TITLE 12. HEALTH
Title of Regulation: 12VAC30-120. Waivered Services (amending 12VAC30-120-900 through
12VAC30-120-925, 12VAC30-120-930, 12VAC30-120-935, 12VAC30-120-945; repealing
12VAC30-120-1700, 12VAC30-120-1705, 12VAC30-120-1710 through 12VAC30-120-1770).
Statutory Authority: § 32.1-325 of the Code of
Virginia; 42 USC § 1396.
Effective Dates: June 29, 2018, through December 28,
2019.
Agency Contact: Emily McClellan, Regulatory Supervisor,
Policy Division, Department of Medical Assistance Services, 600 East Broad
Street, Suite 1300, Richmond, VA 23219, telephone (804) 371-4300, FAX
(804) 786-1680, or email emily.mcclellan@dmas.virginia.gov.
Preamble:
Section 2.2-4011 B of the Code of Virginia states that agencies
may adopt emergency regulations in situations in which Virginia statutory law
or the appropriation act requires that a regulation be effective in 280 days or
less from its enactment, and the regulation is not exempt under the provisions
of § 2.2-4006 A 4 of the Code of Virginia.
Item 306 JJJ (3) of Chapter 780 of the 2016 Acts of
Assembly directs the Department of Medical Assistance Services (DMAS) to seek
reforms to include all remaining Medicaid populations and services, including
long-term care and home and community-based waiver services, into
cost-effective, managed, and coordinated delivery systems. The act requires
DMAS to promulgate regulations to implement the act to be effective within 280
days of enactment.
The emergency regulations establish Commonwealth
Coordinated Care Plus (CCC Plus). Individuals previously served under the
Elderly and Disabled with Consumer Direction and the Technology Assistance
waivers are included in CCC Plus, which operates under a fully integrated model
across the full continuum of care that includes physical health, behavioral
health, community-based, and institutional services. CCC Plus will operate with
very few carved out services.
Part IX
Elderly or Disabled with Consumer Direction Commonwealth Coordinated Care
Plus Waiver
12VAC30-120-900. Definitions.
The following words and terms when used in this part shall
have the following meanings unless the context clearly indicates otherwise:
"Activities of daily living" or "ADLs"
means personal care tasks such as bathing, dressing, toileting, transferring,
and eating/feeding. An individual's degree of independence in performing these
activities is a part of determining appropriate level of care and service
needs.
"Adult" means an individual who is 21 years of
age or older.
"Adult day health care " or "ADHC" means
long-term maintenance or supportive services offered by a DMAS-enrolled
community-based day care program providing a variety of health, therapeutic,
and social services designed to meet the specialized needs of those waiver
individuals who are elderly or who have a disability and who are at risk of
placement in a nursing facility (NF). The program shall be licensed by the
Virginia Department of Social Services (VDSS) as an adult day care center
(ADCC). The services offered by the center shall be required by the waiver
individual in order to permit the individual to remain in his home rather than
entering a nursing facility. ADHC can also refer to the center where this
service is provided.
"Adult Protective Services" or "APS"
means a program overseen by the Virginia Department for Aging and
Rehabilitative Services that investigates reports of abuse, neglect, and
exploitation of adults 60 years of age and older and incapacitated adults 18
years of age and older and provides services when such persons are found to be
in need of protective services.
"Agency-directed model of service" means a
model of service delivery where an agency is responsible for providing direct
support staff, for maintaining individuals' records, and for scheduling the
dates and times of the direct support staff's presence in the individuals'
homes for personal and respite care.
"Agency provider" means a public or private
organization or entity that holds a Medicaid provider agreement and furnishes
services to individuals using its own employees or subcontractors.
"Americans with Disabilities Act" or
"ADA" means the United States Code pursuant to 42 USC § 12101 et seq.
"Annually" means a period of time covering 365
consecutive calendar days or 366 consecutive days in the case of leap years.
"Appeal" means the process used to challenge
actions regarding services, benefits, and reimbursement provided by Medicaid
pursuant to 12VAC30-110 and 12VAC30-20-500 through 12VAC30-20-560.
"Applicant" means an individual, or
representative on his behalf, who has applied for or is in the process of
applying for and is awaiting a determination of eligibility for admission to
the CCC Plus Waiver.
"Assess" means to evaluate an applicant's or an
individual's condition, including functional status (an individual's degree of
dependence in performing ADLs or IADLs), current medical status, psychosocial
history, and environment. Information is collected from the applicant or
individual; applicant's or individual's representative, family, and medical
professionals as well as the assessor's observation of the applicant or
individual.
"Assessment" means one or more processes that
are used to obtain information about an applicant, including his condition,
personal goals and preferences, functional limitations, health status,
financial status, and other factors that are relevant to the determination of
eligibility for service. An assessment is required for the authorization of and
provision of services; and forms the basis for the development of the plan of
care.
"Assistive technology" or "AT" means
specialized medical equipment and supplies including those devices, controls,
or appliances specified in the plan of care but not available under the State
Plan for Medical Assistance that (i) enable waiver individuals who
are participating in the Money Follows the Person demonstration program
pursuant to Part XX (12VAC30-120-2000 et seq.) to increase their abilities
to perform activities of daily living or ADLs or IADLs and to
perceive, control, or communicate with the environment in which they live,
or that (ii) are necessary to the proper functioning of the
specialized equipment, cost effective, and appropriate for the individual's
assessed medical needs and physical deficits.
"Backup caregiver" means a secondary person who
assumes the role of providing direct care to and support of the waiver
individual in instances of emergencies and in the absence of the primary
caregiver who is unable to care for the individual. The backup caregiver shall
perform the duties needed by the waiver individual without compensation and
shall be trained in the skilled needs and technologies required by the waiver
individual. The backup caregiver shall be identified in the waiver individual's
records.
"Barrier crime" means those crimes as defined at § 32.1-162.9:1
of the Code of Virginia that would prohibit either the employment or the
continuation of employment if a person is found, through a Virginia
State Police criminal record check, to have been convicted of such a
crime.
"CMS" means the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid
Services, which is the unit of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
that administers the Medicare and Medicaid programs.
"Child Protective Services" or "CPS" means
a program overseen by the Virginia Department of Social Services that
investigates reports of abuse, neglect, and exploitation of children younger
than 18 years of age and provides services when persons are found to be in need
of protective services.
"Cognitive impairment" means a severe deficit in
mental capability that affects a waiver individual's areas of functioning such
as thought processes, problem solving, judgment, memory, or comprehension that
interferes with such things as reality orientation, ability to care for self,
ability to recognize danger to self or others, or impulse control.
"Commonwealth Coordinated Care Plus Program" or
"CCC Plus" means the DMAS mandatory integrated care initiative for
certain qualifying individuals, including individuals who are dually eligible
for Medicare and Medicaid and individuals receiving long-term services and
supports (LTSS). The CCC Plus program includes individuals who receive services
through nursing facility (NF) care, or from four of the DMAS five home and
community-based services (HCBS) § 1915(c) waivers (the Alzheimer's Assisted
Living (AAL) Waiver individuals are not eligible for the CCC Plus program).
"Congregate living arrangement" means a living
arrangement in which three or fewer waiver individuals live in the same
household and share receipt of health care services from the same provider or
providers.
"Congregate skilled PDN" means skilled in-home
nursing provided to three or fewer waiver individuals in the individuals'
primary residence or a group setting.
"Conservator" means a person appointed by a
court to manage the estate and financial affairs of an incapacitated
individual.
"Consumer-directed attendant" means a person who
provides, via the consumer-directed model of services, personal care, companion
services, or respite care, or any combination of these three services, who is
also exempt from workers' compensation.
"Consumer-directed (CD) model of service" or
"CD model of service" means the model of service delivery for
which the waiver individual enrolled in the waiver or the
individual's employer of record, as appropriate, are is
responsible for hiring, training, supervising, and firing of the person or
persons attendants who actually render the services that are
reimbursed by DMAS.
"Consumer-directed services facilitator,"
"CD services facilitator," or "facilitator" means the
DMAS-enrolled provider who is responsible for supporting the individual and
family/caregiver by ensuring the development and monitoring of the
consumer-directed services plan of care, providing attendant management
training, and completing ongoing review activities as required by DMAS for
consumer-directed personal care and respite services.
"Cost-effective" means the anticipated annual
cost to Medicaid for CCC Plus waiver services shall be less than or equal to
the anticipated annual institutional costs to Medicaid for individuals
receiving care in hospitals or specialized care nursing facilities.
"Day" means, for the purposes of reimbursement, a
24-hour period beginning at 12 a.m. and ending at 11:59 p.m.
"DBHDS" means the Department of Behavioral Health
and Developmental Services.
"Direct marketing" means any of the following: (i)
conducting either directly or indirectly door-to-door, telephonic, or other
"cold call" marketing of services at residences and provider sites;
(ii) using direct mailing; (iii) paying "finders fees"; (iv) offering
financial incentives, rewards, gifts, or special opportunities to eligible
individuals or family/caregivers as inducements to use the providers' services;
(v) providing continuous, periodic marketing activities to the same prospective
individual or family/caregiver, for example, monthly, quarterly, or annual
giveaways as inducements to use the providers' services; or (vi) engaging in
marketing activities that offer potential customers rebates or discounts in
conjunction with the use of the providers' services or other benefits as a
means of influencing the individual's or family/caregiver's use of the
providers' services.
"Direct medical benefit" means services or
supplies that are proper and needed for the diagnosis or treatment of a medical
condition; are provided for the diagnosis, direct care, and treatment of the
condition; and meet the standards of good professional medical practice.
"DMAS" means the Department of Medical Assistance
Services.
"DMAS staff" means persons employed by the
Department of Medical Assistance Services.
"Durable medical equipment and supplies" or
"DME" means those items prescribed by the attending physician,
generally recognized by the medical community as serving a diagnostic or
therapeutic purpose to assist the waiver individual in the completion of
everyday activities, and as being a medically necessary element of the service
plan without regard to whether those items are covered by the State Plan for
Medical Assistance.
"Elderly or Disabled with Consumer Direction
Waiver" or "EDCD Waiver" means the CMS-approved waiver that
covers a range of community support services offered to waiver individuals who
are elderly or who have a disability who would otherwise require a nursing
facility level of care.
"Employer of record" or "EOR" means the
person who performs the functions of the employer in the consumer-directed
model of service delivery. The EOR may be the individual enrolled in the
waiver, a family member, caregiver, or another person.
"Enrollment" means the process where an
individual has been determined to meet the eligibility requirements for a
Medicaid program or service and the approving entity has verified the
availability of services for the individual requesting waiver enrollment and
services.
"Environmental modifications" or "EM"
means physical adaptations to an individual's primary home residence
or primary vehicle or work site, when the work site modification exceeds
reasonable accommodation requirements of the Americans with Disabilities Act
(42 USC § 1201 et seq.), which that are necessary to ensure the
individual's health and, safety, or welfare or that
enable functioning the individual to function with greater
independence and shall be of direct medical or remedial benefit to
individuals who are participating in the Money Follows the Person demonstration
program pursuant to Part XX (12VAC30-120-2000 et seq.) without which the
individual would require institutionalization. Such physical adaptations
shall not be authorized for Medicaid payment when the adaptation is being used
to bring a substandard dwelling up to minimum habitation standards.
"EPSDT" means the Early Periodic Screening,
Diagnosis and Treatment Program administered by DMAS for children younger than
21 years of age according to federal guidelines that prescribe preventive and
treatment services for Medicaid-eligible children as set out in 12VAC30-50-130.
"Fiscal/employer agent" means a state agency or
other entity as determined by DMAS that meets the requirements of 42 CFR
441.484 and the Virginia Public Procurement Act, § 2.2-4300 et seq. of the
Code of Virginia.
"Guardian" means a person appointed by a court to
manage the personal affairs of an incapacitated individual pursuant to Chapter
20 (§ 64.2-2000 et seq.) of Title 64.2 of the Code of Virginia.
"Health, safety, and welfare standard" means,
for the purposes of this waiver, that an individual's right to receive an EDCD
Waiver service is dependent on a determination that the waiver individual needs
the service based on appropriate assessment criteria and a written plan of
care, including having a backup plan of care, that demonstrates medical
necessity and that services can be safely provided in the community or through
the model of care selected by the individual.
"Home and community-based waiver services" or
"waiver services" means the range of community support services
approved by the CMS pursuant to § 1915(c) of the Social Security Act to be
offered to individuals as an alternative to institutionalization.
"Individual" means the person who has applied for
and been approved to receive these waiver services.
"Individual's representative" means a spouse,
legal guardian, adult child, parent of a minor child, or other person chosen by
the member to represent him in matters relating to his care or to function as
the member's primary caregiver as defined in this section.
"Instrumental activities of daily living" or
"IADLs" means tasks such as meal preparation, shopping, housekeeping
and laundry. An individual's degree of independence in performing these
activities is a part of determining appropriate service needs.
"Legally responsible person" means one who has a
legal obligation under the provisions of state law to care for and make
decisions for an individual. Legally responsible persons shall include the
parents or legal guardians of minor children.
"Level of care" or "LOC" means the
specification of the minimum amount of assistance an individual requires in
order to receive services in an institutional setting under the State Plan or
to receive waiver services.
"License" means proof of official or legal
permission issued by the government for an entity or person to perform an
activity or service such that, in the absence of an official license, the
entity or person is debarred from performing the activity or service. In
the absence of a license that may be required by either statute or regulation,
the entity or person shall be prohibited from performing the activity or
service for reimbursement by DMAS.
"Licensed Practical Nurse" or "LPN" means
a person who is licensed or holds multi-state licensure to practice nursing
pursuant to Chapter 30 (§ 54.1-3000 et seq.) of Title 54.1 of the Code of
Virginia.
"Live-in caregiver" means a personal caregiver
who resides in the same household as the individual who is receiving waiver
services.
"Long-term care" services and
supports" or "LTC" "LTSS" means a
variety of services that help individuals with health or personal care needs
and activities of daily living over a period of time. Long-term care can be
provided in the home, in the community, or in various types of facilities,
including nursing facilities and assisted living facilities.
"Medicaid Long-Term Care (LTC) Services and
Supports (LTSS) Communication Form" or "DMAS-225" means the
form used by the long-term care provider to report information about changes in
an individual's eligibility and financial circumstances.
"Medically necessary" means those services or
specialized medical equipment or supplies that are covered for reimbursement
under either the State Plan for Medical Assistance or in a waiver program that
are reasonable, proper, and necessary for the treatment of an illness, injury,
or deficit; are provided for direct care of the condition or to maintain or
improve the functioning of a malformed body part; and that meet the standards
of good professional medical practice as determined by DMAS.
"Medication monitoring" means an electronic device,
which is only available in conjunction with Personal Emergency Response
Systems personal emergency response systems, that enables certain
waiver individuals who are at risk of institutionalization to be reminded to
take their medications at the correct dosages and times.
"Money Follows the Person" or "MFP"
means the demonstration program, as set out in 12VAC30-120-2000 and
12VAC30-120-2010.
"Monitoring" means the ongoing oversight of the
provision of waiver and other services to determine that they are furnished
according to the waiver individual's plan of care and effectively meet his
needs, thereby assuring his health, safety, and welfare. Monitoring activities
may include telephone contact; observation; interviewing the individual or the
trained individual representative, as appropriate, in person or by telephone;
or interviewing service providers.
"Participating provider" or "provider"
means an entity that meets the standards and requirements set forth by DMAS and
has a current, signed provider participation agreement, including managed
care organizations, with DMAS or a managed care organization that has a
signed contract with DMAS.
"PAS Team" means the entity contracted with DMAS
that is responsible for performing preadmission screening pursuant to §
32.1-330 of the Code of Virginia.
"Patient pay amount" means the portion of the
individual's income that must be paid as his share of the long-term care
services and supports and is calculated by the local department of social
services based on the individual's documented monthly income and permitted
deductions.
"Personal care agency" means a participating
provider that provides personal care services.
"Personal care aide" or "aide" means a
person employed by an agency who provides personal care or unskilled respite
services. The aide shall have successfully completed an educational curriculum
of at least 40 hours of study related to the needs of individuals who are
either elderly or who have disabilities as further set out in 12VAC30-120-935.
Such successful completion may be evidenced by the existence of a certificate
of completion, which is provided to DMAS during provider audits, issued by the
training entity.
"Personal care attendant," or
"attendant," or "PCA" means a person who
provides personal care or respite services that are directed by a consumer,
family member/caregiver, or an employer of record under the CD model
of service delivery.
"Personal care services" or "PC
services" means a range of support services necessary to enable the
waiver individual to remain at or return home rather than enter a nursing
facility and that includes assistance with activities of daily living
(ADLs), instrumental activities of daily living (IADLs) ADLs or IADLs,
access to the community, self-administration of medication, or other
medical needs, supervision, and the monitoring of health status and
physical condition. Personal care services shall be provided by
aides, within the scope of their licenses/certificates, as appropriate, under
through the agency-directed model or by personal care
attendants under the CD consumer-directed model of service delivery.
Personal care services shall be provided by PCAs or attendants within the
scope of their licenses or certifications, as appropriate.
"Personal emergency response system" or
"PERS" means an electronic device and monitoring service that enables
certain waiver individuals, who are at least 14 years of age, at risk of
institutionalization to secure help in an emergency. PERS services shall be
limited to those waiver individuals who live alone or who are alone for
significant parts of the day and who have no regular caregiver for extended
periods of time.
"PERS provider" means a certified home health or a
personal care agency, a durable medical equipment provider, a hospital, or a
PERS manufacturer that has the responsibility to furnish, install, maintain,
test, monitor, and service PERS equipment, direct services (i.e., installation,
equipment maintenance, and services calls), and PERS monitoring. PERS providers
may also provide medication monitoring.
"Plan of care" or "POC" means the written
plan developed collaboratively by the waiver individual and the waiver
individual's family/caregiver, as appropriate, and the provider related solely
to the specific services necessary for the individual to remain in the
community while ensuring his health, safety, and welfare.
"Preadmission screening" means the process to: (i)
evaluate the functional, nursing, and social supports of individuals referred
for preadmission screening for certain long-term care services and
supports requiring NF eligibility; (ii) assist individuals in determining
what specific services the individuals need; (iii) evaluate whether a service
or a combination of existing community services are available to meet the
individuals' needs; and (iv) provide a list to individuals of appropriate
providers for Medicaid-funded nursing facility or home and community-based care
for those individuals who meet nursing facility level of care.
"Preadmission Screening Team" means the entity
contracted with DMAS that is responsible for performing preadmission screening
pursuant to § 32.1-330 of the Code of Virginia.
"Primary caregiver" means the primary person
who consistently assumes the primary role of providing direct care and
support of the waiver individual to live successfully in the community
without receiving compensation for providing such care. Such person's
name, if applicable, shall be documented by the RN or services facilitator in
the waiver individual's record. Waiver individuals are not required to have a
primary caregiver in order to participate in the EDCD waiver.
"Provider agreement" means the contract between
DMAS and a participating provider under which the provider agrees to furnish
services to Medicaid-eligible individuals in compliance with state and federal
statutes and regulations and Medicaid contract requirements.
"Registered nurse" or "RN" means a person
who is licensed or who holds multi-state licensure privilege pursuant to
Chapter 30 (§ 54.1-3000 et seq.) of Title 54.1 of the Code of Virginia to
practice nursing.
"Respite care agency" means a participating
provider that renders respite services.
"Respite services" means services provided to
waiver individuals who are unable to care for themselves that are furnished on
a short-term basis because of the absence of or need for the relief of the
unpaid primary caregiver who normally provides the care.
"Service authorization" or "Srv Auth"
means the process of approving either a service for the individual
before it is rendered or reimbursed. The process of approving is done by
DMAS, its service authorization contractor, or a DMAS-designated entity,
for the purposes of reimbursement for a service for the individual before it is
rendered or reimbursed.
"Service authorization contractor" means DMAS or
the entity that has been contracted by DMAS to perform service authorization
for medically necessary Medicaid covered home and community-based services.
"Services facilitation" means a service that
assists the waiver individual (or family/caregiver, as appropriate) in
arranging for, directing, training, and managing services provided through the
consumer-directed model of service.
"Services facilitator" means a DMAS-enrolled
provider or DMAS-designated entity or a person designated by the DMAS
managed care organization contractor or one who is employed or contracted by a
DMAS-enrolled provider that is responsible for supporting the individual
and the individual's family/caregiver or EOR, as appropriate, by ensuring the
development and monitoring of the CD services plans of care, providing employee
management training, and completing ongoing review activities as required by
DMAS for consumer-directed personal care and respite services. Services
facilitator shall be deemed to mean the same thing as consumer-directed
services facilitator.
"Skilled private duty nursing services" or
"skilled PDN" means skilled in-home nursing services listed in the
POC that are (i) not otherwise covered under the State Plan for Medical
Assistance home health benefit; (ii) required to prevent institutionalization;
(iii) provided within the scope of the Commonwealth's Nurse Practice Act and
Drug Control Act (Chapters 30 (§ 54.1-3000 et seq.) and 34 (§ 54.1-3400 et
seq.) of Title 54.1 of the Code of Virginia, respectively); and (iv) provided
by a licensed RN, or by an LPN under the supervision of an RN, to waiver
members who have serious medical conditions or complex health care needs.
Skilled nursing services are to be used as hands-on member care, training,
consultation, as appropriate, and oversight of direct care staff, as
appropriate.
"Skilled respite services" means temporary skilled
nursing services that are provided to waiver individuals who need such services
and that are performed by a LPN or RN for the relief of the unpaid
primary caregiver who normally provides the care.
"State Plan for Medical Assistance" or "State
Plan" means the Commonwealth's legal document approved by CMS identifying
the covered groups, covered services and their limitations, and provider
reimbursement methodologies as provided for under Title XIX of the Social
Security Act.
"Transition coordinator" means the person
defined in 12VAC30-120-2000 who facilitates MFP transition.
"Transition services" means set-up expenses for
individuals as defined at 12VAC30-120-2010.
"VDH" means the Virginia Department of Health.
"VDSS" means the Virginia Department of Social
Services.
"Virginia Uniform Assessment Instrument" or
"UAI" means the standardized multidimensional comprehensive
assessment that is completed by the Preadmission Screening Team or approved
hospital discharge planner that assesses an individual's physical health,
mental health, and psycho/social and functional abilities to determine if the
individual meets the nursing facility level of care.
"Weekly" means a span of time covering seven
consecutive calendar days.
12VAC30-120-905. Waiver description and legal authority.
A. The Elderly or Disabled with Consumer Direction (EDCD)
Commonwealth Coordinated Care Plus (CCC Plus) Waiver operates under the
authority of § 1915(c) of the Social Security Act and 42 CFR 430.25(b),
which permit the waiver of certain State Plan requirements. These federal
statutory and regulatory provisions permit the establishment of Medicaid
waivers to afford the states with greater flexibility to devise different
approaches to the provision of long-term care (LTC) services and
supports. Under this § 1915(c) waiver, DMAS waives
§ 1902(a)(10)(B) and (C) of the Social Security Act related to
comparability of services.
B. This waiver provides Medicaid individuals who are
elderly or who have a disability with supportive services to enable such
individuals to remain in their communities thereby avoiding
institutionalization. CCC Plus Waiver services shall be covered only for
Medicaid-eligible individuals who have been determined eligible for waiver
services and who also require the level of care provided in either a nursing
facility, specialized care nursing facility, or long-stay hospital. These
services shall be the critical service necessary to delay or avoid the
individual's placement in an appropriate facility.
C. Federal waiver requirements provide that the current
aggregate average cost of care fiscal year expenditures under this waiver shall
not exceed the average per capita expenditures in the aggregate for the level
of care (LOC) provided in a nursing facility (NF), specialized care nursing
facility, or long-stay hospital under the State Plan that would have been
provided had the waiver not been granted.
D. DMAS shall be the single state agency authority,
pursuant to 42 CFR 431.10, responsible for the processing and payment of
claims for the services covered in this waiver and for obtaining federal
financial participation from CMS.
E. Payments for EDCD CCC Plus Waiver services
shall not be provided to any financial institution or entity located outside of
the United States pursuant to § 1902(a)(80) of the Social Security Act.
Payments for EDCD CCC Plus Waiver services furnished in another
state shall be (i) provided for an individual who meets the requirements of 42
CFR 431.52 and (ii) limited to the same service limitations that exist when
services are rendered within the Commonwealth's political boundaries. Waiver
services shall not be furnished to covered for Medicaid-eligible
individuals who are inpatients of a hospital, nursing facility (NF),
intermediate care facility for individuals with intellectual disabilities
(ICF/IID), inpatient rehabilitation facility rehabilitation hospitals,
assisted living facility licensed by VDSS that serves five or more
individuals, long-stay hospitals, skilled or intermediate care nursing
facilities, general acute care hospitals, adult foster homes, or a
group home homes licensed by DBHDS.
F. An individual shall not be simultaneously enrolled in more
than one waiver program but may be listed on the waiting list for another
waiver program as long as criteria are met for both waiver programs.
G. DMAS shall be responsible for assuring appropriate
placement of the individual in home and community-based waiver services and shall
have the authority to terminate such services for the individual for the
reasons set out below. providers shall meet the following requirements.
1. Waiver services shall not be reimbursed until the provider
is enrolled and the individual eligibility process is complete.
2. DMAS payment for services under this waiver shall be
considered payment in full and no balance billing by the provider to the waiver
individual, family/caregiver, employer of record (EOR), or any other family
member of the waiver individual shall be permitted.
3. Additional voluntary payments or gifts from family members
shall not be accepted by providers of services.
4. DMAS shall not duplicate services that are required as a
reasonable accommodation as a part of the Americans with Disabilities Act (42
USC §§ 12131 through 12165) or the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 (29 USC § 794). EDCD
CCC Plus Waiver services shall not be authorized if another entity is
required to provide the services, (e.g., schools, insurance) because these
waiver services shall not duplicate payment for services available through
other programs or funding streams.
H. In the case of termination of home and community-based
waiver services by DMAS, individuals shall be notified of their appeal rights
pursuant to 12VAC30-110. DMAS, or the designated Srv Auth service
authorization contractor, or other designated entity shall
have the responsibility and the authority to terminate the receipt of home and
community-based care waiver services by the waiver individual for
any of the following reasons:
1. The home and community-based care waiver
services are no longer the critical alternative to prevent or delay
institutional placement within 30 days;
2. The waiver individual is no longer eligible for Medicaid;
3. The waiver individual no longer meets the NF LOC
criteria required for the waiver;
4. The waiver individual's environment in the community does
not provide for his health, safety, or welfare;
5. The waiver individual does not have a backup plan for
services in the event the provider is unable to provide services; or
6. Any other circumstances (including hospitalization) that
cause services to cease or be interrupted for more than 30 consecutive calendar
days. In such cases, such individuals shall be referred back to the local
department of social services for redetermination of their Medicaid
eligibility.
12VAC30-120-920. Individual eligibility requirements.
A. Home and community-based waiver services shall be
available through a § 1915(c) of the Social Security Act waiver for the
following Medicaid-eligible individuals who have been determined to be eligible
for waiver services and to require the level of care provided in a nursing
facility (NF), long-stay hospital, or specialized care nursing facility:
1. Individuals who are elderly as defined by § 1614 of
the Social Security Act; or
2. Individuals who have a disability as defined by § 1614
of the Social Security Act.
B. The Commonwealth has elected to cover low-income families
with children as described in § 1931 of the Social Security Act; aged, blind,
or disabled individuals who are eligible under 42 CFR 435.121; optional categorically
needy individuals who are aged and disabled who have incomes at 80% of the
federal poverty level; the special home and community-based waiver group under
42 CFR 435.217; and the medically needy groups specified in 42 CFR 435.320,
435.322, 435.324, and 435.330.
1. Under this waiver, the coverage groups authorized under § 1902(a)(10)(A)(ii)(VI)
of the Social Security Act shall be considered as if they were
institutionalized in a NF, specialized care NF, or long-stay hospital
for the purpose of applying institutional deeming rules. All individuals in the
waiver must meet the financial and nonfinancial Medicaid eligibility criteria
and meet the institutional level of care (LOC) criteria. The deeming rules are
applied to waiver eligible individuals as if the individual were residing in an
institution or would require that level of care.
2. Virginia shall reduce its payment for home and
community-based services provided to an individual who is eligible for Medicaid
services under 42 CFR 435.217 by that amount of the waiver individual's total
income (including amounts disregarded in determining eligibility) that remains
after allowable deductions for personal maintenance needs, deductions for other
dependents, and medical needs have been made, according to the guidelines in 42
CFR 435.735 and § 1915(c)(3) of the Social Security Act as amended by the
Consolidated Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1986. DMAS shall reduce its
payment for home and community-based waiver services by the amount that remains
after the following deductions:
a. For waiver individuals to whom § 1924(d) applies
(Virginia waives the requirement for comparability pursuant to § 1902(a)(10)(B)),
deduct the following in the respective order:
(1) An amount for the maintenance needs of the waiver
individual that is equal to 165% of the SSI income limit for one individual.
Working individuals have a greater need due to expenses of employment;
therefore, an additional amount of income shall be deducted. Earned income
shall be deducted within the following limits: (i) for waiver individuals
employed 20 hours or more per week, earned income shall be disregarded up to a
maximum of both earned and unearned income up to 300% of SSI and (ii) for
waiver individuals employed at least eight but less than 20 hours per week,
earned income shall be disregarded up to a maximum of both earned and unearned
income up to 200% of SSI. However, in no case shall the total amount of income
(both earned and unearned) that is disregarded for maintenance exceed 300% of
SSI. If the waiver individual requires a guardian or conservator who charges a
fee, the fee, not to exceed an amount greater than 5.0% of the waiver
individual's total monthly income, is added to the maintenance needs allowance.
However, in no case shall the total amount of the maintenance needs allowance
(basic allowance plus earned income allowance plus guardianship fees) for the
individual exceed 300% of SSI;
(2) For a waiver individual with only a spouse at home, the
community spousal income allowance is determined in accordance with § 1924(d)
of the Social Security Act;
(3) For an individual with a family at home, an additional
amount for the maintenance needs of the family is determined in accordance with
§ 1924(d) of the Social Security Act; and
(4) Amounts for incurred expenses for medical or remedial care
that are not subject to payment by a third party, including Medicare and other
health insurance premiums, deductibles, or coinsurance charges and necessary
medical or remedial care recognized under the state law but not covered under
the State Plan.
b. For waiver individuals to whom § 1924(d) of the Social
Security Act does not apply, deduct the following in the respective order:
(1) An amount for the maintenance needs of the waiver
individual that is equal to 165% of the SSI income limit for one individual.
Working individuals have a greater need due to expenses of employment;
therefore, an additional amount of income shall be deducted. Earned income
shall be deducted within the following limits: (i) for waiver individuals
employed 20 hours or more, earned income shall be disregarded up to a maximum
of 300% of SSI and (ii) for waiver individuals employed at least eight but less
than 20 hours, earned income shall be disregarded up to a maximum of 200% of
SSI. However, in no case shall the total amount of income (both earned and
unearned) that is disregarded for maintenance exceed 300% of SSI. If the
individual requires a guardian or conservator who charges a fee, the fee, not
to exceed an amount greater than 5.0% of the individual's total monthly income,
is added to the maintenance needs allowance. However, in no case shall the
total amount of the maintenance needs allowance (basic allowance plus earned
income allowance plus guardianship fees) for the individual exceed 300% of SSI;
(2) For an individual with a family at home, an additional
amount for the maintenance needs of the family that shall be equal to the
medically needy income standard for a family of the same size; and
(3) Amounts for incurred expenses for medical or remedial care
that are not subject to payment by a third party including Medicare and other
health insurance premiums, deductibles, or coinsurance charges and necessary
medical or remedial care recognized under state law but not covered under the
State Plan.
C. Assessment and authorization of home and community-based waiver
services.
1. To ensure that Virginia's home and community-based waiver
programs serve only Medicaid eligible individuals who would otherwise be placed
in a NF, specialized care NF, or long-stay hospital, home and
community-based waiver services shall be considered only for individuals who
are eligible for admission within 30 calendar days to a NF the
institution. Home and community-based waiver services shall be the critical
service to enable the individual to remain at home and in the community rather
than being placed in a NF an institution.
2. The individual's eligibility for home and community-based waiver
services shall be determined by the Preadmission Screening PAS
Team or DMAS-enrolled hospital provider after completion of a thorough
assessment of the individual's needs and available support. If an individual
meets NF criteria for a CCC Plus Waiver qualifying institution (NF,
specialized care NF, or long-stay hospital) and in the absence of
community-based waiver services, is at risk of NF institutional
placement within 30 days, the Preadmission Screening PAS Team or
DMAS-enrolled hospital provider shall provide the individual and
family/caregiver with the choice of EDCD CCC Plus Waiver
services, other appropriate services, NF institutional placement,
or Program of All Inclusive Care for the Elderly (PACE) enrollment for people
55 years of age or older, where available and appropriate.
3. The Preadmission Screening PAS Team or
DMAS-enrolled hospital provider shall explore alternative settings or
services to provide the care needed by the individual. If Medicaid-funded home
and community-based care waiver services are selected by the
individual and when such services are determined to be the critical services
necessary to delay or avoid NF placement, the Preadmission Screening PAS
Team or DMAS-enrolled hospital provider shall initiate referrals for such
services.
4. Medicaid shall not pay for any home and community-based care
waiver services delivered prior to the individual establishing Medicaid
eligibility and prior to the date of the preadmission screening by the Preadmission
Screening PAS Team or DMAS-enrolled hospital provider and the
physician signature on the Medicaid Funded Long-Term Care Services
Authorization Form (DMAS-96).
5. Before Medicaid shall assume payment responsibility of home
and community-based waiver services, service authorization must be
obtained from DMAS or the DMAS designated Srv Auth contractor, in accordance
with DMAS policy, entity for all services requiring service
authorization. Providers shall submit all required information to DMAS or the
designated Srv Auth contractor entity within 10 business days of
initiating care or within 10 business days of receiving verification of
Medicaid eligibility from the local department of social services. If the
provider submits all required information to DMAS or the designated Srv Auth
contractor entity within 10 business days of initiating care,
services may be authorized beginning from the date the provider initiated
services but not preceding the date of the physician's signature on the DMAS 96
form. If the provider does not submit all required information to DMAS or the
designated Srv Auth contractor entity within 10 business days of
initiating care, the services may be authorized beginning with the date all
required information was received by DMAS or the designated Srv Auth contractor
entity, but in no event preceding the date of the physician's signature
on the DMAS-96 form.
6. Once waiver eligibility has been determined by the Preadmission
Screening PAS Team or DMAS-enrolled hospital provider and
referrals have been initiated, the provider shall submit a Medicaid LTC LTSS
Communication Form (DMAS-225) to the local department of social services to
determine financial eligibility for the waiver program and any patient pay
responsibilities. If the waiver individual who is receiving EDCD CCC
Plus Waiver services has a patient pay amount, a provider shall use the
electronic patient pay process for the required monthly monitoring of relevant
changes. Local departments of social services shall enter data regarding a
waiver individual's patient pay amount obligation into the Medicaid Management
Information System (MMIS) at the time action is taken on behalf of the
individual either as a result of an application for LTC services LTSS,
redetermination of eligibility, or reported change or changes in a waiver
individual's situation. Procedures for the verification of a waiver
individual's patient pay obligation are available in the appropriate Medicaid
provider manual or manual from the designated entity.
7. After the provider has received notification via the
DMAS-225 process by the local department of social services and enrollment
confirmation from DMAS or the designated Srv Auth contractor entity,
the provider shall inform the individual or family/caregiver so that services
may be initiated.
8. The provider shall be responsible for notifying the local
department of social services via the DMAS-225 when there is an interruption of
services for 30 consecutive calendar days or upon discharge from the provider's
services.
9. Home and community-based care waiver services
shall not be offered or provided to any individual who resides in a NF, an
ICF/IID, specialized care NF, a long-stay hospital, an assisted
living facility licensed by VDSS that serves five or more individuals, or
a group home licensed by DBHDS. Transition coordination and transition
services may be available to individuals residing in some settings as approved
by CMS through the Money Follows the Person demonstration program.
10. Certain home and community-based waiver services
shall not be available to individuals residing in an assisted living facility
licensed by VDSS that serves four or fewer individuals. These services are:
respite, PERS, ADHC, environmental modifications and transition
services. Personal care services shall be covered for individuals living
in these facilities but shall be limited to personal care not to exceed five
hours per day. Personal care services shall be authorized based on the waiver
individual's documented need for care over and above that provided by the
facility.
11. Individuals who are receiving Auxiliary Grants shall not
be eligible for EDCD CCC Plus enrollment or services.
12. Individuals who are receiving skilled PDN waiver
services shall have a trained primary caregiver who accepts responsibility for
the individual's health, safety, and welfare. This primary caregiver shall be
responsible for all hours not provided by an RN or an LPN. The name of the
trained primary caregiver shall be documented in the provider agency records.
This trained primary caregiver shall also have a back-up system available in
emergency situations.
D. Waiver individual responsibilities under the
consumer-directed (CD) model.
1. The individual shall be authorized for CD services and the
EOR shall successfully complete consumer employee management training performed
by the CD services facilitator before the waiver individual/EOR shall be
permitted to hire a personal care attendant for Medicaid reimbursement. Any
services rendered by an attendant prior to dates authorized by Medicaid shall
not be eligible for reimbursement by Medicaid. Individuals who are
eligible for CD services shall have the capability to hire and train their own
personal care attendants and supervise the attendants' performance including,
but not limited to, creating and maintaining complete and accurate timesheets.
Individuals may have a family member, caregiver, or another person serve as the
EOR on their behalf.
2. The person who serves as the EOR on behalf of the waiver
individual shall not be permitted to be (i) the paid attendant for respite
services or personal care services or (ii) the services facilitator.
3. Individuals will acknowledge that they will not knowingly
continue to accept CD personal care services when the service is no longer
appropriate or necessary for their care needs and shall inform the services
facilitator. If CD services continue after services have been terminated by
DMAS or the designated Srv Auth contractor entity, the waiver
individual shall be held liable for attendant compensation.
4. Individuals shall notify the CD services facilitator of all
hospitalizations and admission to any rehabilitation facility, rehabilitation
unit, or NF. Failure to do so may result in the waiver individual being liable
for employee compensation.
E. Waiver individuals' rights and responsibilities. DMAS
shall ensure that:
1. Each waiver individual shall receive, and the provider
and provider staff shall provide, the necessary care and services, to the
extent of provider availability, to attain or maintain the highest practicable
physical, mental, and psychosocial well-being, in accordance with the
individual's comprehensive assessment and POC.
2. Waiver individuals shall have the right to receive
services from the provider with reasonable accommodation of the individuals'
needs and preferences except when DMAS makes a determination that the health,
safety, or welfare of the individuals or other waiver individuals would be
endangered.
3. Waiver individuals formulate their own advance
directives based on information that providers must give to adult waiver
individuals at the time of their admissions to services.
4. All waiver individuals shall have the right to:
a. Voice grievances to the provider or provider staff
without discrimination or reprisal. Such grievances include those with respect
to treatment that has been furnished or has not been furnished;
b. Prompt efforts by the provider or staff, as appropriate,
to resolve any grievances the waiver individual may have;
c. Be free from verbal, sexual, physical, and mental abuse,
neglect, exploitation, and misappropriation of property;
d. Be free from any physical or chemical restraints of any
form that may be used as a means of coercion, discipline, convenience, or
retaliation and that are not required to treat the individual's medical
symptoms; and
e. Their privacy and confidentiality of their medical and
clinical records.
5. Waiver individuals shall be provided by their health
care providers, at the time of their admission to this waiver, with written
information regarding their rights to participate in medical care decisions,
including the right to accept or refuse medical treatment and the right to
formulate advance directives.
6. The legally competent waiver individual, the waiver
individual's legal guardian, or the parent of the minor child shall have the
right to:
a. Choose whether the individual wishes to receive home and
community-based care waiver services instead of institutionalization in
accordance with the assessed needs of the individual. The PAS Team shall inform
the individual of all available waiver service providers in the community in
which the waiver individual resides. The waiver individual shall have the
option of selecting the provider and services of his choice. This choice must
be documented in the individual's medical record;
b. Choose his own primary care physician in the community
in which he lives;
c. Be fully informed in advance about the waiver POC and
treatment needs as well as any changes in that care or treatment that may
affect the individual's well-being; and
d. Participate in the care planning process, choice, and
scheduling of providers and services.
12VAC30-120-924. Covered services; limits on covered services.
A. Covered services in the EDCD CCC Plus Waiver
shall include are as follows: adult day health care, personal
care (both consumer-directed and agency-directed), respite services (both
consumer-directed and agency-directed), PERS, PERS medication monitoring, limited
services facilitation, skilled private duty nursing, assistive
technology, limited environmental modifications, transition
coordination, and transition services.
1. The services covered in this waiver shall be appropriate
and medically necessary to maintain the individual in the community in order to
prevent institutionalization and shall be cost effective in the aggregate as
compared to the alternative NF institutional placement.
2. EDCD CCC Plus Waiver services shall not be
authorized if another entity is required to provide the services (e.g.,
schools, insurance). Waiver services shall not duplicate services available
through other programs or funding streams.
3. Assistive technology and environmental modification
services shall be available only to those EDCD Waiver individuals who are also
participants in the Money Follows the Person (MFP) demonstration program
pursuant to Part XX (12VAC30-120-2000 et seq.).
4. 3. An individual receiving EDCD CCC
Plus Waiver services who is also getting hospice care may receive
Medicaid-covered personal care (agency-directed and consumer-directed), respite
care (agency-directed and consumer-directed), services facilitation, skilled
private duty nursing, adult day health care, transition services, transition
coordination, and PERS services, regardless of whether the hospice provider
receives reimbursement from Medicare or Medicaid for the services covered under
the hospice benefit. Such dual waiver/hospice individuals shall only be able
to receive assistive technology and environmental modifications if they are
also participants in the MFP demonstration program.
B. Voluntary/involuntary disenrollment from consumer-directed
services. In either voluntary or involuntary disenrollment situations, the
waiver individual shall be permitted to select an agency from which to receive
his agency-directed personal care and respite services.
1. A waiver individual may be found to be ineligible for CD services
by either the Preadmission Screening PAS Team, DMAS-enrolled
hospital provider, DMAS, its designated agent, or the CD services
facilitator. An individual may not begin or continue to receive CD services if
there are circumstances where the waiver individual's health, safety, or
welfare cannot be assured, including but not limited to:
a. It is determined that the waiver individual cannot be the
EOR and no one else is able to assume this role;
b. The waiver individual cannot ensure his own health, safety,
or welfare or develop an emergency backup plan that will ensure his health,
safety, or welfare; or
c. The waiver individual has medication or skilled nursing
needs or medical or behavioral conditions that cannot be met through CD
services or other services.
2. The waiver individual may be involuntarily disenrolled from
consumer direction if he or the EOR, as appropriate, is consistently unable to
retain or manage the attendant as may be demonstrated by, but not necessarily
limited to, a pattern of serious discrepancies with the attendant's timesheets.
3. In situations where either (i) the waiver individual's
health, safety, or welfare cannot be assured or (ii) attendant timesheet
discrepancies are known, the services facilitator shall assist as requested
with the waiver individual's transfer to agency-directed services as follows:
a. Verify that essential training has been provided to the
waiver individual or EOR;
b. Document, in the waiver individual's case record,
the conditions creating the necessity for the involuntary disenrollment and
actions taken by the services facilitator;
c. Discuss with the waiver individual or the EOR, as
appropriate, the agency-directed option that is available and the actions
needed to arrange for such services and offer choice of potential providers,
and
d. Provide written notice to the waiver individual of the
right to appeal such involuntary termination of consumer direction. Such notice
shall be given at least 10 calendar days prior to the effective date of
this change. In cases when the individual's or the provider personnel's safety
may be in jeopardy, the 10 calendar days notice shall not apply.
C. Adult day health care (ADHC) services. ADHC services shall
only be offered to waiver individuals who meet preadmission screening criteria
as established in 12VAC30-60-303 and 12VAC30-60-307 12VAC30-60-313
and for whom ADHC services shall be an appropriate and medically necessary
alternative to institutional care. ADHC services may be offered to individuals
in a VDSS-licensed adult day care center (ADCC) congregate setting. ADHC may be
offered either as the sole home and community-based care waiver
service or in conjunction with personal care (either agency-directed or
consumer-directed), respite care (either agency-directed or consumer-directed),
or PERS. A multi-disciplinary approach to developing, implementing, and
evaluating each waiver individual's POC shall be essential to quality ADHC
services.
1. ADHC services shall be designed to prevent
institutionalization by providing waiver individuals with health care services,
maintenance of their physical and mental conditions, and coordination of
rehabilitation services in a congregate daytime setting and shall be tailored
to their unique needs. The minimum range of services that shall be made
available to every waiver individual shall be: assistance with ADLs, nursing
services, coordination of rehabilitation services, nutrition, social services,
recreation, and socialization services.
a. Assistance with ADLs shall include supervision of the
waiver individual and assistance with management of the individual's POC.
b. Nursing services shall include the periodic evaluation, at
least every 90 days, of the waiver individual's nursing needs; provision of
indicated nursing care and treatment; responsibility for monitoring, recording,
and administering prescribed medications; supervision of the waiver individual
in self-administered medication; support of families in their home care efforts
for the waiver individuals through education and counseling; and helping
families identify and appropriately utilize health care resources. Periodic
evaluations may occur more frequently than every 90 days if indicated by the
individual's changing condition. Nursing services shall also include the
general supervision of provider staff, who are certified through the Board of
Nursing, in medication management and administering medications.
c. Coordination and implementation of rehabilitation services
to ensure the waiver individual receives all rehabilitative services deemed
necessary to improve or maintain independent functioning, to include physical
therapy, occupational therapy, and speech therapy.
d. Nutrition services shall be provided to include, but not
necessarily be limited to, one meal per day that meets the daily nutritional
requirements pursuant to 22VAC40-60-800. Special diets and nutrition counseling
shall be provided as required by the waiver individuals.
e. Recreation and social activities shall be provided that are
suited to the needs of the waiver individuals and shall be designed to
encourage physical exercise, prevent physical and mental deterioration, and
stimulate social interaction.
f. ADHC coordination shall involve implementing the waiver
individuals' POCs, updating such plans, recording 30-day progress notes, and
reviewing the waiver individuals' daily logs each week.
2. Limits on covered ADHC services.
a. A day of ADHC services shall be defined as a minimum of six
hours.
b. ADCCs that do not employ professional nursing staff on site
shall not be permitted to admit waiver individuals who require skilled nursing
care to their centers. Examples of skilled nursing care may include: (i) tube
feedings; (ii) Foley catheter irrigations; (iii) sterile dressing changing; or
(iv) any other procedures that require sterile technique. The ADCC shall not
permit its aide employees to perform skilled nursing procedures.
c. At any time that the center is no longer able to provide
reliable, continuous care to any of the center's waiver individuals for the
number of hours per day or days per week as contained in the individuals' POCs,
then the center shall contact the waiver individuals or family/caregivers, as
appropriate, to initiate other care arrangements for these individuals. The
center may either subcontract with another ADCC or may transfer the waiver
individual to another ADCC. The center may discharge waiver individuals from
the center's services but not from the waiver. Written notice of discharge
shall be provided, with the specific reason or reasons for discharge, at least
10 calendar days prior to the effective date of the discharge. In cases when
the individual's or the center personnel's safety may be jeopardy, the 10
calendar days notice shall not apply.
d. ADHC services shall not be provided, for the purpose of
Medicaid reimbursement, to individuals who reside in NFs, ICFs/IID nursing
facilities, intermediate care facilities for individuals with intellectual
disabilities, hospitals, assisted living facilities that are licensed by
VDSS, or group homes that are licensed by DBHDS.
D. Agency-directed personal care services. Agency-directed
personal care services shall only be offered to persons who meet the
preadmission screening criteria at 12VAC30-60-303 and 12VAC30-60-307 12VAC30-60-313
and for whom it shall be an appropriate alternative to institutional care.
Agency-directed personal care services shall be comprised of hands-on care of
either a supportive or health-related nature and shall include, but shall not
necessarily be limited to, assistance with ADLs, access to the community,
assistance with medications in accordance with VDH licensing requirements or
other medical needs, supervision, and the monitoring of health status and
physical condition. Where the individual requires assistance with ADLs, and
when specified in the POC, such supportive services may include assistance with
IADLs. This service shall not include skilled nursing services with the
exception of skilled nursing tasks (e.g., catheterization) that may be
delegated pursuant to Part VIII (18VAC90-20-420 VI (18VAC90-19-240
through 18VAC90-20-460) 18VAC90-19-280) of 18VAC90-20 18VAC90-19.
Agency-directed personal care services may be provided in a home or community
setting to enable an individual to maintain the health status and functional
skills necessary to live in the community or participate in community
activities. Personal care may be offered either as the sole home and
community-based care waiver service or in conjunction with adult
day health care, respite care (agency-directed or consumer-directed), or PERS.
The provider shall document, in the individual's medical record, the waiver
individual's choice of the agency-directed model.
1. Criteria. In order to qualify for this service, the waiver
individual shall have met the NF LOC criteria as set out in
12VAC30-60-303 and 12VAC30-60-307 12VAC30-60-313 as documented on
the UAI assessment form, and for whom it shall be an appropriate alternative to
institutional care.
a. A waiver individual may receive both CD and agency-directed
personal care services if the individual meets the criteria. Hours received by
the individual who is receiving both CD and agency-directed services shall not
exceed the total number of hours that would be needed if the waiver individual
were receiving personal care services through a single delivery model.
b. CD and agency-directed services shall not be simultaneously
provided but may be provided sequentially or alternately from each other.
c. The individual or family/caregiver shall have a backup plan
for the provision of services in the event the agency is unable to provide an
aide.
2. Limits on covered agency-directed personal care services.
a. DMAS shall not duplicate services that are required as a
reasonable accommodation as a part of the Americans with Disabilities Act (42
USC §§ 12131 through 12165) or the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 (29 USC § 794).
b. DMAS or its contractor shall reimburse for services
delivered, consistent with the approved POC, for personal care that the
personal care aide provides to the waiver individual to assist him while he is
at work or postsecondary school.
(1) DMAS or the designated Srv Auth contractor entity
shall review the waiver individual's needs and the complexity of the
disability, as applicable, when determining the services that are provided to
him in the workplace or postsecondary school or both.
(2) DMAS shall not pay for the personal care aide to assist
the enrolled waiver individual with any functions or tasks related to the
individual completing his job or postsecondary school functions or for
supervision time during either work or postsecondary school or both.
c. Supervision services shall only be authorized to ensure the
health, safety, or welfare of the waiver individual who cannot be left alone at
any time or is unable to call for help in case of an emergency, and when there
is no one else in the home competent and able to call for help in case of an
emergency.
d. There shall be a maximum limit of eight hours per 24-hour
day for supervision services. Supervision services shall be documented in the
POC as needed by the individual.
e. Agency-directed personal care services shall be limited to
56 hours of services per week for 52 weeks per year. Individual exceptions may
be granted based on criteria established by DMAS.
f. Due to the complex medical needs of waiver individuals
requiring skilled PDN services and the need for 24-hour supervision, the
trained primary caregiver shall be present in the home and shall render the
required skilled services during the entire time that the aide is providing
unskilled care.
g. Agency-directed personal care services shall not be
available to waiver individuals younger than 21 years of age. Personal care
services for individuals younger than 21 shall be accessed through the EPSDT
benefit.
E. Agency-directed respite services. Agency-directed respite
care services shall only be offered to waiver individuals who meet the
preadmission screening criteria at 12VAC30-60-303 and 12VAC30-60-307 12VAC30-60-313
and for whom it shall be an appropriate alternative to institutional care.
Agency-directed respite care services may be either skilled nursing respite
or unskilled care and shall be comprised of hands-on care of either a
supportive or health-related nature and may include, but shall not be limited
to, assistance with ADLs, access to the community, assistance with medications
in accordance with VDH licensing requirements or other medical needs,
supervision, and monitoring health status and physical condition. Skilled
respite shall include skilled nursing care ordered on the physician-certified
POC.
1. Respite care shall only be offered to individuals who have
an unpaid primary caregiver who requires temporary relief to avoid
institutionalization of the waiver individual. Respite care services may be
provided in the individual's home or other community settings.
2. When the individual requires assistance with ADLs, and
where such assistance is specified in the waiver individual's POC, such
supportive services may also include assistance with IADLs.
3. The unskilled care portion of this Unskilled respite
service shall not include skilled nursing services with the exception of
skilled nursing tasks (e.g., catheterization) that may be delegated pursuant to
Part VIII (18VAC90-20-420 VI (18VAC90-19-240 through 18VAC90-20-460)
18VAC90-19-280) of 18VAC90-20 18VAC90-19.
4. Skilled respite care
services.
a. This service shall be provided by skilled nursing staff
licensed to practice in the Commonwealth under the direct supervision of a
licensed, certified, or accredited home health agency with which DMAS has a
provider agreement to provide skilled PDN. Direct supervision means that the
supervising registered nurse (RN) is immediately accessible by telephone to the
RN, LPN, or personal care aide who is delivering waiver-covered services to
individuals.
b. Skilled respite care services shall be comprised of both
skilled and hands-on care of either a supportive or health-related nature and
may include all skilled nursing care as ordered on the physician-certified POC,
assistance with ADLs or IADLs, administration of medications or other medical
needs, and monitoring of the health status and physical condition of
individuals.
c. When skilled respite services are offered in conjunction
with skilled PDN, the same individual record may be used with a separate section
for skilled respite services documentation. This documentation must be clearly
labeled as distinct from skilled PDN services.
d. Individuals who have congregate living arrangements
shall be permitted to share skilled respite care service providers. The same
limits on this service in the congregate setting (480 hours per calendar year
per household) shall apply regardless of the type of waiver.
4. 5. Limits on service.
a. The unit of service shall be one hour. Respite services
shall be limited to 480 hours per individual per state fiscal year, to be
service authorized. If an individual changes waiver programs, this same maximum
number of respite hours shall apply. No additional respite hours beyond the 480
maximum limit shall be approved for payment for individuals who change waiver
programs. Additionally, individuals who are receiving respite services in this
waiver through both the agency-directed and CD models shall not exceed 480
hours per state fiscal year combined.
b. If agency-directed respite service is the only service
received by the waiver individual, it must be received at least as often as
every 30 days. If this service is not required at this minimal level of
frequency, then the provider agency shall notify the local department of social
services for its redetermination of eligibility for the waiver individual.
c. The individual or family/caregiver shall have a backup plan
for the provision of services in the event the agency is unable to provide an
aide.
F. Services facilitation for consumer-directed services.
Consumer-directed personal care and respite care services shall only be offered
to persons who meet the preadmission screening criteria at 12VAC30-60-303 and 12VAC30-60-307
12VAC30-60-313 and for whom there shall be appropriate alternatives to
institutional care.
1. Individuals who choose CD services shall receive support
from a DMAS-enrolled CD services facilitator or a provider designated by the
managed care organization contractor as required in conjunction with CD
services. The services facilitator shall document the waiver individual's
choice of the CD model and whether there is a need for another person to serve
as the EOR on behalf of the individual. The CD services facilitator shall be
responsible for assessing the waiver individual's particular needs for a
requested CD service, assisting in the development of the POC, providing
training to the EOR on his responsibilities as an employer, and for providing
ongoing support of the CD services.
2. Individuals who are eligible for CD services shall have, or
have an EOR who has, the capability to hire and train the personal care
attendant or attendants and supervise the attendant's performance, including
approving the attendant's timesheets.
a. If a waiver individual is unwilling or unable to direct his
own care or is younger than 18 years of age, a family/caregiver/designated
person shall serve as the EOR on behalf of the waiver individual in order to
perform these supervisory and approval functions.
b. Specific employer duties shall include checking references
of personal care attendants and determining that personal care attendants meet
qualifications.
3. The individual or family/caregiver shall have a backup plan
for the provision of services in case the attendant does not show up for work
as scheduled or terminates employment without prior notice.
4. The CD services facilitator shall not be the waiver
individual, a CD attendant, a provider of other Medicaid-covered services,
spouse of the individual, parent (natural, adoptive, step, or foster parent)
of the individual who is a minor child, or the EOR who is employing the CD
attendant.
5. DMAS shall either provide for fiscal employer/agent
services or contract for the services of a fiscal employer/agent for CD
services. The fiscal employer/agent shall be reimbursed by DMAS or DMAS
contractor (if the fiscal/employer agent service is contracted) to perform
certain tasks as an agent for the EOR. The fiscal employer/agent shall handle
responsibilities for the waiver individual including, but not limited to,
employment taxes and background checks for attendants. The fiscal
employer/agent shall seek and obtain all necessary authorizations and approvals
of the Internal Revenue Service in order to fulfill all of these duties.
G. Consumer-directed personal care services. CD personal care
services shall be comprised of hands-on care of either a supportive or
health-related nature and shall include assistance with ADLs and may include,
but shall not be limited to, access to the community, monitoring of
self-administered medications or other medical needs, supervision, and
monitoring health status and physical condition. Where the waiver individual
requires assistance with ADLs and when specified in the POC, such supportive
services may include assistance with IADLs. This service shall not include
skilled nursing services with the exception of skilled nursing tasks (e.g.,
catheterization) that may be delegated pursuant to Part VIII (18VAC90-20-420
VI (18VAC90-19-240 through 18VAC90-20-460) 18VAC90-19-280)
of 18VAC90-20 18VAC90-19 and as permitted by Chapter 30 (§
54.1-3000 et seq.) of Title 54.1 of the Code of Virginia. CD personal care
services may be provided in a home or community setting to enable an individual
to maintain the health status and functional skills necessary to live in the
community or participate in community activities. Personal care may be offered
either as the sole home and community-based waiver service or in
conjunction with adult day health care, respite care (agency-directed or
consumer-directed), or PERS.
1. In order to qualify for this service, the waiver individual
shall have met the NF LOC criteria as set out in 12VAC30-60-303 and 12VAC30-60-307
12VAC30-60-313 as documented on the UAI assessment instrument, and for
whom it shall be an appropriate alternative to institutional care.
a. A waiver individual may receive both CD and agency-directed
personal care services if the individual meets the criteria. Hours received by
the waiver individual who is receiving both CD and agency-directed services
shall not exceed the total number of hours that would be otherwise authorized
had the individual chosen to receive personal care services through a single
delivery model.
b. CD and agency-directed services shall not be simultaneously
provided but may be provided sequentially or alternately from each other.
2. Limits on covered CD personal care services.
a. DMAS shall not duplicate services that are required as a
reasonable accommodation as a part of the Americans with Disabilities Act (42
USC §§ 12131 through 12165) or the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 (29 USC § 794).
b. There shall be a limit of eight hours per 24-hour day for
supervision services included in the POC. Supervision services shall be
authorized to ensure the health, safety, or welfare of the waiver individual
who cannot be left alone at any time or is unable to call for help in case of
an emergency, and when there is no one else in the home who is competent and
able to call for help in case of an emergency.
c. Consumer-directed personal care services shall be limited
to 56 hours of services per week for 52 weeks per year. Individual exceptions
may be granted based on criteria established by DMAS set forth in
12VAC30-120-927.
d. Due to the complex medical needs of waiver individuals
requiring skilled PDN services and the need for 24-hour supervision, the
trained primary caregiver shall be present in the home and shall render the
required skilled services during the entire time that the aide is providing
unskilled care.
3. CD personal care services at work or school shall be
limited as follows:
a. DMAS or its contractor shall reimburse for services
delivered, consistent with the approved POC, for CD personal care that the
attendant provides to the waiver individual to assist him while he is at work
or postsecondary school or both.
b. DMAS or the designated Srv Auth contractor entity
shall review the waiver individual's needs and the complexity of the
disability, as applicable, when determining the services that will be provided
to him in the workplace or postsecondary school or both.
c. DMAS shall not pay for the personal care attendant to
assist the waiver individual with any functions or tasks related to the
individual completing his job or postsecondary school functions or for
supervision time during work or postsecondary school or both.
d. Consumer-directed personal care services shall not be
available to waiver individuals younger than 21 years of age. Personal care
services for individuals younger than 21 shall be accessed through the EPSDT
benefit.
H. Consumer-directed respite services. CD respite care
services are unskilled care and shall be comprised of hands-on care of either a
supportive or health-related nature and may include, but shall not be limited
to, assistance with ADLs, access to the community, monitoring of
self-administration of medications or other medical needs, supervision,
monitoring health status and physical condition, and personal care services in
a work environment.
1. In order to qualify for this service, the waiver individual
shall have met the NF CCC Plus LOC criteria as set out in
12VAC30-60-303 and 12VAC30-60-307 12VAC30-60-313 as documented on
the UAI assessment instrument, and for whom it shall be an appropriate
alternative to institutional care.
2. CD respite services shall only be offered to individuals
who have an unpaid primary caregiver who requires temporary relief to avoid
institutionalization of the waiver individual. This service shall be provided
in the waiver individual's home or other community settings.
3. When the waiver individual requires assistance with ADLs,
and where such assistance is specified in the individual's POC, such supportive
services may also include assistance with IADLs.
4. Limits on covered CD respite care services.
a. The unit of service shall be one hour. Respite services
shall be limited to 480 hours per waiver individual per state fiscal year. If a
waiver individual changes waiver programs, this same maximum number of respite
hours shall apply. No additional respite hours beyond the 480 maximum limit
shall be approved for payment. Individuals who are receiving respite services
in this waiver through both the agency-directed and CD models shall not exceed
480 hours per state fiscal year combined.
b. CD respite care services shall not include skilled nursing
services with the exception of skilled nursing tasks (e.g., catheterization)
that may be delegated pursuant to Part VIII (18VAC90-20-420 VI
(18VAC90-19-240 through 18VAC90-20-460) 18VAC90-19-280) of 18VAC90-20
18VAC90-19 and as permitted by Chapter 30 (§ 54.1-3000 et seq.) of Title
54.1 of the Code of Virginia).
c. If consumer-directed respite service is the only service
received by the waiver individual, it shall be received at least as often as
every 30 days. If this service is not required at this minimal level of
frequency, then the services facilitator shall refer the waiver individual to
the local department of social services for its redetermination of eligibility
for the waiver individual.
I. Personal emergency response system (PERS).
1. Service description. PERS is a service that monitors waiver
individual safety in the home and provides access to emergency assistance for
medical or environmental emergencies through the provision of a two-way voice
communication system that dials a 24-hour response or monitoring center upon
activation and via the individual's home telephone line or system. PERS may
also include medication monitoring devices.
a. PERS may be authorized only when there is no one else in
the home with the waiver individual who is competent or continuously available
to call for help in an emergency or when the individual is in imminent danger.
b. The use of PERS equipment shall not relieve the backup
caregiver of his responsibilities.
c. Service units and service limitations.
(1) PERS shall be limited to waiver individuals who are ages
14 years and older who also either live alone or are alone for significant
parts of the day and who have no regular caregiver for extended periods of
time. PERS shall only be provided in conjunction with receipt of personal care
services (either agency-directed or consumer-directed), respite services
(either agency-directed or consumer-directed), or adult day health care. A
waiver individual shall not receive PERS if he has a cognitive impairment as
defined in 12VAC30-120-900.
(2) A unit of service shall include administrative costs,
time, labor, and supplies associated with the installation, maintenance,
monitoring, and adjustments of the PERS. A unit of service shall be the
one-month rental price set by DMAS in its fee schedule. The one-time installation
of the unit shall include installation, account activation, individual and
family/caregiver instruction, and subsequent removal of PERS equipment when it
is no longer needed.
(3) PERS services shall be capable of being activated by a
remote wireless device and shall be connected to the waiver individual's
telephone line or system. The PERS console unit must provide hands-free
voice-to-voice communication with the response center. The activating device
must be (i) waterproof, (ii) able to automatically transmit to the response
center an activator low battery alert signal prior to the battery losing power,
(iii) able to be worn by the waiver individual, and (iv) automatically reset by
the response center after each activation, thereby ensuring that subsequent
signals can be transmitted without requiring manual resetting by the waiver
individual.
(4) All PERS equipment shall be approved by the Federal
Communications Commission and meet the Underwriters' Laboratories, Inc. (UL)
safety standard.
(5) Medication monitoring units shall be physician ordered. In
order to be approved to receive the medication monitoring service, a waiver
individual shall also receive PERS services. Physician orders shall be
maintained in the waiver individual's record. In cases where the medical
monitoring unit must be filled by the provider, the person who is filling the
unit shall be either an RN or an LPN. The units may be filled as frequently as
a minimum of every 14 days. There must be documentation of this action in the
waiver individual's record.
J. Transition coordination and transition services.
Transition coordination and transition services, as defined at 12VAC30-120-2000
and 12VAC30-120-2010, provide for applicants to move from institutional
placements or licensed or certified provider-operated living arrangements to
private homes or other qualified settings. The applicant's transition from an
institution to the community shall be coordinated by the facility's discharge
planning team. The discharge planner shall coordinate with the transition
coordinator to ensure that EDCD CCC Plus Waiver eligibility
criteria shall be met.
1. Transition coordination and transition services
shall be authorized by DMAS or its designated agent in order for reimbursement
to occur.
2. For the purposes of transition services, an institution
must meet the requirements as specified by CMS in the Money Follows the Person
demonstration program at http://www.ssa.gov/OP_Home/comp2/F109-171.html#ft262.
3. Transition coordination shall be authorized for a
maximum of 12 consecutive months upon discharge from an institutional placement
and shall be initiated within 30 days of discharge from the institution.
4. 3. Transition coordination and transition
services shall be provided in conjunction with personal care (agency-directed
or consumer-directed), respite (agency-directed or consumer-directed), skilled
private duty nursing, or adult day health care services.
4. Transition services may be provided by DMAS enrolled
area agencies on aging, centers for independent living, and local departments
of social services.
K. Assistive technology (AT).
1. Service description. Assistive technology (AT), as defined
in 12VAC30-120-900, shall only be available to waiver individuals who are
participating in the MFP program pursuant to Part XX (12VAC30-120-2000 et
seq.). be portable and shall be authorized per calendar year. AT
services are the specialized medical equipment and supplies, including those
devices, controls, or appliances, specified in the individual's plan of care,
but that are not available under the State Plan for Medical Assistance, that
enable waiver individuals to increase their abilities to perform ADLs or IADLs,
or to perceive, control, or communicate with the environment in which they
live.
2. In order to qualify for these services, the individual
shall have a demonstrated need for specialized medical equipment and
supplies for remedial or direct medical benefit primarily in an individual's
primary home, primary vehicle used by the individual, community activity
setting, or day program to specifically serve to improve the individual's
personal functioning. This shall encompass those items not otherwise covered
under the State Plan for Medical Assistance. AT shall be covered in the least
expensive, most cost-effective manner.
3. AT services shall be available for enrolled waiver
individuals who have a demonstrated need for equipment for remedial or direct
medical benefit. This service includes ancillary supplies and equipment
necessary to the proper functioning of such items.
3. 4. Service
units and service limitations.
a. All requests for AT shall be made by the transition
coordinator to DMAS or the Srv Auth contractor. The cost for AT shall
not be carried over from one calendar year to the next. Each item must be
service authorized by either DMAS or the DMAS designated entity for each
calendar year.
b. The maximum funded expenditure per individual for all AT
covered procedure codes (combined total of AT items and labor related to these
items) shall be $5,000 per year for individuals regardless of waiver, or
regardless of whether the individual changes waiver programs, for which AT is
approved. The service unit shall always be one, for the total cost of all AT
being requested for a specific timeframe.
c. AT may be provided in the individual's home or community
setting.
d. AT shall not be approved for purposes of convenience of the
caregiver/provider or restraint of the individual, recreation or leisure,
educational purposes, or diversion activities.
e. An independent, professional consultation shall be obtained
from a qualified professional who is knowledgeable of that item for each AT
request prior to approval by the Srv Auth service authorization
contractor or other DMAS designated entity and may include training on
such AT by the qualified professional. The consultation shall not be performed
by the provider of AT to the individual.
f. All AT shall be prior authorized by the Srv Auth service
authorization contractor or other DMAS designated entity prior to
billing.
g. Excluded shall be items Items that are
reasonable accommodation requirements, for example, of the Americans
with Disabilities Act, the Virginians with Disabilities Act (§ 51.5-1 et
seq. of the Code of Virginia), or the Rehabilitation Act (20 USC § 794),
or that are required to be provided through other funding sources shall
be excluded.
h. AT services or equipment shall not be rented but shall be
purchased.
i. Shipping, freight, or delivery charges are not billable
to DMAS or the waiver individual, as such charges are considered noncovered
items.
(1) All products must be delivered, demonstrated,
installed, and in working order prior to submitting any claim for them to
Medicaid.
(2) The date of service on the claim shall be within the
service authorization approval dates, which may be prior to the delivery date
as long as the initiation of services commenced during the approved dates.
(3) The service authorization shall not be modified to
accommodate delays in product deliveries. In such situations, new service
authorizations must be sought by the provider.
(4) When two or more waiver individuals live in the same
home or congregate living arrangement, the AT shall be shared to the extent
practicable consistent with the type of AT.
j. Assistive technology shall not be available to waiver
individuals younger than 21 years of age. Assistive technology for individuals
younger than 21 shall be accessed through the EPSDT benefit.
k. AT exclusions.
(1) Medicaid shall not reimburse for any AT devices or
services that may have been rendered prior to authorization from DMAS or the
designated service authorization contractor.
(2) Providers of AT shall not be spouses or parents
(natural, adoptive, step, or foster parents) of the individual who is receiving
waiver services. Providers that supply AT for the waiver individual may not
perform assessments or consultation or write specifications for that
individual. Any request for a change in cost (either an increase or a decrease)
requires justification and supporting documentation of medical need and service
authorization by DMAS or the designated service authorization contractor. The
vendor shall receive a copy of the professional evaluation in order to purchase
the items recommended by the professional. If a change is necessary, then the
vendor shall notify the assessor to ensure the changed items meet the
individual's needs.
(3) All equipment or supplies already covered by a service
provided for in the State Plan shall not be purchased under the waiver as AT.
Such examples are, but shall not necessarily be limited to:
(a) Specialized medical equipment, durable or nondurable
medical equipment, ancillary equipment, and supplies necessary for life
support;
(b) Adaptive devices, appliances, and controls that enable
an individual to be more independent in areas of personal care and ADLs or
IADLs; and
(c) Equipment and devices that enable an individual to
communicate more effectively.
L. Environmental modifications (EM).
1. Service description. Environmental modifications (EM), as
defined herein, shall only be available to waiver individuals who are
participating in the MFP program pursuant to Part XX (12VAC30-120-2000 et seq.).
Adaptations shall be documented in the waiver individual's POC and may include,
but shall not necessarily be limited to, the installation of ramps and
grab-bars, widening of doorways, modification of bathroom facilities, or
installation of specialized electrical and plumbing systems that are necessary
to accommodate the medical equipment and supplies that are necessary for the
welfare of the waiver individual. Excluded are those adaptations or
improvements to the home that are of general utility and are not of direct
medical or remedial benefit to the individual, such as carpeting, flooring,
roof repairs, central air conditioning, or decks. Adaptations that add to the
total square footage of the home shall be excluded from this benefit, except
when necessary to complete an authorized adaptation, as determined by DMAS or
its designated agent. All services shall be provided in the individual's
primary home in accordance with applicable state or local building codes. All
modifications must be prior authorized by the Srv Auth service
authorization contractor or other DMAS designated entity.
Modifications may only be made to a vehicle if it is the primary vehicle being
used by the waiver individual. This service does not include the purchase or
lease of vehicles.
2. In order to qualify for these services, the waiver
individual shall have a demonstrated need for modifications of a remedial or direct
medical benefit offered in his primary home or primary vehicle used by the
waiver individual to ensure his health, welfare, or safety or specifically to
improve the individual's personal functioning. Modifications may include a
generator for waiver individuals who are dependent on mechanical ventilation
for 24 hours a day and when the generator is used to support the medical
equipment and supplies necessary for the individual's welfare. This service
shall encompass those items not otherwise covered in the State Plan for Medical
Assistance or through another program. EM shall be covered in the least
expensive, most cost-effective manner.
3. Service units and service limitations.
a. All requests for EM shall be made by the MFP transition
coordinator to DMAS or the Srv Auth contractor.
b. a. The maximum funded expenditure per
individual for all EM covered procedure codes (combined total of EM items and
labor related to these items) shall be $5,000 per year for individuals
regardless of waiver, or regardless of whether the individual changes waiver
programs, for which EM is approved. Unexpended portions of this maximum
amount shall not be accumulated across one or more years to be expended in a
later year. The service unit shall always be one, for the total cost of all
EM being requested for a specific timeframe.
c. b. All EM shall be authorized by the Srv
Auth contractor DMAS or the DMAS designated entity prior to billing.
d. c. Modifications shall not be used to bring a
substandard dwelling up to minimum habitation standards. Also excluded shall be
modifications that are reasonable accommodation requirements of the Americans
with Disabilities Act, the Virginians with Disabilities Act (§ 51.5-1 et
seq. of the Code of Virginia), and the Rehabilitation Act (20 USC§ § 794).
e. Transition coordinators d. Care coordinators
shall, upon completion of each modification, meet face-to-face with the waiver
individual and his family/caregiver, as appropriate, to ensure that the
modification is completed satisfactorily and is able to be used by the
individual.
f. e. EM shall not be approved for purposes of
convenience of the caregiver/provider or restraint of the waiver individual.
f. Only the actual cost of material and labor is
reimbursed. There shall be no additional markup.
g. EM shall be carried out in the most cost-effective
manner possible to achieve the goal required for the individual's health,
safety, and welfare.
h. All services shall be provided in the individual's
primary residence in accordance with applicable state or local building codes
and appropriate permits or building inspections, which shall be provided to
DMAS or the DMAS contractor.
i. Proposed modifications that are to be made to rental
properties must have prior written approval of the property's owner.
Modifications to rental properties shall only be valid if it is an
independently operated rental facility with no direct or indirect ties to any
other Medicaid service provider.
j. Modifications may be made to a vehicle if it is the
primary vehicle used by the individual. This service shall not include the
purchase of or the general repair of vehicles. Repairs of modifications that
have been reimbursed by DMAS shall be covered.
k. The EM provider shall ensure that all work and products
are delivered, installed, and in good working order prior to seeking
reimbursement from DMAS. The date of service on this provider's claim shall be
within the service authorization approval dates, which may be prior to the
completion date as long as the work commenced during the approval dates. The
service authorization shall not be modified to accommodate installation delays.
All requests for cost changes (either increases or decreases) shall be
submitted to DMAS or the DMAS-designated service authorization contractor for
revision to the previously issued service authorization and shall include
justification and supporting documentation of medical needs.
4. EM exclusions.
a. There shall be no duplication of previous EM services
within the same residence such as multiple wheelchair ramps or previous
modifications to the same room.
b. Adaptations or improvements to the primary home that
shall be excluded are of general utility and are not of direct medical or
remedial benefit to the waiver individual, such as, but not limited to,
carpeting; flooring; roof repairs; central air conditioning or heating; general
maintenance and repairs to a home; additions or maintenance of decks;
maintenance, replacement, or addition of sidewalks, driveways, or carports; or
adaptations that only increase the total square footage of the home.
c. EM shall not be covered by Medicaid for general leisure
or diversion items or those items that are recreational in nature or those
items that may be used as an outlet for adaptive or maladaptive behavioral
issues. Such noncovered items may include swing sets, playhouses, climbing
walls, trampolines, protective matting or ground cover, sporting equipment, or
exercise equipment, such as special bicycles or tricycles.
d. EM shall not be covered by Medicaid if, for example, the
Fair Housing Act (42 USC § 3601 et seq.), the Virginia Fair Housing Law (§
36-96.1 et seq. of the Code of Virginia) or the Americans with Disabilities Act
(42 USC § 12101 et seq.) requires the modification and the payment for such
modifications are to be made by a third party.
e. EM shall not include the costs of removal or disposal,
or any other costs, of previously installed modifications, whether paid for by
DMAS or any other source.
f. Providers of EM shall not be the waiver individual's
spouse, parent (natural, adoptive, step, or foster parent), other legal
guardians, or conservator. Providers who supply EM to waiver individuals shall
not perform assessments or consultations or write EM specifications for such
individuals.
M. Skilled private duty nursing. Skilled PDN, for a single
individual and individuals residing in congregate living arrangements, as
defined in 12VAC30-120-900, shall be provided for waiver enrolled individuals
who have serious medical conditions or complex health care needs. To receive
this service, an individual must require specific skilled and continuous
nursing care on a regularly scheduled or intermittent basis performed by an RN
or an LPN. Upon completion of the required screening and required assessments
and a determination that the individual requires substantial and ongoing
skilled nursing care and waiver enrollment then the skilled PDN hours shall be
authorized by the DMAS designated entity.
1. Skilled PDN services shall be rendered according to a
POC authorized by DMAS or the DMAS designated entity and shall have been
certified by a physician as medically necessary to enable the individual to
remain at home.
2. No reimbursement shall be provided by DMAS for either RN
or LPN services without signed physician orders that specifically identify
skilled nursing tasks to be performed for the individual.
3. Limits placed on the amount of skilled PDN that will be
approved for reimbursement shall be consistent with the individual's support
needs and medical necessity. The maximum skilled PDN hours authorized per week
for adult individuals shall be based on their technology and medical necessity
justification documented.
4. For adult individuals, whether living separately or in a
congregate setting, skilled PDN shall be reimbursed up to a maximum 112 hours
per week (Sunday through Saturday) per waiver individual living in the
household. The number of hours per week shall be based on the individual's
documented medical needs.
5. The adult individual shall be determined to need a
medical device and ongoing skilled nursing care when such individual meets
Category A or all eight criteria in Category B:
a. Category A. Individuals who depend on mechanical
ventilators; or
b. Category B. Individuals who have a complex tracheostomy
as defined by:
(1) Tracheostomy with the potential for weaning off of it,
or documentation of attempts to wean, with subsequent inability to wean;
(2) Nebulizer treatments ordered at least four times a day
or nebulizer treatments followed by chest physiotherapy provided by a nurse or
respiratory therapist at least four times a day;
(3) Pulse oximetry monitoring at least every shift due to
unstable oxygen saturation levels;
(4) Respiratory assessment and documentation every shift by
a licensed respiratory therapist or nurse;
(5) Have a physician's order for oxygen therapy with
documented usage;
(6) Receives tracheostomy care at least daily;
(7) Has a physician's order for tracheostomy suctioning;
and
(8) Deemed at risk to require subsequent mechanical
ventilation.
6. Skilled PDN services may include consultation and
training for the primary caregiver.
7. The provider shall be responsible for notifying DMAS or
the DMAS designated entity should the primary residence of the individual be
changed, should the individual be hospitalized, should the individual die, or
should the individual be out of the Commonwealth for 48 hours or more.
8. Exclusions from DMAS coverage of skilled PDN:
a. This service shall not be authorized when intermittent
skilled nursing visits could be satisfactorily utilized while protecting the
health, safety, and welfare of the individual.
b. Skilled PDN hours shall not be reimbursed while the
individual is receiving emergency care or during emergency transport of the
individual to such facilities. The RN or LPN shall not transport the waiver
individual to such facilities.
c. Skilled PDN services may be ordered but shall not be
provided simultaneously with skilled respite care or personal care services.
d. Parents (natural, adoptive, step, or foster parents),
spouses, siblings, grandparents, grandchildren, adult children, other legal
guardians, or any person living under the same roof with the individual shall
not provide skilled PDN services for the purpose of Medicaid reimbursement for
the waiver individual.
e. Providers shall not bill prior to receiving the
physician's dated signature on the individual's POC for services provided and
the DMAS or DMAS designated entity's authorization or determination of skilled
PDN hours.
f. Time spent driving the waiver individual shall not be
reimbursed by DMAS.
9. Congregate skilled PDN.
a. If more than one waiver individual reside in the home,
the same waiver provider shall be chosen to provide all skilled PDN services
for all waiver individuals in the home.
b. Only one nurse shall be authorized to care for no more
than two waiver individuals in such arrangements. In instances when three
waiver individuals share a home, nursing ratios shall be determined by DMAS or
its designated agent based on the needs of all the individuals who are living
together. These congregate skilled PDN hours shall be at the same scheduled
shifts.
c. The primary caregiver shall be shared and shall be
responsible for providing all care needs when a private duty nurse is not
available.
d. DMAS shall not reimburse for skilled PDN services
through the CCC Plus waiver and skilled PDN services through the EPSDT benefit
for the same individual at the same time. Waiver individuals younger than 21 years
of age shall not receive skilled PDN services through the CCC Plus waiver.
Individuals younger than 21 shall receive skilled PDN services through the
EPSDT benefit.
12VAC30-120-925. Respite coverage in children's residential
facilities.
A. Individuals with special needs who are enrolled in the EDCD
CCC Plus Waiver and who have a diagnosis of intellectual disability (ID)
shall be eligible to receive respite services in children's residential
facilities that are licensed for respite services for children with ID.
B. These respite services shall be covered consistent with
the requirements of 12VAC30-120-924, 12VAC30-120-930, and 12VAC30-120-935,
whichever is in effect at the time of service delivery.
12VAC30-120-930. General requirements for home and
community-based participating providers.
A. Requests for participation shall be screened by DMAS or
the designated DMAS contractor to determine whether the provider applicant
meets the requirements for participation, as set out in the provider agreement,
and demonstrates the abilities to perform, at a minimum, the following
activities:
1. Screen all new and existing employees and contractors to
determine whether any are excluded from eligibility for payment from federal
health care programs, including Medicaid (i.e., via the United States
Department of Health and Human Services Office of Inspector General List of
Excluded Individuals or Entities (LEIE) website). Immediately report in writing
to DMAS any exclusion information discovered to: DMAS, ATTN: Program
Integrity/Exclusions, 600 East Broad Street, Suite 1300, Richmond, VA 23219, or
email to providerexclusions@dmas.virginia.gov;
2. Immediately notify DMAS in writing of any change in the
information that the provider previously submitted to DMAS;
3. Except for waiver individuals who are subject to the DMAS
Client Medical Management program Part VIII (12VAC30-130-800 et seq.) of
12VAC30-130 or are enrolled in a Medicaid managed care program organization,
ensure freedom of choice to individuals in seeking services from any
institution, pharmacy, practitioner, or other provider qualified to perform the
service or services required and participating in the Medicaid Program at the
time the service or services are performed;
4. Ensure the individual's freedom to refuse medical care,
treatment, and services;
5. Accept referrals for services only when staff is available
to initiate and perform such services on an ongoing basis;
6. Provide services and supplies to individuals in full
compliance with Title VI (42 USC § 2000d et seq.) of the Civil Rights Act of
1964 which prohibits discrimination on the grounds of race, color, religion, or
national origin; the Virginians with Disabilities Act (§ 51.5-1 et seq. of the
Code of Virginia); § 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 (29 USC § 794),
which prohibits discrimination on the basis of a disability; and the Americans
with Disabilities Act of 1990 (42 USC § 12101 et seq.), which provides
comprehensive civil rights protections to individuals with disabilities in the
areas of employment, public accommodations, state and local government
services, and telecommunications;
7. Provide services and supplies to individuals of the same
quality and in the same mode of delivery as are provided to the general public;
8. Submit charges to DMAS for the provision of services and
supplies to individuals in amounts not to exceed the provider's usual and
customary charges to the general public and accept as payment in full the amount
established by DMAS payment methodology beginning with the individual's
authorization date for the waiver services;
9. Use only DMAS-designated forms for service documentation except
when otherwise permitted. The provider shall not alter the DMAS forms in
any manner without prior written approval from DMAS;
10. Use DMAS-designated billing forms for submission of
charges;
11. Perform no type of direct marketing activities to Medicaid
individuals;
12. Maintain and retain business and professional records
sufficient to document fully and accurately the nature, scope, and details of
the services provided.
a. In general, such records shall be retained for a period of
at least six years from the last date of service or as provided by applicable
federal and state laws, whichever period is longer. However, if an audit is
initiated within the required retention period, the records shall be retained
until the audit is completed and every exception resolved. Records of minors
shall be kept for a period of at least six years after such minor has reached
18 years of age.
b. Policies regarding retention of records shall apply even if
the provider discontinues operation. DMAS shall be notified in writing of the
storage location and procedures for obtaining records for review should the
need arise. The location, agent, or trustee shall be within the Commonwealth;
13. Furnish information on the request of and in the form
requested to DMAS, the Attorney General of Virginia or their authorized
representatives, federal personnel, and the state Medicaid Fraud Control Unit.
The Commonwealth's right of access to provider agencies and records shall
survive any termination of the provider agreement;
14. Disclose, as requested by DMAS, all financial, beneficial,
ownership, equity, surety, or other interests in any and all firms,
corporations, partnerships, associations, business enterprises, joint ventures,
agencies, institutions, or other legal entities providing any form of health
care services to recipients of Medicaid;
15. Pursuant to 42 CFR 431.300 et seq., § 32.1-325.3 of the
Code of Virginia, and the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act
(HIPAA), safeguard and hold confidential all information associated with an
applicant or enrollee or individual that could disclose the
applicant's/enrollee's/individual's identity. Access to information concerning
the applicant/enrollee/individual shall be restricted to persons or agency
representatives who are subject to the standards of confidentiality that are
consistent with that of the agency and any such access must be in accordance
with the provisions found in 42 CFR 431.306 and 12VAC30-20-90;
16. When ownership of the provider changes, notify DMAS in
writing at least 15 calendar days before the date of change;
17. Pursuant to §§ 63.2-100, 63.2-1509, and 63.2-1606 of the
Code of Virginia, if a participating provider or the provider's staff knows or
suspects that a home and community-based waiver services individual is being
abused, neglected, or exploited, the party having knowledge or suspicion of the
abuse, neglect, or exploitation shall report this immediately from first
knowledge or suspicion of such knowledge to the local department of social
services adult or child protective services worker as applicable or to the
toll-free, 24-hour hotline as described on the local department of social
services' website. Employers shall ensure and document that their staff is
aware of this requirement;
18. In addition to compliance with the general conditions and
requirements, adhere to the conditions of participation outlined in the
individual provider's participation agreements, in the applicable DMAS provider
manual, and in other DMAS laws, regulations, and policies. DMAS shall conduct
ongoing monitoring of compliance with provider participation standards and DMAS
policies. A provider's noncompliance with DMAS policies and procedures may
result in a retraction of Medicaid payment or termination of the provider
agreement, or both;
19. Meet minimum qualifications of staff.
a. For reasons of Medicaid individuals' safety and welfare,
all employees shall have a satisfactory work record, as evidenced by at least
two references from prior job experience, including no evidence of abuse,
neglect, or exploitation of incapacitated or older adults or children. In
instances of employees who have worked for only one employer, such employees
shall be permitted to provide one appropriate employment reference and one
appropriate personal reference including no evidence of abuse, neglect, or exploitation
of incapacitated or older adults or children.
b. Criminal record checks for both employees and volunteers
conducted by the Virginia State Police. Proof that these checks were performed
with satisfactory results shall be available for review by DMAS staff or its
designated agent who are authorized by the agency to review these files. DMAS
shall not reimburse the provider for any services provided by an employee or
volunteer who has been convicted of committing a barrier crime as defined in § 32.1-162.9:1
of the Code of Virginia. Providers shall be responsible for complying with §
32.1-162.9:1 of the Code of Virginia regarding criminal record checks. Provider
staff shall not be reimbursed for services provided to the waiver individual
effective on the date and thereafter that the criminal record check confirms
the provider's staff person or volunteer was convicted of a barrier crime. Pursuant
to 42 CFR 441.302 and 42 CFR 441.352, within 30 calendar days of employment,
the staff or volunteer shall obtain an original criminal record clearance with
respect to convictions for offenses specified in § 19.2-392.02 of the Code of
Virginia or an original criminal history record from the Central Criminal
Records Exchange.
(1) DMAS shall not reimburse a provider for services
provided by an individual who works in a position that involves direct contact
with a waiver individual until an original criminal record clearance or
original criminal history record has been received. DMAS shall reimburse
services provided by such an individual during only the first 30 calendar days
of employment if the provider can produce documented evidence that such person
worked only under the direct supervision of another individual for whom a
background check was completed in accordance with the requirements of this
section. If an original criminal record clearance or original criminal history
record is not received within the first 30 calendar days of employment, DMAS
shall not reimburse the provider for services provided by such employee on the
31st calendar day through the date on which the provider receives an original
criminal record clearance or an original criminal history record.
(2) DMAS shall not reimburse a provider for services
provided by an individual who has been convicted of any offense set forth in
clause (i) of the definition of barrier crime in § 19.2-392.02 of the Code
of Virginia unless all of the following conditions are met: (i) the offense was
punishable as a misdemeanor; (ii) the individual has been convicted of only one
such offense; (iii) the offense did not involve abuse or neglect; and (iv) at
least five years have elapsed since the conviction.
c. The staff or volunteer shall provide the hiring facility
with a sworn statement or affirmation disclosing any criminal convictions or
any pending criminal charges, whether within or outside of the Commonwealth.
c. d. Provider staff and volunteers who serve
waiver individuals who are minor children shall also be screened through
the VDSS Child Protective Services (CPS) Central Registry. Provider staff and
volunteers shall not be reimbursed for services provided to the waiver
individual effective on the date and thereafter that the VDSS CPS Central
Registry check confirms the provider's staff person or volunteer has a finding.
20. Providers shall comply with requirements for
person-centered planning and home and community based settings as described in
42 CFR 441.301.
B. DMAS shall terminate the provider's Medicaid provider
agreement pursuant to § 32.1-325 of the Code of Virginia and as may be
required for federal financial participation. A provider who has been convicted
of a felony, or who has otherwise pled guilty to a felony, in Virginia or in
any other of the 50 states, the District of Columbia, or the U.S. territories
shall within 30 days of such conviction notify DMAS of this conviction and
relinquish its provider agreement. Such provider agreement terminations,
subject to applicable appeal rights, shall conform to § 32.1-325 D and E
of the Code of Virginia and Part XII (12VAC30-20-500 et seq.) of 12VAC30-20.
C. For DMAS to approve provider agreements with home and
community-based waiver providers, the following standards shall be met:
1. Staffing, financial solvency, disclosure of ownership, and
ensuring comparability of services requirements as specified in the applicable
provider manual;
2. The ability to document and maintain waiver individuals'
case records in accordance with state and federal requirements;
3. Compliance with all applicable laws, regulations, and
policies pertaining to EDCD CCC Plus Waiver services.
D. The waiver individual shall have the option of selecting
the provider of his choice from among those providers who are approved and who
can appropriately meet his needs.
E. A participating provider may voluntarily terminate his
participation in Medicaid by providing 30 days' written notification to DMAS.
F. Except as otherwise provided by state or federal law,
DMAS may terminate at will a provider's participation agreement on 30 days'
written notice as specified in the DMAS participation agreement. DMAS may
immediately terminate a provider's participation agreement if the provider is
no longer eligible to participate in the Medicaid program. Such action
precludes further payment by DMAS for services provided to individuals on or
after the date specified in the termination notice.
G. The provider shall be responsible for completing the
DMAS-225 form. The provider shall notify the designated Srv Auth service
authorization contractor, as appropriate, and the local department of
social services, in writing, when any of the following events occur.
Furthermore, it shall be the responsibility of the designated Srv Auth service
authorization contractor to also update DMAS, as requested, when any of the
following events occur:
1. Home and community-based waiver services are implemented;
2. A waiver individual dies;
3. A waiver individual is discharged from the provider's EDCD
CCC Plus Waiver services;
4. Any other events (including hospitalization) that cause
home and community-based waiver services to cease or be interrupted for more
than 30 consecutive calendar days; or
5. The initial selection by the waiver individual or
family/caregiver of a provider to provide services, or a change by the waiver
individual or family/caregiver of a provider, if it affects the individual's
patient pay amount.
H. Changes or termination of services.
1. The provider may decrease the amount of authorized care if
the revised POC is appropriate and based on the medical needs of the waiver
individual. The participating provider shall collaborate with the waiver
individual or the family/caregiver/EOR, or both as appropriate, to develop the
new POC and calculate the new hours of service delivery. The provider shall
discuss the decrease in care with the waiver individual or
family/caregiver/EOR, document the conversation in the waiver individual's
record, and notify the designated Srv Auth service authorization
contractor. The Srv Auth service authorization contractor shall
process the decrease request and the waiver individual shall be notified of the
change by letter. This letter shall clearly state the waiver individual's right
to appeal this change.
2. If a change in the waiver individual's condition
necessitates an increase in care, the participating provider shall assess the
need for the increase and, collaborate with the waiver individual and
family/caregiver/EOR, as appropriate, to develop a POC for services to meet the
changed needs. The provider may implement the increase in personal/respite care
hours without approval from DMAS, or the designated Srv Auth service
authorization contractor, if the amount of services does not exceed the
total amount established by DMAS as the maximum for the level of care
designated for that individual on the plan of care.
3. Any increase to a waiver individual's POC that exceeds the
number of hours allowed for that individual's level of care or any change in
the waiver individual's level of care shall be authorized by DMAS or the designated
Srv Auth service authorization contractor prior to the increase
and be accompanied by adequate documentation justifying the increase.
4. In an emergency situation when either the health, safety,
or welfare of the waiver individual or provider personnel is endangered, or
both, DMAS, or the designated Srv Auth service authorization
contractor, shall be notified prior to discontinuing services. The written
notification period set out below shall not be required. If appropriate, local
department of social services adult or child protective services, as may be
appropriate, shall be notified immediately. Appeal rights shall be afforded to
the waiver individual.
5. In a nonemergency situation, when neither the health,
safety, nor welfare of the waiver individual or provider personnel is
endangered, the participating provider shall give the waiver individual at
least 10 calendar days' written notification (plus three days for mail transit
for a total of 13 calendar days from the letter's date) of the intent to
discontinue services. The notification letter shall provide the reasons for and
the effective date the provider will be discontinuing services. Appeal rights
shall be afforded to the waiver individual.
I. Staff education and training requirements.
1. RNs shall (i) be currently licensed to practice in the
Commonwealth as an RN, or shall hold multi-state licensure privilege pursuant
to Chapter 30 (§ 54.1-3000 et seq.) of Title 54.1 of the Code of Virginia;
(ii) have at least one year of related clinical nursing experience, which may
include work in an acute care hospital, public health clinic, home health
agency, rehabilitation hospital, or NF nursing facility, or as an
LPN who worked for at least one year in one of these settings; and (iii) submit
to a criminal records check meet the requirements of subdivision A 19 of
this section regarding criminal record checks and consent to a search of
the VDSS Child Protective Services Central Registry if the waiver individual is
a minor child. The RN shall not be compensated for services provided to the
waiver individual if this record check verifies that the RN has been convicted
of a barrier crime described in § 32.1-162.9:1 of the Code of Virginia or
if the RN has a founded complaint confirmed by the VDSS Child Protective
Services Central Registry.
2. LPNs shall work under supervision as set out in 18VAC90-20-37
18VAC90-19-70. LPNs shall (i) be currently licensed to practice in
the Commonwealth as an LPN, or shall hold multi-state licensure privilege
pursuant to Chapter 30 (§ 54.1-3000 et seq.) of Title 54.1 of the Code of
Virginia; (ii) shall have at least one year of related clinical nursing
experience, which may include work in an acute care hospital, public health
clinic, home health agency, rehabilitation hospital, or NF. The LPN shall meet
the qualifications and skills, prior to being assigned to care for the waiver individual,
that are required by the individual's POC; and (iii) submit to a criminal
records check meet the requirements of subdivision A 19 of this section
regarding criminal record checks and consent to a search of the VDSS Child
Protective Services Central Registry if the waiver individual is a minor child.
The LPN shall not be compensated for services provided to the waiver individual
if this record check verifies that the LPN has been convicted of a barrier
crime described in § 32.1-162.9:1 of the Code of Virginia or if the LPN
has a founded complaint confirmed by the VDSS Child Protective Services Central
Registry.
3. All RNs and LPNs who provide skilled PDN services shall
have either (i) at least six months of related clinical experience as
documented in their history, which may include work in acute care hospitals,
long-stay hospitals, rehabilitation hospitals, or specialized care nursing
facilities or (ii) completed a provider training program related to the care
and technology needs of the assigned waiver individual.
a. Training programs established by providers shall
include, at a minimum, the following:
(1) Trainers (either RNs or respiratory therapists) shall
have at least six months hands-on successful experience in the areas in which
they provide training, such as ventilators, tracheostomies, peg tubes, and
nasogastric tubes.
(2) Training shall include classroom time as well as direct
hands-on demonstration of mastery by the trainee of the specialized skills
required to work with individuals who have technology dependencies.
(3) The training program shall include the following
subject areas as they relate to the care to be provided by the nurse: (i) human
anatomy and physiology, (ii) medications frequently used by technology
dependent individuals, (iii) emergency management, and (iv) the operation of
the relevant equipment.
(4) Providers shall assure the competency and mastery of
the skills necessary to successfully care for waiver individuals by the nurses
prior to assigning them to a waiver individual. Documentation of successful
completion of such training course and mastery of the specialized skills required
to work with individuals who have technology dependencies shall be maintained
in the provider's personnel records. This documentation shall be provided to
DMAS upon request.
b. The RN supervisor for nurses providing skilled PDN shall
be currently licensed to practice nursing in the Commonwealth and have at least
one year of related clinical nursing experience, which may include work in an
acute care hospital, long-stay hospital, rehabilitation hospital, or
specialized care nursing facility.
3. 4. Personal care aides who are employed by
personal care agencies that are licensed by VDH shall meet the requirements of
12VAC5-381. In addition, personal care aides shall also receive annually a
minimum of 12 documented hours of agency-provided training in the performance
of these services.
4. 5. Personal care aides who are employed by
personal care agencies that are not licensed by the VDH shall have completed an
educational curriculum of at least 40 hours of study related to the needs of
individuals who are either elderly or who have disabilities, as ensured by the
provider prior to being assigned to the care of an individual, and shall have
the required skills and training to perform the services as specified in the
waiver individual's POC and related supporting documentation.
a. Personal care aides' required initial (that is, at the
onset of employment) training, as further detailed in the applicable
provider manual, shall be met in one of the following ways: (i)
registration with the Board of Nursing as a certified nurse aide; (ii)
graduation from an approved educational curriculum as listed by the Board of
Nursing; or (iii) completion of the provider's educational curriculum, which
must be a minimum of 40 hours in duration, as taught by an RN who meets the
same requirements as the RN listed in subdivision 1 of this subsection.
b. In addition, personal care aides shall also be required to
receive annually a minimum of 12 documented hours of agency-provided training
in the performance of these services.
5. 6. Personal
care aides shall:
a. Be at least 18 years of age or older;
b. Be able to read and write English to the degree necessary
to perform the expected tasks and create and maintain the required
documentation;
c. Be physically able to perform the required tasks and have
the required skills to perform services as specified in the waiver individual's
supporting documentation;
d. Have a valid social security number that has been issued to
the personal care aide by the Social Security Administration;
e. Submit to a criminal records check Meet the
requirements of subdivision A 19 of this section regarding criminal record
checks and, if the waiver individual is a minor, consent to a search of the
VDSS Child Protective Services Central Registry. The aide shall not be
compensated for services provided to the waiver individual effective the date
in which the record check verifies that the aide has been convicted of barrier
crimes described in § 32.1-162.9:1 of the Code of Virginia or if the aide
has a founded complaint confirmed by the VDSS Child Protective Services Central
Registry;
f. Understand and agree to comply with the DMAS EDCD CCC
Plus Waiver requirements; and
g. Receive tuberculosis (TB) screening as specified in the
criteria used by the VDH.
6. 7. Consumer-directed personal care attendants
shall:
a. Be 18 years of age or older;
b. Be able to read and write in English to the degree
necessary to perform the tasks expected and create and maintain the required
documentation;
c. Be physically able to perform the required tasks and have
the required skills to perform consumer-directed services as specified in the
waiver individual's supporting documentation;
d. Have a valid social security number that has been issued to
the personal care attendant by the Social Security Administration;
e. Submit to a criminal records check Meet the
requirements of subdivision A 19 of this section and, if the waiver
individual is a minor, consent to a search of the VDSS Child Protective
Services Central Registry. The attendant shall not be compensated for
services provided to the waiver individual effective the date in which the
record check verifies that the attendant has been convicted of barrier crimes
described in § 32.1-162.9:1 of the Code of Virginia or if the attendant
has a founded complaint confirmed by the VDSS Child Protective Services Central
Registry;
f. Understand and agree to comply with the DMAS EDCD CCC
Plus Waiver requirements;
g. Receive tuberculosis (TB) screening as specified in the
criteria used by the VDH; and
h. Be willing to attend training at the individual's or
family/caregiver's request.
12VAC30-120-935. Participation standards for specific covered
services.
A. The personal care providers, respite care providers, ADHC
providers, skilled private duty nursing providers, and CD services
facilitators shall develop an individualized POC that addresses the waiver
individual's service needs. Such plan shall be developed in collaboration with
the waiver individual or the individual's family/caregiver/EOR, as appropriate.
B. Agency providers shall employ appropriately licensed
professional staff who can provide the covered waiver services required by the
waiver individuals. Providers shall require that the supervising RN/LPN be
available by phone at all times that the LPN/attendant and consumer-directed
services facilitators, as appropriate, are providing services to the waiver
individual.
C. Agency staff (RN, LPNs, or aides) or CD employees
(attendants) attendants shall not be reimbursed by DMAS for services
rendered to waiver individuals when the agency staff or the CD employee attendant
is either (i) the spouse of the waiver individual or (ii) the parent (biological,
adoptive, legal guardian) (natural, adoptive, step, or foster parent)
or other legal guardian of the minor child waiver individual.
1. Payment shall not be made for services furnished by
other family members living under the same roof as the individual enrolled in
the waiver receiving services unless there is objective written documentation
completed by the services facilitator as to why there are no other providers
available to render the personal services. The consumer-directed services
facilitator shall initially make this determination and document it fully in
the individual's record.
2. Family members who are approved to be reimbursed for
providing personal services shall meet the same qualifications as all other CD
attendants.
D. Failure to provide the required services, conduct the
required reviews, and meet the documentation standards as stated herein
may in this section shall result in DMAS charging audited
providers with returning overpayments and requiring the return
of the overpaid funds to DMAS.
E. In addition to meeting the general conditions and
requirements, home and community-based waiver services participating
providers shall also meet the following requirements:
1. ADHC services provider. In order to provide these services,
the ADCC adult day care center (ADCC) shall:
a. Make available a copy of the current VDSS license for DMAS'
DMAS review and verification purposes prior to the provider applicant's
enrollment as a Medicaid provider;
b. Adhere to VDSS' ADCC standards as defined in 22VAC40-60
including, but not limited to, provision of activities for waiver individuals
Holds a license with VDSS for ADCC; and
c. Employ the following:
(1) A director who shall be responsible for overall management
of the center's programs and employees pursuant to 22VAC40-60-320. The director
shall be the provider contact person for DMAS and the designated Srv Auth
service authorization contractor and shall be responsible for responding
to communication from DMAS and the designated Srv Auth service
authorization contractor. The director shall be responsible for ensuring
the development of the POCs for waiver individuals. The director shall assign
either himself, the activities director if there is one, RN, or therapist to
act as the care coordinator for each waiver individual and shall document in
the individual's medical record the identity of the care coordinator. The care
coordinator shall be responsible for management of the waiver individual's POC
and for its review with the program aides and any other staff, as necessary.
(2) A RN who shall be responsible for administering to and
monitoring the health needs of waiver individuals. The RN may also contract
with the center. The RN shall be responsible for the planning and
implementation of the POC involving multiple services where specialized health
care knowledge may be needed. The RN shall be present a minimum of eight hours
each month at the center. DMAS may require the RN's presence at the center for
more than this minimum standard depending on the number of waiver individuals
who are in attendance and according to the medical and nursing needs of the
waiver individuals who attend the center. Although DMAS does not require that
the RN be a full-time staff position, there shall be a RN available, either in
person or by telephone, to the center's waiver individuals and staff during all
times that the center is in operation. The RN shall be responsible for:
(a) Providing periodic evaluation, at least every 90 days, of
the nursing needs of each waiver individual;
(b) Providing the nursing care and treatment as documented in
individuals' POCs; and
(c) Monitoring, recording, and administering of prescribed
medications or supervising the waiver individual in self-administered
medication.
(3) Personal care aides who shall be responsible for overall
care of waiver individuals such as assistance with ADLs, social/recreational
activities, and other health and therapeutic-related activities. Each program
aide hired by the provider shall be screened to ensure compliance with training
and skill mastery qualifications required by DMAS. The aide shall, at a
minimum, have the following qualifications:
(a) Be 18 years of age or older;
(b) Be able to read and write in English to the degree
necessary to perform the tasks expected and create and maintain the required
waiver individual documentation of services rendered;
(c) Be physically able to perform the work and have the skills
required to perform the tasks required in the waiver individual's POC;
(d) Have a valid social security number issued to the program
aide by the Social Security Administration;
(e) Have satisfactorily completed an educational curriculum as
set out in clauses (i), (ii), and (iii) of this subdivision E 1 c 3
(e). Documentation of successful completion shall be maintained in the
aide's personnel file and be available for review by DMAS' staff. Prior to
assigning a program aide to a waiver individual, the center shall ensure that
the aide has either (i) registered with the Board of Nursing as a certified
nurse aide; (ii) graduated from an approved educational curriculum as listed by
the Board of Nursing; or (iii) completed the provider's educational curriculum,
at least 40 hours in duration, as taught by an RN who is licensed in the
Commonwealth or who holds a multi-state licensing privilege.
(4) The ADHC coordinator who shall coordinate, pursuant to
22VAC40-60-695, the delivery of the activities and services as prescribed in
the waiver individuals' POCs and keep such plans updated, record 30-day
progress notes concerning each waiver individual, and review the waiver
individuals' daily records each week. If a waiver individual's condition
changes more frequently, more frequent reviews and recording of progress notes
shall be required to reflect the individual's changing condition.
2. Recreation and social activities responsibilities. The
center shall provide planned recreational and social activities suited to the
waiver individuals' needs and interests and designed to encourage physical
exercise, prevent deterioration of each waiver individual's condition, and
stimulate social interaction.
3. The center shall maintain all records of each Medicaid
individual. These records shall be reviewed periodically by DMAS staff or its
designated agent who is authorized by DMAS to review these files. At a minimum,
these records shall contain, but shall not necessarily be limited to:
a. DMAS required forms as specified in the center's
provider-appropriate guidance documents;
b. Interdisciplinary POCs developed, in collaboration with the
waiver individual or family/caregiver, or both as may be appropriate, by the
center's director, RN, and therapist, as may be appropriate, and any other
relevant support persons;
c. Documentation of interdisciplinary staff meetings that
shall be held at least every three months to reassess each waiver individual
and evaluate the adequacy of the POC and make any necessary revisions;
d. At a minimum, 30-day goal-oriented progress notes recorded
by the designated ADHC care coordinator. If a waiver individual's condition and
treatment POC changes more often, progress notes shall be written more
frequently than every 30 days;
e. The daily record of services provided shall contain the
specific services delivered by center staff. The record shall also contain the
arrival and departure times of the waiver individual and shall be signed weekly
by either the director, activities director, RN, or therapist employed by the
center. The record shall be completed on a daily basis, neither before nor
after the date of services delivery. At least once a week, a staff member shall
chart significant comments regarding care given to the waiver individual. If
the staff member writing comments is different from the staff signing the
weekly record, that staff member shall sign the weekly comments. A copy of this
record shall be given weekly to the waiver individual or family/caregiver, and
it shall also be maintained in the waiver individual-specific medical record; and
f. All contacts shall be documented in the waiver individual's
medical record, including correspondence made to and from the individual with
family/caregivers, physicians, DMAS, the designated Srv Auth service
authorization contractor, formal and informal services providers, and all
other professionals related to the waiver individual's Medicaid services or
medical care.
F. Agency-directed personal care services. The personal care
provider agency shall hire or contract with and directly supervise a RN who
provides ongoing supervision of all personal care aides and LPNs. LPNs may
supervise, pursuant to their licenses, personal care aides based upon RN
assessment of the waiver individuals' health, safety, and welfare needs.
1. The RN supervisor shall make an initial home assessment
visit on or before the start of care for all individuals admitted to personal
care, when a waiver individual is readmitted after being discharged from
services, or if he is transferred from another provider, ADHC, or from a CD services
program.
2. During a home visit, the RN supervisor shall evaluate, at
least every 90 days, the LPN supervisor's performance and the waiver
individual's needs to ensure the LPN supervisor's abilities to function
competently and shall provide training as necessary. This shall be documented
in the waiver individual's record. A reassessment of the individual's needs and
review of the POC shall be performed and documented during these visits.
3. The RN/LPN supervisor shall also make supervisory visits
based on the assessment and evaluation of the care needs of waiver individuals
as often as needed and as defined in this subdivision to ensure both quality
and appropriateness of services.
a. The personal care provider agency shall have the
responsibility of determining when supervisory visits are appropriate for the
waiver individual's health, safety, and welfare. Supervisory visits shall be at
least every 90 days. This determination must be documented in the waiver
individuals' records by the RN on the initial assessment and in the ongoing
assessment records.
b. If DMAS determines that the waiver individual's health,
safety, or welfare is in jeopardy, DMAS may require the provider's RN or LPN
supervisor to supervise the personal care aides more frequently than once every
90 days. These visits shall be conducted at this designated increased frequency
until DMAS determines that the waiver individual's health, safety, or welfare
is no longer in jeopardy. This shall be documented by the provider and entered
into the individual's record.
c. During visits to the waiver individual's home, the RN/LPN
supervisor shall observe, evaluate, and document the adequacy and
appropriateness of personal care services with regard to the individual's
current functioning status and medical and social needs. The personal care
aide's record shall be reviewed and the waiver individual's or
family's/caregiver's, or both, satisfaction with the type and amount of
services discussed.
d. If the supervising RN/LPN must be delayed in conducting the
regular supervisory visit, such delay shall be documented in the waiver
individual's record with the reasons for the delay. Such supervisory visits
shall be conducted within 15 calendar days of the waiver individual's first
availability.
e. A RN/LPN supervisor shall be available to the personal care
aide for conferences pertaining to waiver individuals being served by the aide.
(1) The RN/LPN supervisor shall be available to the aide by
telephone at all times that the aide is providing services to waiver
individuals.
(2) The RN/LPN supervisor shall evaluate the personal care
aide's performance and the waiver individual's needs to identify any
insufficiencies in the personal care aide's abilities to function competently
and shall provide training as indicated. This shall be documented in the waiver
individual's record.
f. Licensed practical nurses (LPNs). As permitted by his
license, the LPN may supervise personal care aides. To ensure both quality and
appropriateness of services, the LPN supervisor shall make supervisory visits
of the aides as often as needed, but no fewer visits than provided in waiver
individuals' POCs as developed by the RN in collaboration with individuals and
the individuals' family/caregivers, or both, as appropriate.
(1) During visits to the waiver individual's home, a
LPN-supervisor shall observe, evaluate, and document the adequacy and
appropriateness of personal care services, the individual's current functioning
status and social needs. The personal care aide's record shall be reviewed and
the waiver individual's or family/caregiver's, or both, satisfaction with the
type and amount of services discussed.
(2) The LPN supervisor shall evaluate the personal care aide's
performance and the waiver individual's needs to identify any insufficiencies
in the aide's abilities to function competently and shall provide training as
required to resolve the insufficiencies. This shall be documented in the waiver
individual's record and reported to the RN supervisor.
(3) An LPN supervisor shall be available to personal care
aides for conferences pertaining to waiver individuals being served by them.
g. Personal care aides. The agency provider may employ and the
RN/LPN supervisor shall directly supervise personal care aides who provide
direct care to waiver individuals. Each aide hired to provide personal care
shall be evaluated by the provider agency to ensure compliance with
qualifications and skills required by DMAS pursuant to 12VAC30-120-930.
4. Payment shall not be made for services furnished by family
members or caregivers who are living under the same roof as the waiver
individual receiving services, unless there is objective written documentation
as to why there are no other providers or aides available to provide the care.
The provider shall initially make this determination and document it fully in
the waiver individual's record.
5. Required documentation for waiver individuals' records. The
provider shall maintain all records for each individual receiving personal care
services. These records shall be separate from those of non-home and
community-based care waiver services, such as companion or home
health services. These records shall be reviewed periodically by DMAS or its
designated agent. At a minimum, the record shall contain:
a. All personal care aides' records (DMAS-90) to include (i)
the specific services delivered to the waiver individual by the aide; (ii) the
personal care aide's actual daily arrival and departure times; (iii) the aide's
weekly comments or observations about the waiver individual, including
observations of the individual's physical and emotional condition, daily
activities, and responses to services rendered; and (iv) any other information
appropriate and relevant to the waiver individual's care and need for services.
b. The personal care aide's and individual's or responsible
caregiver's signatures, including the date, shall be recorded on these records
verifying that personal care services have been rendered during the week of the
service delivery.
(1) An employee of the provider shall not sign for the waiver
individual unless he is a family member or unpaid caregiver of the waiver
individual.
(2) Signatures, times, and dates shall not be placed on the
personal care aide record earlier than the last day of the week in which
services were provided nor later than seven calendar days from the date of the
last service.
G. Agency-directed respite care services.
1. To be approved as a respite care provider with DMAS, the
respite care agency provider shall:
a. Employ or contract with and directly supervise either a RN
or LPN, or both, who will provide ongoing supervision of all respite care
aides/LPNs, as appropriate. A RN shall provide supervision to all direct care
and supervisory LPNs.
(1) When respite care services are received on a routine
basis, the minimum acceptable frequency of the required RN/LPN supervisor's
visits shall not exceed every 90 days, based on the initial assessment. If an
individual is also receiving personal care services, the respite care RN/LPN
supervisory visit may coincide with the personal care RN/LPN supervisory
visits. However, the RN/LPN supervisor shall document supervision of respite
care separately from the personal care documentation. For this purpose, the
same individual record may be used with a separate section for respite care
documentation.
(2) When respite care services are not received on a routine
basis but are episodic in nature, a RN/LPN supervisor shall conduct the home
supervisory visit with the aide/LPN on or before the start of care. The RN/LPN
shall review the utilization of respite services either every six months or
upon the use of half of the approved respite hours, whichever comes first. If a
waiver individual is also receiving personal care services, the respite care
RN/LPN supervisory visit may coincide with the personal care RN/LPN supervisory
visit.
(3) During visits to the waiver individual's home, the RN/LPN
supervisor shall observe, evaluate, and document the adequacy and
appropriateness of respite care services to the waiver individual's current
functioning status and medical and social needs. The aide's/LPN's record shall
be reviewed along with the waiver individual's or family's/caregiver's, or
both, satisfaction with the type and amount of services discussed.
(4) Should the required RN/LPN supervisory visit be delayed,
the reason for the delay shall be documented in the waiver individual's record.
This visit shall be completed within 15 days of the waiver individual's first
availability.
b. Employ or contract with aides to provide respite care
services who shall meet the same education and training requirements as
personal care aides.
c. Not hire respite care aides for DMAS' reimbursement for
services that are rendered to waiver individuals when the aide is either (i)
the spouse of the waiver individual or (ii) the parent (biological, adoptive, legal
guardian) step, or foster parent) legal guardian, or other guardian
of the minor child waiver individual.
d. Employ an LPN to perform skilled respite care services. When
skilled respite services are offered in conjunction with skilled PDN, the
provider shall employ either a LPN or RN to provide skilled respite services.
Such services shall be reimbursed by DMAS under the following circumstances:
(1) The waiver individual shall have a documented need for
routine skilled respite care that cannot be provided by unlicensed personnel,
such as an aide. These waiver individuals would typically require a skilled
level of care involving, for example but not necessarily limited to,
ventilators for assistance with breathing or either nasogastric or gastrostomy
feedings;
(2) No other person in the waiver individual's support system
is willing and able to supply the skilled component of the individual's care
during the primary caregiver's absence; and
(3) The waiver individual is unable to receive skilled nursing
visits from any other source that could provide the skilled care usually given
by the caregiver.
e. Document in the waiver individual's record the circumstances
that require the provision of services by an LPN or RN. At the time of
the LPN's or RN's service, the LPN or RN shall also provide all
of the services normally provided by an aide.
2. Payment shall not be made for services furnished by other
family members or caregivers who are living under the same roof as the waiver
individual receiving services unless there is objective written documentation
as to why there are no other providers or aides available to provide the care.
The provider shall initially make this determination and document it fully in
the waiver individual's record.
3. Required documentation for waiver individuals' records. The
provider shall maintain all records for each waiver individual receiving
respite services. These records shall be separate clearly labelled
and maintained separately from those of non-home and community-based care
waiver services, such as companion or home health services. These
records shall be reviewed periodically either by the DMAS staff or a contracted
entity who is authorized by DMAS to review these files. At a minimum these
records shall contain:
a. Forms as specified in the DMAS guidance documents.
b. a. All respite care LPN/aide LPN,
RN, or aide records shall contain:
(1) The specific services delivered to the waiver individual
by the LPN/aide LPN, RN, or aide;
(2) The respite care LPN's/aide's LPN, RN, or aide's
daily arrival and departure times;
(3) Comments or observations recorded weekly about the waiver
individual. LPN/aide LPN, RN, or aide comments shall include, but
shall not be limited to, observation of the waiver individual's physical and
emotional condition, daily activities, the individual's response to services
rendered, and documentation of vital signs if taken as part of the POC.
c. All b. Skilled respite care LPN records (DMAS-90A),
which may be documented on the DMAS 90-A, shall be reviewed and signed by
the supervising RN and shall contain:
(1) The respite care LPN/aide's and waiver individual's or
responsible family/caregiver's signatures, including the date, verifying that
respite care services have been rendered during the week of service delivery as
documented in the record.
(2) An employee of the provider shall not sign for the waiver
individual unless he is a family member or unpaid caregiver of the waiver
individual.
(3) Signatures, times, and dates shall not be placed on the
respite care LPN/aide record earlier than the last day of the week in which
services were provided. Nor shall signatures be placed on the respite care
LPN/aide records later than seven calendar days from the date of the last
service.
H. Consumer-directed (CD) services facilitation for
personal care and respite services.
1. Any services rendered by attendants prior to dates
authorized by DMAS or the Srv Auth contractor shall not be eligible for
Medicaid reimbursement and shall be the responsibility of the waiver
individual.
2. The CD services facilitator shall meet the following
qualifications:
a. To be enrolled as a Medicaid CD services facilitator and
maintain provider status, the CD services facilitator shall have sufficient
knowledge, skills, and abilities to perform the activities required of such
providers. In addition, the CD services facilitator shall have the ability to
maintain and retain business and professional records sufficient to fully and
accurately document the nature, scope, and details of the services provided.
b. It is preferred that the CD services facilitator
possess, at a minimum, an undergraduate degree in a human services field or be
a registered nurse currently licensed to practice in the Commonwealth. In
addition, it is preferable that the CD services facilitator have at least two
years of satisfactory experience in a human services field working with
individuals who are disabled or elderly. The CD services facilitator must
possess a combination of work experience and relevant education that indicates
possession of the following knowledge, skills, and abilities described below in
this subdivision H 2 b. Such knowledge, skills, and abilities must be
documented on the CD services facilitator's application form, found in
supporting documentation, or be observed during a job interview. Observations
during the interview must be documented. The knowledge, skills, and abilities
include:
(1) Knowledge of:
(a) Types of functional limitations and health problems
that may occur in individuals who are elderly or individuals with disabilities,
as well as strategies to reduce limitations and health problems;
(b) Physical care that may be required by individuals who
are elderly or individuals with disabilities, such as transferring, bathing
techniques, bowel and bladder care, and the approximate time those activities
normally take;
(c) Equipment and environmental modifications that may be
required by individuals who are elderly or individuals with disabilities that
reduce the need for human help and improve safety;
(d) Various long-term care program requirements, including
nursing facility and assisted living facility placement criteria, Medicaid
waiver services, and other federal, state, and local resources that provide
personal care and respite services;
(e) Elderly or Disabled with Consumer-Direction Waiver
requirements, as well as the administrative duties for which the services
facilitator will be responsible;
(f) How to conduct assessments (including environmental,
psychosocial, health, and functional factors) and their uses in services
planning;
(g) Interviewing techniques;
(h) The individual's right to make decisions about, direct
the provisions of, and control his consumer-directed services, including
hiring, training, managing, approving time sheets of, and firing an aide;
(i) The principles of human behavior and interpersonal
relationships; and
(j) General principles of record documentation.
(2) Skills in:
(a) Negotiating with individuals, family/caregivers, and
service providers;
(b) Assessing, supporting, observing, recording, and
reporting behaviors;
(c) Identifying, developing, or providing services to
individuals who are elderly or individuals with disabilities; and
(d) Identifying services within the established services
system to meet the individual's needs.
(3) Abilities to:
(a) Report findings of the assessment or onsite visit,
either in writing or an alternative format for individuals who have visual
impairments;
(b) Demonstrate a positive regard for individuals and their
families;
(c) Be persistent and remain objective;
(d) Work independently, performing position duties under
general supervision;
(e) Communicate effectively orally and in writing; and
(f) Develop a rapport and communicate with individuals from
diverse cultural backgrounds.
c. If the CD services facilitator is not a RN, the CD
services facilitator shall inform the waiver individual's primary health care
provider that services are being provided and request consultation as needed.
These contacts shall be documented in the waiver individual's record.
3. Initiation of services and service monitoring.
a. For CD services, the CD services facilitator shall make
an initial comprehensive in-home visit at the primary residence of the waiver
individual to collaborate with the waiver individual or family/caregiver to
identify the needs, assist in the development of the POC with the waiver
individual or family/caregiver, as appropriate, and provide employer of record
(EOR) employee management training within seven days of the initial visit. The
initial comprehensive home visit shall be conducted only once upon the waiver
individual's entry into CD services. If the waiver individual changes, either
voluntarily or involuntarily, the CD services facilitator, the new CD services
facilitator must complete a reassessment visit in lieu of an initial
comprehensive visit.
b. After the initial comprehensive visit, the CD services
facilitator shall continue to monitor the POC on an as-needed basis, but in no
event less frequently than every 90 days for personal care, and shall conduct
face-to-face meetings with the waiver individual and may include the
family/caregiver. The CD services facilitator shall review the utilization of
CD respite services, either every six months or upon the use of half of the
approved respite services hours, whichever comes first, and shall conduct a
face-to-face meeting with the waiver individual and may include the
family/caregiver.
c. During visits with the waiver individual, the CD
services facilitator shall observe, evaluate, and consult with the
individual/EOR and may include the family/caregiver, and document the adequacy
and appropriateness of CD services with regard to the waiver individual's
current functioning, cognitive status, and medical and social needs. The CD
services facilitator's written summary of the visit shall include, but shall
not necessarily be limited to:
(1) A discussion with the waiver individual or family/caregiver/EOR
concerning whether the service is adequate to meet the waiver individual's
needs;
(2) Any suspected abuse, neglect, or exploitation and to
whom it was reported;
(3) Any special tasks performed by the attendant and the
attendant's qualifications to perform these tasks;
(4) The waiver individual's or family/caregiver's/EOR's
satisfaction with the service;
(5) Any hospitalization or change in medical condition,
functioning, or cognitive status; and
(6) The presence or absence of the attendant in the home
during the CD services facilitator's visit.
4. DMAS, its designated contractor, or the fiscal/employer
agent shall request a criminal record check and a check of the VDSS Child
Protective Services Central Registry if the waiver individual is a minor child,
in accordance with 12VAC30-120-930, pertaining to the attendant on behalf of
the waiver individual and report findings of these records checks to the EOR.
5. The CD services facilitator shall review copies of
timesheets during the face-to-face visits to ensure that the hours approved in
the POC are being provided and are not exceeded. If discrepancies are
identified, the CD services facilitator shall discuss these with the waiver
individual or EOR to resolve discrepancies and shall notify the fiscal/employer
agent. The CD services facilitator shall also review the waiver individual's
POC to ensure that the waiver individual's needs are being met.
6. The CD services facilitator shall maintain records of
each waiver individual that he serves. At a minimum, these records shall
contain:
a. Results of the initial comprehensive home visit
completed prior to or on the date services are initiated and subsequent
reassessments and changes to the supporting documentation;
b. The personal care POC. Such plans shall be reviewed by
the provider every 90 days, annually, and more often as needed, and modified as
appropriate. The respite services POC shall be included in the record and shall
be reviewed by the provider every six months or when half of the approved
respite service hours have been used whichever comes first. For the annual
review and in cases where either the personal care or respite care POC is
modified, the POC shall be reviewed with the waiver individual, the
family/caregiver, and EOR, as appropriate;
c. CD services facilitator's dated notes documenting any
contacts with the waiver individual or family/caregiver/EOR and visits to the
individual;
d. All contacts, including correspondence, made to and from
the waiver individual, EOR, family/caregiver, physicians, DMAS, the designated
Srv Auth contractor, formal and informal services provider, and all other
professionals related to the individual's Medicaid services or medical care;
e. All employer management training provided to the waiver
individual or EOR to include, but not necessarily be limited to (i) the
individual's or EOR's receipt of training on their responsibilities for the
accuracy of the attendant's timesheets and (ii) the availability of the
Consumer-Directed Waiver Services Employer Manual available at
www.dmas.virginia.gov;
f. All documents signed by the waiver individual or EOR, as
appropriate, that acknowledge the responsibilities as the employer; and
g. The DMAS required forms as specified in the agency's
waiver-specific guidance document.
7. Payment shall not be made for services furnished by
other family members or caregivers who are living under the same roof as the
waiver individual receiving services unless there is objective written
documentation by the CD services facilitator as to why there are no other
providers or aides available to provide the required care.
8. In instances when either the waiver individual is
consistently unable to hire and retain the employment of a personal care
attendant to provide CD personal care or respite services such as, but not
limited to, a pattern of discrepancies with the attendant's timesheets, the CD
services facilitator shall make arrangements, after conferring with DMAS, to
have the needed services transferred to an agency-directed services provider of
the individual's choice or discuss with the waiver individual or
family/caregiver/EOR, or both, other service options.
9. Waiver individual responsibilities.
a. The waiver individual shall be authorized for CD
services and the EOR shall successfully complete consumer/employee-management
training performed by the CD services facilitator before the individual shall
be permitted to hire an attendant for Medicaid reimbursement. Any services that
may be rendered by an attendant prior to authorization by Medicaid shall not be
eligible for reimbursement by Medicaid. Waiver individuals who are eligible for
CD services shall have the capability to hire and train their own attendants
and supervise the attendants' performance. Waiver individuals may have a
family/caregiver or other designated person serve as the EOR on their behalf.
The EOR shall be prohibited from also being the Medicaid-reimbursed attendant
for respite or personal care or the services facilitator for the waiver
individual.
b. Waiver individuals shall acknowledge that they will not
knowingly continue to accept CD personal care services when the service is no
longer appropriate or necessary for their care needs and shall inform the
services facilitator of their change in care needs. If CD services continue
after services have been terminated by DMAS or the designated Srv Auth
contractor, the waiver individual shall be held liable for attendant
compensation.
c. Waiver individuals shall notify the CD services
facilitator of all hospitalizations or admissions, such as but not necessarily
limited to, any rehabilitation facility, rehabilitation unit, or NF as CD
attendant services shall not be reimbursed during such admissions. Failure to
do so may result in the waiver individual being held liable for attendant
compensation.
d. Waiver individuals shall not employ attendants for DMAS
reimbursement for services rendered to themselves when the attendant is the (i)
spouse of the waiver individual; (ii) parent (biological, adoptive, legal guardian)
or other guardian of the minor child waiver individual; or (iii)
family/caregiver or caregivers/EOR who may be directing the waiver individual's
care.
H. Consumer-directed (CD) services facilitation for
personal care and respite services.
1. Any services rendered by attendants prior to dates
authorized by DMAS or the service authorization contractor shall not be
eligible for Medicaid reimbursement and shall be the responsibility of the
waiver individual.
2. If the services facilitator is not an RN, then the
services facilitator shall inform the primary health care provider for the
individual who is enrolled in the waiver that services are being provided
within 30 days from the start of such services and request consultation with
the primary health care provider, as needed. This shall be done after the
services facilitator secures written permission from the individual to contact
the primary health care provider. The documentation of this written permission
to contact the primary health care provider shall be retained in the
individual's medical record. All contacts with the primary health care provider
shall be documented in the individual's medical record.
3. The consumer-directed services facilitator, whether
employed or contracted by a DMAS enrolled services facilitator, shall meet the
following qualifications:
a. To be enrolled as a Medicaid consumer-directed services
facilitator and maintain provider status, the consumer-directed services
facilitator shall have sufficient knowledge, skills, and abilities as provided
for in subdivision H 3 i of this section to perform the activities required of
such providers. In addition, the consumer-directed services facilitator shall
have the ability to maintain and retain business and professional records
sufficient to fully and accurately document the nature, scope, and details of
the services provided.
b. Effective January 11, 2016, prior to reimbursement for
services provided to waiver individuals, all consumer-directed services
facilitators shall:
(1) Have a satisfactory work record as evidenced by two
references from prior job experiences from any human services work; such
references shall not include any evidence of abuse, neglect, or exploitation of
the elderly or persons with disabilities or children;
(2) Within 30 calendar days of employment, the staff or
volunteer shall obtain an original criminal record clearance with respect to
convictions for offenses specified in § 19.2-392.02 of the Code of Virginia or
an original criminal history record from the Central Criminal Records Exchange.
(a) DMAS shall not reimburse a provider for services
provided by an individual who works in a position that involves direct contact
with a waiver individual until an original criminal record clearance or
original criminal history record has been received. DMAS shall reimburse
services provided by such an individual during only the first 30 calendar days
of employment if the provider can produce documented evidence that such person
worked only under the direct supervision of another individual for whom a
background check was completed in accordance with the requirements of this
section. If an original criminal record clearance or original criminal history
record is not received within the first 30 calendar days of employment, DMAS
shall not reimburse the provider for services provided by such employee on the
31st calendar day through the date on which the provider receives an original
criminal record clearance or an original criminal history record.
(b) DMAS shall not reimburse a provider for services
provided by an individual who has been convicted of any offense set forth in
clause (i) of the definition of barrier crime in § 19.2-392.02 of the Code
of Virginia unless all of the following conditions are met: (i) the offense was
punishable as a misdemeanor; (ii) the individual has been convicted of only one
such offense; (iii) the offense did not involve abuse or neglect; and (iv) at
least five years have elapsed since the conviction.
(3) The staff or volunteer shall provide the hiring
facility with a sworn statement or affirmation disclosing any criminal
convictions or any pending criminal charges, whether within or outside of the
Commonwealth.
(4) Submit to a search of the VDSS Child Protective
Services Central Registry. A consumer-directed services facilitator shall not
be reimbursed for services provided to the waiver individual effective on the
date and thereafter that the VDSS CPS Central Registry check confirms the
consumer-directed services facilitator has a finding; and
(5) Not be debarred, suspended, or otherwise excluded from
participating in federal health care programs, as listed on the federal List of
Excluded Individuals/Entities (LEIE) database at http://www.olg.hhs.govfraud/exclusions%20/exclusions%20list.asp.
c. Persons who are consumer-directed services facilitators
prior to January 11, 2016, shall not be required to meet the degree and
experience requirements of this subsection unless required to submit a new
application to be a consumer-directed services facilitator after January 11,
2016. Effective January 11, 2016, consumer-directed services facilitators shall
possess the required degree and experience, as follows:
(1) Prior to enrollment by the department as a
consumer-directed services facilitator, all new applicants shall possess, at a
minimum, either an associate's degree or higher from an accredited college in a
health or human services field or be a registered nurse currently licensed to
practice in Commonwealth and possess a minimum of two years of satisfactory
direct care experience supporting individuals with disabilities or older
adults; or
(2) Possess a bachelor's degree or higher in a non-health
or human services field and have a minimum of three years of satisfactory
direct care experience supporting individuals with disabilities or older
adults.
d. Effective April 10, 2016, all consumer-directed services
facilitators shall complete required training and competency assessments.
Satisfactory competency assessment results shall be kept in the service
facilitator's record.
(1) All new consumer-directed services facilitators shall
complete the DMAS-approved consumer-directed services facilitator training and
pass the corresponding competency assessment with a score of at least 80% prior
to being approved as a consumer-directed services facilitator and being
reimbursed for working with waiver individuals.
(2) Persons who are consumer-directed services facilitators
prior to January 11, 2016, shall be required to complete the DMAS-approved consumer-directed
services facilitator training and pass the corresponding competency assessment
with a score of at least 80% in order to continue being reimbursed for and
working with waiver individuals for the purpose of Medicaid reimbursement.
e. Failure to satisfy the competency assessment
requirements and meet all other requirements shall result in a retraction of
Medicaid payment or the termination of the provider agreement, or both.
f. Failure to satisfy the
competency assessment requirements and meet all other requirements may also
result in the termination of a CD services facilitator employed by or
contracted with a Medicaid enrolled services facilitator provider.
g. As a component of the renewal of the Medicaid provider
agreement, all CD services facilitators shall pass the competency assessment
every five years and achieve a score of at least 80%.
h. The consumer-directed services facilitator shall have
access to a computer with secure Internet access that meets the requirements of
45 CFR Part 164 for the electronic exchange of information. Electronic exchange
of information shall include, for example, checking individual eligibility,
submission of service authorizations, submission of information to the fiscal
employer agent, and billing for services.
i. The consumer-directed services facilitator must possess
a combination of work experience and relevant education that indicates
possession of the following knowledge, skills, and abilities. Such knowledge,
skills, and abilities must be documented on the consumer-directed services
facilitator's application form, found in supporting documentation, or be
observed during a job interview. Observations during the interview must be
documented. The knowledge, skills, and abilities include:
(1) Knowledge of:
(a) Types of functional limitations and health problems
that may occur in older adults or individuals with disabilities, as well as
strategies to reduce limitations and health problems;
(b) Physical care that may be required by older adults or
individuals with disabilities, such as transferring, bathing techniques, bowel
and bladder care, and the approximate time those activities normally take;
(c) Equipment and environmental modifications that may be
required by individuals who are elderly or individuals with disabilities that
reduce the need for human help and improve safety;
(d) Various long-term services and supports program
requirements, including nursing facility and assisted living facility placement
criteria, Medicaid waiver services, and other federal, state, and local
resources that provide personal care and respite services;
(e) CCC Plus Waiver requirements, as well as the
administrative duties for which the services facilitator will be responsible;
(f) How to conduct assessments (including environmental,
psychosocial, health, and functional factors) and their uses in services
planning;
(g) Interviewing techniques;
(h) The individual's right to make decisions about, direct
the provisions of, and control his consumer-directed services, including
hiring, training, managing, approving timesheets, and firing an aide;
(i) The principles of human behavior and interpersonal
relationships; and
(j) General principles of record documentation.
(2) Skills in:
(a) Negotiating with individuals, family/caregivers, and
service providers;
(b) Assessing, supporting, observing, recording, and
reporting behaviors;
(c) Identifying, developing, or providing services to
individuals who are elderly or individuals with disabilities; and
(d) Identifying services within the established services
system to meet the individual's needs.
(3) Abilities to:
(a) Report findings of the assessment or onsite visit,
either in writing or an alternative format for individuals who have visual
impairments;
(b) Demonstrate a positive regard for individuals and their
families;
(c) Be persistent and remain objective;
(d) Work independently, performing position duties under
general supervision;
(e) Communicate effectively, orally and in writing; and
(f) Develop a rapport and communicate with individuals from
diverse cultural backgrounds.
4. Initiation of services and service monitoring.
a. For consumer-directed model of service, the
consumer-directed services facilitator shall make an initial comprehensive home
visit at the primary residence of the individual to collaborate with the
individual or the individual's family/caregiver, as appropriate, to identify
the individual's needs, assist in the development of the plan of care with the
waiver individual and individual's family/caregiver, as appropriate, and
provide EOR management training within seven days of the initial visit. The initial
comprehensive home visit shall be conducted only once upon the individual's
entry into consumer-directed services. If the individual changes, either
voluntarily or involuntarily, the consumer-directed services facilitator, the
new consumer-directed services facilitator shall complete a reassessment visit
in lieu of a comprehensive visit.
b. After the initial comprehensive visit, the services
facilitator shall continue to monitor the plan of care on an as-needed basis,
but in no event less frequently than every 90 days for personal care, and shall
conduct face-to-face meetings with the individual and may include the
family/caregiver. The services facilitator shall review the utilization of
consumer-directed respite services and shall conduct a face-to-face meeting
with the individual and may include the family/caregiver either every six
months or upon the use of half of the approved respite services hours,
whichever comes first. Such monitoring reviews shall be documented in the
individual's medical record.
c. During visits with the individual, the services
facilitator shall observe, evaluate, and consult with the individual/EOR and
may include the family/caregiver and document the adequacy and appropriateness
of CD services with regard to the individual's current functioning, cognitive
status, and medical and social needs. The consumer-directed services
facilitator's written summary of the visit shall include at a minimum:
(1) Discussion with the waiver individual or
family/caregiver/EOR, as appropriate, concerning whether the service is
adequate to meet the waiver individual's needs;
(2) Any suspected abuse, neglect, or exploitation and to
whom it was reported;
(3) Any special tasks (tasks outside of the normal ADLs or
IADLs) performed by the consumer-directed attendant and the consumer-directed
attendant's qualifications to perform these tasks;
(4) The individual's or family/caregiver's/EOR's
satisfaction with the service;
(5) Any hospitalization or change in medical condition,
functioning, or cognitive status; and
(6) The presence or absence of the consumer-directed
attendant in the home during the consumer-directed services facilitator's
visit.
5. DMAS, its designated contractor, or the fiscal/employer
agent shall request a criminal record check, and a check of the VDSS Child
Protective Services Central Registry if the waiver individual is a minor child,
and shall comply with the requirements of subdivision H 3 b of this section.
6. The consumer-directed services facilitator shall review
and verify copies of timesheets during the face-to-face visits to ensure that
the hours approved in the plan of care are being provided and are not exceeded.
If discrepancies are identified, the consumer-directed services facilitator
shall discuss these with the individual or EOR to resolve discrepancies and
shall notify the fiscal/employer agent. The consumer-directed services
facilitator shall also review the individual's plan of care to ensure that the
individual's needs are being met. Failure to conduct such reviews and
verifications of timesheets and maintain the documentation of these reviews
shall result in a DMAS recovery of payments made.
7. Failure to maintain all required documentation shall
result in a DMAS action to recover payments made. Repeated instances of failure
to maintain documentation may result in cancellation of the Medicaid provider
agreement. The consumer-directed services facilitator shall maintain records of
each individual that he serves. At a minimum, these records shall contain:
a. Results of the initial comprehensive home visit
completed prior to or on the date services are initiated and subsequent
reassessments and changes to the supporting documentation;
b. The personal care plan of care. Such plans shall be
reviewed by the provider every 90 days, annually, and more often as needed, and
modified as appropriate. The respite services plan of care shall be included in
the record and shall be reviewed by the provider every six months or when half
of the approved respite service hours have been used, whichever comes first.
For the annual review and in cases where either the personal care or respite
care plan of care is modified, the plan of care shall be reviewed with the
individual, the family/caregiver, and EOR, as appropriate;
c. The consumer-directed services facilitator's dated notes
documenting any contacts with the individual or family/caregiver/EOR and visits
to the individual;
d. All contacts, including correspondence, made to and from
the waiver individual, EOR, family/caregiver, physicians, DMAS, the designated
service authorization contractor, formal and informal services provider, and
all other professionals related to the individual's Medicaid services or
medical care;
e. All employer management training provided to the waiver
individual or EOR to include (i) the individual's or EOR's receipt of training
on their responsibilities for the accuracy of the consumer-directed attendant's
timesheets and (ii) the availability of the Consumer-Directed Waiver Services
Employer Manual available at http://lis.virginia.gov/000/noc/www.dmas.virginia.gov;
f. All documents signed by the individual or EOR, as
appropriate, that acknowledge the responsibilities as the employer; and
g. The DMAS required forms as specified in the agency's
waiver-specific guidance document.
8. Waiver individual,
family/caregiver, and EOR responsibilities.
a. The individual shall be authorized for the
consumer-directed model of service, and the EOR shall successfully complete EOR
management training performed by the consumer-directed services facilitator
before the individual or EOR shall be permitted to hire a consumer-directed
attendant for Medicaid reimbursement. Any services that may be rendered by a
consumer-directed attendant prior to authorization by Medicaid shall not be
eligible for reimbursement by Medicaid. Individuals who are eligible for
consumer-directed services shall have the capability to hire and train their
own consumer-directed attendants and supervise the consumer-directed
attendants' performances. In lieu of being the EOR themselves, individuals may
have a family/caregiver or other designated person serve as the EOR on their
behalf. The EOR shall be prohibited from also being the Medicaid-reimbursed
consumer-directed attendant for respite or personal care or the services
facilitator for the individual.
b. Individuals shall acknowledge that they will not
knowingly continue to accept consumer-directed personal care services when the
service is no longer appropriate or necessary for their care needs and shall
inform the services facilitator of their change in care needs. If the
consumer-directed model of services continues after services have been
terminated by DMAS or the designated service authorization contractor, the
individual shall be held liable for the consumer-directed attendant
compensation.
c. Waiver individuals shall notify the consumer-directed
services facilitator of all hospitalizations or admissions, for example, to any
rehabilitation facility rehabilitation unit or nursing facility as
consumer-directed attendant services shall not be reimbursed during such
admissions. Failure to do so may result in the individual being held liable for
the consumer-directed employee compensation.
I. Personal emergency response systems. In addition to
meeting the general conditions and requirements for home and community-based
waiver services participating providers as specified in 12VAC30-120-930,
PERS providers must also meet the following qualifications and requirements:
1. A PERS provider shall be either, but not necessarily
limited to, a personal care agency, a durable medical equipment provider, a
licensed home health provider, or a PERS manufacturer. All such providers shall
have the ability to provide PERS equipment, direct services (i.e.,
installation, equipment maintenance, and service calls), and PERS monitoring;
2. The PERS provider shall provide an emergency response
center with fully trained operators who are capable of (i) receiving signals
for help from an individual's PERS equipment 24 hours a day, 365 or 366 days
per year, as appropriate; (ii) determining whether an emergency exists; and
(iii) notifying an emergency response organization or an emergency responder
that the PERS individual needs emergency help;
3. A PERS provider shall comply with all applicable Virginia
statutes, all applicable regulations of DMAS, and all other governmental
agencies having jurisdiction over the services to be performed;
4. The PERS provider shall have the primary responsibility to
furnish, install, maintain, test, and service the PERS equipment, as required,
to keep it fully operational. The provider shall replace or repair the PERS
device within 24 hours of the waiver individual's notification of a malfunction
of the console unit, activating devices, or medication monitoring unit and
shall provide temporary equipment, as may be necessary for the waiver
individual's health, safety, and welfare, while the original equipment is being
repaired or replaced;
5. The PERS provider shall install, consistent with the
manufacturer's instructions, all PERS equipment into a waiver individual's
functioning telephone line or system within seven days of the request of such
installation unless there is appropriate documentation of why this timeframe
cannot be met. The PERS provider shall furnish all supplies necessary to ensure
that the system is installed and working properly. The PERS provider shall test
the PERS device monthly, or more frequently if needed, to ensure that the
device is fully operational;
6. The PERS installation shall include local seize line
circuitry, which guarantees that the unit shall have priority over the
telephone connected to the console unit should the telephone be off the hook or
in use when the unit is activated;
7. A PERS provider shall maintain a data record for each
waiver individual at no additional cost to DMAS or the waiver individual. The
record shall document all of the following:
a. Delivery date and installation date of the PERS equipment;
b. Waiver individual/caregiver signature verifying receipt of
the PERS equipment;
c. Verification by a test that the PERS device is operational
and the waiver individual is still using it monthly or more frequently as
needed;
d. Waiver individual contact information, to be updated
annually or more frequently as needed, as provided by the individual or the individual's
caregiver/EOR;
e. A case log documenting the waiver individual's utilization
of the system, all contacts, and all communications with the individual,
caregiver/EOR, and responders;
f. Documentation that the waiver individual is able to use the
PERS equipment through return demonstration; and
g. Copies of all equipment checks performed on the PERS unit;
8. The PERS provider shall have backup monitoring capacity in
case the primary system cannot handle incoming emergency signals;
9. The emergency response activator shall be capable of being
activated either by breath, touch, or some other means and shall be usable by
waiver individuals who are visually or hearing impaired or physically disabled.
The emergency response communicator shall be capable of operating without
external power during a power failure at the waiver individual's home for a
minimum period of 24 hours. The emergency response console unit shall also be
able to self-disconnect and redial the backup monitoring site without the
waiver individual resetting the system in the event it cannot get its signal
accepted at the response center;
10. PERS providers shall be capable of continuously monitoring
and responding to emergencies under all conditions, including power failures
and mechanical malfunctions. It shall be the PERS provider's responsibility to
ensure that the monitoring agency and the monitoring agency's equipment meet
the following requirements. The PERS provider shall be capable of
simultaneously responding to multiple signals for help from the waiver
individuals' PERS equipment. The PERS provider's equipment shall include the
following:
a. A primary receiver and a backup receiver, which shall be
independent and interchangeable;
b. A backup information retrieval system;
c. A clock printer, which shall print out the time and date of
the emergency signal, the waiver individual's identification code, and the
emergency code that indicates whether the signal is active, passive, or a
responder test;
d. A backup power supply;
e. A separate telephone service;
f. A toll-free number to be used by the PERS equipment in
order to contact the primary or backup response center; and
g. A telephone line monitor, which shall give visual and
audible signals when the incoming telephone line is disconnected for more than
10 seconds;
11. The PERS provider shall maintain detailed technical and
operation manuals that describe PERS elements, including the installation,
functioning, and testing of PERS equipment; emergency response protocols; and
recordkeeping and reporting procedures;
12. The PERS provider shall document and furnish within 30
days of the action taken, a written report for each emergency signal that
results in action being taken on behalf of the waiver individual. This excludes
test signals or activations made in error. This written report shall be
furnished to (i) the personal care provider; (ii) the respite care provider;
(iii) the CD services facilitation provider; (iv) in cases where the individual
only receives ADHC services, to the ADCC provider; or (v) to the transition
coordinator for the service in which the individual is enrolled; and
13. The PERS provider shall obtain and keep on file a copy of
the most recently completed DMAS-225 form. Until the PERS provider obtains a
copy of the DMAS-225 form, the PERS provider shall clearly document efforts to
obtain the completed DMAS-225 form from the personal care provider, respite
care provider, CD services facilitation provider, or ADCC provider.
J. Assistive technology (AT) and environmental modification
(EM) services. AT and EM shall be provided only to waiver individuals who
also participate in the MFP demonstration program by providers who have
current provider participation agreements with DMAS.
1. AT shall be rendered by providers having a current provider
participation agreement with DMAS as durable medical equipment and supply
providers. An independent, professional consultation shall be obtained, as may
be required, from qualified professionals who are knowledgeable of that item
for each AT request prior to approval by either DMAS or the Srv Auth service
authorization contractor and may include training on such AT by the
qualified professional. Independent, professional consultants shall include,
but shall not necessarily be limited to, speech/language therapists, physical
therapists, occupational therapists, physicians, behavioral therapists,
certified rehabilitation specialists, or rehabilitation engineers. Providers
that supply AT for a waiver individual may not perform assessment/consultation,
write specifications, or inspect the AT for that individual. Providers of
services shall not be (i) spouses of the waiver individual or (ii) parents (biological,
(natural, adoptive, step, or foster, or legal guardian) parent)
or legal guardian of the waiver individual. AT shall be delivered within 60
days from the start date of the authorization. The AT provider shall ensure
that the AT functions properly.
2. In addition to meeting the general conditions and
requirements for home and community-based waiver services participating
providers as specified in
12VAC30-120-930, as appropriate, environmental modifications shall be provided
in accordance with all applicable state or local building codes by contractors
who have provider agreements with DMAS. Providers of services shall not be (i)
the spouse of the waiver individual or (ii) the parent (biological, (natural,
adoptive, step, or foster, or legal guardian) parent) or legal
guardian of the waiver individual who is a minor child. Modifications shall
be completed within a year of the start date of the authorization.
3. Providers of AT and EM services shall not be permitted to
recover equipment that has been provided to waiver individuals whenever the
provider has been charged, by either DMAS or its designated service
authorization agent, with overpayments and is therefore being required to
return payments to DMAS.
K. Transition coordination. This service shall be provided
consistent with 12VAC30-120-2000 and 12VAC30-120-2010.
L. K. Transition services. This service shall
be provided consistent with 12VAC30-120-2000 and 12VAC30-120-2010.
L. Skilled private duty nursing.
1. This service shall be provided through either a home
health agency licensed or certified by the VDH for Medicaid participation and
with which DMAS has a contract for either skilled PDN or congregate skilled PDN
or both;
2. Demonstrate a prior successful health care delivery;
3. Operate from a business office; and
4. Employ (or subcontract with) and directly supervise an
RN or an LPN. The LPN and RN shall be currently licensed to practice in the
Commonwealth. Prior to providing skilled PDN services, the RN or LPN shall have
either (i) at least six months of related clinical nursing experience or (ii)
completed a provider training program related to the care and technology needs
of the waiver individual as described in 12VAC30-120-930 I 3. Regardless of
whether a nurse has six months of experience or completes a provider training
course, the provider agency shall be responsible for assuring all nurses who
are assigned to an individual are competent in the care needs of that
individual.
5. As part of direct supervision, the RN supervisor shall
make, at a minimum, a visit every 30 days to ensure both quality and
appropriateness of PDN to assess the individual's and the individual's
representative's satisfaction with the services being provided, to review the
medication and treatments, and to update and verify that the most current
physician signed orders are in the home.
a. The waiver individual shall be present when the
supervisory visits are made;
b. At least every other visit shall be in the individual's
primary residence;
c. When a delay occurs in the RN supervisor's visits
because the individual is unavailable, the reason for the delay shall be
documented in the individual's record, and the visit shall occur as soon as the
individual is available. Failure to meet this standard may result in a DMAS
recovery of payments made.
d. The RN supervisor may delegate personal care aide
supervisory visits to an LPN. The provider's RN or LPN supervisor shall make
supervisory visits at least every 90 days. During visits to the waiver
individual's home, the RN/LPN supervisor shall observe, evaluate, and document
the adequacy and appropriateness of personal care services with regard to the
individual's current functioning status and medical and social needs. The
personal care aide's record shall be reviewed and the waiver individual's or
family/caregiver's, or both, satisfaction with the type and amount of services
discussed.
e. Additional supervisory visits may be required under the
following circumstances: (i) at the provider's discretion; (ii) at the request
of the individual; (iii) when a change in the individual's condition has
occurred; (iv) any time the health, safety, or welfare of the individual could
be at risk; and (v) at the request of the DMAS staff.
6. When skilled respite services are routine in nature and
offered in conjunction with personal care (PC) services for adults, the RN
supervisory visit conducted for personal care may serve as the supervisory
visit for respite services. However, the supervisor shall document supervision
of skilled respite services separately. For this purpose, the same individual
record can be used with a separate section clearly labelled for documentation
of skilled respite services.
7. For DMAS-enrolled skilled PDN providers that also
provide PC services, the provider shall employ or subcontract with and directly
supervise an RN who will provide ongoing supervision of all PCAs. The
supervising RN shall be currently licensed to practice nursing in the
Commonwealth and have at least one year of related clinical nursing experience,
which may include work in an acute care hospital, long-stay hospital,
rehabilitation hospital, or specialized care nursing facility. In addition to
meeting the general conditions and requirements for home and community-based
waiver services participating providers as specified in 12VAC30-120-930 and
12VAC30-120-935, the provision of PC services shall also comply with the
requirements of 12VAC30-120-930.
8. The following documentation shall be maintained for
every individual for whom DMAS-enrolled providers render these services:
a. Physicians' orders for these services shall be
maintained in the individual's record as well as at the individual's primary
residence. All recertifications of the POC shall be performed within the last
five business days of each current 60-day period. The physician shall sign the
recertification before Medicaid reimbursement shall occur;
b. All assessments, reassessments, and evaluations (including
the complete UAI screening packet or risk evaluations) made during the
provision of services, including any required initial assessments by the RN
supervisor completed prior to or on the date services are initiated and changes
to the supporting documentation by the RN supervisor;
c. Progress notes reflecting the individual's status and,
as appropriate, progress toward the identified goals in the POC;
d. All related communication with the individual and the
individual's representative, the DMAS designated agent for service
authorization, consultants, DMAS, VDSS, formal and informal service providers,
all required referrals, as appropriate, to Adult Protective Services or Child
Protective Services and all other professionals concerning the individual;
e. All service authorization decisions rendered by the DMAS
staff or the DMAS-designated service authorization contractor; and
f. All POCs completed with the individual, or
family/caregiver, as appropriate, and specific to the service being provided
and all supporting documentation related to any changes in the POC.
12VAC30-120-945. Payment for covered services.
A. DMAS shall not reimburse providers, either agency-directed
or consumer-directed, for any staff training required by these waiver
regulations or any other training that may be required.
B. All services provided in the EDCD CCC Plus
Waiver shall be reimbursed at a rate established by DMAS in its agency fee
schedule.
1. DMAS or its contractor shall reimburse a per diem
fee for ADHC services that shall be considered as payment in full for all
services rendered to that waiver individual as part of the individual's
approved ADHC plan of care.
2. Agency personal care/respite care and respite
care services shall be reimbursed on an hourly basis consistent with the
agency's fee schedule.
3. Consumer-directed personal care/respite care and
respite care services and skilled PDN shall be reimbursed on an
hourly a quarter-hour basis and consistent with the agency's
fee schedule.
4. Transition services. The total costs of these transition
services shall be limited to $5,000 per waiver individual per lifetime and
shall be expended within nine months from the start date of authorization. Transition
services shall be reimbursed at the actual cost of the item; no mark ups shall
be permitted.
5. Reimbursement for assistive technology (AT) and
environmental modification (EM) services shall be limited to those waiver
individuals who are also participating in the MFP demonstration program as
follows:
a. All AT services provided in the EDCD CCC Plus
Waiver shall be reimbursed as a service limit of one and up to a per member
annual maximum of $5,000 per calendar year regardless of waiver. AT
services in this waiver shall be reimbursed up to a per individual annual MFP
enrollment period not to exceed 12 months. These limits shall apply
regardless of whether the waiver individual remains in this waiver or changes
to another waiver program. AT services shall be reimbursed in a manner that
is reasonable and customary not to exceed the provider's usual and customary
charges to the general public.
b. All EM services provided in the EDCD CCC Plus
Waiver shall be reimbursed per individual annual MFP enrollment period not
to exceed 12 months as a service limit of one and up to a per member
annual maximum of $5,000 per calendar year regardless of waiver. All EM
services shall be reimbursed at the actual cost of material and labor and no
mark ups shall be permitted.
6. DMAS shall reimburse a monthly fee for transition
coordination consistent with the agency's fee schedule.
7. 6. PERS monthly fee payments shall be
consistent with the agency's fee schedule.
C. Duplication of services.
1. DMAS shall not duplicate services that are required as a
reasonable accommodation as a part of the American with Disabilities Act (42
USC §§ 12131 through 12165), the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 (29 USC § 794), or
the Virginians with Disabilities Act (§ 51.5-1 et seq. of the Code of
Virginia).
2. Payment for waiver services shall not duplicate payments
made to public agencies or private entities under other program authorities for
this same purpose. All private insurance benefits for these waiver covered
services shall be exhausted before Medicaid reimbursement can occur as Medicaid
shall be the payer of last resort.
3. DMAS payments for EM services shall not be duplicative in
homes where multiple waiver individuals reside.
Part XVII
Home and Community-Based Services for Technology Assisted Individuals Waiver (Repealed)
12VAC30-120-1700. Definitions. (Repealed.)
The following words and terms when used in this part shall
have the following meanings unless the context clearly indicates otherwise:
"Activities of daily living" or "ADLs"
means personal care tasks such as bathing, dressing, toileting, transferring,
and eating or feeding. An individual's degree of independence in performing
these activities is a part of determining appropriate level of care and service
needs.
"Adult" means an individual who is either 21
years of age or older.
"Adult foster care" means room and board,
supervision, and a locally optional program that may be provided by a single
provider for up to three adults, each of whom has a physical or mental
condition. The provider must be approved by the local department of social
services for the locality in which the provider renders services.
"Adult Protective Services" or "APS"
means a program overseen by the Virginia Department of Social Services that
investigates reports of abuse, neglect, and exploitation of adults 60 years of
age and older and incapacitated adults 18 years of age and older and provides
services when such persons are found to be in need of protective services.
"Agency provider" means a public or private
organization or entity that holds a Medicaid provider agreement and furnishes
services to individuals using its own employees or subcontractors.
"Alternate back up facility" means the alternate
facility placement that the technology assisted individuals must use when home
and community-based waiver services are interrupted. Such facilities may be,
for the purpose of this waiver, an intermediate care facility for the
intellectually disabled (ICF/ID), a long-stay hospital, a specialized care
nursing facility, or an acute care hospital when all technology assisted waiver
criteria are met.
"Americans with Disabilities Act" or
"ADA" means the United States Code pursuant to 42 USC § 12101 et
seq., as amended.
"Appeal" means the process used to challenge
actions regarding services, benefits, and reimbursement provided by Medicaid
pursuant to 12VAC30-110 and Part XII (12VAC30-20-500 et seq.) of 12VAC30-20.
"Applicant" means an individual (or
representative on his behalf) who has applied for or is in the process of
applying for and is awaiting a determination of eligibility for admission to
the technology assisted waiver.
"Assess" means to evaluate an applicant's or an
individual's condition, including functional status, current medical status,
psychosocial history, and environment. Information is collected from the applicant
or individual, applicant's or individual's representative, family, and medical
professionals, as well as the assessor's observation of the applicant or
individual.
"Assessment" means one or more processes that
are used to obtain information about an applicant, including his condition,
personal goals and preferences, functional limitations, health status,
financial status and other factors that are relevant to the determination of
eligibility for services and is required for the authorization of and provision
of services, and forms the basis for the development of the plan of care.
"Assistive technology" or "AT" means
specialized medical equipment and supplies, including those devices, controls,
or appliances specified in the plan of care but not available under the State
Plan for Medical Assistance, that (i) enable individuals to increase their
abilities to perform ADLs/IADLs and to perceive, control, or communicate with
the environment in which they live or (ii) are necessary for the proper functioning
of the specialized equipment; cost effective; and appropriate for the
individual's assessed medical needs and physical deficits.
"Backup caregiver" means the secondary person
who will assume the role of providing direct care to and support of the waiver
individual in instances of emergencies and in the absence of the primary
caregiver who is unable to care for the individual. Such secondary persons
shall perform the duties needed by the waiver individual without compensation
and shall be trained in the skilled needs and technologies required by the
waiver individual. Such secondary persons must be identified in the waiver
individual's records.
"Barrier crime" means those crimes as defined in
§ 32.1-162.9:1 of the Code of Virginia that would prohibit either the
employment or the continuation of employment if a person is found, through a
Virginia State Police criminal history record check, to have been convicted of
such a crime.
"CMS-485 Home Health Certification form" means
the federal Home Health Service Plan form.
"Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services" or
"CMS" means the unit of the U.S. Department of Health and Human
Services that administers the Medicare and Medicaid programs.
"Child Protective Services" or "CPS"
means a program overseen by the Department of Social Services that investigates
reports of abuse, neglect, and exploitation of children younger than 18 years
of age and provides services when persons are found to be in need of protective
services.
"Code of Federal Regulations" or "CFR"
contains the regulations that have been officially adopted by federal agencies
and have the force and effect of federal law.
"Congregate living arrangement" means a living
arrangement in which three or fewer waiver individuals live in the same
household and share receipt of health care services from the same provider or
providers.
"Congregate skilled private duty nursing" means
skilled in-home nursing provided to three or fewer waiver individuals in the
individuals' primary residence or a group setting.
"Congregate private duty respite" means skilled
respite care provided to three or fewer waiver individuals. This service shall
be limited to 360 hours per calendar year per household.
"Cost-effective" means the anticipated annual
cost to Medicaid for technology assisted waiver services shall be less than or
equal to the anticipated annual institutional costs to Medicaid for individuals
receiving care in hospitals or specialized care nursing facilities.
"Day" means, for the purpose of reimbursement
under this waiver, a 24-hour period beginning at 12 a.m. and ending at 11:59
p.m.
"DBHDS" means the Department of Behavioral
Health and Developmental Services.
"DMAS" means the Department of Medical
Assistance Services.
"Direct marketing" means one of the following:
(i) conducting directly or indirectly door-to-door, telephonic or other
"cold call" marketing of services at residences and provider sites;
(ii) mailing directly; (iii) paying "finders' fees"; (iv) offering
financial incentives, rewards, gifts, or special opportunities to eligible
individuals and the individual's family/caregiver, as appropriate, as
inducements to use the providers' services; (v) continuous, periodic marketing
activities to the same prospective individual and the individual's family/caregiver,
as appropriate, for example, monthly, quarterly, or annual giveaways as
inducements to use the providers' services; or (vi) engaging in marketing
activities that offer potential customers rebates or discounts in conjunction
with the use of the providers' services or other benefits as a means of
influencing the individual and the individual's family/caregiver, as
appropriate, use of the providers' services.
"Direct medical benefit" means services or
supplies that are proper and needed for the diagnosis or treatment of a medical
condition; are provided for the diagnosis, direct care, and treatment of the
condition; and meet the standards of good professional medical practice.
"Direct supervision" means that the supervising
registered nurse (RN) is immediately accessible by phone to the RN, licensed
practical nurse or personal care aide who is delivering waiver covered services
to individuals.
"Durable medical equipment (DME) and supplies"
means those items prescribed by the attending physician, generally recognized
by the medical community as serving a diagnostic or therapeutic purpose to
assist the waiver individual in the home environment, and as being a medically
necessary element of the service plan without regard to whether those items are
covered by the State Plan for Medical Assistance.
"Eligibility determination" is the process to
determine whether an individual meets the eligibility requirements specified by
DMAS to receive Medicaid benefits and continues to be eligible as determined
annually.
"Enrolled provider" means those professional
entities or facilities who are registered, certified, or licensed, as
appropriate, and who are also enrolled by DMAS to render services to eligible
waiver individuals and receive reimbursement for such services.
"Enrollment" means the process where an
individual has been determined to meet the eligibility requirements for a
Medicaid program or service and the approving entity has verified the
availability of services for the individual requesting waiver enrollment and
services.
"Environmental modifications" or "EM"
means physical adaptations to an individual's primary residence or primary
vehicle that are necessary to ensure the individual's health, safety, or
welfare or that enable the individual to function with greater independence and
without which the individual would require institutionalization.
"EPSDT" means the Early Periodic Screening,
Diagnosis and Treatment program administered by DMAS for children younger than
21 years of age according to federal guidelines that prescribe preventive and
treatment services for Medicaid-eligible children as set out in 12VAC30-50-130.
"Evaluation tool" means the tool that is used to
determine the medical appropriateness for technology assisted waiver enrollment
or services. Individuals younger than 21 years of age shall be assessed using
the Technology Assisted Waiver Pediatric Referral Form (DMAS-109) and
individuals 21 years of age or older shall be assessed using the Technology
Assisted Waiver Adult Referral form (DMAS-108).
"Freedom of choice" means the right afforded an
individual who is determined to require a level of care specified in a waiver
to choose (i) either institutional or home and community-based services
provided there are available funded slots, (ii) providers of services, and
(iii) waiver services as may be limited by medical necessity.
"Functional status" means an individual's degree
of dependence in performing ADLs/IADLs.
"Health, safety, and welfare standard" means
that an individual's right to receive a waiver service is dependent on a DMAS
determination that the waiver individual needs the medically necessary service
based on appropriate assessment criteria and an approved written plan of care
and that medically necessary services can be safely provided in the community.
"Home and community-based waiver services" or
"waiver services" means the range of home and community services
approved by the CMS pursuant to § 1915(c) of the Social Security Act to be
offered to individuals as an alternative to institutionalization.
"Individual" means the person who has applied
for and been approved to receive technology assisted waiver services.
"Individual's representative" means a spouse,
guardian, adult child, parent (natural, adoptive, step, or foster) of a minor
child, or other person chosen by the member to represent him in matters
relating to his care or to function as the member's primary caregiver as
defined herein.
"Instrumental activities of daily living" or
"IADLs" means tasks such as meal preparation, shopping, housekeeping,
and laundry. An individual's degree of independence in performing these
activities is a part of determining the appropriate level of care and service
needs.
"Legally responsible person" means one who has a
legal obligation under the provisions of state law to care for and make
decisions for an individual. Legally responsible persons shall include the
parents (natural, adoptive, or legal guardian) of minor children, and legally
assigned caregiver relatives of minor children.
"Level of care" or "LOC" means the
specification of the minimum amount of assistance an individual must require in
order to receive services in an institutional setting under the State Plan for
Medical Assistance Services or to receive waiver services.
"License" means proof of official or legal
permission issued by the government for an entity or person to perform an
activity or service. In the absence of a license that may be required by either
statute or regulation, the entity or person shall be prohibited from performing
the activity or service for reimbursement by DMAS.
"Licensed practical nurse" or "LPN"
means a person who is licensed or holds a multi-state licensure privilege,
pursuant to Chapter 30 (§ 54.1-3000 et seq.) of Title 54.1 of the Code of
Virginia, to practice practical nursing as defined.
"Long-term care" or "LTC" means a
variety of services that help individuals with health or personal care needs
and ADLs over a period of time. Long-term care can be provided in the home, in
the community, or in various types of facilities, including nursing facilities,
long-stay hospitals, and ICF/IDs.
"Medicaid" means the joint federal and state
program to assist the states in furnishing medical assistance to eligible needy
persons pursuant to Title XIX of the Social Security Act (42 USC § 1396 et
seq.).
"Medicaid Long Term Care Communication Form" or
"DMAS-225" means the form used to exchange eligibility information of
a Medicaid-eligible individual or other information that may affect the
individual's eligibility status.
"Medically necessary" means those services or
specialized medical equipment or supplies that are covered for reimbursement
under either the State Plan for Medical Assistance or in a waiver program that
are reasonable, proper, and necessary for the treatment of an illness, injury,
or deficit; are provided for direct care of the condition or to maintain or
improve the functioning of a malformed body part; and that meet the standards
of good professional medical practice as determined by DMAS.
"Minor child" means an individual who is younger
than 21 years of age.
"Money Follows the Person" or "MFP"
means the demonstration program as set out in 12VAC30-120-2000 and
12VAC30-120-2010.
"Monitoring" means the ongoing oversight of the
provision of waiver and other services to determine that they are furnished
according to the waiver individual's plan of care and effectively meet his
needs, thereby assuring his health, safety, and welfare. Monitoring activities
may include, but shall not be limited to, telephone contact; observation;
interviewing the individual or the trained individual representative, as
appropriate, in person or by telephone; or interviewing service providers.
"Participating provider" or "provider"
means an entity that meets the standards and requirements set forth by the
appropriate licensing or certification agencies and who has a current, signed
provider participation agreement with DMAS.
"Payor of last resort" means all other payment
sources must be exhausted before enrollment in the technology assisted waiver
and Medicaid reimbursement may occur.
"Personal care aide" or "PCA" means an
appropriately licensed or certified person who provides personal care services.
"Personal care provider" means an enrolled
provider that renders services that prevent or reduce institutional care by
providing eligible waiver individuals with PCAs who provide personal care
services.
"Personal care (PC) services" means a range of
support services that includes assistance with ADLs/IADLs, access to the
community, and self-administration of medication or other medical needs, and
the monitoring of health status and physical condition provided through the
agency-directed model. Personal care services shall be provided by PCAs within
the scope of their licenses or certifications, as appropriate.
"Person-centered planning" means a process,
directed by the individual or his representative, as appropriate, that is
intended to identify the strengths, capacities, preferences, needs, and desired
outcomes for the individual.
"Plan of care" or "POC" means the
written plan of waiver services and supplies ordered and certified by the
attending physician as being medically needed by the individual to ensure
optimal health and safety for an extended period of time while the individual
is living in the community. This POC shall be developed collaboratively by the
individual or individual representative, as appropriate.
"Preadmission screening" or "PAS"
means the process to (i) evaluate the functional, nursing, and social support
needs of applicants referred for preadmission screening; (ii) assist applicants
in determining what specific services the applicants need; (iii) evaluate
whether a service or a combination of existing community services are available
to meet the applicants' needs; and (iv) refer applicants to the appropriate
provider for Medicaid-funded facility or home and community-based care for
those who meet specialized care nursing facility level of care.
"Preadmission screening team" or "PAS
team" means the entity contracted with DMAS that is responsible for
performing preadmission screening pursuant to § 32.1-330 of the Code of
Virginia.
"Primary caregiver" means the primary person who
consistently assumes the role of providing direct care and support of the individual
to live successfully in the community without compensation for providing such
care.
"Provider agreement" means the contract between
DMAS and a participating provider under which the provider agrees to furnish
services to Medicaid-eligible individuals in compliance with state and federal
statutes and regulations and Medicaid contract requirements.
"Reevaluation" means the periodic but at least
annual review of an individual's condition and service needs to determine
whether the individual continues to meet the LOC specified for persons approved
for waiver participation.
"Registered nurse" or "RN" means a
person who is licensed or holds a multi-state licensure privilege pursuant to
Chapter 30 (§ 54.1-3000 et seq.) of Title 54.1 of the Code of Virginia to
practice professional nursing as defined.
"Service authorization" or "serv auth"
means the DMAS approval of a requested medical service for reimbursement prior
to the provision of the service. Service authorizations shall be performed by
DMAS or its service authorization contractor.
"Service authorization contractor" means DMAS or
the entity that has been contracted by DMAS to perform service authorization
for medically necessary Medicaid reimbursed home and community-based services.
"Single state agency" means the agency within
state government that has been designated pursuant to § 1902(a)(5) of the
Act as responsible for the administration of the State Plan for Medical
Assistance. In Virginia, the single state agency is DMAS.
"Skilled private duty nursing respite care
provider" means a DMAS participating provider that renders services in the
individual's designated primary care residence to offer periodic or routine
relief for unpaid primary caregivers.
"Skilled private duty nursing respite care
services" means temporary skilled nursing services provided in the waiver
individual's primary residence that are designed to relieve the unpaid primary
caregiver on an episodic or routine basis for short periods or for specified
longer periods of time.
"Skilled private duty nursing services" or
"skilled PDN" means skilled in-home nursing services listed in the
POC that are (i) not otherwise covered under the State Plan for Medical
Assistance Services home health benefit; (ii) required to prevent institutionalization;
(iii) provided within the scope of the Commonwealth's Nurse Practice Act and
Drug Control Act (Chapters 30 (§ 54.1-3000 et seq.) and 34
(§ 54.1-3400 et seq.) of Title 54.1 of the Code of Virginia,
respectively); and (iv) provided by a licensed RN, or by an LPN under the
supervision of an RN, to waiver members who have serious medical conditions or
complex health care needs. Skilled nursing services are to be used as hands-on
member care, training, consultation, as appropriate, and oversight of direct
care staff, as appropriate.
"State Plan for Medical Assistance" or
"State Plan" means the Commonwealth's legal document approved by CMS
identifying the covered groups, covered services and their limitations, and
provider reimbursement methodologies as provided for under Title XIX of the
Social Security Act.
"Technology assisted waiver" or "tech
waiver" means the CMS-approved waiver that provides medically necessary
covered services to individuals who are chronically ill or severely impaired,
having experienced loss of a vital body function, and who require substantial
and ongoing skilled nursing care to avert death or further disability and whose
illness or disability would, in the absence of services approved under this
waiver, require their admission for a prolonged stay in a hospital or
specialized care nursing facility.
"Termination" means disenrollment from a waiver
by DMAS or a DMAS-designated agent.
"Transition services" means set-up expenses for
individuals as defined at 12VAC30-120-2010.
"VDH" or "Department of Health" means
the Virginia Department of Health.
"VDSS" means the Virginia Department of Social
Services.
"Ventilator dependence" means that the waiver
individual is dependent on such machines in order to sustain life or compensate
for the loss of body function.
"Virginia Uniform Assessment Instrument" or
"UAI" means the standardized multidimensional questionnaire that
assesses an individual's physical health, mental health, psychosocial, and
functional abilities to determine if the individual meets the nursing facility
LOC.
12VAC30-120-1705. Waiver description and legal authority.
(Repealed.)
A. Home and community-based waiver services shall be
available through a § 1915(c) waiver of the Social Security Act. Under
this waiver, DMAS has waived § 1902(a) (10) (B) and (C) of the Social
Security Act related to comparability of services.
B. Technology assisted waiver services shall be covered
only for Medicaid-eligible individuals who have been determined eligible for
waiver services and who also require the level of care provided in either
long-stay hospitals or specialized care nursing facilities as long as age
appropriate criteria are met. These services shall be the critical service
necessary to delay or avoid the individual's placement in an appropriate
facility. These waiver services shall not be covered for Medicaid-eligible
individuals who reside in, but not necessarily limited to, the following types
of facilities: assisted living facilities, nursing facilities, rehabilitation
hospitals, long-stay hospitals, skilled or intermediate care nursing
facilities, Intermediate Care Facilities for the Intellectually Disabled, group
homes licensed by DBHDS, general acute care hospitals, or adult foster care
homes.
C. An individual shall demonstrate the medical necessity
for skilled private duty nursing services in order to be approved for this
waiver.
D. The cost effectiveness standard that shall be applied
for individuals in this waiver shall be in the aggregate.
E. Payments for tech waiver services shall not be provided
to any financial institution or entity located outside of the United States
pursuant to the Social Security Act § 1902(a)(80). Payments for tech
waiver services furnished in another state shall (i) be provided for an individual
who meets the requirements of 42 CFR § 431.52 and (ii) be limited to the same
number of skilled PDN hours approved for the individual's home-based skilled
PDN.
F. An individual shall not simultaneously be in a managed
care program and enrolled in this waiver. An individual shall not be
simultaneously enrolled in more than one waiver program.
G. For individuals admitted to this waiver, when
their waiver services must be interrupted due to their primary caregiver's
emergency unavailability, then hospitalization or placement in a specialized
nursing facility, should a specialized care nursing facility bed be available,
shall occur.
H. DMAS shall be responsible for assuring appropriate
placement of the individual in home and community-based waiver services and
shall have the authority to terminate such services.
I. No waiver services shall be reimbursed until after both
the provider enrollment process and individual eligibility process have been
completed.
12VAC30-120-1710. Individual eligibility requirements;
preadmission screening. (Repealed.)
A. Individual eligibility requirements.
1. The Commonwealth covers these optional categorically
needy groups: ADC and AFDC-related individuals; SSI and SSA-related
individuals; aged, blind, or disabled Medicaid-eligible individuals under 42
CFR 435.121; and the home and community-based waiver group at 42 CFR 435.217
that includes individuals who are eligible under the State Plan if they were
institutionalized.
a. The income level used for the home and community-based
waiver group at 42 CFR 435.217 shall be 300% of the current Supplemental
Security Income payment standard for one person.
b. Medically needy Medicaid-eligible individuals shall be
eligible if they meet the medically needy financial requirements for income and
resources.
2. Under this waiver, the coverage groups authorized under
§ 1902(a)(10)(A)(ii)(VI) of the Social Security Act shall be considered as
if they were institutionalized for the purpose of applying institutional
deeming rules. All individuals in the waiver must meet the financial and
non-financial Medicaid eligibility criteria and meet the institutional LOC
criteria. The deeming rules shall be applied to waiver eligible individuals as
if they were residing in an institution or would require that level of care.
3. An applicant for technology assisted waiver shall meet
specialized care nursing facility criteria, including both medical and
functional needs, and also be dependent on waiver services to avoid or delay
facility placement and meet all criteria for the age appropriate assessments in
order to be eligible for the tech waiver. Applicants shall not be enrolled in
the tech waiver unless skilled private duty nursing (PDN) hours are ordered by
the physician. The number of skilled PDN hours shall be based on the total
technology and nursing score on the Technology Assisted Waiver Pediatric
Referral form, DMAS-109 (when individuals are younger than 21 years of age).
The number of skilled PDN hours for adults shall be based on the Technology
Assisted Waiver Adult Referral form (DMAS-108).
4. Applicants who are eligible for third-party payment for
skilled private duty nursing services shall not be eligible for these waiver
services. If an individual or an individual's legally responsible party
voluntarily drops any insurance plan that would have provided coverage of
skilled private duty nursing services in order to become eligible for these
waiver services within one year prior to the date waiver services are
requested, eligibility for the waiver shall be denied. From the date that such
insurance plan is discontinued, such applicants shall be barred for one year
from reapplying for waiver services. After the passage of the one-year time
period, the applicant may reapply to DMAS for admission to the tech waiver.
5. In addition to the medical needs identified in this
section, the Medicaid-eligible individual shall be determined to need
substantial and ongoing skilled nursing care. The Medicaid-eligible individual
shall be required to meet a minimum standard on the age appropriate referral
forms to be eligible for enrollment in the tech waiver.
6. Medicaid-eligible individuals who entered the waiver
prior to their 21st birthday shall, on the date of their 21st birthday, conform
to the adult medical criteria and cost-effectiveness standards.
7. Every individual who applies for Medicaid-funded waiver
services must have his Medicaid eligibility evaluated or re-evaluated, if
already Medicaid eligible, by the local DSS in the city or county in which he
resides. This determination shall be completed at the same time the
preadmission screening (PAS) team completes its evaluation (via the use of the
Uniform Assessment Instrument (UAI)) of whether the applicant meets waiver
criteria. DMAS payment of waiver services shall be contingent upon the DSS
determination that the individual is eligible for Medicaid services for the
dates that waiver services are to be provided and that DMAS or the designated
service authorization contractor has authorized waiver enrollment and has prior
authorized the services that will be required by the individual.
8. In order for an enrolled waiver individual to retain his
enrolled status, tech waiver services must be used by the individual at least
once every 30 days. Individuals who do not utilize tech waiver services at
least once every 30 days shall be terminated from the waiver.
9. The waiver individual shall have a trained primary
caregiver, as defined in 12VAC30-120-1700, who accepts responsibility for the
individual's health, safety, and welfare. This primary caregiver shall be
responsible for all hours not provided by the provider agency's RN or LPN. The
name of the trained primary caregiver shall be documented in the provider
agency records. This trained primary caregiver shall also have a back up system
available in emergency situations.
B. Screening and community referral for authorization for
tech waiver. Tech waiver services shall be considered only for individuals who
are eligible for Medicaid and for admission to a specialized care nursing
facility, ICF/ID, long-stay hospital, or acute care hospital when those
individuals meet all the criteria for tech waiver admission. Such individuals,
with the exception of those who are transferring into this tech waiver from a
long-stay hospital, shall have been screened using the Uniform Assessment
Instrument (UAI).
1. The screening team shall provide the individual and
family or caregiver with the choice of tech waiver services or specialized care
nursing facility or long-stay hospital placement, as appropriate, as well as
the provider of those services from the time an individual seeks waiver
information or application and referral. Such provision of choice includes the
right to appeal pursuant to 12VAC30-110 when applicable.
2. The screening team shall explore alternative care
settings and services to provide the care needed by the applicant being
screened when Medicaid-funded home and community-based care services are
determined to be the critical service necessary to delay or avoid facility
placement.
3. Individuals must be screened to determine necessity for
nursing facility placement if the individual is currently financially Medicaid
eligible or anticipates that he will be financially eligible within 180 days of
the receipt of nursing facility care or if the individual is at risk of nursing
facility placement.
a. Such covered waiver services shall be critical, as
certified by the participant's physician at the time of assessment, to enable
the individual to remain at home and in the community rather than being placed
in an institution. In order to meet criteria for tech waiver enrollment, the
applicant requesting consideration for waiver enrollment must meet the level of
care criteria.
b. Individuals who are younger than 21 years of age shall
have the Technology Assisted Waiver Pediatric Referral form (DMAS-109)
completed and must require substantial and ongoing nursing care as indicated by
a minimum score of at least 50 points to qualify for waiver enrollment. This
individual shall require a medical device and ongoing skilled PDN care by
meeting the categories described in subdivision (1), (2), or (3) below:
(1) Applicants depending on mechanical ventilators;
(2) Applicants requiring prolonged intravenous
administration of nutritional substances or drugs or requiring ongoing
peritoneal dialysis; or
(3) Applicants having daily dependence on other
device-based respiratory or nutritional support, including tracheostomy tube
care, oxygen support, or tube feeding.
c. Individuals who are 21 years of age or older shall have
the Technology Assisted Waiver Adult Referral form (DMAS-108) completed and
must be determined to be dependent on a ventilator or must meet all eight
specialized care criteria (12VAC30-60-320) for complex tracheostomy care in
order to qualify for waiver enrollment.
4. When an applicant has been determined to meet the
financial and waiver eligibility requirements and DMAS has verified the
availability of the services for that individual and that the individual has no
other payment sources for skilled PDN, tech waiver enrollment and entry into
home and community-based care may occur.
5. A PAS is considered valid for the following timeframes.
The validity of a PAS applies to individuals who are screened, meet the
criteria for long-term care services, but have not yet begun receiving services
during the periods outlined in subdivisions 5 a through 5 f of this subsection.
a. Zero to 180 days. Screenings are valid and do not
require revisions or a new screening.
b. 181 days to 12 months. Screening revisions are required;
revisions may also be done if there is a significant change in an individual's
medical or physical condition. Revisions should be entered into the ePAS
system, per the Medicaid web portal instructions, resulting in a claim being
generated for the screening revision. For the purposes of this subdivision,
"Electronic preadmission screening" or "ePAS" means the
automated system for use by all entities contracted by DMAS to perform
preadmission screenings pursuant to § 32.1-330 of the Code of Virginia. DMAS
will cover the cost of the PAS.
c. Over 12 months. A new screening is required and
reimbursement is made by DMAS. New screenings must be entered into ePAS
according to the Medicaid web portal instructions.
d. Break in services. When an individual starts and then
stops services for a period of time exceeding 30 consecutive calendar days, the
PAS team will need to complete a revised screening prior to service resumption
if the individual has not received any Medicaid funded long-term care services
during the break in service delivery. DMAS will cover the cost of the PAS.
e. In any other circumstances, including hospitalization,
that cause services to cease or to be interrupted for more than 30 consecutive
calendar days, the individuals shall be referred back to the local department
of social services for redetermination of his Medicaid eligibility. The
provider shall be responsible for notifying the local department of social
services via the DMAS-225 form when there is an interruption of services for 30
consecutive calendar days or upon discharge from the provider's services.
f. If the individual has been receiving ongoing services
either through a nursing facility or a home and community-based service
program, the screening timeframes do not apply.
6. When an individual was not screened prior to admission
to a specialized care nursing facility, or the individual resides in the
community at the time of referral initiation to DMAS, the locality in which the
individual resides at the time of discharge shall complete the preadmission
screening prior to enrollment into the tech waiver.
7. DMAS shall be the final determining body for enrollment
in the tech waiver and the determination of the number of approved skilled PDN
hours for which DMAS will pay. DMAS has the ultimate responsibility for
authorization of waiver enrollment and Medicaid skilled PDN reimbursement for
tech waiver services.
C. Waiver individuals' rights and responsibilities. DMAS
shall ensure that:
1. Each waiver individual shall receive, and the provider
and provider staff shall provide, the necessary care and services, to the
extent of provider availability, to attain or maintain the highest practicable
physical, mental, and psychosocial well-being, in accordance with the
individual's comprehensive assessment and POC.
2. Waiver individuals shall have the right to receive
services from the provider with reasonable accommodation of the individuals'
needs and preferences except when DMAS makes a determination that the health,
safety, or welfare of the individuals or other waiver individuals would be
endangered.
3. Waiver individuals formulate their own advance
directives based on information that providers must give to adult waiver
individuals at the time of their admissions to services.
4. All waiver individuals shall have the right to:
a. Voice grievances to the provider or provider staff
without discrimination or reprisal. Such grievances include those with respect
to treatment that has been furnished or has not been furnished;
b. Prompt efforts by the provider or staff, as appropriate,
to resolve any grievances the waiver individual may have;
c. Be free from verbal, sexual, physical, and mental abuse,
neglect, exploitation, and misappropriation of property;
d. Be free from any physical or chemical restraints of any
form that may be used as a means of coercion, discipline, convenience, or
retaliation and that are not required to treat the individual's medical
symptoms; and
e. Their personal privacy and confidentiality of their
personal and clinical records.
5. Waiver individuals shall be provided by their health
care providers, at the time of their admission to this waiver, with written
information regarding their rights to participate in medical care decisions, including
the right to accept or refuse medical treatment and the right to formulate
advance directives.
6. The legally competent waiver individual, the waiver
individual's legal guardian, or the parent (natural, adoptive or foster) of the
minor child shall have the right to:
a. Choose whether the individual wishes to receive home and
community-based care waiver services instead of institutionalization in
accordance with the assessed needs of the individual. The PAS team shall inform
the individual of all available waiver service providers in the community in
which the waiver individual resides. The tech waiver individual shall have the
option of selecting the provider and services of his choice. This choice must
be documented in the individual's medical record;
b. Choose his own primary care physician in the community
in which he lives;
c. Be fully informed in advance about the waiver POC and
treatment needs as well as any changes in that care or treatment that may
affect the individual's well-being; and
d. Participate in the care planning process, choice, and
scheduling of providers and services.
12VAC30-120-1720. Covered services; limits; changes to or
termination of services. (Repealed.)
A. Coverage statement.
1. These waiver services shall be medically necessary,
cost-effective as compared to the costs of institutionalization, and necessary
to maintain the individual safely in the community and prevent
institutionalization.
2. Services shall be provided only to those individuals
whose service needs are consistent with the service description and for which
providers are available who have adequate and appropriate staffing to meet the
needs of the individuals to be served.
3. All services covered through this waiver shall be
rendered according to the individuals' POCs that have been certified by
physicians as medically necessary and also reviewed by DMAS to enable the
waiver enrolled individuals to remain at home or in the community.
4. Providers shall be required to refund payments received
to DMAS if they (i) are found during any review to have billed Medicaid
contrary to policy, (ii) have failed to maintain records to support their
claims for services, or (iii) have billed for medically unnecessary services.
5. DMAS shall perform service authorization for skilled PDN
services, PC for adults, and transition services. DMAS or the service
authorization contractor shall perform service authorization for skilled
private duty respite services, AT services and EM services.
6. When a particular service requires service
authorization, reimbursement shall not be made until the service authorization
is secured from either DMAS or the DMAS-designated service authorization
contractor.
B. Covered services. Covered services shall include:
skilled PDN; skilled private duty respite care; personal care only for adults,
assistive technology; environmental modifications; and transition services only
for individuals needing to move from a designated institution into the
community or for waiver individuals who have already moved from an institution
within 30 days of their transition. Coverage shall not be provided for these
services for individuals who reside in any facilities enumerated in
12VAC30-120-1705. Skilled PDN shall be a required service. If an individual has
no medical necessity for skilled PDN, he shall not be admitted to this waiver.
All other services provided in this waiver shall be provided in conjunction
with the provision of skilled PDN.
1. Skilled PDN, for a single individual and congregate
group settings, as defined in 12VAC30-120-1700, shall be provided for waiver
enrolled individuals who have serious medical conditions or complex health care
needs. To receive this service, the individuals must require specific skilled
and continuous nursing care on a regularly scheduled or intermittent basis
performed by an RN or an LPN. Upon completion of the required screening and
required assessments and a determination that the individual requires
substantial and ongoing skilled nursing care and waiver enrollment then the PDN
hours shall be authorized by the DMAS staff.
a. PDN services shall be rendered according to a POC
authorized by DMAS and shall have been certified by a physician as medically
necessary to enable the individual to remain at home.
b. No reimbursement shall be provided by DMAS for either RN
or LPN services without signed physician orders that specifically identify
skilled nursing tasks to be performed for the individual.
c. Limits placed on the amount of PDN that will be approved
for reimbursement shall be consistent with the individual's age-appropriate
technology assisted waiver referral form (DMAS-108 or DMAS-109) and medical
necessity. Except for a minor individual's care during his first 15 days
following initial enrollment into this waiver, in no instances shall the
individual's POC or ongoing multiple POCs result in coverage of more than 112
hours of skilled PDN per week (Sunday through Saturday). The maximum number of
approved hours authorized per week for minor children shall be based on their
total approved points documented on the Technology Assisted Waiver Pediatric
Referral form (DMAS-109). The maximum skilled PDN hours authorized per week for
adult individuals shall be based on their technology and medical necessity
justification documented on the Technology Assisted Waiver Adult Referral form
(DMAS-108).
(1) The number of skilled PDN hours for minor individuals
shall be based on the total technology and nursing score on the Technology
Assisted Waiver Pediatric Referral form (DMAS-109) and updated by the DMAS
staff when changes occur and with annual waiver eligibility redetermination by
DMAS.
(2) Once the minor individual's composite score (total
score) is derived, a LOC is designated for the individual as a Level A, B, or
C. This LOC designation determines the maximum number of hours per week of
skilled PDN that DMAS may allocate for a pediatric individual. Any hours beyond
the approved maximum for such individual's LOC shall be medically necessary and
service authorized by DMAS. Any POC submitted without approval for hours beyond
the approved maximum for any particular LOC will only be entered for the
approved maximum for that LOC.
(3) The results of the scoring assessment determine the
maximum amount of hours available and authorization shall occur as follows:
(a) 50 – 56 points = 70 hours per week.
(b) 57 – 79 points = 84 hours per week.
(c) 80 points or greater = 112 hours per week.
(4) For minor individuals, whether living separately or in
a congregate setting, during the first 15 calendar days after such individuals'
initial admission to the waiver, skilled PDN may be covered for up to 24-hours
per day, if required and appropriate to assist the family in adjustment to the
care associated with technology assistance. After these first 15 calendar days,
skilled PDN shall be reimbursed up to the maximum allowable hours per week
based on the individual's total technology and nursing scores and provided that
the aggregate cost-effectiveness standard is not exceeded for the individual's
care.
(5) When reimbursement is to be made for skilled PDN
services to be provided in schools, the nurse shall be in the same room as the
waiver individual for the hours of skilled PDN care billed. When an individual
receives skilled PDN while attending school, the total skilled PDN hours shall
not exceed the authorized number of hours under his nursing score category on
the Technology Assisted Waiver Pediatric Referral form (DMAS-109).
(6) For adult individuals, whether living separately or in
a congregate setting, skilled PDN shall be reimbursed up to a maximum of 112
hours per week (Sunday through Saturday) per tech waiver individual living in
the household based on the individual's technology and medical justification
and provided that the aggregate cost-effectiveness standard is not exceeded for
the individual's care.
(7) The adult individual shall be determined to need a
medical device and ongoing skilled nursing care when such individual meets
Category A or all eight criteria in Category B:
(a) Category A. Individuals who depend on mechanical
ventilators; or
(b) Category B. Individuals who have a complex tracheostomy
as defined by:
(i) Tracheostomy with the potential for weaning off of it,
or documentation of attempts to wean, with subsequent inability to wean;
(ii) Nebulizer treatments ordered at least four times a day
or nebulizer treatments followed by chest physiotherapy provided by a nurse or
respiratory therapist at least four times a day;
(iii) Pulse oximetry monitoring at least every shift due to
unstable oxygen saturation levels;
(iv) Respiratory assessment and documentation every shift
by a licensed respiratory therapist or nurse;
(v) Have a physician's order for oxygen therapy with
documented usage;
(vi) Receives tracheostomy care at least daily;
(vii) Has a physician's order for tracheostomy suctioning;
and
(viii) Deemed at risk to require subsequent mechanical
ventilation.
(8) Skilled PDN services shall be available to individuals
in their primary residence with some community integration (e.g., medical appointments
and school) permitted.
(9) Skilled PDN services may include consultation and
training for the primary caregiver.
d. The provider shall be responsible for notifying DMAS
should the primary residence of the individual be changed, should the individual
be hospitalized, should the individual die, or should the individual be out of
the Commonwealth for 48 hours or more.
e. Exclusions from DMAS' coverage of skilled PDN:
(1) This service shall not be authorized when intermittent
skilled nursing visits could be satisfactorily utilized while protecting the
health, safety, and welfare of the individual.
(2) Skilled PDN hours shall not be reimbursed while the
individual is receiving emergency care or during emergency transport of the
individual to such facilities. The RN or LPN shall not transport the waiver
individual to such facilities.
(3) Skilled PDN services may be ordered but shall not be
provided simultaneously with PDN respite care or personal care services as
described in this section.
(4) Parents (natural, adoptive, legal guardians), spouses,
siblings, grandparents, grandchildren, adult children, other legal guardians,
or any person living under the same roof with the individual shall not provide
skilled PDN services for the purpose of Medicaid reimbursement for the waiver
individual.
(5) Providers shall not bill prior to receiving the
physician's dated signature on the individual's POC for services provided and
the DMAS staff's authorization/determination of skilled PDN hours.
(6) Time spent driving the waiver individual shall not be
reimbursed by DMAS.
f. Congregate skilled PDN.
(1) If more than one waiver individual will reside in the
home, the same waiver provider or providers shall be chosen to provide all
skilled PDN services for all waiver individuals in the home.
(2) Only one nurse shall be authorized to care for no more
than two waiver individuals in such arrangements. In instances when three
waiver individuals share a home, nursing ratios shall be determined by DMAS or
its designated agent based on the needs of all the individuals who are living
together. These congregate skilled PDN hours shall be at the same scheduled
shifts.
(3) The primary caregiver shall be shared and shall be
responsible for providing all care needs when a private duty nurse is not
available.
(4) DMAS shall not reimburse for skilled PDN services
through the tech waiver and skilled PDN services through the EPSDT benefit for
the same individual at the same time.
2. Skilled private duty respite care services. Skilled
private duty respite care services may be covered for a maximum of 360 hours
per calendar year for individuals who are qualified for tech waiver services
and regardless of whether the waiver individual changes waivers and whose
primary caregiver requires temporary or intermittent relief from the burden of
caregiving.
a. This service shall be provided by skilled nursing staff
licensed to practice in the Commonwealth under the direct supervision of a
licensed, certified, or accredited home health agency and with which DMAS has a
provider agreement to provide skilled PDN.
b. Skilled private duty respite care services shall be
comprised of both skilled and hands-on care of either a supportive or
health-related nature and includes (i) all skilled nursing care as ordered on
the physician-certified POC, (ii) assistance with ADLs and IADLs, (iii)
administration of medications or other medical needs, and (iv) monitoring of
the health status and physical condition of the individual or individuals.
c. When skilled private duty respite services are offered
in conjunction with skilled PDN, the same individual record may be used with a
separate section for skilled private duty respite services documentation.
d. Individuals who are living in congregate arrangements
shall be permitted to share skilled private duty respite care service
providers. The same limits on this service in the congregate setting (360 hours
per calendar year per household) shall apply.
e. Skilled private duty respite care services shall be
provided in the individual's primary residence as is designated upon admission
to the waiver.
3. Assistive technology (AT) services. Assistive
technology, as defined in 12VAC30-120-1700, devices shall be portable and shall
be authorized per calendar year.
a. AT services shall be available for enrolled waiver
individuals who are receiving skilled PDN. AT services are the specialized
medical equipment and supplies, including those devices, controls, or
appliances, specified in the individual's plan of care, but that are not available
under the State Plan for Medical Assistance, that enable waiver individuals to
increase their abilities to perform ADLs/IADLs, or to perceive, control, or
communicate with the environment in which they live. This service includes
ancillary supplies and equipment necessary to the proper functioning of such
items.
b. An independent, professional consultation shall be
obtained from qualified professionals who are knowledgeable of that item for
each AT request prior to approval by DMAS or the designated service
authorization contractor. Individual professional consultants include
speech/language therapists, physical therapists, occupational therapists,
physicians, certified rehabilitation engineers or rehabilitation specialists. A
prescription shall not meet the standard of an assessment.
c. In order to qualify for these services, the individual
must have a demonstrated need for equipment for remedial or direct medical
benefit primarily in the individual's primary residence or primary vehicle to
specifically serve to improve the individual's personal functioning.
d. AT shall be covered in the least expensive, most
cost-effective manner. The cost of AT services shall be included in the total
cost of waiver services.
e. Service units and service limitations. AT equipment and
supplies shall not be rented but shall be purchased through a Medicaid-enrolled
durable medical equipment provider.
(1) The service unit is always one, for the total cost of
all AT being requested for a specific timeframe. The maximum Medicaid-funded
expenditure per individual for all AT covered procedure codes combined shall be
$5,000 per individual per calendar year.
(2) The cost for AT shall not be carried over from one
calendar year to the next. Each item must be service authorized by either DMAS
or the DMAS designated contractor for each calendar year.
(3) Unexpended portions of the maximum amount shall not be
accumulated across one or more calendar years to be expended in a later year.
(4) Shipping/freight/delivery charges are not billable to
DMAS or the waiver individual, as such charges are considered noncovered items.
(5) All products must be delivered, demonstrated, installed
and in working order prior to submitting any claim for them to Medicaid.
(6) The date of service on the claim shall be within the
service authorization approval dates, which may be prior to the delivery date
as long as the initiation of services commenced during the approved dates.
(7) The service authorization shall not be modified to
accommodate delays in product deliveries. In such situations, new service
authorizations must be sought by the provider.
(8) When two or more waiver individuals live in the same
home or congregate living arrangement, the AT shall be shared to the extent
practicable consistent with the type of AT.
f. AT exclusions.
(1) Medicaid shall not reimburse for any AT devices or
services that may have been rendered prior to authorization from DMAS or the
designated service authorization contractor.
(2) Providers of AT shall not be spouses, parents (natural,
adoptive, or foster), or stepparents of the individual who is receiving waiver
services. Providers that supply AT for the waiver individual may not perform
assessments/consultation or write specifications for that individual. Any request
for a change in cost (either an increase or a decrease) requires justification
and supporting documentation of medical need and service authorization by DMAS
or the designated service authorization contractor. The vendor shall receive a
copy of the professional evaluation in order to purchase the items recommended
by the professional. If a change is necessary then the vendor shall notify the
assessor to ensure the changed items meet the individual's needs.
(3) All equipment or supplies already covered by the State
Plan shall not be purchased under the waiver as AT. Such examples include:
(a) Specialized medical equipment, durable or nondurable
medical equipment (DME), ancillary equipment, and supplies necessary for life
support;
(b) Adaptive devices, appliances, and controls that enable
an individual to be more independent in areas of personal care and ADLs/IADLs;
and
(c) Equipment and devices that enable an individual to
communicate more effectively.
(4) AT services shall not be approved for purposes of the
convenience of the caregiver, restraint of the individual, recreation or
leisure, educational purposes, or diversion activities. Examples of these types
of items shall be listed in DMAS guidance documents.
4. Environmental modifications services shall be covered as
defined in 12VAC30-120-1700. Medicaid reimbursement shall not occur before
service authorization of EM services is completed by DMAS or the
DMAS-designated service authorization contractor. EM services shall entail limited
physical adaptations to preexisting structures and shall not include new
additions to an existing structure that simply increase the structure's square
footage.
a. In order to qualify for EM services, the individual
shall have a demonstrated need for modifications of a remedial nature or
medical benefit to the primary residence to specifically improve the
individual's personal functioning. Such modifications may include, but shall
not necessarily be limited to, the installation of ramps and grab-bars,
widening of doorways and other adaptations to accommodate wheelchairs,
modification of bathroom facilities to accommodate wheelchairs (but not
strictly for cosmetic purposes), or installation of specialized electrical and
plumbing systems required to accommodate the medical equipment and supplies
that are necessary for the individual's welfare. Modifications may include a
generator for waiver individuals who are dependent on mechanical ventilation
for 24 hours a day and when the generator is used to support the medical
equipment and supplies necessary for the individual's welfare.
b. EM shall be available costing up to a maximum amount of
$5,000 per calendar year regardless of waiver for individuals who are receiving
skilled PDN services.
c. Costs for EM shall not be carried over from one calendar
year to the next year. Each item shall be service authorized by DMAS or the
DMAS-designated agent for each calendar year. Unexpended portions of this
maximum amount shall not be accumulated across one or more years to be expended
in a later year.
d. When two or more waiver individuals live in the same
home or congregate living arrangement, the EM shall be shared to the extent
practicable consistent with the type of requested modification.
e. Only the actual cost of material and labor is
reimbursed. There shall be no additional markup.
f. EM shall be carried out in the most cost-effective
manner possible to achieve the goal required for the individual's health,
safety, and welfare. The cost of EM waiver services shall be included in the
individual's costs of all other waiver services, which shall not exceed the
total annual cost for placement in an institution.
g. All services shall be provided in the individual's
primary residence in accordance with applicable state or local building codes
and appropriate permits or building inspections, which shall be provided to
DMAS or the DMAS contractor.
h. Proposed modifications that are to be made to rental
properties must have prior written approval of the property's owner.
Modifications to rental properties shall only be valid if it is an
independently operated rental facility with no direct or indirect ties to any
other Medicaid service provider.
i. Modifications may be made to a vehicle if it is the
primary vehicle used by the individual. This service shall not include the
purchase of or the general repair of vehicles. Repairs of modifications that
have been reimbursed by DMAS shall be covered.
j. The EM provider shall ensure that all work and products
are delivered, installed, and in good working order prior to seeking
reimbursement from DMAS. The date of service on this provider's claim shall be
within the service authorization approval dates, which may be prior to the
completion date as long as the work commenced during the approval dates. The
service authorization shall not be modified to accommodate installation delays.
All requests for cost changes (either increases or decreases) shall be
submitted to DMAS or the DMAS-designated service authorization contractor for revision
to the previously issued service authorization and shall include justification
and supporting documentation of medical needs.
k. EM exclusions.
(1) There shall be no duplication of previous EM services
within the same residence such as (i) multiple wheelchair ramps or (ii)
previous modifications to the same room. There shall be no duplication of EM
within the same plan year.
(2) Adaptations or improvements to the primary home that
shall be excluded are of general utility and are not of direct medical or
remedial benefit to the waiver individual, such as, but not necessarily limited
to, carpeting, flooring, roof repairs, central air conditioning or heating,
general maintenance and repairs to a home, additions or maintenance of decks,
maintenance/replacement or addition of sidewalks, driveways, carports, or
adaptations that only increase the total square footage of the home.
(3) EM shall not be covered by Medicaid for general leisure
or diversion items or those items that are recreational in nature or those
items that may be used as an outlet for adaptive/maladaptive behavioral issues.
Such noncovered items may include, but shall not necessarily be limited to,
swing sets, playhouses, climbing walls, trampolines, protective matting or
ground cover, sporting equipment or exercise equipment, such as special
bicycles or tricycles.
(4) EM shall not be approved for Medicaid coverage when the
waiver individual resides in a residential provider's facility program, such as
sponsored homes and congregate residential and supported living settings. EM
shall not be covered by Medicaid if, for example, the Fair Housing Act (42 USC
§ 3601 et seq.), the Virginia Fair Housing Law (§ 36-96.1 et seq. of
the Code of Virginia) or the Americans with Disabilities Act (42 USC § 12101
et seq.) requires the modification and the payment for such modifications are
to be made by a third party.
(5) EM shall not include the costs of removal or disposal,
or any other costs, of previously installed modifications, whether paid for by
DMAS or any other source.
(6) Providers of EM shall not be the waiver individual's
spouse, parent (natural, adoptive, legal guardians), other legal guardians, or
conservator. Providers who supply EM to waiver individuals shall not perform
assessments/consultations or write EM specifications for such individuals.
5. Personal care (PC) services as defined in
12VAC30-120-1700, shall be covered for individuals older than 21 years of age
who have a demonstrated need for assistance with ADLs and IADLs and who have a
trained primary caregiver for skilled PDN interventions during portions of
their day. PC services shall be rendered by a provider who has a DMAS provider
agreement to provide PC, home health care, or skilled PDN. Due to the complex
medical needs of this waiver population and the need for 24-hour supervision,
the trained primary caregiver shall be present in the home and rendering the
required skilled services during the entire time that the PCA is providing
nonskilled care.
a. PC services are either of a supportive or health-related
nature and include assistance with ADLs/IADLs, community access (such as, but
not necessarily limited to, going to medical appointments), monitoring of
self-administration of medication or other medical needs, and monitoring of
health status and physical condition. In order to receive PC, the individual
must require assistance with ADLs/IADLs. When specified in the POC, PC services
may also include assistance with IADLs to include making or changing beds, and
cleaning areas used by the individual. Assistance with IADLs must be essential
to the health and welfare of the individual, rather than the individual's
representative, as applicable.
(1) The unit of service for PC services shall be one hour.
The hours that may be authorized by DMAS or the designated service
authorization contractor shall be based on the individual's need as documented
in the individual's POC and assessed on the Technology Assisted Waiver Adult
Aide Plan of Care (DMAS-97 T).
(2) Supervision of the waiver individual shall not be
covered as part of the tech waiver personal care service.
(3) Individuals may have skilled PDN, PC, and skilled
private duty nursing respite care in their plans of care but shall not be
authorized to receive these services simultaneously.
b. PC services shall not include either practical or
professional nursing services or those practices regulated in Chapters 30
(§ 54.1-3000 et seq.) and 34 (§ 54.1-3400 et seq.) of Title 54.1 of
the Code of Virginia, as appropriate, with the exception of skilled nursing
tasks that may be delegated in accordance with Part VIII (18VAC90-20-420 et
seq.). The PCA may perform ADL functions such as assistance to the primary
caregiver but shall not perform any nursing duties or roles except as permitted
by Part VIII (18VAC90-20-420 et seq.). At a minimum, the staff providing PC
must have been certified through coursework as either PCAs or home health
aides.
c. DMAS will pay for any PC services that the PCA gives to
individuals to assist them in preparing for school or when they return home.
DMAS shall not pay for the PCA to assist the individual with any functions
related to the individual completing post-secondary school functions or for
supervision time during school.
d. PC exclusions.
(1) Time spent driving the waiver individual shall not be
reimbursed.
(2) Regardless of the combination of skilled PDN and PC
hours, the total combined number of hours that shall be reimbursed by DMAS in a
week shall not exceed 112 hours.
(3) The consumer-directed services model shall not be
covered for any services provided in the tech waiver.
(4) Spouses, parents (natural, adoptive, legal guardians),
siblings, grandparents, grandchildren, adult children, other legal guardians,
or any person living under the same roof with the individual shall not provide
PC services for the purpose of Medicaid reimbursement for the waiver
individual.
6. Transition services shall be covered two ways: (i) as
defined at 12VAC30-120-1700 to provide for applicants to move from
institutional placements to community private homes and shall be service
authorized by DMAS or the designated service authorization contractor in order
for reimbursement to occur, and (ii) for applicants who have already moved from
an institution to the community within 30 days of their transition. The
applicant's transition from an institution to the community shall be
coordinated by the facility's discharge planning team. The discharge planner
shall coordinate with the DMAS staff to ensure that technology assisted waiver
eligibility criteria shall be met.
a. Transition services shall be service authorized by DMAS
or its designated service authorization contractor in order for reimbursement
to occur.
b. For the purposes of transition funding for the
technology assisted waiver, an institution means an ICF/ID, a specialized care
nursing facility or a long-stay hospital as defined at 42 CFR 435.1009.
Transition funding shall not be available for individuals who have been
admitted to an acute care hospital.
C. Changes to services or termination of services.
1. DMAS or its designated agent shall have the final
authority to approve or deny a requested change to an individual's skilled PDN
and PC hours. Any request for an increase to an individual's skilled PDN or PC
hours that exceeds the number of hours allowed for that individual's LOC shall
be service authorized by DMAS staff and accompanied by adequate documentation
justifying the increase.
a. The provider may decrease the amount of authorized care
if the revised skilled PDN hours are appropriate and based on the needs of the
individual. The provider agency shall work with the DMAS staff for coordination
and final approval of any decrease in service delivery. A revised tech waiver
skilled PDN authorization shall be completed by DMAS for final authorization
and forwarded to the provider agency.
b. The provider shall be responsible for documenting in
writing the physician's verbal orders and for inclusion of the changes on the
recertification POC in accordance with the DMAS skilled private duty nursing
authorization. The provider agency's RN supervisor, who is responsible for
supervising the individual's care, shall use a person-centered approach in
discussing the change in care with the individual and the individual's
representative to include documentation in the individual's record. The DMAS
staff or the DMAS designated service authorization contractor shall notify in
writing the individual or the individual's representative of the change.
c. The provider shall be responsible for submitting the
DMAS-225 form to the local department of social services when the following
situations occur: (i) when Medicaid eligibility status changes; (ii) when the
individual's level of care changes; (iii) when the individual is admitted to or
discharged from an institution, a home and community-based waiver, or a
provider agency's care; (iv) the individual dies; or (v) any other information
that causes a change in the individual's eligibility status or patient pay
amounts.
2. At any time the individual no longer meets LOC criteria
for the waiver, termination of waiver enrollment shall be initiated by DMAS
staff who is assigned to the individual. In such instances, DMAS shall forward
the DMAS-225 form to the local department of social services.
3. In an emergency situation when the health, safety, or
welfare of the provider staff is endangered, the provider agency may
immediately initiate discharge of the individual and contact the DMAS staff.
The provider must issue written notification containing the reasons for and the
effective date of the termination of services. The written notification period
in subdivision 4 of this subsection shall not be required. Other entities
(e.g., licensing authorities, APS, CPS) shall also be notified as appropriate.
A copy of this letter shall be forwarded to the DMAS staff within five business
days of the letter's date.
4. In a nonemergency situation (i.e., when the health,
safety, or welfare of the waiver individual or provider personnel is not
endangered), the provider shall provide the individual and the individual's
representative 14 calendar days' written notification (plus three days to allow
for mail transmission) of the intent to discharge the individual from agency
services. Written notification shall provide the reasons for and the effective
date of the termination of services as well as the individual's appeal rights.
A copy of the written notification shall also be forwarded to the DMAS staff
within five business days of the date of the notification.
5. Individuals who no longer meet the tech waiver criteria
as certified by the physician for either children or adults shall be terminated
from the waiver. In such cases, a reduction in skilled PDN hours may occur that
shall not exceed two weeks in duration as long as such skilled PDN was
previously approved in the individual's POC. The agency provider of skilled PDN
for such individuals shall document with DMAS the decrease in skilled PDN hours
and prepare for cessation of skilled PDN hours and waiver services.
6. When a waiver individual, regardless of age, requires
admission to a specialized care nursing facility or long-stay hospital, the
individual shall be discharged from waiver services while he is in the
specialized care nursing facility or long-stay hospital. Readmission to waiver
services may resume once the individual has been discharged from the
specialized care nursing facility or long-stay hospital as long as the waiver
eligibility and medical necessity criteria continue to be met. For individuals
21 years of age and older, the individual shall follow the criteria for
specialized care nursing facility admission. For individuals who are younger
than 21 years of age, the individual shall follow the criteria for long-stay
hospital admissions as well as the age appropriate criteria.
7. When a waiver individual, regardless of age, requires
admission to an acute care hospital for 30 days or more, the individual shall
be discharged from waiver services. When such hospitalization exceeds 30 days
and upon hospital discharge, readmission to waiver services is required. Such
readmission requires reassessment by the discharge team and a determination
that the individual continues to meet Medicaid eligibility, level of care
criteria and medical criteria on the DMAS-108 or DMAS-109 form, as appropriate.
If these criteria are met, the individual shall be readmitted to waiver
services. For adults, ages 21 years and older, the individual shall meet the
criteria for specialized care admissions. For children, younger than 21 years of
age, the individual shall meet the criteria for long-stay hospital admissions
and the age appropriate criteria.
8. Waiver individuals, regardless of age, who require
admission to any type of acute care facility for less than 30 days shall, upon
discharge from such acute care facility, be eligible for waiver services as
long as all other requirements continue to be met.
12VAC30-120-1730. General requirements for participating
providers. (Repealed.)
A. All agency providers shall sign the appropriate technology
assisted waiver provider agreement in order to bill and receive Medicaid
payment for services rendered. Requests for provider enrollment shall be
reviewed by DMAS to determine whether the provider applicant meets the
requirements for Medicaid participation and demonstrates the abilities to
perform, at a minimum, the following activities:
1. Be able to render the medically necessary services
required by the waiver individuals. Accept referrals for services only when
staff is available and qualified to initiate and perform the required services
on an ongoing basis.
2. Assure the individual's freedom to reject medical care
and treatment.
3. Assure freedom of choice to individuals in seeking
medical care from any institution, pharmacy, or practitioner qualified to
perform the service or services that may be required and participating in the
Medicaid program at the time the service or services are performed.
4. Actively involve the individual and the authorized
representative, as applicable, in the assessment of needs, strengths, goals,
preferences, and abilities and incorporate this information into the
person-centered planning process. A provider shall protect and promote the
rights of each individual for whom he is providing services and shall provide
for each of the following individual rights:
a. The individual's rights are exercised by the person
appointed under state law to act on the individual's behalf in the case of an
individual adjudged incompetent under the laws of the Commonwealth by a court
of competent jurisdiction.
b. The individual, who has not been adjudged incompetent by
the state court, may designate any legal-surrogate in accordance with state law
to exercise the individual's rights to the extent provided by state law.
c. The individual shall have the right to receive services
from the provider with reasonable accommodation of individual needs and
preferences, except when the health or safety of the individual or other waiver
individuals would be endangered.
5. Perform a criminal background check on all employees,
including the business owner, who may have any contact or provide services to
the waiver individual. Such record checks shall be performed by the Virginia
State Police for the Commonwealth. When the Medicaid individual is a minor
child, searches shall also be made of the Virginia CPS Central Registry.
a. Provider documentation of the results of these searches
must be made available upon request of DMAS or its authorized representatives.
Persons convicted of having committed barrier crimes as defined in
§ 32.1-162.9:1 of the Code of Virginia shall not render services to waiver
individuals for the purposes of seeking Medicaid reimbursement.
b. Persons having founded dispositions in the CPS Central
Registry at DSS shall not be permitted to render services to children in this
waiver and seek Medicaid reimbursement. Medicaid reimbursement shall not be
made for providers' employees who have findings with the Virginia Board of
Nursing of the Department of Health Professions concerning abuse, neglect, or
mistreatment of individuals or misappropriation of their property.
6. Screen all new and existing employees and contractors to
determine whether any of them have been excluded from participation in federal
programs. Search the HHS-OIG List of Excluded Individuals and Entities (LEIE)
website monthly by name for employees, contractors and entities to validate the
eligibility of such persons and entities for federal programs.
a. Immediately report to DMAS any exclusion information
identified.
b. Such information shall be sent in writing and shall
include the individual or business name, provider identification number (if
applicable), and what, if any, action has been taken to date.
c. Such information shall be sent to: DMAS, ATTN: Program Integrity/Exclusions,
600 E. Broad St., Suite 1300, Richmond, VA 23219 or emailed to
providerexclusion@dmas.virginia.gov.
7. Provide services and supplies to individuals in full
compliance with Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, as amended (42 USC § 2000
et seq.), which prohibits discrimination on the grounds of race, color,
religion, or national origin; the Virginians with Disabilities Act
(§ 51.5-1 et seq. of the Code of Virginia); § 504 of the
Rehabilitation Act of 1973, as amended (29 USC § 794), which prohibits
discrimination on the basis of a disability; and the ADA of 1990, as amended
(42 USC § 12101 et seq.), which provides comprehensive civil rights
protections to individuals with disabilities.
8. Report all suspected violations, pursuant to § 63.2-100,
§§ 63.2-1508 through 63.2-1513, and § 63.2-1606 et seq. of the Code
of Virginia, involving mistreatment, neglect, or abuse, including injuries of
an unknown source, and misappropriation of individual property to either CPS,
APS, or other officials in accordance with state law. Providers shall also
train their staff in recognizing all types of such injuries and how to report
them to the appropriate authorities. Providers shall ensure that all employees
are aware of the requirements to immediately report such suspected abuse,
neglect, or exploitation to APS, CPS or human rights, as appropriate.
9. Notify DMAS or its designated agent immediately, in
writing, of any change in the information that the provider previously
submitted to DMAS. When ownership of the provider changes, notify DMAS at least
15 calendar days before the date of such a change.
10. Provide services and supplies to individuals in full
compliance of the same quality and in the same mode of delivery as are provided
to the general public. Submit charges to DMAS for the provision of services and
supplies to individuals in amounts not to exceed the provider's usual and
customary charges to the general public.
11. Accept as payment in full the amount established and
reimbursed by DMAS' payment methodology beginning with individuals'
authorization dates for the waiver services. The provider shall not attempt to
collect from the individual or the individual's responsible relative or
relatives any amount the provider may consider a balance due amount or an
uncovered amount. Providers shall not collect balance due amounts from
individuals or individuals' responsible relatives even if such persons are
willing to pay such amounts. Providers shall not bill DMAS, individuals or
their responsible relatives for broken or missed appointments.
12. Collect all applicable patient pay amounts pursuant to
12VAC30-40-20, 12VAC30-40-30, 12VAC30-40-40, 12VAC30-40-50, and 12VAC30-40-60.
13. Use only DMAS-designated forms for service
documentation. The provider shall not alter the required DMAS forms in any
manner unless DMAS' approval is obtained prior to using the altered forms.
14. Not perform any type of direct-marketing activities to
Medicaid individuals.
15. Furnish access to the records of individuals who are
receiving Medicaid services and furnish information, on request and in the form
requested, to DMAS or its designated agent or agents, the Attorney General of
Virginia or his authorized representatives, the state Medicaid Fraud Control
Unit, the State Long-Term Care Ombudsman and any other authorized state and
federal personnel. The Commonwealth's right of access to individuals receiving
services and to provider agencies and records shall survive any termination of
the provider agreement.
16. Disclose, as requested by DMAS, all financial,
beneficial, ownership, equity, surety, or other interests in any and all firms,
corporations, partnerships, associations, and business enterprises, joint
ventures, agencies, institutions, or other legal entities providing any form of
services to participants of Medicaid.
17. Pursuant to 42 CFR 431.300 et seq. and
§ 32.1-325.3 of the Code of Virginia, all information associated with a
waiver applicant or individual that could disclose the individual's identity is
confidential and shall be safeguarded. Access to information concerning waiver
applicants or individuals shall be restricted to persons or agency
representatives who are subject to the standards of confidentiality that are
consistent with that of the agency, and any such access must be in accordance
with the provisions found in 12VAC30-20-90.
18. Meet staffing, financial solvency, disclosure of
ownership, assurance of comparability of services requirements, and other
requirements as specified in the provider's written program participation
agreement with DMAS.
19. Maintain and retain business and professional records
sufficient to document fully and accurately the nature, scope, and details of
the services provided fully and accurately with documentation necessary to
support services billed. Failure to meet this requirement may result in DMAS'
recovery of expenditures resulting from claims payment.
20. Maintain a medical record for each individual who is
receiving waiver services. Failure to meet this requirement may result in DMAS
recovering expenditures made for claims paid that are not adequately supported
by the provider's documentation.
21. Retain business and professional records at least six
years from the last date of service or as provided by applicable federal and
state laws, whichever period is longer. However, if an audit is initiated
within the required retention period, the records shall be retained until the
audit is completed and every exception resolved. Policies regarding retention
of records shall apply even if the provider discontinues operation. DMAS shall
be notified in writing of the storage location and procedures for obtaining
records for review should the need arise. The location, agent, or trustee shall
be within the Commonwealth.
22. Retain records of minors for at least six years after
such minors have reached 21 years of age.
23. Ensure that all documentation in the individual's
record is completed, signed, and dated with the name or names of the person or
persons providing the service and the appropriate title, dated with month, day,
and year, and in accordance with accepted professional practice. This
documentation shall include the nurses' or PCAs', as appropriate, arrival and
departure times for each shift that is worked.
24. Begin PDN services for which it expects reimbursement
only when the admission packet is received and DMAS' authorization for skilled
PDN services has been given. This authorization shall include the enrollment
date that shall be issued by DMAS staff. It shall be the provider agency's
responsibility to review and ensure the receipt of a complete and accurate
screening packet.
25. Ensure that there is a backup caregiver who accepts
responsibility for the oversight and care of the individual in order to ensure
the health, safety, and welfare of the individual when the primary caregiver is
ill, incapacitated, or using PDN respite. Documentation in the medical record
shall include this backup caregiver's name and phone number.
26. Notify the DMAS staff every time the waiver
individual's primary residence changes.
27. Ensure that minimum qualifications of provider staff
are met as follows:
a. All RN and LPN employees shall have a satisfactory work
record, as evidenced by at least two references from prior job experiences. In
lieu of this requirement for personal care aides only, employees who have
worked for only one employer shall be permitted to provide two personal
references. Providers who are not able to obtain previous job references about
personal care aides shall retain written documentation showing their good faith
efforts to obtain such references in the new employee's work record.
b. Staff and agencies shall meet any certifications,
licensure, or registration, as applicable and as required by applicable state
law. Staff qualifications shall be documented and maintained for review by DMAS
or its designated agent. All additional provider requirements as may be
required under a specific waiver service in this part shall also be met.
c. All RNs and LPNs providing skilled PDN services shall be
currently licensed to practice nursing in the Commonwealth. The LPN shall be
under the direct supervision of an RN.
d. All RNs and LPNs who provide skilled PDN services shall
have either (i) at least six months of related clinical experience as
documented in their history, which may include work in acute care hospitals,
long-stay hospitals, rehabilitation hospitals, or specialized care nursing
facilities, or (ii) completed a provider training program related to the care
and technology needs of the assigned tech waiver individual.
e. Training programs established by providers shall
include, at a minimum, the following:
(1) Trainers (either RNs or respiratory therapists) shall
have at least six months hands-on experience in the areas in which they provide
training, such as ventilators, tracheostomies, peg tubes, and nasogastric
tubes.
(2) Training shall include classroom time as well as direct
hands-on demonstration of mastery of the specialized skills required to work
with individuals in the technology assisted waiver by the trainee.
(3) The training program shall include the following
subject areas as they relate to the care to be provided by the tech waiver
nurse: (i) human anatomy and physiology, (ii) medications frequently used by technology
dependent individuals, (iii) emergency management, and (iv) the operation of
the relevant equipment.
(4) Providers shall assure the competency and mastery of
the skills necessary to care for tech waiver individuals by the nurses prior to
assigning them to a tech waiver individual. Documentation of successful
completion of such training course and mastery of the specialized skills
required to work with individuals in the technology assisted waiver shall be
maintained in the provider's personnel records. This documentation shall be
provided to DMAS upon request.
f. The RN supervisor shall be currently licensed to
practice nursing in the Commonwealth and have at least one year of related
clinical nursing experience, which may include work in an acute care hospital,
long-stay hospital, rehabilitation hospital, or specialized care nursing
facility.
B. DMAS shall have the authority to require the submission
of any other medical documentation or information as may be required to
complete a decision for a waiver individual's eligibility, waiver enrollment,
or coverage for services.
1. Review of individual-specific documentation shall be
conducted by DMAS or its designated agent. This documentation shall contain, up
to and including the last date of service, all of the following, as may be
appropriate for the service rendered:
a. All supporting documentation, including physicians'
orders, from any provider rendering waiver services for the individual;
b. All assessments, reassessments, and evaluations (including
the complete UAI screening packet or risk evaluations) made during the
provision of services, including any required initial assessments by the RN
supervisor completed prior to or on the date services are initiated and changes
to the supporting documentation by the RN supervisor;
c. Progress notes reflecting individual's status and, as
appropriate, progress toward the identified goals on the POC;
d. All related communication with the individual and the
family/caregiver, the designated agent for service authorization, consultants,
DMAS, DSS, formal and informal service providers, referral to APS or CPS and
all other professionals concerning the individual, as appropriate;
e. Service authorization decisions performed by the DMAS
staff or the DMAS-designated service authorization contractor;
f. All POCs completed for the individual and specific to
the service being provided and all supporting documentation related to any
changes in the POCs; and
g. Attendance logs documenting the date and times services
were rendered, the amount and type of services rendered and the dated
professional signature with title.
2. Review of provider participation standards and renewal
of provider agreements. DMAS shall be responsible for ensuring continued
adherence to provider participation standards by conducting ongoing monitoring
of compliance.
a. DMAS shall recertify each provider for agreement
renewal, contingent upon the provider's timely license renewal, to provide home
and community-based waiver services.
b. A provider's noncompliance with DMAS policies and
procedures, as required in the provider agreement, may result in a written
request from DMAS for a corrective action plan that details the steps the
provider shall take and the length of time required to achieve full compliance
with the corrective action plan that shall correct the cited deficiencies.
c. A provider that has been convicted of a felony, or who
has otherwise pled guilty to a felony, in Virginia or in any other of the 50
states, the District of Columbia, or the U.S. territories must, within 30 days
of such conviction, notify DMAS of this conviction and relinquish its provider
agreement. Upon such notice, DMAS shall immediately terminate the provider's
Medicaid provider agreement pursuant to § 32.1-325 D of the Code of
Virginia and as may be required for federal financial participation. Such
provider agreement terminations shall be immediate and conform to
§ 32.1-325 E of the Code of Virginia.
d. Providers shall not be reimbursed for services that may
be rendered between the conviction of a felony and the provider's notification
to DMAS of the conviction.
e. Except as otherwise provided by applicable state or
federal law, the Medicaid provider agreement may be terminated at will on 30
days' written notice. The agreement may be terminated if DMAS determines that
the provider poses a threat to the health, safety, or welfare of any individual
enrolled in a DMAS administered program.
12VAC30-120-1740. Participation standards for provision of
services. (Repealed.)
A. Skilled PDN, skilled PDN respite, and PC services. DMAS
or its designated agent shall periodically review and audit providers' records
for these services for conformance to regulations and policies, and concurrence
with claims that have been submitted for payment. When an individual is
receiving multiple services, the records for all services shall be
separated from those of non-home and community-based care services, such as
companion or home health services. The following documentation shall be
maintained for every individual for whom DMAS-enrolled providers render these
services:
1. Physicians' orders for these services shall be
maintained in the individual's record as well as at the individual's primary
residence. All recertifications of the POC shall be performed within the last
five business days of each current 60-day period. The physician shall sign the
recertification before Medicaid reimbursement shall occur;
2. All assessments, reassessments, and evaluations
(including the complete UAI screening packet or risk evaluations) made during
the provision of services, including any required initial assessments by the RN
supervisor completed prior to or on the date services are initiated and changes
to the supporting documentation by the RN supervisor;
3. Progress notes reflecting the individual's status and,
as appropriate, progress toward the identified goals on the POC;
4. All related communication with the individual and the
individual's representative, the DMAS designated agent for service
authorization, consultants, DMAS, DSS, formal and informal service providers,
all required referrals, as appropriate, to APS or CPS and all other
professionals concerning the individual;
5. All service authorization decisions rendered by the DMAS
staff or the DMAS-designated service authorization contractor;
6. All POCs completed with the individual, or
family/caregiver, as appropriate, and specific to the service being provided
and all supporting documentation related to any changes in the POC;
7. Attendance logs documenting the date and times services
were rendered, the amount and type of services rendered and the dated
signatures of the professionals who rendered the specified care, with the
professionals' titles. Copies of all nurses' records shall be subject to review
by either state or federal Medicaid representatives or both. Any required
nurses' visit notes, PCA notes, and all dated contacts with service providers
and during supervisory visits to the individual's home and shall include:
a. The private duty nurse's or PCA's daily visit note with
arrival and departure times;
b. The RN, LPN, or PCA daily observations, care, and
services that have been rendered, observations concerning the individual's
physical and emotional condition, daily activities and the individual's
response to service delivery; and
c. Observations about any other services, such as and not
limited to meals-on-wheels, companion services, and home health services, that
the participant may be receiving shall be recorded in these notes;
8. Provider's HIPAA release of information form;
9. All Long Term Care Communication forms (DMAS-225);
10. Documentation of rejection or refusal of services and
potential outcomes resulting from the refusal of services communicated to the
individual or the individual's representative;
11. Documentation of all inpatient hospital or specialized
care nursing facility admissions to include service interruption dates, the
reason for the hospital or specialized care nursing facility admission, the
name of the facility or facilities and primary caregiver notification when
applicable including all communication to DMAS;
12. The RN, LPN, or PCA's and individual's, or individual's
representative's weekly or daily, as appropriate, signatures, including the
date, to verify that services have been rendered during that week as documented
in the record. For records requiring weekly signatures, such signatures, times,
and dates shall be placed on these records no earlier than the last day of the
week in which services were provided and no later than seven calendar days from
the date of the last service. An employee providing services to the tech waiver
individual cannot sign for the individual. If the individual is unable to sign
the nurses' records, it shall be documented in the record how the nurses'
records will be signed or who will sign in the individual's place. An employee
of the provider shall not sign for the individual unless he is a family member
of the individual or legal guardian of the individual;
13. Contact notes or progress notes reflecting the
individual's status; and
14. Any other documentation to support that services
provided are appropriate and necessary to maintain the individual in the home
and in the community.
B. In addition to meeting the general conditions and
requirements for home and community-based services participating providers and
skilled PDN, private duty respite, and PC services, providers shall also meet
the following requirements:
1. This service shall be provided through either a home
health agency licensed or certified by the VDH for Medicaid participation and
with which DMAS has a contract for either skilled PDN or congregate PDN or
both;
2. Demonstrate a prior successful health care delivery;
3. Operate from a business office; and
4. Employ (or subcontract with) and directly supervise an
RN or an LPN. The LPN and RN shall be currently licensed to practice in the
Commonwealth. Prior to assignment to a tech waiver individual, the RN or LPN
shall have either (i) at least six months of related clinical nursing
experience or (ii) completed a provider training program related to the care
and technology needs of the tech waiver individual as described in
12VAC30-120-1730 A 27 e. Regardless of whether a nurse has six months of
experience or completes a provider training course, the provider agency shall
be responsible for assuring all nurses who are assigned to an individual are
competent in the care needs of that individual.
5. As part of direct supervision, the RN supervisor shall
make, at a minimum, a visit every 30 days to ensure both quality and
appropriateness of PDN, PDN respite services, and personal care services to
assess the individual's and the individual's representative's satisfaction with
the services being provided, to review the medication and treatments and to
update and verify the most current physician signed orders are in the home.
a. The waiver individual shall be present when the
supervisory visits are made.
b. At least every other visit shall be in the individual's
primary residence.
c. When a delay occurs in the RN supervisor's visits
because the individual is unavailable, the reason for the delay shall be
documented in the individual's record, and the visit shall occur as soon as the
individual is available. Failure to meet this standard may result in DMAS'
recovery of payments made.
d. The RN supervisor may delegate personal care aide
supervisory visits to an LPN. The provider's RN or LPN supervisor shall make
supervisory visits at least every 90 days. During visits to the waiver
individual's home, the RN or LPN supervisor shall observe, evaluate, and
document the adequacy and appropriateness of personal care services with regard
to the individual's current functioning status and medical and social needs.
The personal care aide's record shall be reviewed and the waiver individual's
or family/caregiver's, or both, satisfaction with the type and amount of
services discussed.
e. Additional supervisory visits may be required under the
following circumstances: (i) at the provider's discretion; (ii) at the request
of the individual when a change in the individual's condition has occurred;
(iii) any time the health, safety, or welfare of the individual could be at
risk; and (iv) at the request of the DMAS staff.
6. When private duty respite services are routine in nature
and offered in conjunction with PC services for adults, the RN supervisory
visit conducted for PC may serve as the supervisory visit for respite services.
However, the supervisor shall document supervision of private duty respite
services separately. For this purpose, the same individual record can be used
with a separate section for private duty respite services documentation.
7. For this waiver, personal care services shall only be
agency directed and provided by a DMAS-enrolled PC provider to adult
waiver individuals.
a. For DMAS-enrolled skilled PDN providers that also
provide PC services, the provider shall employ or subcontract with and directly
supervise an RN who will provide ongoing supervision of all PCAs. The
supervising RN shall be currently licensed to practice nursing in the
Commonwealth and have at least one year of related clinical nursing experience,
which may include work in an acute care hospital, long-stay hospital,
rehabilitation hospital, or specialized care nursing facility.
b. In addition to meeting the general conditions and
requirements for home and community-based services participating providers as
specified elsewhere in this part, the provision of PC services shall also
comply with the requirements of 12VAC30-120-930.
8. Skilled monthly supervisory reassessments shall be
performed in accordance with regulations by the PDN agency provider. The agency
RN supervisor shall complete the monthly assessment visit and submit the
"Technology Assisted Waiver Supervisory Monthly Summary" form
(DMAS-103) to DMAS for review by the sixth day of the month following the month
when the visit occurred.
9. Failure of the provider to ensure timely submission of
the required assessments may result in retraction of all skilled PDN payments
for the period of time of the delinquency.
C. Assistive technology and environmental modification.
1. All AT and EM services shall be provided by
DMAS-enrolled DME providers that have a DMAS provider agreement to provide AT
or EM or both.
2. AT and EM shall be covered in the least expensive, most
cost-effective manner. The provider shall document and justify why more
cost-effective solutions cannot be used. DMAS and the DMAS-designated service
authorization contractor may request further documentation on the alternative
cost-effective solutions as necessary.
3. The provider documentation requirements for AT and EM
shall be as follows:
a. Written documentation setting out the medical necessity
for these services regarding the need for service, the process and results of
ensuring that the item is not covered by the State Plan as DME and supplies and
that it is not available from a DME provider when purchased elsewhere and
contacts with vendors or contractors of service and cost;
b. Documentation of any or all of the evaluation, design,
labor costs or supplies by a qualified professional;
c. Documentation of the date services are rendered and the
amount of service needed;
d. Any other relevant information regarding the device or
modification;
e. Documentation in the medical record of notification by
the designated individual or the individual's representative of satisfactory
completion or receipt of the service or item;
f. Instructions regarding any warranty, repairs,
complaints, or servicing that may be needed; and
g. Any additional cost estimates requested by DMAS.
7. The EM or AT provider shall maintain a copy of all
building permits and all building inspections for modifications, as required by
code. All instructions regarding any warranty, repairs, complaints, and
servicing that may be needed and the receipt for any purchased goods or
services. More than one cost estimate may be required.
8. Individuals who reside in rental property shall obtain
written permission from the property's owner before any EM shall be authorized
by DMAS. This letter shall be maintained in the provider's record.
12VAC30-120-1750. Payment for services. (Repealed.)
A. PC services provided in the tech waiver shall be
reimbursed at an hourly rate established by DMAS. All skilled PDN services and
skilled PDN respite care services shall be reimbursed in increments of 15
minutes as a unit and shall be reimbursed at a rate established by DMAS.
B. Reimbursement for AT and EM shall be as follows.
1. All AT covered procedure codes provided in the tech
waiver shall be reimbursed as a service limit of one and up to a per member
annual maximum of $5,000 per calendar year regardless of waiver. Such service
shall only be provided to individuals who are also receiving private duty
nursing.
2. All EM services shall be reimbursed up to $5,000 per
individual per calendar regardless of waiver year as long as such services are
not duplicative. All EM services shall be reimbursed at the actual cost of
material and labor and no mark ups shall be permitted. Such service shall only
be provided to individuals who are also receiving private duty nursing.
C. Duplication of services.
1. DMAS shall not duplicate services that are required as a
reasonable accommodation as a part of the ADA (42 USC §§ 12131 through
12165), the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 (29 USC 791 et seq.), or the Virginians
with Disabilities Act (§ 51.5-1 et seq. of the Code of Virginia).
2. Payment for services under the POC shall not duplicate
payments made to public agencies or private entities under other program
authorities for this same purpose. All private insurance benefits for skilled
PDN shall be exhausted before Medicaid reimbursement can occur as Medicaid
shall be the payer of last resort.
3. DMAS payments for EM shall not be duplicative in homes
where multiple waiver individuals reside. For example, one waiver individual
may be approved for required medically necessary bathroom modifications while a
second waiver individual in the same household would be approved for a
medically necessary access ramp but not for the same improvements to the same
bathroom.
D. Cost-effectiveness computations for the tech waiver
shall be completed by DMAS upon completion of the POC for all individuals
entering the waiver. The total annual aggregate cost of the waiver shall not
exceed the cost of backup facility placement. For individuals, regardless of
age, the DMAS staff shall ensure the anticipated cost to DMAS for the
individual's waiver services for a 12-month period shall not exceed the annual
average aggregate costs to DMAS for specialized nursing facility care for those
individuals 21 years of age or older or for continued hospitalization for
individuals younger than 21 years of age.
12VAC30-120-1760. Quality management review; utilization
reviews; level of care (LOC) reviews. (Repealed.)
A. DMAS shall perform quality management reviews for the
purpose of ensuring high quality of service delivery consistent with the
attending physicians' orders, approved POCs, and service authorized services
for the waiver individuals. Providers identified as not rendering reimbursed
services consistent with such orders, POCs, and service authorizations shall be
required to submit corrective action plans (CAPs) to DMAS for approval. Once
approved, such CAPs shall be implemented to resolve the cited deficiencies.
B. If the DMAS staff determines, during any review or at
any other time, that the waiver individual no longer meets the aggregated
cost-effectiveness standards or medical necessity criteria, then the DMAS
staff, as appropriate, shall deny payment for such waiver individual. Such
waiver individuals shall be discharged from the waiver.
C. Securing service authorization shall not necessarily
guarantee reimbursement pursuant to DMAS utilization review of waiver services.
D. DMAS shall perform annual quality assurance reviews for
tech waiver enrollees. Once waiver enrollment occurs, the Level of Care
Eligibility Re-determination audits (LOCERI) shall be performed by DMAS. This
independent electronic calculation of eligibility determination is performed
and communicated to the DMAS supervisor for tech waiver. Any failure for waiver
eligibility requires higher level of review by the supervisor and may include a
home visit by the DMAS staff.
12VAC30-120-1770. Appeals; provider and recipient. (Repealed.)
A. Providers shall have the right to appeal actions taken
by DMAS. Provider appeals shall be considered pursuant to § 32.1-325.1 of
the Code of Virginia and the Virginia Administrative Process Act
(§ 2.2-4000 et seq. of the Code of Virginia) and DMAS regulations at
12VAC30-10-1000 and 12VAC30-20-500 through 12VAC30-20-560.
B. Individuals shall have the right to appeal actions
taken by DMAS. Individuals' appeals shall be considered pursuant to
12VAC30-110-10 through 12VAC30-120-370. DMAS shall provide the opportunity for
a fair hearing, consistent with 42 CFR Part 431, Subpart E.
C. The individual shall be advised in writing of such
denial and of his right to appeal consistent with DMAS client appeals
regulations 12VAC30-110-70 through 12VAC30-110-80.
VA.R. Doc. No. R18-5055; Filed June 29, 2018, 1:49 p.m.