condition or prevent regression so that the services will not be
needed.
3. Additional required written documentation must include
all of the following:
a. Diagnosis, as defined in the Diagnostic and Statistical
Manual of Mental Disorders, Fourth Edition (DSM-IV, effective October 1, 1996),
including Axis I (Clinical Disorders), Axis II (Personality Disorders/Mental
Retardation), Axis III (General Medical Conditions), Axis IV (Psychosocial and
Environmental Problems), and Axis V (Global Assessment of Functioning);
b. A description of the child's behavior during the 30 days
immediately prior to admission;
c. A description of alternative placements tried or
explored and the outcomes of each placement;
d. The child's functional level and clinical stability;
e. The level of family support available; and
f. The initial plan of care as defined and specified at
12VAC30-130-890.
I. Denial of service may be appealed by the child
consistent with 12VAC30-110; denial of reimbursement may be appealed by the
provider consistent with the Administrative Process Act (§ 2.2-4000 et seq. of
the Code of Virginia).
J. Continued stay criteria for Levels A and B:
1. The length of the authorized stay shall be determined by
DMAS or its contractor.
2. A current Individual Service Plan (ISP) (plan of care)
and a current (within 30 days) summary of progress related to the goals and
objectives on the ISP (plan of care) must be submitted for continuation of the
service.
3. For reauthorization to occur, the desired outcome or
level of functioning has not been restored or improved, over the time frame
outlined in the child's ISP (plan of care) or the child continues to be at risk
for relapse based on history or the tenuous nature of the functional gains and
use of less intensive services will not achieve stabilization. Any one of the
following must apply:
a. The child has achieved initial service plan (plan of
care) goals but additional goals are indicated that cannot be met at a lower
level of care.
b. The child is making satisfactory progress toward meeting
goals but has not attained ISP goals, and the goals cannot be addressed at a
lower level of care.
c. The child is not making progress, and the service plan
(plan of care) has been modified to identify more effective interventions.
d. There are current indications that the child requires
this level of treatment to maintain level of functioning as evidenced by
failure to achieve goals identified for therapeutic visits or stays in a
nontreatment residential setting or in a lower level of residential treatment.
K. Discharge criteria for Levels A and B.
1. Reimbursement shall not be made for this level of care
if either of the following applies:
a. The level of functioning has improved with respect to
the goals outlined in the service plan (plan of care) and the child can
reasonably be expected to maintain these gains at a lower level of treatment;
or
b. The child no longer benefits from service as evidenced
by absence of progress toward service plan goals for a period of 60 days.
12VAC30-130-880. Provider qualifications. (Repealed.)
A. Providers must provide all Residential Treatment
Services (Level C) as defined within this part and set forth in 42 CFR Part 441
Subpart D.
B. Providers of Residential Treatment Services (Level C)
must be:
1. A residential treatment program for children and
adolescents licensed by DMHMRSAS that is located in a psychiatric hospital
accredited by the Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare
Organizations;
2. A residential treatment program for children and
adolescents licensed by DMHMRSAS that is located in a psychiatric unit of an
acute general hospital accredited by the Joint Commission on Accreditation of
Healthcare Organizations; or
3. A psychiatric facility that is (i) accredited by the
Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations, the Commission
on Accreditation of Rehabilitation Facilities, the Council on Quality and
Leadership in Supports for People with Disabilities, or the Council on
Accreditation of Services for Families and Children and (ii) licensed by
DMHMRSAS as a residential treatment program for children and adolescents.
C. Providers of Community-Based Services for Children and
Adolescents under 21 (Level A) must be licensed by the Department of Social
Services, Department of Juvenile Justice, or Department of Education under the
Standards for Interdepartmental Regulation of Children's Residential Facilities
(22VAC42-10).
D. Providers of Therapeutic Behavioral Services (Level B)
must be licensed by the Department of Mental Health, Mental Retardation, and
Substance Abuse Services (DMHMRSAS) under the Standards for Interdepartmental
Regulation of Children's Residential Facilities (22VAC42-10).
12VAC30-130-890. Plans of care; review of plans of care.
(Repealed.)
A. For Residential Treatment Services (Level C), an initial
plan of care must be completed at admission and a Comprehensive Individual Plan
of Care (CIPOC) must be completed no later than 14 days after admission.
B. Initial plan of care (Level C) must include:
1. Diagnoses, symptoms, complaints, and complications
indicating the need for admission;
2. A description of the functional level of the recipient;
3. Treatment objectives with short-term and long-term
goals;
4. Any orders for medications, treatments, restorative and
rehabilitative services, activities, therapies, social services, diet, and
special procedures recommended for the health and safety of the patient;
5. Plans for continuing care, including review and
modification to the plan of care;
6. Plans for discharge; and
7. Signature and date by the physician.
C. The CIPOC for Level C must meet all of the following
criteria:
1. Be based on a diagnostic evaluation that includes
examination of the medical, psychological, social, behavioral, and
developmental aspects of the recipient's situation and must reflect the need
for inpatient psychiatric care;
2. Be developed by an interdisciplinary team of physicians
and other personnel specified under subsection F of this section, who are
employed by, or provide services to, patients in the facility in consultation
with the recipient and his parents, legal guardians, or appropriate others in
whose care he will be released after discharge;
3. State treatment objectives that must include measurable
short-term and long-term goals and objectives, with target dates for
achievement;
4. Prescribe an integrated program of therapies,
activities, and experiences designed to meet the treatment objectives related
to the diagnosis; and
5. Describe comprehensive discharge plans and coordination
of inpatient services and post-discharge plans with related community services
to ensure continuity of care upon discharge with the recipient's family,
school, and community.
D. Review of the CIPOC for Level C. The CIPOC must be
reviewed every 30 days by the team specified in subsection F of this section
to:
1. Determine that services being provided are or were
required on an inpatient basis; and
2. Recommend changes in the plan as indicated by the
recipient's overall adjustment as an inpatient.
E. The development and review of the plan of care for
Level C as specified in this section satisfies the facility's utilization
control requirements for recertification and establishment and periodic review
of the plan of care, as required in 42 CFR 456.160 and 456.180.
F. Team developing the CIPOC for Level C. The following
requirements must be met:
1. At least one member of the team must have expertise in
pediatric mental health. Based on education and experience, preferably
including competence in child psychiatry, the team must be capable of all of
the following:
a. Assessing the recipient's immediate and long-range
therapeutic needs, developmental priorities, and personal strengths and
liabilities;
b. Assessing the potential resources of the recipient's
family;
c. Setting treatment objectives; and
d. Prescribing therapeutic modalities to achieve the plan's
objectives.
2. The team must include, at a minimum, either:
a. A board-eligible or board-certified psychiatrist;
b. A clinical psychologist who has a doctoral degree and a
physician licensed to practice medicine or osteopathy; or
c. A physician licensed to practice medicine or osteopathy
with specialized training and experience in the diagnosis and treatment of
mental diseases, and a psychologist who has a master's degree in clinical
psychology or who has been certified by the state or by the state psychological
association.
3. The team must also include one of the following:
a. A psychiatric social worker;
b. A registered nurse with specialized training or one
year's experience in treating mentally ill individuals;
c. An occupational therapist who is licensed, if required
by the state, and who has specialized training or one year of experience in
treating mentally ill individuals; or
d. A psychologist who has a master's degree in clinical
psychology or who has been certified by the state or by the state psychological
association.
G. All Medicaid services are subject to utilization
review. Absence of any of the required documentation may result in denial or
retraction of any reimbursement.
H. For Therapeutic Behavioral Services for Children and
Adolescents under 21 (Level B), the initial plan of care must be completed at
admission by the licensed mental health professional (LMHP) and a CIPOC must be
completed by the LMHP no later than 30 days after admission. The assessment
must be signed and dated by the LMHP.
I. For Community-Based Services for Children and
Adolescents under 21 (Level A), the initial plan of care must be completed at
admission by the QMHP and a CIPOC must be completed by the QMHP no later than
30 days after admission. The individualized plan of care must be signed and
dated by the program director.
J. Initial plan of care for Levels A and B must include:
1. Diagnoses, symptoms, complaints, and complications
indicating the need for admission;
2. A description of the functional level of the child;
3. Treatment objectives with short-term and long-term
goals;
4. Any orders for medications, treatments, restorative and
rehabilitative services, activities, therapies, social services, diet, and
special procedures recommended for the health and safety of the patient;
5. Plans for continuing care, including review and
modification to the plan of care; and
6. Plans for discharge.
K. The CIPOC for Levels A and B must meet all of the
following criteria:
1. Be based on a diagnostic evaluation that includes
examination of the medical, psychological, social, behavioral, and
developmental aspects of the child's situation and must reflect the need for
residential psychiatric care;
2. The CIPOC for both levels must be based on input from
school, home, other healthcare providers, the child and family (or legal
guardian);
3. State treatment objectives that include measurable
short-term and long-term goals and objectives, with target dates for
achievement;
4. Prescribe an integrated program of therapies,
activities, and experiences designed to meet the treatment objectives related
to the diagnosis; and
5. Describe comprehensive discharge plans with related
community services to ensure continuity of care upon discharge with the child's
family, school, and community.
L. Review of the CIPOC for Levels A and B. The CIPOC must
be reviewed, signed, and dated every 30 days by the QMHP for Level A and by the
LMHP for Level B. The review must include:
1. The response to services provided;
2. Recommended changes in the plan as indicated by the
child's overall response to the plan of care interventions; and
3. Determinations regarding whether the services being
provided continue to be required.
Updates must be signed and dated by the service provider.
M. All Medicaid services are subject to utilization
review. Absence of any of the required documentation may result in denial or
retraction of any reimbursement.
Part XVIII
Behavioral Health Services
12VAC30-130-3000. Behavioral health services.
A. Behavioral health services that shall be covered only for
individuals from birth through 21 years of age are set out in 12VAC30-50-130 B
5 and include: (i) intensive in-home services (IIH), (ii)
therapeutic day treatment (TDT), (iii) community based services for children
and adolescents (Level A) therapeutic group homes, and (iv) therapeutic
behavioral services (Level B) psychiatric residential treatment
facilities.
B. Behavioral health services that shall be covered for
individuals regardless of age are set out in 12VAC30-50-226 and include: (i)
day treatment/partial hospitalization, (ii) psychosocial rehabilitation, (iii)
crisis intervention, (iv) case management as set out in 12VAC30-50-420 and
12VAC30-50-430, (v) intensive community treatment (ICT), (vi) crisis
stabilization services, and (vii) mental health support services (MHSS).
12VAC30-130-3020. Independent clinical assessment requirements;
behavioral health level of care determinations and service eligibility. (Repealed.)
A. The independent clinical assessment (ICA), as set forth
in the Virginia Independent Assessment Program (VICAP-001) form, shall contain
the Medicaid individual-specific elements of information and data that shall be
required for an individual younger than the age of 21 to be approved for
intensive in-home (IIH) services, therapeutic day treatment (TDT), or mental
health support services (MHSS) or any combination thereof. Eligibility
requirements for IIH are in 12VAC30-50-130 B 5 b. Eligibility requirements for
TDT are in 12VAC30-50-130 B 5 c. Eligibility requirements for MHSS are in
12VAC30-50-226 B 8.
1. The required elements in the ICA shall be specified in
the VICAP form with either the BHSA or CSBs/BHAs and DMAS.
2. Service recommendations set out in the ICA shall not be
subject to appeal.
B. Independent clinical assessment requirements.
1. Effective July 18, 2011, an ICA shall be required as a
part of the service authorization process for Medicaid and Family Access to
Medical Insurance Security (FAMIS) intensive in-home (IIH) services,
therapeutic day treatment (TDT), or mental health support services (MHSS) for
individuals up to the age of 21. This ICA shall be performed prior to
the request for service authorization and initiation of treatment for
individuals who are not currently receiving or authorized for services. The ICA
shall be completed prior to the service provider conducting an intake or
providing treatment.
a. Each individual shall have at least one ICA prior to the
initiation of either IIH or TDT, or MHSS for individuals up to the age of 21.
b. For individuals who are already receiving IIH services
or TDT, or MHSS, as of July 18, 2011, the requirement for a completed ICA shall
be effective for service reauthorizations for dates of services on and after
September 1, 2011.
c. Individuals who are being discharged from residential
treatment (DMAS service Levels A, B, or C) or inpatient psychiatric
hospitalization do not need an ICA prior to receiving community IIH services or
TDT, or MHSS. They shall be required, however, to have an ICA as part of the
first subsequent service reauthorization for IIH services, TDT, MHSS, or any
combination thereof.
2. The ICA shall be completed and submitted to DMAS or its
service authorization contractor by the independent assessor prior to the
service provider submitting the service authorization or reauthorization
request to the DMAS service authorization contractor. Failure to meet these
requirements shall result in the provider's service authorization or
reauthorization request being returned to the provider.
3. A copy of the ICA shall be retained in the service
provider's individual's file.
4. If a service provider receives a request from parents or
legal guardians to provide IIH services, TDT, or MHSS for individuals who are
younger than 21 years of age, the service provider shall refer the parent or
legal guardian to the BHSA or the local CSB/BHA to obtain the ICA prior to
providing services.
a. In order to provide services, the service provider shall
be required to conduct a service-specific provider intake as defined in
12VAC30-50-130.
b. If the selected service provider concurs that the child
meets criteria for the service recommended by the independent assessor, the
selected service provider shall submit a service authorization request to DMAS
service authorization contractor. The service-specific provider's intake for
IIH services, TDT, or MHSS shall not occur prior to the completion of the ICA
by the BHSA or CSB/BHA, or its subcontractor.
c. If within 30 days after the ICA a service provider
identifies the need for services that were not recommended by the ICA, the
service provider shall contact the independent assessor and request a
modification. The request for a modification shall be based on a significant
change in the individual's life that occurred after the ICA was conducted.
Examples of a significant change may include, but shall not be limited to,
hospitalization; school suspension or expulsion; death of a significant other;
or hospitalization or incarceration of a parent or legal guardian.
d. If the independent assessment is greater than 30 days
old, a new ICA must be obtained prior to the initiation of IIH services, TDT,
or MHSS for individuals younger than 21 years of age.
e. If the parent or legal
guardian disagrees with the ICA recommendation, the parent or legal guardian
may appeal the recommendation in accordance with Part I (12VAC30-110-10 et
seq.) In the alternative, the parent or legal guardian may request that a
service provider perform his own evaluation. If after conducting a
service-specific provider intake the service provider identifies additional
documentation previously not submitted for the ICA that demonstrates the
service is medically necessary and clinically indicated, the service provider
may submit the supplemental information with a service authorization request to
the DMAS service authorization contractor. The DMAS service authorization
contractor will review the service authorization submission and the ICA and
make a determination. If the determination results in a service denial, the
individual, parent or legal guardian, and service provider will be notified of
the decision and their appeal rights pursuant to Part I (12VAC30-110-10 et
seq.).
5. If the individual is in immediate need of treatment, the
independent clinical assessor shall refer the individual to the appropriate
enrolled Medicaid emergency services providers in accordance with
12VAC30-50-226 and shall also alert the individual's managed care organization.
C. Requirements for behavioral health services
administrator and community services boards/behavioral health authorities.
1. When the BHSA, CSB, or BHA
has been contacted by the parent or legal guardian, the ICA appointment shall
be offered within five business days of a request for IIH services and within
10 business days for a request for TDT or MHSS, or both. The appointment may be
scheduled beyond the respective time frame at the documented request of the
parent or legal guardian.
2. The independent assessor
shall conduct the ICA with the individual and the parent or legal guardian
using the VICAP-001 form and make a recommendation for the most appropriate
medically necessary services, if indicated. Referring or treating providers
shall not be present during the assessment but may submit supporting clinical
documentation to the assessor.
3. The ICA shall be effective for a 30-day period.
4. The independent assessor
shall enter the findings of the ICA into the DMAS service authorization
contractor's web portal within one business day of conducting the assessment.
The independent clinical assessment form (VICAP-001) shall be completed by the
independent assessor within three business days of completing the ICA.
D. The individual or his parent or legal guardian shall
have the right to freedom of choice of service providers.
VA.R. Doc. No. R17-4495; Filed January 31, 2017, 4:07 p.m.