TITLE 12. HEALTH
Titles of Regulations: 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 12VAC30-60-61).
12VAC30-80. Methods and Standards for Establishing Payment
Rates; Other Types of Care (adding 12VAC30-80-97).
12VAC30-120. Waivered Services (amending 12VAC30-120-380).
Statutory Authority: § 32.1-325 of the Code of
Virginia; 42 USC § 1396 et seq.
Public Hearing Information: No public hearings are
scheduled.
Public Comment Deadline: September 22, 2017.
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.
Basis: Section 32.1-325 of the Code of Virginia grants
to the Board of Medical Assistance Services the authority to administer and
amend the Plan for Medical Assistance and to make, adopt, promulgate, and
enforce regulations to implement the state plan, and § 32.1-324 of the Code of
Virginia authorizes the Director of the Department of Medical Assistance
Services (DMAS) to administer and amend the Plan for Medical Assistance
according to the board's requirements. The Medicaid authority as established by
§ 1902(a) of the Social Security Act (42 USC § 1396a) provides
governing authority for payments for services.
Section 1905 of the Social Security Act requires state Medicaid
programs to provide early and periodic screening, diagnosis, and treatment
(EPSDT) services for individuals who are eligible under the plan and are
younger than the age of 21 years, to include "Such other necessary health
care, diagnostic services, treatment, and other measures described in § 1905(a)
to correct or ameliorate defects and physical and mental illnesses and
conditions discovered by the screening services, whether or not such services
are covered under the State plan." If an individual is determined through
an EPSDT screening to need a medical service that is not otherwise covered in
Virginia's State Plan, then this provision in federal law requires the
Commonwealth to cover that service. Behavioral therapy services are an EPSDT
service.
Purpose: The proposed regulatory action is intended to
promote an improved quality of Medicaid-covered behavioral therapy services
provided to children and adolescents. The proposed regulation will
differentiate Medicaid's coverage of behavioral therapy and applied behavior
analysis services from coverage of community mental health and other
developmental services. This regulatory action is essential to protect the
health, safety, and welfare of these affected individuals and to ensure the
quality of services rendered to children and adolescents who demonstrate the
medical need for EPSDT behavioral therapy services. Regulations are needed to
establish clear criteria for Medicaid payment of these services. Regulatory
action is needed to ensure that Medicaid individuals and their families and
service providers are well informed about service specifications prior to
receiving or providing these services. These services will allow children
receiving services to improve interactions with their schools, families,
communities, future employers, and jobs and thus benefit a broad range of
citizens. These regulations are not expected to negatively affect the health,
safety, or welfare of citizens of the Commonwealth.
Substance: Currently, Medicaid payment for behavioral
therapy services is being authorized on an individual case basis under the
authority provided by the basic EPSDT definition found in 12VAC30-50-130 B. The
absence of consistently applied definitions, service requirements, required
provider qualifications, and quality assurance standards might result in
arbitrary decisions that cannot be sustained in an appeal. With increasing
numbers of children being diagnosed with autism and autism spectrum disorders
in need of such services, the individual-case-basis method of covering these
services is no longer satisfactory or appropriate.
DMAS proposes to initiate uniform coverage of behavioral
therapy services for individuals under the age of 21 years who meet the medical
necessity criteria. Trained professionals rendering early intensive treatment,
including applied behavior analysis techniques, has been shown to be effective
in ameliorating impairments in major life functions arising from autism
spectrum disorders and other diagnosed conditions. Coverage of EPSDT behavioral
therapy services will not cause more individuals to be eligible for this
service but will ensure appropriate treatment of eligible children who are
already in the care delivery system as well as those initiating behavioral
therapy services.
Prior to treatment, an appropriate health care practitioner
conducts an intake documenting the child's medical and psychiatric diagnosis
and describing how service needs can best be met through behavioral therapy
interventions. The assessment includes a description of the behavior or
behaviors targeted for treatment, including data on the frequency, duration, and
intensity of the behavior or behaviors. An individualized service plan (ISP) is
developed based on the assessment. The ISP describes each targeted behavior,
the behavioral modification strategy to be used to manage each targeted
behavior, and the measurement and data collection methods to be used for each
targeted behavior in the plan.
Behavioral analysis treatment strategies are systematic
interventions that are primarily provided in the family home. Family training
and counseling related to the implementation of the behavioral therapy shall be
included as part of the behavioral therapy service. Behavioral therapy may be
intermittently provided in community settings when approved settings are deemed
by DMAS or its contractor as medically necessary treatment. These services are
designed to enhance communication skills and decrease maladaptive patterns of
behavior that, if left untreated, could lead to more complex problems and the
need for a greater or a more restrictive level of care, such as institutionalization.
Successful implementation of behavioral therapy services requires the
participation of a parent or guardian.
The service goal is to ensure that the member's family is
trained to successfully manage clinically designed behavioral modification
strategies in the home setting. The family involvement in therapy is meant to
increase the child's adaptive functioning by training the family in effective
methods of behavioral modification strategies. Family members do not have to be
present during all hours of therapy. Family members must be present and
participate with their treatment plan objectives in an effective manner as
documented by the clinical supervisor.
EPSDT behavioral therapy services are intended to improve the
functional behaviors of the member by integrating multidisciplinary clinical
and medical services with the behavioral therapy protocol to increase the
member's adaptive functioning and communicative abilities. Treatment results
must be documented to indicate a generalization of behaviors across different
settings to maintain the targeted functioning outside of the treatment setting
in the patient's residence and the larger community within which the individual
resides.
Behavioral therapy services are currently excluded from
Medicaid managed care contracts and reimbursed by the behavioral health
services administrator (currently, Magellan) on a fee-for-service basis.
Technical corrections are made to the catchlines of several existing services
in 12VAC30-60-61 to create consistency in regulatory text and improve
readability.
Issues: The proposed regulation is advantageous to
individuals and their families by ensuring that Medicaid funded behavioral
therapy services are provided by licensed practitioners with the education,
experience, and clinical training necessary to effectively correct or
ameliorate problematic behaviors through the use of evidence based behavior
modification principles. Regulatory action will ensure that individuals, their
families, and service providers are well informed about Medicaid service
requirements prior to receiving or providing these services, thereby avoiding
DMAS recovery of provider payments made for inappropriate or inadequate
services. This regulatory action will also support the efforts of DMAS and its
contractors to provide effective care coordination and administrative oversight
of service delivery by clarifying provider requirements and service delivery
requirements in the Virginia Administrative Code. The primary advantage to the
Commonwealth, in the setting of these criteria and standards, will be the
statewide uniform application of policies that should result in fewer costly
provider appeals and reduced risks for fraud, waste, and abuse. There are no
disadvantages to the Commonwealth for this action.
Department of Planning and Budget's Economic Impact
Analysis:
Summary of the Proposed Amendments to Regulation. The proposed
regulation establishes in the Virginia Administrative Code uniform and specific
standards for diagnosis and provision of behavioral therapy services under
Medicaid for young people from birth through the age of 21.
Result of Analysis. The benefits likely exceed the costs for
all proposed changes.
Estimated Economic Impact. The proposed regulation establishes
in the Virginia Administrative Code Medicaid coverage for behavioral therapy
services for young people from birth through the age of 21 under the authority
of the Early and Periodic Screening, Diagnosis and Treatment program. To be
covered for this service, children and adolescents must have autism or autism
spectrum disorders, or other similar developmental delays as demonstrated by
their lack of communication skills or lack of interaction with their
environments.
Prior to 2012 these services were already covered by Medicaid,
but there were no uniform standards. The coverage decisions were made on a
case-by-case basis. In 2012, the Department of Medical Assistance Services
(DMAS) adopted a service manual setting out uniform rules for coverage and
provision of behavioral therapy services (e.g., rules for provider enrollment,
eligibility criteria, limitations, service authorization requirements, etc.).
In December 2013, DMAS contracted Magellan Health to administer the provision
of behavioral therapy services. Selection of a behavioral services
administrator to run the program marked the beginning of a significant increase
in provision of these services. In fiscal year 2013, 524 individuals received
these services at a cost of approximately $12.2 million. In calendar year 2014,
$28.2 million was spent on services provided to 1,831 individuals. In calendar
year 2015, the expenditures and recipients increased to $41.6 million and
2,313, respectively. In calendar year 2016, expenditures stood at $60.6 million
and the number of recipients was 2,996.
While the provision of behavioral therapy services has grown
significantly in the recent past, the impact of the proposed regulation on
utilization is expected to be neutral. These services have been provided
according to the uniform standards set out in the service manual since 2012.
Consistent with the service manual, this action specifies in the regulation the
behavioral service requirements, medical necessity criteria, provider clinical
assessment and intake procedures, service planning and progress measurement
requirements, care coordination, clinical supervision, and other standards.
The main effect of the proposed changes is establishing clear
criteria for Medicaid payment of these services in the Virginia Administrative
Code and consequently providing legal basis for the programs administration.
Having clear criteria in regulations is also expected to help protect the
health, safety, and welfare of the affected children by improving the
uniformity of service quality across providers.
Businesses and Entities Affected. As of August 2016, 348
behavioral therapy providers were credentialed with Magellan (only 89 of which
actively provided services in 2016) and there were 488 licensed behavioral
analysts and 103 licensed assistant behavioral analysts in the Commonwealth. In
2016, 2,996 individuals received these services.
Localities Particularly Affected. The proposed regulation does
not disproportionally affect particular localities.
Projected Impact on Employment. No significant impact on
employment is expected.
Effects on the Use and Value of Private Property. No
significant impact on the use and value of private property is expected.
Real Estate Development Costs. No impact on real estate
development costs is expected.
Small Businesses:
Definition. Pursuant to § 2.2-4007.04 of the Code of Virginia,
small business is defined as "a business entity, including its affiliates,
that (i) is independently owned and operated and (ii) employs fewer than 500
full-time employees or has gross annual sales of less than $6 million."
Costs and Other Effects. The Department of Medical Assistance
Services estimates that 90% of the current providers are small businesses. The
proposed amendments are not anticipated to create significant costs or other
effects on small businesses.
Alternative Method that Minimizes Adverse Impact. The proposed
amendments are not anticipated to have an adverse impact on small businesses.
Adverse Impacts:
Businesses. DMAS estimates that 10% of the current providers
are non-small businesses. The proposed amendments are not anticipated to create
significant costs or other effects on non-small businesses.
Localities. The proposed amendments will not adversely affect
localities.
Other Entities. The proposed amendments will not adversely
affect other entities.
Agency's Response to Economic Impact Analysis: The
agency has reviewed the economic impact analysis prepared by the Department of
Planning and Budget and raises no issues with this analysis.
Summary:
The proposed amendments establish Medicaid coverage for
behavioral therapy services for children under the authority of the Early and
Periodic Screening, Diagnosis and Treatment (EPSDT) program. EPSDT is a
mandatory Medicaid-covered service that offers preventive, diagnostic, and treatment
health care services to young people from birth through the age of 21 years. To
be covered for this service, a child must have a psychiatric diagnosis relevant
to the need for behavioral therapy services, including autism, autism spectrum
disorders, or other similar developmental delays and must meet the medical
necessity criteria. The proposed regulations define the behavioral therapy
service requirements, medical necessity criteria, provider clinical assessment
and intake procedures, service planning and progress measurement requirements,
care coordination, clinical supervision, and other standards to assure quality.
The behavioral therapy service will be reimbursed by DMAS outside of the
Medallion 3 managed care contracts.
12VAC30-50-130. Nursing facility services, EPSDT, including
school health services and family planning.
A. 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 of individuals
under 21 years of age, and treatment of conditions found.
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 § 1905(a) of the Social Security Act.
5. 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' claims for services by
recognized diagnosis codes that support and are consistent with the requested
professional services.
a. 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, 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.
"DBHDS" means the Department of Behavioral Health
and Developmental Services.
"DMAS" means the Department of Medical Assistance
Services and its contractor or contractors.
"EPSDT" means early and periodic screening,
diagnosis, and treatment.
"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 psychiatric nurse practitioner, licensed professional counselor,
licensed clinical social worker, licensed substance abuse treatment
practitioner, licensed marriage and family therapist, or certified psychiatric
clinical nurse specialist.
"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.
"Services provided under arrangement" means the same
as defined in 12VAC30-130-850.
b. 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.
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) Service authorization shall be required for services to
continue beyond the initial 26 weeks.
(3) 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) These services may only be rendered by an LMHP,
LMHP-supervisee, LMHP-resident, LMHP-RP, a QMHP-C, or a QMHP-E.
c. 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, 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) Service authorization shall be required for Medicaid
reimbursement.
(2) 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) These services may 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) pursuant to 42 CFR 440.031(d).
(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), Regulation Governing Juvenile
Group Homes and Halfway Houses (6VAC35-41), 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.
e. Therapeutic behavioral services (Level B) pursuant to 42
CFR 440.130(d).
(1) Such services must be therapeutic services rendered in a
residential setting that 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) Authorization is required for Medicaid reimbursement.
Services that are rendered before the date of service authorization shall not
be reimbursed.
(3) Room and board costs shall not be reimbursed. Facilities
that only provide independent living services are not reimbursed. DMAS shall
reimburse only for services provided in facilities or programs with no more
than 16 beds.
(4) These residential providers must 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) Individuals shall be discharged from this service when
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. Services that are 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.
(9) These services may only be rendered by an LMHP,
LMHP-supervisee, LMHP-resident, LMHP-RP, a QMHP-C, a QMHP-E, or a QPPMH.
(10) The facility/group home shall coordinate necessary
services with other providers. Documentation of this care coordination shall be
maintained by the facility/group home in the individual's record. The
documentation shall include who was contacted, when the contact occurred, and
what information was transmitted.
6. Inpatient psychiatric services shall be covered for
individuals younger than age 21 for medically necessary stays in inpatient
psychiatric facilities described in 42 CFR 440.160(b)(1) and (b)(2) for
the purpose of diagnosis and treatment of mental health and behavioral
disorders identified under EPSDT when such services are rendered by (i) a
psychiatric hospital or an inpatient psychiatric program in a hospital
accredited by the Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations
or (ii) a psychiatric facility that is accredited by the Joint Commission on
Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations or the Commission on Accreditation of
Rehabilitation Facilities. 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 12VAC30-130.
a. The inpatient psychiatric services benefit for individuals
younger than 21 years of age shall include services defined at 42 CFR 440.160
that are provided under the direction of a physician pursuant to a certification
of medical necessity and plan of care developed by an interdisciplinary team of
professionals and shall involve active treatment designed to achieve the
child's discharge from inpatient status at the earliest possible time. The
inpatient psychiatric services benefit shall include services provided under
arrangement furnished by Medicaid enrolled providers other than the inpatient
psychiatric facility, as long as the inpatient psychiatric facility (i)
arranges for and oversees the provision of all services, (ii) maintains all
medical records of care furnished to the individual, and (iii) ensures that the
services are furnished under the direction of a physician. Services provided
under arrangement shall be documented by a written referral from the inpatient
psychiatric facility. For purposes of pharmacy services, a prescription ordered
by an employee or contractor of the facility who is licensed to prescribe drugs
shall be considered the referral.
b. Eligible services provided under arrangement with the inpatient
psychiatric facility shall vary by provider type as described in this
subsection. For purposes of this section, emergency services means the same as
is set out in 12VAC30-50-310 B.
(1) State freestanding psychiatric hospitals shall arrange
for, maintain records of, and ensure that physicians order these services: (i)
pharmacy services and (ii) emergency services.
(2) Private freestanding psychiatric hospitals shall arrange
for, maintain records of, and ensure that physicians order these services: (i)
medical and psychological services including those furnished by physicians,
licensed mental health professionals, and other licensed or certified health
professionals (i.e., nutritionists, podiatrists, respiratory therapists, and
substance abuse treatment practitioners); (ii) outpatient hospital services;
(iii) physical therapy, occupational therapy, and therapy for individuals with
speech, hearing, or language disorders; (iv) laboratory and radiology services;
(v) vision services; (vi) dental, oral surgery, and orthodontic services; (vii)
transportation services; and (viii) emergency services.
(3) Residential treatment facilities, as defined at 42 CFR
483.352, shall arrange for, maintain records of, and ensure that physicians
order these services: (i) medical and psychological services, including those
furnished by physicians, licensed mental health professionals, and other
licensed or certified health professionals (i.e., nutritionists, podiatrists,
respiratory therapists, and substance abuse treatment practitioners); (ii)
pharmacy services; (iii) outpatient hospital services; (iv) physical therapy,
occupational therapy, and therapy for individuals with speech, hearing, or
language disorders; (v) laboratory and radiology services; (vi) durable medical
equipment; (vii) vision services; (viii) dental, oral surgery, and orthodontic
services; (ix) transportation services; and (x) emergency services.
c. Inpatient psychiatric services are reimbursable only when
the treatment program is fully in compliance with (i) 42 CFR Part 441 Subpart
D, specifically 42 CFR 441.151(a) and (b) and 441.152 through 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.
d. Service limits may be exceeded based on medical necessity
for individuals eligible for EPSDT.
7. 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.
8. Behavioral therapy services shall be covered for
individuals under the age of 21 years.
a. Definitions. The following words and terms when used in
this subsection shall have the following meanings unless the context clearly
indicates otherwise:
"Behavioral therapy" means systematic
interventions provided by licensed practitioners acting within the scope of
practice defined under a Virginia Health Professions Regulatory Board and
covered as remedial care under 42 CFR 440.130(d) within the home to
individuals under 21 years of age. Behavioral therapy includes applied
behavioral analysis and is primarily provided in the family home. Family
counseling and training related to the implementation of the behavioral therapy
shall be included as part of the behavioral therapy service. Behavioral therapy
services shall be subject to clinical reviews and determined as medically
necessary. Behavioral therapy may be intermittently provided in community
settings when approved settings are deemed by DMAS or its contractor as
medically necessary treatment.
"Individual" means the child or adolescent under
the age of 21 who is receiving behavioral therapy services.
"Primary care provider" means a licensed medical
practitioner who provides preventive and primary health care and is responsible
for providing routine EPSDT screening and referral and coordination of other
medical services needed by the individual.
b. Behavioral therapy services shall be designed to enhance
communication skills and decrease maladaptive patterns of behavior, which if
left untreated, could lead to more complex problems and the need for a greater
or a more intensive level of care. The service goal shall be to ensure the
individual's family or caregiver is trained to effectively manage the
individual's behavior in the home using modification strategies. The services
shall be provided in accordance with the individual service plan and clinical assessment
summary.
c. Behavioral therapy services shall be covered when
recommended by the individual's primary care provider or other licensed
physician, licensed physician assistant, or licensed nurse practitioner and
determined by DMAS or its contractor to be medically necessary to correct or
ameliorate significant impairments in major life activities that have resulted
from either developmental, behavioral, or mental disabilities. Criteria for
medical necessity are set out in 12VAC30-60-61 H. Service-specific provider
intakes shall be required at the onset of these services in order to receive
authorization for reimbursement. Individual service plans (ISPs) shall be
required throughout the entire duration of services. The services shall be
provided in accordance with the individual service plan and clinical assessment
summary. These services shall be provided in settings that are natural or
normal for a child or adolescent without a disability, such as his home, unless
there is justification in the ISP, which has been authorized for reimbursement,
to include service settings that promote a generalization of behaviors across
different settings to maintain the targeted functioning outside of the
treatment setting in the patient's residence and the larger community within
which the individual resides. Covered behavioral therapy services shall
include:
(1) Initial and periodic service-specific provider intake
as defined in 12VAC30-60-61 H;
(2) Development of initial and updated ISPs as established
in 12VAC30-60-61 H;
(3) Clinical supervision activities. Requirements for
clinical supervision are set out in 12VAC30-60-61 H;
(4) Behavioral training to increase the individual's
adaptive functioning and communication skills;
(5) Training a family member in behavioral modification
methods;
(6) Documentation and analysis of quantifiable behavioral
data related to the treatment objectives; and
(7) Care coordination.
8. 9. Addiction and recovery treatment services
shall be covered under EPSDT consistent with 12VAC30-130-5000 et seq.
C. 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 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 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 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 specialists, 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 (12VAC30-50-530).
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. 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 or services to promote fertility. Family planning
services shall not cover payment for abortion services and no funds shall be
used to perform, assist, encourage, or make direct referrals for abortions.
3. Family planning services as established by § 1905(a)(4)(C)
of the Social Security Act include annual family planning exams; cervical cancer
screening for women; sexually transmitted infection (STI) testing; lab services
for family planning and STI testing; family planning education, counseling, and
preconception health; sterilization procedures; nonemergency transportation to
a family planning service; and U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved
prescription and over-the-counter contraceptives, subject to limits in
12VAC30-50-210.
12VAC30-60-61. Services related to the Early and Periodic
Screening, Diagnosis and Treatment Program (EPSDT); community mental health
services for children; behavioral therapy 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 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.
"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.
"Licensed assistant behavior analyst" means a
person who has met the licensing requirements of 18VAC85-150 and holds a valid
license issued by the Department of Health Professions.
"Licensed behavior analyst" means a person who
has met the licensing requirements of 18VAC85-150 and holds a valid license
issued by the Department of Health Professions.
"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 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 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.
"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. Utilization review requirements for all services in
this section.
1. 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.
2. Providers shall be required to refund payments made by
Medicaid if they fail to maintain adequate documentation to support billed
activities.
3. Individual service plans (ISPs) shall meet all of the
requirements set forth in 12VAC30-60-143 B 7.
C. Intensive Utilization review of 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 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 Utilization review of 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.
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 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 Utilization review of
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 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. Therapeutic Utilization review of therapeutic
behavioral services 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. The clinical director must 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 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 group home shall meet DBHDS
paraprofessional staff criteria, as defined in 12VAC35-105-20. The program/group
home must coordinate services with other providers.
4. All therapeutic behavioral 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, 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 services
for children and adolescents under 21 (Level B) is also receiving case
management services, the therapeutic behavioral services provider must
collaborate with the care coordinator/case manager by notifying him of the
provision of Level B services and the Level B 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, shall inform him of the individual's receipt of these Level B
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 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 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).
H. Utilization review of behavioral therapy services for
children.
1. In order for Medicaid to cover behavioral therapy
services, the provider shall be enrolled with DMAS or its contractor as a
Medicaid provider. The provider enrollment agreement shall be in effect prior
to the delivery of services for Medicaid reimbursement.
2. Behavioral therapy services shall be covered for
individuals younger than 21 years of age when recommended by the individual's primary
care provider, licensed physician, licensed physician assistant, or licensed
nurse practitioner and determined by DMAS or its contractor to be medically
necessary to correct or ameliorate significant impairments in major life
activities that have resulted from either developmental, behavioral, or mental
disabilities.
3. Behavioral therapy services require service
authorization. Services shall be authorized only when eligibility and medical
necessity criteria are met.
4. Prior to treatment, an appropriate service-specific
provider intake shall be conducted, documented, signed, and dated by a licensed
behavior analyst (LBA), licensed assistant behavior analyst (LABA), or LMHP,
LMHP-R, LMHP-RP, or LMHP-S, acting within the scope of his practice, documenting
the individual's diagnosis (including a description of the behavior or
behaviors targeted for treatment with their frequency, duration, and intensity)
and describing how service needs can best be met through behavioral therapy.
The service-specific provider intake shall be conducted face-to-face in the
individual's residence with the individual and parent or guardian. A new
service-specific provider intake shall be conducted and documented every three
months, or more often if needed, to observe the individual and family
interaction, review clinical data, and revise the ISP as needed.
5. The ISP shall be developed upon admission to the service
and reviewed within 30 days of admission to the service to ensure that all
treatment goals are reflective of the individual's clinical needs and shall
describe each treatment goal, targeted behavior, one or more measurable
objectives for each targeted behavior, the behavioral modification strategy to
be used to manage each targeted behavior, the plan for parent or caregiver
training, care coordination, and the measurement and data collection methods to
be used for each targeted behavior in the ISP. The ISP shall be fully
completed, signed, and dated by an LBA, LABA, LMHP, LMHP-R, LMHP-RP, or LMHP-S
and the individual and individual's parent or guardian. The ISP shall be
reviewed every three months (at the same time the service-specific provider
intake is conducted and documented) and updated as the individual progresses
and his needs change, but at least annually, and shall be 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.
6. Reimbursement for the initial service-specific provider
intake and the initial ISP shall be limited to five hours without service
authorization. If additional time is needed to complete these documents,
service authorization shall be required.
7. Clinical supervision shall be required for Medicaid
reimbursement of behavioral therapy services that are rendered by an LABA,
LMHP-R, LMHP-RP, or LMHP-S or unlicensed staff consistent with the scope of
practice as described by the applicable Virginia Department of Health
Professions regulatory board. Clinical supervision shall occur at least weekly
and, as documented in the individual's medical record, shall include a review
of progress notes and data and dialogue with supervised staff about the
individual’s progress and the effectiveness of the ISP.
8. The following shall not be covered under this service:
a. Screening to identify physical, mental, or developmental
conditions that may require evaluation or treatment. Screening is covered as an
EPSDT service provided by the primary care provider and is not covered as a
behavioral therapy service under this section.
b. Services other than the initial service-specific
provider intake that are provided but are not based upon the individual's ISP
or linked to a service in the ISP. Time not actively involved in providing
services directed by the ISP shall not be reimbursed.
c. Services that are based upon an incomplete, missing, or
outdated service-specific provider intake or ISP.
d. Sessions that are conducted for family support,
education, recreational, or custodial purposes, including respite or child
care.
e. Services that are provided by a provider but are
rendered primarily by a relative or guardian who is legally responsible for the
individual's care.
f. Services that are provided in a clinic or provider's
office without documented justification for the location in the ISP.
g. Services that are provided in the absence of the
individual and a parent or other authorized caregiver identified in the ISP
with the exception of treatment review processes described in 12VAC30-60-61 H
11 e, care coordination, and clinical supervision.
h. Services provided by a local education agency.
i. Provider travel time.
9. Behavioral therapy services shall not be reimbursed
concurrently with community mental health services described in 12VAC30-50-130
B 5 or 12VAC30-50-226, or behavioral, psychological, or psychiatric therapeutic
consultation described in 12VAC30-120-756, 12VAC30-120-1000, or
12VAC30-135-320.
10. If the individual is receiving targeted case management
services under the Medicaid state plan (defined in 12VAC30-50-410 through
12VAC30-50-491, the provider shall notify the case manager of the provision of
behavioral therapy services unless the parent or guardian requests that the
information not be released. In addition, the provider shall send monthly
updates to the case manager on the individual's status pursuant to a valid
release of information. A discharge summary shall be sent to the case manager
within 30 days of the service discontinuation date. A refusal of the parent or
guardian to release information shall be documented in the medical record for
the date the request was discussed.
11. Other standards to ensure quality of services:
a. Services shall be delivered only by an LBA, LABA, LMHP,
LMHP-R, LMHP-RP, LMHP-S, or clinically supervised unlicensed staff consistent
with the scope of practice as described by the applicable Virginia Department
of Health Professions regulatory board.
b. Individual-specific services shall be directed toward
the treatment of the eligible individual and delivered in the family's
residence unless an alternative location is justified and documented in the
ISP.
c. Individual-specific progress notes shall be created
contemporaneously with the service activities and shall document the name and
Medicaid number of each individual; the provider's name, signature, and date;
and time of service. Documentation shall include activities provided, length of
services provided, the individual's reaction to that day's activity, and
documentation of the individual's and the parent or caregiver's progress toward
achieving each behavioral objective through analysis and reporting of
quantifiable behavioral data. Documentation shall be prepared to clearly
demonstrate efficacy using baseline and service-related data that shows
clinical progress and generalization for the child and family members toward
the therapy goals as defined in the service plan.
d. Documentation of all billed services shall include the
amount of time or billable units spent to deliver the service and shall be
signed and dated on the date of the service by the practitioner rendering the
service.
e. Billable time is permitted for the LBA, LABA, LMHP,
LMHP-R, LMHP-RP, or LMHP-S to better define behaviors and develop documentation
strategies to measure treatment performance and the efficacy of the ISP
objectives, provided that these activities are documented in a progress note as
described in subdivision 11 c of this subsection.
12. Failure to comply with any of the requirements in
12VAC30-50-130 or in this section shall result in retraction.
12VAC30-80-97. Fee-for-service: behavioral therapy services
under EPSDT.
A. Payment for behavioral therapy services for individuals
younger than 21 years of age shall be the lower of the state agency fee
schedule or actual charge (charge to the general public). All private and
governmental fee-for-service providers shall be reimbursed according to the
same methodology. The agency's rates were set as of October 1, 2011, and are
effective for services on or after that date until rates are revised. Rates are
published on the agency's website at www.dmas.virginia.gov.
B. Providers shall be required to refund payments made by
Medicaid if they fail to maintain adequate documentation to support billed
activities.
12VAC30-120-380. MCO responsibilities.
A. The MCO shall provide, at a minimum, all medically
necessary covered services provided under the State Plan for Medical Assistance
and further defined by written DMAS regulations, policies and instructions,
except as otherwise modified or excluded in this part.
1. Nonemergency services provided by hospital emergency
departments shall be covered by MCOs in accordance with rates negotiated
between the MCOs and the hospital emergency departments.
2. Services that shall be provided outside the MCO network
shall include, but are not limited to, those services identified and
defined by the contract between DMAS and the MCO. Services reimbursed by DMAS
include (i) dental and orthodontic services for children up to age 21 years;
(ii) for all others, dental services (as described in 12VAC30-50-190), (iii)
school health services, (iv) community mental health services
(12VAC30-50-130 and 12VAC30-50-226); (v) early intervention services
provided pursuant to Part C of the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act
(IDEA) of 2004 (as defined in 12VAC30-50-131 and 12VAC30-50-415), and);
(vi) long-term care services provided under the § 1915(c) home-based and
community-based waivers including related transportation to such authorized
waiver services; and (vii) behavioral therapy services as defined in
12VAC30-50-130.
3. The MCOs shall pay for emergency services and family
planning services and supplies whether such services are provided inside or
outside the MCO network.
B. EPSDT services shall be covered by the MCO and defined by
the contract between DMAS and the MCO. The MCO shall have the authority to
determine the provider of service for EPSDT screenings.
C. The MCOs shall report data to DMAS under the contract
requirements, which may include data reports, report cards for members, and ad
hoc quality studies performed by the MCO or third parties.
D. Documentation requirements.
1. The MCO shall maintain records as required by federal and
state law and regulation and by DMAS policy. The MCO shall furnish such
required information to DMAS, the Attorney General of Virginia or his
authorized representatives, or the State Medicaid Fraud Control Unit on request
and in the form requested.
2. Each MCO shall have written policies regarding member
rights and shall comply with any applicable federal and state laws that pertain
to member rights and shall ensure that its staff and affiliated providers take
those rights into account when furnishing services to members in accordance
with 42 CFR 438.100.
3. Providers shall be required to refund payments if they
fail to maintain adequate documentation to support billed activities.
E. The MCO shall ensure that the health care provided to its
members meets all applicable federal and state mandates, community standards
for quality, and standards developed pursuant to the DMAS managed care quality
program.
F. The MCOs shall promptly provide or arrange for the
provision of all required services as specified in the contract between the
Commonwealth and the MCO. Medical evaluations shall be available within 48
hours for urgent care and within 30 calendar days for routine care. On-call
clinicians shall be available 24 hours per day, seven days per week.
G. The MCOs shall meet standards specified by DMAS for
sufficiency of provider networks as specified in the contract between the
Commonwealth and the MCO.
H. Each MCO and its subcontractors shall have in place, and
follow, written policies and procedures for processing requests for initial and
continuing authorizations of service. Each MCO and its subcontractors shall
ensure that any decision to deny a service authorization request or to
authorize a service in an amount, duration, or scope that is less than
requested, be made by a health care professional who has appropriate clinical
expertise in treating the member's condition or disease. Each MCO and its
subcontractors shall have in effect mechanisms to ensure consistent application
of review criteria for authorization decisions and shall consult with the
requesting provider when appropriate.
I. In accordance with 42 CFR 447.50 through 42 CFR
447.60, MCOs shall not impose any cost sharing obligations on members except as
set forth in 12VAC30-20-150 and 12VAC30-20-160.
J. An MCO may not prohibit, or otherwise restrict, a health
care professional acting within the lawful scope of practice, from advising or
advocating on behalf of a member who is his patient in accordance with 42 CFR
438.102.
K. An MCO that would otherwise be required to reimburse for
or provide coverage of a counseling or referral service is not required to do
so if the MCO objects to the service on moral or religious grounds and
furnishes information about the service it does not cover in accordance with 42
CFR 438.102.
VA.R. Doc. No. R13-3527; Filed June 30, 2017, 3:41 p.m.