Medicaid Program; State Plan Home and Community-Based Services, 5-Year Period for Waivers, Provider Payment Reassignment, and Setting Requirements for Community First Choice, 26362-26406 [2012-10385]
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Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 86 / Thursday, May 3, 2012 / Proposed Rules
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid
Services
42 CFR Parts 430, 431, 435, 436, 440,
441, and 447
[CMS–2249–P2]
RIN 0938–AO53
Medicaid Program; State Plan Home
and Community-Based Services,
5-Year Period for Waivers, Provider
Payment Reassignment, and Setting
Requirements for Community First
Choice
Centers for Medicare &
Medicaid Services (CMS), HHS.
ACTION: Proposed rule.
AGENCY:
This proposed rule would
revise Medicaid regulations to define
and describe State plan home and
community-based services (HCBS)
under the Social Security Act (the Act)
as added by the Deficit Reduction Act
of 2005 and amended by the Patient
Protection and Affordable Care Act of
2010 (Affordable Care Act 1). This
proposed rule offers States new
flexibility in providing necessary and
appropriate services to elderly and
disabled populations and reflects CMS’
commitment to the general principles of
the President’s Executive Order released
January 18, 2011, entitled ‘‘Improving
Regulation and Regulatory Review.’’ In
particular, this rule does not require the
eligibility link between HCBS and
institutional care that exists under the
Medicaid HCBS waiver program. This
regulation would describe Medicaid
coverage of the optional State plan
benefit to furnish home and communitybased services and receive Federal
matching funds. As a result, States will
be better able to design and tailor
Medicaid services to accommodate
individual needs. This may result in
improved patient outcomes and
satisfaction, while enabling States to
effectively manage their Medicaid
resources.
This proposed rule would also amend
Medicaid regulations consistent with
the requirements of the Affordable Care
Act, which amended the Act to provide
authority for a 5-year duration for
certain demonstration projects or
waivers under the Act, at the discretion
of the Secretary, when they involve
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SUMMARY:
1 Affordable Care Act: Patient Protection and
Affordable Care Act of 2010, Public Law 111–148
as amended by the Health Care and Education
Reconciliation Act of 2010, Public Law 111–152.
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individuals dually eligible for Medicaid
and Medicare benefits.
In addition, this proposed rule would
provide an additional limited exception
to the general requirement that payment
for services under a State plan must be
made directly to the individual
practitioner providing a service when
the Medicaid program is the primary
source of reimbursement for a class of
individual practitioners. This exception
would allow payments to be made to
other parties to benefit the providers by
ensuring health and welfare, and
training. We are including the payment
reassignment provisions in this HCBS
proposed rule because State’s Medicaid
programs often operate as the primary or
only payer for the class of practitioners
that includes HCBS service providers.
Finally, this proposed rule would also
amend Medicaid regulations to provide
home and community-based setting
requirements of the Affordable Care Act
for the Community First Choice State
plan option.
DATES: To be assured consideration,
comments must be received at one of
the addresses provided below, no later
than 5 p.m., e.d.t., on June 4, 2012.
ADDRESSES: In commenting, please refer
to file code CMS–2249–P2. Because of
staff and resource limitations, we cannot
accept comments by facsimile (FAX)
transmission.
You may submit comments in one of
four ways (please choose only one of the
ways listed):
1. Electronically. You may submit
electronic comments on this regulation
to https://www.regulations.gov. Follow
the ‘‘Submit a comment’’ instructions.
2. By regular mail. You may mail
written comments to the following
address ONLY: Centers for Medicare &
Medicaid Services, Department of
Health and Human Services, Attention:
CMS–2249–P2, P.O. Box 8016,
Baltimore, MD 21244–8016.
Please allow sufficient time for mailed
comments to be received before the
close of the comment period.
3. By express or overnight mail. You
may send written comments to the
following address ONLY: Centers for
Medicare & Medicaid Services,
Department of Health and Human
Services, Attention: CMS–2249–P2,
Mail Stop C4–26–05, 7500 Security
Boulevard, Baltimore, MD 21244–1850.
4. By hand or courier. If you prefer,
you may deliver (by hand or courier)
your written comments before the close
of the comment period to either of the
following addresses:
a. For delivery in Washington, DC—
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid
Services, Department of Health and
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Human Services, Room 445–G, Hubert
H. Humphrey Building, 200
Independence Avenue SW.,
Washington, DC 20201.
(Because access to the interior of the
Hubert H. Humphrey Building is not
readily available to persons without
Federal government identification,
commenters are encouraged to leave
their comments in the CMS drop slots
located in the main lobby of the
building. A stamp-in clock is available
for persons wishing to retain a proof of
filing by stamping in and retaining an
extra copy of the comments being filed.)
b. For delivery in Baltimore, MD—
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid
Services, Department of Health and
Human Services, 7500 Security
Boulevard, Baltimore, MD 21244–1850.
If you intend to deliver your
comments to the Baltimore address,
please call telephone number (410) 786–
7195 in advance to schedule your
arrival with one of our staff members.
Comments mailed to the addresses
indicated as appropriate for hand or
courier delivery may be delayed and
received after the comment period.
Submission of comments on
paperwork requirements. You may
submit comments on this document’s
paperwork requirements by following
the instructions at the end of the
‘‘Collection of Information
Requirements’’ section in this
document.
For information on viewing public
comments, see the beginning of the
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Kathy Poisal, (410) 786–5940.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Inspection of Public Comments: All
comments received before the close of
the comment period are available for
viewing by the public, including any
personally identifiable or confidential
business information that is included in
a comment. We post all comments
received before the close of the
comment period on the following Web
site as soon as possible after they have
been received: https://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the search
instructions on that Web site to view
public comments.
Comments received timely will also
be available for public inspection as
they are received, generally beginning
approximately 3 weeks after publication
of a document, at the headquarters of
the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid
Services, 7500 Security Boulevard,
Baltimore, Maryland 21244, Monday
through Friday of each week from
8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. To schedule an
appointment to view public comments,
phone 1–800–743–3951.
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Table of Contents
I. Executive Summary
II. Background
A. Expanded Access to Home and
Community-Based Services for the
Elderly and Disabled Under Section
1915(i) of the Act: History of Section
1915(i) of the Act
B. Overview of the State Plan Home and
Community-Based Services (HCBS)
Benefit To Provide HCBS for the Elderly
and Individuals With Disabilities
1. Services
2. Eligibility
3. Number Served
4. Independent Evaluation
5. Adjustment Authority
6. Independent Assessment
7. Person-Centered Service Plan
8. Self-Direction
9. Quality Assurance
10. Conflict of Interest
11. Eligibility Redeterminations; Appeals
12. Option for Presumptive Eligibility for
Assessment
13. Individual’s Representative
14. Nonapplication
15. No Effect on Waiver Authority
16. Continuation of Federal Financial
Participation (FFP) for Institutional Level
of Care for Individuals Receiving
Services as of the Effective Date of the
State Plan HCBS Amendment
17. State Option To Provide HCBS to
Individuals Eligible for Services Under a
Waiver
18. Establishment of Optional Eligibility
Group To Provide Full Medicaid Benefits
to Individuals Receiving State Plan
HCBS
19. State Option To Offer HCBS to Specific,
Targeted Populations
20. Five-Year Approval for Targeted
Section 1915(i) HCBS Benefits and
Renewal Requirements
21. Phase-In of Services and Eligibility
C. Effective Date
D. The State Plan HCBS Benefit in the
Context of the Medicaid Program as a
Whole
E. Other Background
F. Section 2601 of the Affordable Care Act:
5-Year Period for Demonstration Projects
G. Prohibition Against Reassignment of
Provider Claims
H. Definition of Home and CommunityBased Settings for the 1915(k)
Community First Choice State Plan
Option
III. Provisions of the Proposed Rule
A. State Organization and General
Administration (Part 431)
B. Eligibility in the States, District of
Columbia, the Northern Mariana Islands,
and American Samoa (Part 435) and
Eligibility in Guam, Puerto Rico and the
Virgin Islands (Part 436)
C. Services: General Provisions (Part 440)
D. Services: Requirements and Limits
Applicable to Specific Services (Part
441)
E. Basis and Purpose (§ 441.650)
F. State Plan Requirements (§ 441.653)
G. Eligibility for Home and CommunityBased Services Under Section 1915(i)(1)
of the Act (§ 441.656)
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H. Needs-Based Criteria and Evaluation
(§ 441.659)
I. Independent Assessment (§ 441.662)
J. Service Plan (§ 441.665)
K. Provider Qualifications (§ 441.668)
L. Definition of Individual’s Representative
(§ 441.671)
M. Self-Directed Services (§ 441.674)
N. State Plan HCBS Administration: State
Responsibilities and Quality
Improvement (§ 441.677)
P. Section 2601 of the Affordable Care Act:
5-Year Period for Demonstration
Projects: Waiver Requirements (§ 430.25)
Q. Prohibition Against Reassignment of
Provider Claims (§ 447.10)
R. Section 2401 of the Affordable Care Act:
Community First Choice State Plan
Option: Home and Community-Based
Setting Requirements (§ 441.530)
IV. Response to Comments
V. Collection of Information Requirements
VI. Regulatory Impact Analysis
VII. Regulatory Flexibility Act Analysis
VIII. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
Analysis
IX. Federalism Analysis
Regulation Text
Acronyms
Because of the many terms to which
we refer by acronym in this proposed
rule, we are listing the acronyms used
and their corresponding terms in
alphabetical order below.
ADA Americans with Disabilities Act of
1990 (Pub. L. 110–325)
ADLs Activities of daily living
AHRQ Agency for Healthcare Research and
Quality
ANPRM Advance Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking
CFC Community First Choice (1915(k) State
plan Option)
CHIPRA Children’s Health Insurance
Program Reauthorization of 2009 (Pub. L.
111–3)
CMS Centers for Medicare & Medicaid
Services
DRA Deficit Reduction Act of 2005 (Pub. L.
109–171)
EPSDT Early and Periodic Screening,
Diagnosis and Treatment
FBR Federal benefit rate
FFP Federal financial participation
FPL Federal poverty line
FY Federal fiscal year
HCBS Home and Community-Based
Services
HHS Department of Health and Human
Services
IADLs Instrumental activities of daily living
ICF/MR Intermediate care facility for the
mentally retarded
LOC Level of care
NF Nursing facility
OBRA’81 Omnibus Budget Reconciliation
Act of 1981 (Pub. L. 97–35)
OT Occupational therapy
PT Physical therapy
RFA Regulatory Flexibility Act
SPA State Plan Amendments
SSI Supplemental Security Income
SSI/FBR Supplemental Security Income
Federal Benefit Rate
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UPL
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Upper payment limit
I. Executive Summary
A. Purpose
This proposed rule would amend the
Medicaid regulations to define and
describe State plan home and
community-based services (HCBS). This
regulation outlines the optional State
plan benefit to furnish home and
community-based State plan services
and draw Federal matching funds. As a
result, States will be able to design and
tailor Medicaid services to better
accommodate individual needs. This
may result in improved patient
outcomes and satisfaction, while
enabling States to effectively manage
their Medicaid resources.
This proposed rule would also amend
Medicaid regulations consistent with
the requirements of section 2601 of the
Patient Protection and Affordable Care
Act of 2010 (Affordable Care Act),
which added section 1915(h)(2) to the
Act to provide authority for a 5-year
duration for certain demonstration
projects or waivers under sections 1115,
1915(b), (c), or (d) of the Act, at the
discretion of the Secretary, when they
involve individuals who are dually
eligible for both Medicaid and Medicare
benefits.
In addition, this proposed rule would
provide an additional limited exception
to the general requirement that payment
for services under a State plan must be
made directly to the individual
practitioner providing a service when
the Medicaid program is the primary
source of reimbursement for a class of
individual practitioners. This exception
would allow payments to be made to
other parties to benefit the providers by
ensuring workforce stability, health and
welfare, and trainings, and provide
added flexibility to the State. We are
including the payment reassignment
provision in the HCBS proposed rule
because States’ Medicaid programs often
operate as the primary or only payer for
the class of practitioners that includes
HCBS service providers.
This proposed rule would also amend
Medicaid regulations to provide home
and community-based setting
requirements related to section 2401 of
the Affordable Care Act for the section
1915(k) Community First Choice State
plan option.
B. Summary of the Major Provisions
1. Section 1915(i) State Plan Home
Community-Based Services
The Deficit Reduction Act (DRA)
added a new provision to the Medicaid
statute entitled ‘‘Expanded Access to
Home and Community-Based Services
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for the Elderly and Disabled.’’ This
provision allows States to provide HCBS
(as an optional program) under their
State Medicaid plans. This option
allows States to receive Federal
financial participation for services that
were previously eligible for Federal
funds only under waiver or
demonstration projects. This provision
was further amended by the Affordable
Care Act. The statute now provides
additional options for States to design
and implement HCBS under the
Medicaid State Plan. In April 4, 2008,
we published a proposed rule to amend
Medicaid regulations to implement
HCBS under the DRA. That proposed
rule was not finalized, and with the
passage of section 2402 of the
Affordable Care Act, some previously
proposed regulations would no longer
be in compliance with the current law
under section 1915(i) of the Act. In
addition, several new provisions were
added. Specifically, the Affordable Care
Act amended the statute by adding a
new optional categorical eligibility
group for individuals to provide full
Medicaid benefits to certain individuals
who will be receiving HCBS. It also
authorized States to elect not to comply
with section 1902(a)(10)(B) of the Act
pertaining to comparability of Medicaid
services. After closely analyzing the
Affordable Care Act provisions, we
concluded that a new proposed rule was
necessary. This proposed rule retains a
large portion of the policies contained
within the April 4, 2008 proposed rule,
and updates some of our previous
proposals to reflect comments that we
received on the April 4, 2008 proposed
rule as well as the statutory changes that
were made by the Affordable Care Act.
2. Section 2601 of the Affordable Care
Act: 5-Year Period for Certain
Demonstration Projects and Waivers
This proposed rule also provides for
a 5-year approval or renewal period,
subject to the discretion of the
Secretary, for certain Medicaid waivers.
Specifically, this time period would
apply for demonstration and waiver
programs through which a State serves
individuals who are dually eligible for
both Medicare and Medicaid benefits.
for health and welfare benefit
contributions, training costs, and other
benefits customary for employees.
3. Provider Payment Reassignments
Section 1902(a)(32) of the Act
provides that State plans can allow
payments to be made only to certain
individuals or entities. Specifically,
payment may only be made to an
individual practitioner who provided
the service. The statute provides several
specific exceptions to the general
principle of direct payment to the
individual practitioner.
Over the years, some States have
requested that we consider adopting
additional exceptions to the direct
payment principle to permit
withholding from the payment due to
the individual practitioner for amounts
paid by the State directly to third parties
for health and welfare benefits, training
costs and other benefits customary for
employees. These amounts would not
be retained by the State, but would be
remitted to third parties on behalf of the
practitioner for the stated purpose.
While the statute does not expressly
provide for additional exceptions to the
direct payment principle, we believe the
circumstances at issue were not
contemplated under the statute.
Therefore, we are proposing that the
direct payment principle should not
apply because we think its application
would contravene the fundamental
purpose of this provision. The apparent
purpose of the direct payment principle
was to prohibit factoring arrangements,
and not to preclude a Medicaid program
that is functioning as the practitioner’s
primary source of revenue from
fulfilling the basic responsibilities that
are associated with that role. Therefore,
we are proposing an additional
exception to describe payments that we
do not see as within the intended scope
of the statutory direct payment
requirement, that would allow the State
to claim as a provider payment amounts
that are not directly paid to the
provider, but are withheld and remitted
to a third party on behalf of the provider
4. Section 2401 of the Affordable Care
Act: Community First Choice State Plan
Option: Home and Community-Based
Setting Requirements
Section 1915(k)(1)(A)(ii) of the Act
provides that home and communitybased attendant services and supports
must be provided in a home and
community-based setting. The statute
specifies that home and communitybased settings do not include a nursing
facility, institution for mental diseases,
or an intermediate care facility for the
mentally retarded.2 We propose to adopt
this statutory language in our
regulations. Additionally, to provide
greater clarity, we are proposing
language to establish that home and
community-based settings must exhibit
specific qualities to be eligible sites for
delivery of home and community-based
services.
After consideration of comments
received in response to the Community
First Choice (CFC) proposed rule
published on February 25, 2011, we
decided to revise the setting provision
and publish our proposed definition as
a new proposed rule to allow for
additional public comment before
finalizing. Since CFC and section
1915(i) both pertain to home and
community-based services, we have
aligned this CFC proposed language
with the section 1915(i) proposed home
and community-based setting
requirements also included in this rule.
We find the public comment process to
be valuable in our attempt to develop
the best policy on this issue for
Medicaid beneficiaries. Therefore, we
plan to fully consider all comments
received, and align decision making and
language pertaining to home and
community-based setting requirements
across CFC, section 1915(i) State plan
HCBS, as well as section 1915(c) HCBS
waivers.
C. Summary of Costs and Benefits
Total costs
Total benefits
1915(i) State Plan Home Community-Based Services.
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Provision description
We estimate that, adjusted for a phase-in period
during which States gradually elect to offer the
State plan HCBS benefit, in fiscal year (FY) 2012
the estimated Federal cost would be $80 million,
and the estimated State cost would be $60 million.
We anticipate that States will make varying use of
the State plan HCBS benefit provisions to provide needed long-term care services for Medicaid
beneficiaries. These services will be provided in
the home or alternative living arrangements in
the community, which is of benefit to the beneficiary, and is less costly than institutional care.
2 Although we recognize that the language used
here is outdated, and that ‘‘intellectual disability’’
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is the appropriate way to discuss this type of
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disability, the Social Security Act still refers to
these types of facilities in this manner.
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26365
Provision description
Total costs
Total benefits
Section 2601 of the Affordable Care
Act: 5-Year Period for Demonstration Projects (Waivers).
No impact on Federal or State Medicaid funding.
This rule is voluntary on the part of States.
Provider Payment Reassignments ...
We do not anticipate any impact on Federal Medicaid funding. This rule is voluntary on the part of
States.
Section 2401 of the Affordable Care
Act: Community First Choice State
Plan Option: Home and Community-Based Setting Requirements.
We do not believe there is an impact on Federal or
State Medicaid funding as the purpose of the rule
is merely to define home and community-based
settings in which CFC services may be provided.
As this provision elongates the time period under
which States may operate certain waiver programs without renewal, it will help States to minimize administrative and renewal requirements in
order to better focus on program implementation
and quality oversight.
This rule proposes additional operational flexibilities
for States to ensure a strong provider workforce.
There is also no impact on individual practitioners, even though the proposed rule would
allow States to deduct or withhold portions of
such payments under the specific circumstances
described in the proposed rule. State budgets will
not likely be significantly affected because the
operational flexibilities in the proposed rule would
only facilitate the transfer of funds between participating entities, rather than the addition or subtraction of new funds.
This rule will provide States with necessary guidance to support compliance with the requirement
that CFC services are provided in a home or
community based-setting. This rule also provides
beneficiary protections to support an individual’s
choice to receive home and community-based
services in a manner that allows for integration
with the greater community.
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II. Background
A. Expanded Access to Home and
Community-Based Services for the
Elderly and Disabled Under Section
1915(i) of the Social Security Act:
History of Section 1915(i) of the Act
Section 6086 of the Deficit Reduction
Act of 2005 (Pub. L. 109–171, enacted
February 8, 2006) (DRA) entitled
‘‘Expanded Access to Home and
Community-Based Services for the
Elderly and Disabled,’’ added section
1915(i) to the Social Security Act (the
Act) to allow States, at their option, to
provide home and community-based
services (HCBS) under their State
Medicaid plans. This option allows
States to receive Federal financial
participation (FFP) for services that
were previously only eligible for FFP
under waivers or demonstration
projects, such as those authorized under
sections 1915(c) and 1115 of the Act.
Section 1915(i) of the Act was later
amended by sections 2402(b) through (g)
of the Patient Protection and Affordable
Care Act of 2010 (Pub. L. 111–148,
enacted March 23, 2010) (Affordable
Care Act) to provide additional options
for States to design and implement
HCBS under the Medicaid State Plan.
In the April 4, 2008 Federal Register
(73 FR 18676), we published a proposed
rule to amend Medicaid regulations to
implement HCBS under section 1915(i)
of the Act. This rule was never
finalized, and with the passage of the
Affordable Care Act some of the
proposed regulations would no longer
be in compliance with the statute, as
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several new provisions were added to
the statute. Therefore, we concluded
that a new proposed rule and a new
period of public comment were
necessary. This proposed rule retains a
large portion of the policies contained
within the April 4, 2008 proposed rule.
However, we have updated some of our
proposals to reflect the statutory
changes that were made by the
Affordable Care Act.
B. Overview of the State Plan Home and
Community-Based Services (HCBS)
Benefit To Provide HCBS for the Elderly
and Individuals With Disabilities
The following overview describes the
provisions of section 1915(i) of the Act
as established by the DRA and amended
by the Affordable Care Act.
In the following discussion and the
proposed regulation, we refer to
particular home and community-based
service(s) offered under section 1915(i)
of the Act as ‘‘State plan HCBS’’ or
simply ‘‘HCBS’’.3 We refer to the ‘‘State
plan HCBS benefit’’ when describing the
collective requirements of section
1915(i) of the Act that apply to States
electing to provide one, or several, of
the authorized HCBS. We choose to use
the term ‘‘benefit’’ rather than
‘‘program’’ to describe section 1915(i) of
the Act to avoid possible confusion with
section 1915(c) HCBS waiver programs.
The State plan HCBS benefit shares
3 Note that the abbreviation HCBS does not
distinguish between singular and plural. Where this
could be confusing, we spell out home and
community-based service(s).
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many features with section 1915(c)
waiver programs, but it is a State plan
benefit, although one with very unique
features not common to traditional State
plan services.
Under section 1915(i) of the Act,
States can provide HCBS to individuals
who require less than institutional level
of care (LOC) and who would, therefore,
not be eligible for HCBS under section
1915(c) waivers, in addition to serving
individuals who have needs that would
meet entry requirements for an
institution. As it is a State plan benefit,
section 1915(i) of the Act also does not
require cost neutrality compared to
institutional services. Section 1915(i) of
the Act differs from section 1915(c)
waivers in other ways. As with other
State plan services, the benefits must be
provided Statewide, and States must not
limit the number of eligible people
served.
1. Services
Section 1915(i)(1) of the Act grants
States the option to provide, under the
State plan, the services and supports
listed in section 1915(c)(4)(B) of the Act
governing HCBS waivers. The services
specifically listed in section
1915(c)(4)(B) of the Act are as follows:
• Case management.
• Homemaker/home health aide.
• Personal care.
• Adult day health.
• Habilitation.
• Respite care.
• Other services requested by the
State as the Secretary may approve.
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In addition, the following services
may be provided for individuals with
chronic mental illness:
• Day treatment.
• Other partial hospitalization
services.
• Psychosocial rehabilitation
services.
• Clinic services (whether or not
furnished in a facility).
The HCBS may not include payment
for room and board (see additional
discussion in section II.E.3. of this
proposed rule).
Section 1915(c)(4)(B) of the Act also
permits States to request, and the
Secretary to approve, coverage of other
services not specifically designated in
the list of specific services in the
subparagraph. This authority was not
included under section 1915(i) when it
was created in the DRA. However,
section 2402(c) of the Affordable Care
Act amended section 1915(i)(1) of the
Act to permit States to request, and the
Secretary to approve, coverage for such
other services in a 1915(i) benefit.
We interpret the statute as authorizing
States to cover in their 1915(i) benefit
both the services specifically identified
in section 1915(c)(4)(B) of the Act, and
any other services States request to
include and which the Secretary
approves. Therefore, we would expect
States to define State plan HCBS with
sufficient specificity so that we can
determine whether the nature and scope
of the service clearly relates to those
listed in section 1915(c)(4)(B) of the Act.
These services are described in
§ 440.180 of this proposed rule.
However, we would not require the
same standard for ‘‘other services’’
under section 1915(i) State plan HCBS
that we would apply under section
1915(c) of the Act. Since section 1915(i)
of the Act does not require an
individual to meet the criteria for
institutional LOC, there is no authority
to apply the standard that the ‘‘other
services’’ defined and provided through
State plan HCBS be necessary to prevent
institutionalization. We note that for all
services, including those in the ‘‘other
services’’ category, States must include
a specific and complete description of
the scope of the service, and not include
open-ended statements.
We propose to review and approve
these ‘‘other services’’ not specifically
listed in section 1915(c)(4)(A) of the Act
based upon the applicability to and
consistency with the support needs as
indicated in the needs-based criteria
that a State defines for the HCBS
benefit, and with assurance that the
service will not duplicate other services
available to individuals through the
State’s Medicaid State plan.
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Additionally, these services must be
offered in a manner that would comply
with section 1902(a)(23) of the Act
regarding free choice of providers, and
that permits individuals to receive
services in the most integrated setting
possible and consistent with the best
interests of the beneficiaries and the
requirements of the Americans with
Disabilities Act (ADA). Section 1915(i)
does not incorporate waiver authority or
other exceptions from these legal
requirements. Therefore, the services
offered cannot have the impact of
limiting the pool of qualified providers
from which individuals would receive
services, or have the impact of
requiring/only allowing individuals to
receive services from the same entity
from which they purchase or who
provide their housing. For example, we
would not allow States to establish
residential HCBS in provider-owned
and/or operated settings only, when
they do not have comparable HCBS
available to individuals residing in their
own homes.
2. Eligibility
Eligibility for this option is based
upon several different factors that are
either specified by the statute or that a
State may define. These include
financial eligibility, the establishment of
needs-based criteria, and the State
option to target the benefit and to offer
benefits differing in type, amount,
duration or scope to specific
populations. Due to the complex
interaction between these provisions,
the following section is divided into
subsections that address eligibility for
the benefits. These include:
• Eligibility Overview.
• Income Eligibility.
• Needs-Based Criteria Overview.
• Option to Disregard Comparability.
• Establishing Needs-Based Criteria.
a. Section 1915(i) of the Act: Eligibility
Overview
Section 1915(i) of the Act explicitly
provides that State plan HCBS may be
provided without determining that, but
for the provision of these services,
individuals would require the LOC
provided in a hospital, a nursing facility
(NF), or an intermediate care facility for
the mentally retarded 4 (ICF/MR) as is
required in section 1915(c) HCBS
waivers. While HCBS services provided
through section 1915(c) waivers must be
‘‘cost-neutral’’ as compared to
institutional services, no cost neutrality
4 Although we recognize that the language used
here is outdated, and that ‘‘intellectual disability’’
is the appropriate way to discuss this type of
disability, the Social Security Act still refers to
these types of facilities in this manner.
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requirement applies to the section
1915(i) State plan HCBS benefit. States
are not required to produce comparative
cost estimates of institutional care and
the State plan HCBS benefit. This
significant distinction allows States to
offer HCBS to individuals whose needs
are substantial, but not severe enough to
qualify them for institutional or waiver
services, and to individuals for whom
there is not an offset for cost savings in
NFs, ICFs/MR, or hospitals.
One particular result of this
distinction is that, through the section
1915(i) benefit, States have the ability to
provide a full array of HCBS to adults
with mental health and substance use
disorders. The benefit also creates an
opportunity to provide HCBS to other
individuals with significant needs who
do not qualify for an institutional LOC,
such as some individuals with Autism
Spectrum Disorder, diabetes, acquired
immune deficiency syndrome, or
Alzheimer’s disease. In many cases,
without the provision of HCBS, these
conditions may deteriorate to the point
where the individuals become eligible
for more costly facility-based care.
State plan HCBS are intended to
enable individuals to receive needed
services in their own homes, or in
alternative living arrangements in what
is collectively termed the ‘‘community’’
in this context. (See additional
discussion in section II.E.2. of this
proposed rule regarding institutions not
considered to be in the community, and
in which State plan HCBS will not be
available.)
b. Income Eligibility
Section 1915(i)(1) of the Act requires
that in order to receive State plan HCBS,
individuals must be eligible for
Medicaid under an eligibility group
covered under the State’s Medicaid
plan. In determining whether either of
the relevant income requirements
(discussed) is met, the regular rules for
determining income eligibility for the
individual’s eligibility group apply,
including any less restrictive income
rules used by the State for that group
under section 1902(r)(2) of the Act.
Section 1915(i)(3) of the Act permits
States to not apply the requirements of
section 1902(a)(10)(C)(i)(III) of the Act
relating to income and resource rules in
the community for the medically needy.
Under this authority States are
permitted to use institutional eligibility
rules in determining eligibility for the
medically needy. The nonapplication
requirements are described in section
II.B.14 of the preamble. This eligibility
criterion was not changed by the
Affordable Care Act.
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Section 2402(b) of the Affordable Care
Act added a new option at section
1915(i)(6) of the Act, to allow States to
provide section 1915(i) services to
certain individuals who meet the needsbased criteria, who would be eligible for
HCBS under section 1915(c), (d) or (e)
waivers or a section 1115 waiver
approved for the State, and who have
income up to 300 percent of the
Supplemental Security Income Federal
Benefit Rate (SSI/FBR).
Section 2402(d) of the Affordable Care
Act also amended section
1902(a)(10)(A)(ii) of the Act by adding a
new optional categorically needy
eligibility group specified at section
1902(a)(10)(A)(ii)(XXII) of the Act to
provide full Medicaid benefits to certain
individuals who will be receiving
section 1915(i) services. This eligibility
group has two parts, and States can
cover individuals under either or both
parts of the group. Under this group,
States can elect to cover individuals
who are not otherwise eligible for
Medicaid who meet the needs-based
criteria of the section 1915(i) benefit,
have income up to 150 percent of the
Federal poverty line (FPL) with no
resource test and who will receive
section 1915(i) services, or individuals
with income up to 300 percent of the
SSI/FBR, who would be eligible under
an existing section 1915(c), (d) or (e) 5
waiver or section 1115 waiver approved
for the State and who will receive
section 1915(i) services. These
individuals do not have to be receiving
services under an existing section
1915(c), (d) or (e) waiver or section 1115
waiver; the individual just has to be
determined eligible for the waiver.
c. Needs-Based Criteria Overview
In contrast to the institutional LOC
requirement for eligibility in HCBS
waivers, section 1915(i)(1)(A) of the Act
requires States to impose needs-based
criteria for eligibility for the State plan
HCBS benefit. Institutional level of care
criteria must be more stringent than the
needs-based criteria for the State plan
HCBS benefit. Additionally, the State
may establish needs-based criteria for
each specific State plan home and
community-based service that an
individual would receive.
Thus, under section 1915(i) of the
Act, States determine eligibility for State
plan HCBS based on the following:
• Individuals eligible for medical
assistance under the State plan whose
income is below 150 percent of FPL, as
5 1915(d) and (e) waivers are State options to
provide HCBS to the elderly and to individuals
with disabilities, respectively. Currently, no State
elects to provide services under either of these
authorities.
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determined by the State under the
methodology applicable to the group,
including any less restrictive income
rules in place through section 1902(r)(2)
of the Act.
• At the State option, individuals
eligible under the new optional
categorical needy group
1902(a)(10)(A)(ii)(XXII) of the Act. This
includes:
++ Individuals with income below
300 percent of the SSI/FBR who are
eligible for HCBS through a waiver
approved for the State under sections
1115, 1915(c), 1915(d), or 1915(e) of the
Act and will receive section 1915(i)
services.
++ Individuals who are not otherwise
eligible for medical assistance who have
income below 150 percent and who will
receive section 1915(i) services. There
will be no resource test for this group.
• The individual resides in the home
or community.
• The individual meets the needsbased criteria established by the State.
• The individual meets any targeting
criteria in accordance with CMS
requirements that the State elects to
establish.
For more information about the
optional eligibility category for
individuals who receive services
through the State plan HCBS benefit,
please see section II.B.18. of this
proposed rule.
The needs-based criteria for coverage
of individual services provided within a
State’s section 1915(i) benefit are subject
to the same requirements as the needsbased eligibility criteria for the benefit,
and may not limit or target any service
based on age, nature or type of
disability, disease, condition, or
residential setting, but could include
risk factors or take into account service
history. However, section 1915(i)(7) of
the Act provides States with the option
to target eligibility for the benefit to
specific populations.
d. Option To Disregard Comparability
Effective October 1, 2010, section
2402(f) of the Affordable Care Act,
amended section 1915(i)(3) of the Act to
permit States to elect not to comply
with the requirement of section
1902(a)(10)(B) of the Act relating to
comparability of services. A waiver of
comparability is a key feature of section
1915(c) HCBS waivers, permitting a
State to target the HCBS benefit to
certain populations by defining which
groups will be eligible for waiver
services, and by having separate waivers
for different groups. With this change,
States may exercise the authority to
target the section 1915(i) benefit
similarly, but are not required to do so.
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A State must establish needs-based
criteria for eligibility for and receipt of
State plan HCBS regardless of whether
it elects the option to not comply with
the comparability requirement. For
additional information regarding the
option for targeting in the benefit, please
see the discussion at (section II.B.19 of
the proposed rule).
e. Establishing Needs-Based Criteria
The heading of section 1915(i) of the
Act describes the State plan HCBS
benefit as ‘‘for Elderly and Disabled
Individuals.’’ However, section 1915(i)
of the Act does not include definitions
of the terms ‘‘elderly’’ or ‘‘disabled’’ in
setting forth eligibility criteria, and
instead requires eligibility to be based
on need and on eligibility for medical
assistance under a State plan group.
Thus, we believe that the use of these
terms in the statute is descriptive.
Individuals who are eligible for medical
assistance under a group covered in the
State’s plan and who meet the needsbased eligibility criteria for State plan
HCBS will be likely to have needs
stemming either from a disability or
from being elderly. We note that section
1902(b)(1) of the Act prohibits the
Secretary from approving any plan for
medical assistance that imposes an age
requirement of more than 65 years as a
condition of eligibility.
The statute does not define ‘‘needsbased.’’ We are proposing to define the
nature of needs-based criteria to
distinguish them from targeting criteria,
which are permitted under the statute as
a State option and are distinct from the
needs-based criteria. We propose to
provide States with the flexibility to
define the specific needs-based criteria
they will establish.
We believe that the statute
distinguishes needs-based criteria from
other possible descriptors of an
individual’s medical condition or
diagnosis. We interpret needs-based
criteria as describing the individual’s
particular need for support, regardless
of the conditions and diagnoses that
may cause the need. However, as
discussed in section II.B.19. of this
proposed rule, States may also disregard
comparability requirements contained
in section 1902(a)(10)(B) of the Act, and
thus, target the section 1915(i) benefit
(or multiple benefits) to individuals
with specific diagnoses and conditions.
We interpret the statute to mean that,
when a State elects to disregard
comparability in order to target the
benefit to individuals with specific
diagnoses, those individuals must meet
both the targeting criteria, as well as the
State’s needs-based criteria.
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Section 1915(i)(1)(B) of the Act
additionally requires that the needsbased criteria for determining whether
an individual requires the LOC
provided in a hospital, NF, or ICF/MR
or under a waiver of the State plan be
more stringent than the needs-based
eligibility criteria for the State plan
HCBS benefit. Institutional/waiver LOC
criteria in some States do not include
needs-based criteria. Since the two must
be comparable, we interpret this to
mean that States without a needs-based
component to their institutional LOC
evaluation must establish needs-based
criteria for those services, as well as for
the State plan HCBS benefit. We also
believe that States electing to implement
a section 1915(i) benefit must include a
needs-based evaluation component of
the institutional/waiver LOC
determination process so that stringency
of those criteria can be compared to
stringency of eligibility criteria for the
State plan HCBS benefit.
‘‘Stringency’’ is not defined in the
statute. The requirement is simply that
there be a differential between the
threshold of need for the State plan
HCBS benefit as compared to the
threshold of need for institutional
services. The required difference in
criteria will be relative, specific to each
State’s unique institutional levels of
care, and can be constructed in several
ways. Because we have received many
questions on the stringency
requirements of the statute we will
illustrate some of the possible options.
We want to be clear, however, that the
requirement of section 1915(i) of the Act
is simply that the needs-based criteria
for institutions and for the State plan
HCBS benefit be set so that the latter are
lower at the time the benefit is
implemented. There is no requirement
that institutional criteria be higher,
lower, or unchanged from their level
prior to implementing the State plan
HCBS benefit. The only test is that the
result of all the needs-based criteria
must be that some individuals will be
served under the State plan HCBS
benefit who are not eligible to be served
by Medicaid institutional services. If
institutional LOC criteria are changed in
implementing the benefit, States may
provide protections for individuals who
lose eligibility due to the application of
those new criteria (see section II.B.16. of
this proposed rule).
There are issues for States to consider
other than section 1915(i) of the Act that
will influence decisions on levels of
care and needs-based criteria, that are
far beyond the scope of this document,
for example, statutory requirements for
maintenance of effort (MOE) in effect at
the time of this proposed rule,
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requirements of the Americans with
Disabilities Act and the Olmstead
decision, and funding constraints 6. In
this proposed rule, we focus on the
choices a State may make in setting up
a State plan HCBS benefit in ways that
are consistent with requirements of
section 1915(i) of the Act. As an
illustration, this proposed regulation
would permit a State to define the
needs-based criteria for a new HCBS
benefit at a lower level than the State’s
existing institutional levels of care, and
leave the institutional criteria
unchanged (if they already include
needs-based criteria). This would satisfy
the requirement that the institutional
criteria be more stringent than the State
plan HCBS benefit, meet a goal to
service individuals who have not
previously had access to HCBS because
they have not yet reached the level of
need for admission to an institution,
without making any change to existing
services. This proposed regulation
would also permit States to take other
approaches. A State could raise one or
more institutional levels of care, and
provide HCBS under the State plan
benefit for some or all of the individuals
who would have not yet reached the
level of need for admission to an
institution. The State could choose (or
not) to also include in the benefit
individuals below the former
institutional level of care. This scenario
would also satisfy the stringency
requirement, but would be more
complex and would require analysis of
some of the other relevant issues
mentioned above.
We note that section 1915(i) of the Act
does not modify the statutory coverage
provisions governing institutional
benefits. States must be cautious not to
establish more stringent needs-based
criteria for hospitals, NFs or ICFs/MR
that would reduce access to services
mandated elsewhere in title XIX, since
those other provisions of the statute
were not amended. For example, the NF
benefit is defined in section 1919(a)(1)
of the Act as an institution that is
primarily engaged in providing to
residents skilled nursing care,
6 Under section 2001(b) of the Affordable Care
Act, States are not permitted to establish eligibility
standards, methodologies, or procedures that are
more restrictive than those in place on the date of
the Affordable Care Act’s enactment (March 23,
2010). For adults, this requirement lasts until the
Secretary determines that a health insurance
exchange is fully operational in the State; for
children under the age of 19, the requirement lasts
until September 30, 2019.
Because the application of LOC requirements for
institutions and HCBS waivers may have an impact
on Medicaid eligibility for some individuals, we
encourage States interested in using the State plan
HCBS to contact CMS for technical assistance in
meeting these statutory requirements.
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rehabilitation services, and ‘‘[o]n a
regular basis, health-related care and
services to individuals who because of
their mental or physical condition
require care and services (above the
level of room and board) which can be
made available to them only through
institutional facilities.’’ To the extent an
individual has a medical need for such
health-related care and services which
are only available in an institutional
setting because that needed home or
community-based health-related care
and services are not available, the NF
institutional benefit must remain
available to all Medicaid eligible
individuals described in section
1919(a)(1)(C) of the Act.
We interpret the reference to hospitals
in section 1915(i)(1)(B) of the Act to
mean facilities certified by Medicaid as
hospitals that are providing long-term
care services. General acute care
Medicaid hospital services are not
subject to LOC determinations by the
State.
We interpret the reference in section
1915(i)(1)(B) of the Act ‘‘under any
waiver of such plan’’ to apply to section
1915(c), 1915(d) and 1915(e) waivers, as
well as those section 1115 waivers that
include HCBS, as specified in section
1915(i)(6)(a) of the Act. Sections
1915(c), (d) and (e) 7 of the Act will have
more stringent minimum criteria than
the State plan HCBS benefit, as the
waivers are required to use LOC
assessments equivalent to one or more
of the institutional levels of care. If a
State has an approved section 1115
demonstration with multiple levels of
care for institutional and/or HCBS, we
interpret this requirement to apply to
the least stringent institutional LOC
criteria within that demonstration that
would likely be the comparison for
purposes of section 1915(i) of the Act.
In summary, the needs-based
eligibility criteria for the State plan
HCBS benefit must have the effect of
allowing some individuals who do not
meet the needs-based criteria for
institutionalized care to access HCBS
through the section 1915(i) benefit, but
may also allow access to individuals
who meet the institutional needs-based
eligibility criteria. States may also enroll
individuals in both a section 1915(i)
benefit, and a section 1915(c) waiver, as
discussed earlier in this rule.
3. Number Served
Section 1915(i)(1)(C) of the Act, as
amended by section 2402(e) of the
7 Although the statute references waivers under
Section 1915(d) and (e), no State currently operates
a waiver under either authority. In the event that
a State elects to include a (d) or (e) waiver, these
requirements would apply.
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Affordable Care Act, does not permit
States to limit the number of eligible
individuals receiving services and to
establish waiting lists. Instead, the
benefit requires a State to provide to the
Secretary a projection of the number of
individuals expected to receive services.
If this projection is exceeded, section
1915(i)(1)(D)(ii) of the Act permits the
State to constrict its needs-based
eligibility thresholds for State plan
HCBS (see the discussion on
Adjustment Authority in I.B.5. of this
proposed rule).
Section 1915(i)(1)(C) of the Act
requires that the State submit
projections, in the form and manner,
and upon the frequency as the Secretary
specifies, of the number of individuals
to be provided HCBS. We propose to
follow the practice used in HCBS
waivers to calculate the number served
as unduplicated persons receiving
services during a 12-month period. We
further propose to specify that, during
the application process, States would
project the total number of individuals
to be served by the benefit during the
initial year. We further propose to
specify that States with an approved
State plan HCBS benefit annually
submit both the projected number of
individuals to be served and the actual
number of individuals served in the
previous year. We refer to individuals
served under the benefit and included
in the annual number served as having
been enrolled in the benefit. The statute
refers to ‘‘enrollment’’ in section
1915(i)(1)(D)(ii) of the Act concerning
‘‘Adjustment Authority.’’ Because there
are a number of steps involved in an
individual initiating service under the
State plan HCBS benefit, ‘‘enrollment’’
is a useful term to indicate individuals
for whom those steps have been
completed, services have been
authorized or provided, and who will be
accounted for in the annual number
served under the benefit. If the State
exceeds its enrollment estimate, the
State would report the number of
individuals actually served in the
required annual report to the Secretary,
and revise the estimate for succeeding
years.
4. Independent Evaluation
Section 1915(i)(1)(D) of the Act sets
forth a requirement for an individual
evaluation of need for each person
seeking coverage of the State plan HCBS
benefit. The statute here uses the term
‘‘assessment,’’ while sections
1915(i)(1)(E) and (H) of the Act refer to
the initial eligibility determination as
the ‘‘independent evaluation.’’ We
would use the latter term for
consistency. ‘‘Independent evaluation,’’
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as understood in light of section
1915(i)(1)(H) of the Act, means free from
conflict of interest on the part of the
evaluator. The independent evaluation
is separate from, but related to, the
independent assessment (as discussed
below).
The independent evaluation applies
the needs-based HCBS eligibility criteria
(established by the State according to
section 1915(i)(1)(A) of the Act), to an
applicant for the State plan HCBS
benefit. Section 1915(i)(1)(D) of the Act
establishes that determining whether an
individual meets the needs-based
eligibility criteria specified in sections
1915(i)(1)(A) and (B) of the Act requires
an individualized and independent
evaluation of each person’s support
needs and capabilities. We interpret
‘‘needs and capabilities’’ to mean a
balanced approach that considers both
needs and strengths. However, the
words ‘‘capability’’ and ‘‘ability’’ are
historically connected with a deficitoriented approach to assessment, which
is the opposite of the statute’s personcentered approach. Therefore, we would
refer to needs and strengths in this
discussion and in the regulation.
Section 1915(i)(1)(D) of the Act
indicates that the independent
evaluation ‘‘may take into account’’ the
inability of the individual to perform
two or more activities of daily living
(ADLs), (which the statute defines by
reference to section 7702B(c)(2)(B) of
the Internal Revenue Code of 1986), or
the need for significant assistance to
perform these activities. The State may
also assess other risk factors it
determines to be appropriate in
determining eligibility for, and receipt
of, HCBS. The statute does not limit the
factors a State may take into account in
the evaluation. For example, difficulty
with instrumental activities of daily
living (IADLs) or the need for cueing in
order to perform a task could be
considered. A State could choose to use
a person-centered functional assessment
tool or strategy to fulfill this
requirement.
5. Adjustment Authority
Section 1915(i)(1)(D)(ii) of the Act
permits the State to adjust the needsbased criteria described in section
1915(i)(1)(B) of the Act in the event that
enrollment exceeds the annual
maximum number of individuals that
the State has projected it would serve
within parameters as noted above. The
purpose of an adjustment would be to
revise the State’s needs-based criteria to
reduce the number of individuals who
would be eligible for the HCBS benefit.
To preserve the requirement of section
1915(i)(1)(B) of the Act that more
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stringent needs-based criteria be in
place for institutionalized care, the
adjusted eligibility criteria must still be
less stringent than those applicable to
institutional levels of care in the State
plan institutional benefit, and thus, in
any HCBS waivers that require
participants to meet an institutional
LOC. If the State chooses to make this
adjustment, it must provide at least 60
days written notice to the Secretary and
to the public, stating the revisions it
proposes.
While the adjustment authority is
granted to States without having to
obtain prior approval from the
Secretary, we believe that the statute
requires the State to amend the State
plan to reflect the adjusted criteria. We
believe that the State’s adjustment
authority does not prevent the Secretary
from disapproving a State plan
amendment (SPA) that fails to comply
with the statute and regulations. This
provision of the law must be interpreted
in light of existing Medicaid
requirements not waived by section
1915(i) of the Act. We have, therefore,
incorporated within the proposed
regulation those relevant requirements
in addition to the statutory provisions
within section 1915(i)(1)(D)(ii) of the
Act. Section 441.559(c) provides the
greatest degree of authority for
adjustment possible within the
constraints of other requirements. The
Secretary will evaluate the State’s
adjusted criteria for compliance with
the provisions of this subparagraph and
all requirements of subpart K. A State
may implement the adjusted criteria as
early as 60 days after notifying all
required parties. Section 430.16
provides the Secretary 90 days to
approve or disapprove a State plan
amendment, or request additional
information. If the State implements the
modified criteria prior to the Secretary’s
final determination with respect to the
State plan amendment, the State would
be at risk for any actions it takes that are
later disapproved.
After needs-based criteria are adjusted
under this authority, the statute requires
that individuals served under the
previous State plan HCBS needs-based
criteria would continue to receive
HCBS. As amended by section 2402(e)
of the Affordable Care Act, section
1915(i)(1)(D)(ii)(II) of the Act provides
that an individual who is receiving
HCBS before the effective date for
modified needs-based criteria, (based on
the most recent version of the criteria in
effect before the modification), must be
deemed by the State to continue to be
eligible for State plan HCBS until the
individual no longer meets the needsbased criteria, and targeting criteria if
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applicable, under which they were
originally provided the benefit. Any
changes to the institutional LOC criteria
under this section are subject to the
same requirements as described in
1915(i)(5) (see section II.B.16. of this
proposed rule).
However, we would remind States of
the maintenance of efforts requirements
discussed in section II.B.2. of this
proposed rule.
We note that the required processes
for individual notification and appeals,
contained within part 431, subpart E,
remain in effect whenever a State
modifies its needs-based criteria.
Furthermore, section 1915(i)(5) of the
Act provides protections for individuals
who are receiving services in waivers or
institutional settings prior to the
modification of the LOC requirements,
as discussed below.
It is important to note that the
adjustment authority is a State option;
there is nothing in the law that requires
a State to constrict its needs-based
criteria if enrollment exceeds
projections.
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6. Independent Assessment
Section 1915(i)(1)(E) of the Act
describes the relationship of several
required functions. Section
1915(i)(1)(E)(i) of the Act refers to the
independent evaluation of eligibility in
section 1915(i)(1)(A) and (B) of the Act,
emphasizing the independence
requirement. Section 1915(i)(1)(E)(ii) of
the Act introduces the requirement of an
independent assessment following the
independent evaluation. Thus, there are
two steps to the process: the eligibility
determination, which requires the
application of the needs-based criteria
and any additional targeting criteria the
State elects to require; and the
assessment for individuals who were
determined to be eligible under the first
step, to determine specific needed
services and supports. The assessment
also applies the needs-based criteria for
each service (if the State has adopted
such criteria). Like the eligibility
evaluation, the independent assessment
is based on the individual’s needs and
strengths. The Act requires that both
physical and mental needs and
strengths are assessed. These
requirements describe a person-centered
assessment including behavioral health,
which will take into account the
individual’s total support needs as well
as the need for the HCBS to be offered.
Section 1915(i)(1)(E)(ii) of the Act
requires that States use the assessment
to: Determine the necessary level of
services and supports to be provided;
prevent the provision of unnecessary or
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inappropriate care; and establish a
written individualized service plan.
To achieve the three purposes of the
assessment listed above, the assessor
must be independent; that is, free from
conflict of interest with regard to
providers, to the individual and related
parties, and to budgetary concerns.
Therefore, we are proposing specific
requirements for independence of the
assessor in accordance with section
1915(i)(1)(H)(ii) of the Act, and we
would apply these also to the evaluator
and the person involved with
developing the person-centered service
plan, where the effects of conflict of
interest would be equally deleterious.
These considerations of independence
inform the discussion below under
section 1915(i)(1)(H)(ii) of the Act
regarding conflict of interest standards.
Section 1915(i)(1)(F) of the Act
provides detailed requirements for the
independent assessment:
• A face-to-face evaluation of the
individual by an assessor trained in the
assessment and evaluation of persons
whose physical or behavioral health
conditions trigger a potential need for
HCBS. To fulfill this statutory
requirement, we would propose that the
State must develop standards and
determine the qualifications necessary
for agencies and individuals who will
perform independent assessments and
be involved with developing the plans
of care. Additionally, we recognize that
many States are developing
infrastructure and policies to support
the use of telemedicine and other ways
to provide distance-care to individuals
in order to increase access to services in
rural areas or other locations with a
shortage of providers. To support these
activities, we propose that the ‘‘face-toface’’ assessment can include any
session(s) performed through
telemedicine or other information
technology medium if the following
conditions apply:
++ The health care professional(s)
performing the assessment meet the
provider qualifications defined by the
State, including any additional
qualifications or training requirements
for the operation of required
information technology;
++ The individual receives
appropriate support during the
assessment, including the use of any
necessary on-site support-staff; and
++ The individual is provided the
opportunity to request an in-person
assessment in lieu of one performed via
telemedicine.
• An objective evaluation of the
individual’s inability to perform two or
more ADLs, or the need for significant
assistance to perform the activities is
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required. We do not interpret
‘‘objective’’ to refer to the independence
required of the assessor as discussed
above, but to refer to an additional
requirement for reliance on some level
of valid measurement appropriate to the
ADLs in order to ensure that the
assessments were applied uniformly
across individuals in the section 1915(i)
benefit. For example, an occupational
therapy (OT) or physical therapy (PT)
evaluation or a trauma screening could
be required, the results of which would
be utilized by the assessor. We note that
the trained assessor is not necessarily
responsible for performing the objective
evaluation, but should make sure that
the objective evaluation is performed by
qualified individuals. We do not
propose methods to achieve this
requirement, as the nature of the HCBS
to be provided and the needs-based
criteria for the State plan HCBS benefit
will determine the appropriate means of
evaluating ADLs.
Section 1915(i)(1)(F) of the Act
defines ADLs in terms of section
7702B(c)(2)(B) of the Internal Revenue
Code of 1986, which includes the
following: bathing, dressing, toileting,
transferring, eating, and continence.
This section of the Internal Revenue
Code does not define the terms
‘‘inability’’ or ‘‘significant assistance.’’
While States have some flexibility to
define these factors, we interpret
‘‘inability’’ to mean need for total
support to perform an ADL, and
‘‘significant assistance’’ to mean
assistance from another individual or
from assistive technology necessary for
the successful performance of the task.
An objective evaluation of inability to
perform two or more ADLs is a required
element of the assessment but only a
suggested element of the eligibility
evaluation. We conclude that partial or
complete inability to perform two or
more ADLs is not a statutory
prerequisite to receive State plan HCBS,
but is a required element of the
assessment in order to inform the
development of the service plan
required by section 1915(i)(1)(G) of the
Act. Because States may define very
diverse needs-based criteria and HCBS
service definitions, we do not believe it
is possible to be more specific in
regulation about the criteria for
assessment. However, we would note
that a functional assessment tool could
be used to measure objectively an
individual’s needs to establish
eligibility as well as to develop an
appropriate service plan.
We note that we are currently engaged
in an initiative to develop universal core
elements to be included in an
assessment, through work being done
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under the Balancing Incentives Payment
Program, created under section 10202 of
the Affordable Care Act. For consistency
across Medicaid programs, we therefore,
intend to move toward States including
any finalized universal core elements
developed from this work in carrying
out independent assessments under
1915(i), as well as under 1915(k)
Community First Choice, and in
performing other HCBS assessments as
determined by CMS.
• Consultation with any responsible
persons appropriate to the individual
and the needed supports, including
family, spouse, guardian, or healthcare
and support providers. We do not
believe the examples listed in the
statute to be prescriptive or limiting.
The assessor must give the individual
and, if applicable, the individual’s
authorized representative, the
opportunity to identify appropriate
persons who should be consulted
during this process. The role of the
assessor is to facilitate free
communication from persons relevant to
the support needs of the individual,
while protecting privacy, and promoting
the wishes and best interests of the
individual. In necessary circumstances,
the consultations are not required to be
performed in person or at the same time
and place as the face-to-face evaluation,
so long as any ancillary contacts are
with persons the individual has
identified, are divulged and discussed
with the individual/representative, and
documented. For example, telephone
communications with parties not
available for an in-person meeting
would be permitted.
• An examination of the individual’s
relevant history, medical records, and
care and support needs.
• Knowledge of best practices and
research on effective strategies that
result in improved health and quality of
life outcomes, and knowledge of the
adult and child public service systems.
At section 1915(i)(1)(F)(v) of the Act, the
statute requires that the examination of
the individual’s history, medical
records, and care and support needs be
guided by this knowledge, and we
would propose that this evidence-based
approach should apply to the entire
process for assessment and service plan
development in a comprehensive,
coordinated manner. Since the
individualized service plan must be
based upon the independent
assessment, these requirements for the
assessment should be used to inform
and strengthen the service plan and,
subsequently, the services provided to
the individual.
• If the State offers the option of selfdirection and the individual so elects,
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the assessment should include gathering
the information required to establish
self-direction of services. We do not
propose to require States to conduct a
separate or additional assessment
process for self-direction.
As long as States comply with all
provisions related to conducting the
independent eligibility evaluation,
independent assessment, and
developing the person-centered service
plan, States have flexibility in
determining whether they will require
that the functions be performed as one
activity by a single agency or individual,
or whether they wish to separate those
functions and have different entities
involved.
7. Person-Centered Service Plan
Section 1915(i)(1)(G) of the Act
requires that the State plan HCBS
benefit be furnished under an
individualized care plan based on the
assessment. The terms ‘‘care plan’’ and
‘‘service plan’’ are used interchangeably
in practice. We will adopt the term
‘‘service plan’’ in this regulation for two
reasons. First, to be consistent with the
terminology in use with other HCBS,
including § 1915(c) HCBS waivers, we
wish to avoid the misunderstanding that
the plan is a different type of
requirement in the State plan HCBS
benefit than in other HCBS authorities.
We note the reference to ‘‘service plan’’
for self-directed HCBS at
1915(i)(1)(G)(iii)(II)(bb). Second, some
individuals and advocates have
commented that ‘‘care plan’’ has a
medical or dependent connotation,
inconsistent with a person-centered
approach. Since we see no technical
difference between the two terms, we
propose to adopt ‘‘service plan’’.
Underpinning all aspects of
successful HCBS is the importance of a
complete and inclusive person-centered
planning process that addresses health
and long-term services and support
needs in a manner that reflects
individual preferences. The personcentered approach is a process, directed
by the individual with long-term
support needs, and may also include a
representative whom the individual has
freely chosen.
To fully meet individual needs and
ensure meaningful access to their
surrounding community, systems that
deliver HCBS must be based upon a
strong foundation of person-centered
planning and approaches to service
delivery. Thus, we propose to require
such a process be used in the
development of the individualized
service plan for all individuals to be
served by section 1915(i) benefit. This
can be achieved when States
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affirmatively and creatively support
individuals in the planning process. We
would propose certain requirements for
developing the service plan, but note
that the degree to which the process
achieves the goal of person-centeredness
can only be known with appropriate
quality monitoring by the State, which
should include substantial feedback
provided by individuals who received
or are receiving services.
The person-centered service plan
must identify the strengths, preferences,
needs (clinical and support), and
desired outcomes of the individual. The
person-centered planning process is
conducted in a manner that reflects
what is important for the individual to
meet identified clinical and support
needs determined through a personcentered functional needs assessment
process and what is important to the
individual to ensure delivery of services
in a manner that reflects personal
preferences and choices.
In addition to being driven by the
individual receiving services, the
person-centered planning process
would—
• Include people chosen by the
individual;
• Provide necessary support to ensure
that the individual has a meaningful
role in directing the process to the
maximum extent possible, and is
enabled to make informed choices and
decisions;
• Is timely and occurs at times and
locations of convenience to the
individual;
• Reflects cultural considerations of
the individual;
• Include strategies for solving
conflict or disagreement within the
process, including clear conflict of
interest guidelines for all planning
participants;
• Offers choices to the individual
regarding the services and supports they
receive and from whom.
• Includes a method for the
individual to request updates to the
plan.
• Records the alternative home and
community-based settings that were
considered by the individual.
The plan resulting from this process
should reflect that the setting in which
the individual resides is chosen by the
individual. The plan should reflect the
individual’s strengths and preferences,
as well as clinical and support needs (as
identified through an assessment of
functional need). The plan should
include individually identified goals,
which may include goals and
preferences related to relationships,
community participation, employment,
income and savings, health care and
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wellness, education, and others (we
note that not all goals will have
comparable services covered under
Medicaid). The plan should reflect the
services and supports (paid and unpaid)
that will assist the individual to achieve
identified goals, and who provides
them. The plan should reflect risk
factors and measures in place to
minimize them, including
individualized back-up plans. The plan
must be signed by all individuals and
providers responsible for its
implementation, and should reflect the
approach in place to ensure that it is
implemented as intended. A copy of the
plan must be provided to individuals
and others involved in the plan.
Consistent with these person-centered
principles and the requirements for
community integration under the
Americans with Disabilities Act, we are
proposing that the service plan should
be constructed in a manner that
promotes service delivery and
independent living in the most
integrated setting possible. Therefore,
we propose that the plan must not only
address medical and support needs, but
should also reflect other individual
goals related to community living to the
extent that services covered under the
State Medicaid plan would be available
to support such goals. Although these
goals may include activities that may
not themselves be funded through
medical assistance, the coordination of
Medicaid services with other activities
in which the individual would be
engaged as part of community living is
an essential part of ensuring community
integration. These activities might
include employment, education,
recreation or social activities, and/or
other activities that occur regularly for
individuals living in the community.
Subject to any additional needs-based
criteria established for individual
services, the State must make the
services available to all eligible
individuals who are assessed to need
them. We conclude that the statute
permits determining the level of
services required by an individual only
according to assessment of the
individual’s needs, not based on
available funds. Just as significantly,
individuals who qualify for HCBS may
not be compelled to receive them.
Individuals may also exercise their
freedom to choose among qualified
providers in the planning process.
The State Medicaid agency may
delegate other agents to develop the
service plan, but remains responsible for
ensuring compliance with all
requirements for each service plan
developed. While the agency may
delegate the authority for plan
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development and approval, the
Medicaid agency is ultimately
responsible for ensuring that the plans
are completed according to the
requirements of this regulation. This can
be done through the establishment of
appropriate controls, including
monitoring and a quality improvement
process.
Section 1915(i)(1)(G)(ii)(I)(aa) of the
Act requires that the service plan is
developed in consultation with the
individual. The requirements for who is
consulted in developing the service plan
parallel those describing who may be
consulted during the assessment process
as determined by the State. As with the
assessment, providers or others who
may be responsible for providing
services identified in the plan may be
involved in the process. For example,
providers may contribute to these
processes by providing portions of an
assessment and recommending a service
plan, so long as the entity that retains
final responsibility for the assessment or
service plan meets all of the
requirements of this final rule,
including meeting the conflict of
interest standards (See section II.B.10.
for further discussion of conflict of
interest).
Section 1915(i)(1)(G)(ii)(I)(bb) of the
Act requires that the development of the
service plan take into account the extent
of family or other supports, which we
refer to as ‘‘natural supports,’’ for the
individual, and section
1915(i)(1)(G)(ii)(II) of the Act requires
that such plan identify needed services.
We interpret these provisions to
indicate that to the extent available,
natural supports should be explicitly
included in the service plan. This
means that individuals with equivalent
needs for support but differing levels of
family or other natural supports may be
authorized for different levels of HCBS.
In the context of person-centered
planning and consultation with natural
supports, we conclude that the statute
requires that the service plan should
neither duplicate, nor compel, natural
supports.
Section 1915(i)(1)(G)(ii)(III) of the Act
provides that plans of care will be
reviewed at least annually and upon
significant change in the individual’s
circumstances. We interpret this
provision to indicate that diagnostic or
functional changes are not required in
order to adjust a service plan. Changes
in external factors such as gain or loss
of other supports may trigger a review.
Additionally, an individual may request
a review of the plan at any time. We
would require revision of the service
plan if the review indicates that revision
is appropriate. By ‘‘annually,’’ we mean
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not less often than every 12 months.
Finally, we would relate this
requirement to the independent
assessment, since the development or
revision of the service plan is based on
the assessment. Therefore, we would
propose that the independent
assessment (See section II.B.6.) is
required at least annually, and when
needed upon a change in circumstances,
in order to comply with the requirement
to review plans of care with that
frequency.
8. Self-Direction
Section 1915(i)(1)(G)(iii)(I) and (II)
provides that States may offer enrolled
individuals the option to self-direct
some or all of the State Plan HCBS that
they require. Many States have
incorporated elements of self-direction
into section 1915(c) waiver programs as
well as section 1115 demonstration
programs. Self-directed State plan HCBS
allow States another avenue by which
they may afford individuals maximum
choice and control over the delivery of
services, while comporting with all
other applicable provisions of Medicaid
law. We have urged all States to afford
waiver participants the opportunity to
direct some or all of their waiver
services, without regard to their support
needs. With the release of an updated,
revised section 1915(c) waiver
application in 2008, we refined the
criteria and guidance to States
surrounding self-direction (also referred
to as participant-direction), and
established a process by which States
are encouraged, to whatever degree
feasible, to include self-direction as a
component of their overall HCBS waiver
programs. While section 1915(i) of the
Act does not require that States follow
the guidelines for section 1915(c)
waivers in implementing self-direction
in the HCBS State plan benefit, we
anticipate that States will make use of
their experience with section 1915(c)
waivers to offer a similar pattern of selfdirected opportunities with meaningful
supports and effective protections.
Individuals who choose to self-direct
will be subject to the same requirements
as other enrollees in the State plan
HCBS benefit.
Section 1915(i)(1)(G)(iii)(II) of the Act
defines self-direction, and requires that
there be an assessment and service plan.
We do not interpret these requirements
to indicate assessments and plans in
addition to those generally required in
sections 1915(i)(1)(F) and (G) of the Act.
Accordingly, we would propose that the
requirements for a self-directed service
plan under section 1915(i)(1)(G)(iii)(III)
of the Act be incorporated as
components of the assessment and
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service plan required for all enrollees in
the State plan HCBS benefit.
Section 1915(i)(1)(G)(iii)(III) of the Act
contains specific requirements for the
self-directed service plan, for which we
describe proposed regulations in section
III. The proposed regulations are
consistent with our requirements for
self-direction under section 1915(c)
HCBS waivers. Section
1915(i)(1)(G)(iii)(III)(dd) of the Act
requires that the service plan be
developed with a person-centered
process, which, as noted above, we
would propose to require of all service
plans for the State plan HCBS benefit.
Section 1915(i)(1)(G)(iii)(IV) of the
Act describes certain aspects of a selfdirected budget, which we have termed
‘‘budget authority.’’ Section 1915(i)(1)
(G)(iii)(III)(bb) of the Act provides for
self-directed selecting, managing, and/or
dismissing of providers of the State plan
HCBS, which we term ‘‘employer
authority.’’ We interpret selecting to
include the authority to hire a provider,
as well as to direct an agency to hire a
specific provider. Currently, section
1915(c) HCBS waivers include varying
degrees of self-direction. The proposed
rule explains both budget authority and
employer authority in a manner
consistent with section 1915(c) HCBS
waiver policy.
Individuals require information and
assistance to support them in
successfully directing their services.
Therefore, we would require States to
design and provide functions in support
of self-direction that are individualized
according to the support needs of each
enrollee. These functions should
include, at a minimum, information and
assistance consistent with sound
principles and practice of self-direction,
and financial management supports to
serve as fiscal/employer agents or coemployers. The availability of an
independent advocate to assist the
individual with the access to and
oversight of their waiver services,
including self-direction, is also an
important component of a strong selfdirected system. We note that the
adequacy of supports for successful selfdirection will be important elements of
the State’s quality assurance strategy,
which is required by section
1915(i)(1)(H) of the Act.
9. Quality Assurance
Section 1915(i)(1)(H)(i) of the Act
requires the State to ensure that the
State plan HCBS benefit meets Federal
and State guidelines for quality
assurance, which we interpret as
assurances of quality improvement.
Consistent with current trends in health
care, the language of quality assurance
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has evolved to mean quality
improvement, a systems approach
designed to continuously improve
services and support and prevent or
minimize problems prior to
occurrences. Guidelines for quality
improvement have been made available
through CMS policies governing section
1915(c) HCBS waivers available at
www.hcbswaivers.net and published
manuscripts available at
www.nationalqualityenterprise.com.
Consistent with recent legislation
with considerable focus on evidencebased quality and measurement, we
would require States to have a quality
improvement strategy, and to measure
and maintain evidence of quality
improvement including system
performance, individual quality of care,
and individual experience of care
indicators approved and/or prescribed
by the Secretary. These measures must
take into account the relevant, targeted
assurances, and include measures
established through the DRA, CHIPRA,
Affordable Care Act, and/or any other
relevant health care indicators or quality
measures developed by HHS, as
applicable to the population(s) served
by the section 1915(i) benefit. We would
require States to make this information
on their identified measures available to
CMS upon request. In the event that a
State elects to target the section 1915(i)
benefit to specific populations, the State
must submit evidence of quality
improvement no later than 180 days
before the end of each 5-year approval
period. (See the discussion at I.B.19 of
this proposed rule for more information
regarding targeting and approval
periods).
10. Conflict of Interest
Section 1915(i)(1)(H)(ii) of the Act
provides that the State will establish
conflict of interest standards for the
independent evaluation and
independent assessment. For reasons
described above under independent
assessment, we believe that the same
independence is necessary for those
involved with developing the personcentered service plan. In this
discussion, we will refer to persons or
entities responsible for the independent
evaluation, independent assessment,
and the service plan as ‘‘agents’’ to
distinguish them from ‘‘providers’’ of
home and community-based services.
Conflicts can arise from incentives for
either over- or under-utilization of
services; subtle problems such as
interest in retaining the individual as a
client rather than promoting
independence; or issues that focus on
the convenience of the agent or service
provider rather than being person-
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centered. Many of these conflicts of
interest may not be conscious decisions
on the part of individuals or entities
responsible for the provisions of service.
To mitigate any explicit or implicit
conflicts of interest, the independent
agent must not be influenced by
variations in available funding, either
locally or from the State. The service
plan must offer each individual all of
the HCBS that are covered by the State
that the individual qualifies for, and
that are demonstrated to be necessary
through the evaluation and assessment
process. The service plan must be based
only on medical necessity (for example,
needs-based criteria), not on available
funding. When local entities directly
expend funds or direct allocated
resources for services, in accordance
with section 1902(a)(2) of the Act, the
State must have a mechanism to ensure
that availability of local funds does not
affect access to services, such as using
State resources to compensate for
variability in local funding.
In this proposed regulation, we would
require States to define conflict of
interest standards to include criteria
that reflect State and Federal experience
with the issue in administering HCBS
waivers, and that reflect the principles
of section 1877 of the Act. Section 1877
of the Act prohibits certain types of
referrals for services when there is a
financial relationship between the
referring entity and the provider of
services.
We are aware that in certain areas
there may only be one provider
available to serve as both the agent
performing independent assessments
and developing plans of care, and the
provider of one or more of the HCBS. To
address this potential problem we
would propose to permit providers in
some cases to serve as both agent and
provider of services, but with guarantees
of independence of function within the
provider entity. In certain
circumstances, we may require that
States develop ‘‘firewall’’ policies, for
example, separating staff that perform
assessments and develop plans of care
from those that provide any of the
services in the plan; and meaningful
and accessible procedures for
individuals and representatives to
appeal to the State. We would not
permit States to circumvent these
requirements by adopting State or local
policies that suppress enrollment of any
qualified and willing provider. We do
not believe that under any
circumstances determination of
eligibility for the State plan HCBS
benefit should be performed by parties
with an interest in providers of HCBS.
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We understand that the development
of appropriate plans of care often
requires the inclusion of individuals
with expertise in the provision of longterm services and supports or the
delivery of acute care medical services.
As discussed previously, this rule is not
intended to prevent providers from
participating in these functions, but to
ensure that an independent agent
retains the final responsibility for the
evaluation, assessment, and service plan
functions.
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11. Eligibility Redeterminations;
Appeals
Section 1915(i)(1)(I) of the Act
requires the State to conduct
redeterminations of eligibility at least
annually. We interpret ‘‘annually’’ to
mean not less than every 12 months.
The State must conduct
redeterminations and appeals in the
same manner as required under the
State plan. States must grant fair
hearings consistent with the
requirements of part 431, subpart E.
12. Option for Presumptive Eligibility
for Assessment
Section 1915(i)(1)(J) of the Act gives
States the option of providing for a
period of presumptive eligibility, not to
exceed 60 days, for individuals the State
has reason to believe may be eligible for
the State plan HCBS benefit.
We interpret this provision as follows:
• ‘‘Presumptive’’ we interpret to
indicate that FFP will be available for
evaluation even when an individual is
subsequently found not to be eligible for
the State plan HCBS benefit.
• ‘‘Eligibility’’ does not connote
eligibility for Medicaid generally, as this
provision ‘‘shall be limited to medical
assistance for carrying out the
independent evaluation and
assessment’’ under section 1915(i)(1)(E)
of the Act. For clarity, we would refer
to this limited option as ‘‘presumptive
payment’’. Individuals not eligible for
Medicaid may not receive State plan
HCBS.
• ‘‘Evaluation and assessment’’ under
section 1915(i)(1)(E) of the Act, is
described as evaluation for eligibility for
the benefit and assessment to determine
necessary services. We believe the
statutory phrase ‘‘and if the individual
is so eligible, the specific HCBS that the
individual will receive’’ is further
describing the assessment under section
1915(i)(1)(E) of the Act for which
presumptive payment is available, and
that this phrase is not offering
presumptive payment for the actual
services. The phrase ‘‘if the individual
is so eligible’’ indicates that payment is
available once the individual is
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determined eligible, and not prior to
that point.
• In section 1915(i)(1)(J) of the Act,
we interpret the term ‘‘medical
assistance for carrying out the
independent evaluation and assessment
under subparagraph E’’ to mean
expenditures for both costs of evaluative
services that are described in section
1905(a), such as physician or other
practitioner services, as well as
administrative costs to determine
eligibility for the State plan HCBS
benefit. We interpret section
1915(i)(1)(J) of the Act to offer the State
an option for a period of presumptive
payment, not to exceed 60 days, for
individuals the State has reason to
believe may be eligible for the State plan
HCBS benefit. FFP would be available
for both medical services and
administrative costs incurred for
evaluation and assessment activities.
During the period of presumptive
payment, the individual would not
receive State plan HCBS, and would not
be considered to be enrolled in
Medicaid or eligible for the HCBS
benefit for purposes of computing the
number of individuals being served
under the benefit.
We invite comments that offer other
interpretations of this presumptive
payment option and that comport with
existing Federal requirements.
13. Individual’s Representative
When an individual is not capable of
giving consent, or requires assistance in
making decisions regarding his or her
care, the individual may be assisted or
represented by another person. Section
1915(i)(2) of the Act defines the term
‘‘individual’s representative’’ by listing
certain examples, but also provides that
‘‘* * * any other individual who is
authorized to represent the individual’’
may be included. We believe that
‘‘authorized’’ refers to State rules
concerning guardians, legal
representatives, power of attorney, or
persons of other status recognized under
State law or under the policies of the
State Medicaid program.
States should ensure that the
representatives conform to good practice
concerning free choice of the individual,
and assess for abuse or excessive
control. States should also ensure that
the person-centered planning process
continues to be focused on the
individual with HCBS support needs
and his or her preferences and goals,
and supports are provided so the
individual can meaningfully participate
and direct the process to the maximum
extent possible. We are proposing to
provide that the State may not refuse to
recognize an authorized representative
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that the individual chooses, unless the
State discovers and can document
evidence that the representative is not
acting in the best interest of the
individual or cannot perform the
required functions.
14. Nonapplication
As amended by the Affordable Care
Act, section 1915(i)(3) of the Act allows
States to be exempted from the
requirements of two sections of the
Medicaid statute: section 1902(a)(10)(B)
of the Act, regarding comparability; and
section 1902(a)(10)(C)(i)(III) of the Act,
regarding income and resource rules for
the medically needy in the community.
The statute uses the terms
‘‘nonapplication’’ and ‘‘may chose not
to comply with’’ rather than ‘‘waive’’.
We would use this terminology to
maintain clarity between HCBS waiver
programs under section 1915(c) of the
Act and State plan HCBS under section
1915(i) of the Act. However, it is
important to reiterate that the choice not
to apply these requirements applies
only with regard to the provision of
State plan HCBS.
Nonapplication of the requirement of
comparability allows States to furnish
the State plan HCBS benefit to specific
targeted populations, similar to section
1915(c) waivers. Regardless of whether
a State chooses to apply comparability
requirements, it must define needsbased criteria to establish eligibility for
the section 1915(i) benefit. If a State
chooses not to apply comparability and
to target the benefit, individuals must
meet both the targeting criteria and the
needs-based criteria in order to receive
services through the section 1915(i)
benefit. See the discussion in I.B.19 of
this proposed rule for more detail
regarding the option not to apply
Medicaid comparability requirements
and to target the benefit to a specific
population or populations.
The nonapplication of the
requirements of section
1902(a)(10)(C)(i)(III) of the Act enables
States to provide medical assistance to
medically needy individuals in the
community by electing to treat the
individuals as if they are living in an
institution for purposes of determining
income and resources. This would
result in the State not deeming/counting
income and resources from an ineligible
spouse to an applicant or from a parent
to a child with a disability. However,
nonapplication of the income and
resource rules applicable in the
community applies only to the
medically needy and only for the
purposes of providing HCBS in
accordance with the State plan
amendment implementing section
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1915(i) of the Act. Based on this
language, we are interpreting the statute
to mean that individuals made eligible
on the basis of nonapplication of section
1902(a)(10)(C)(i)(III) of the Act may only
be eligible for section 1915(i) services.
In other words, for medically needy
applicants, the State can elect not to
deem income from an ineligible spouse,
or from a parent to a child. If the State
elects not to apply the requirements of
section 1902(a)(10)(C)(i)(III) of the Act
for the medically needy, it would
determine Medicaid eligibility for
section 1915(i) eligible medically needy
individuals using institutional rules
rather than community rules. Once the
individual has been determined to be
eligible as medically needy using
institutional rules, and has been
determined to meet the 150 percent of
the FPL limit, the individual would
only be eligible for State plan HCBS
under section 1915(i) of the Act. The
individual would not be eligible for any
other Medicaid State plan services.
However, individuals who are eligible
for Medicaid as medically needy under
income and resource rules applicable in
the community, and whose income does
not exceed the 150 percent of the FPL
limit, would be eligible for State plan
HCBS as well as all Medicaid State plan
services.
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15. No Effect on Waiver Authority
Section 1915(i)(4) of the Act
emphasizes that State election to
provide the State plan HCBS benefit
does not in any way affect the State’s
ability to offer programs through a
section 1915(b) or (c) waiver, or under
section 1115 of the Act. We further note
that States may consider including
1915(i) services as a part of capitation
under section 1915(b) waivers or other
authorities for managed care
arrangements. A State could use joint
authority of 1915(b) and 1915(i) to
provide HCBS to individuals eligible for
the 1915(i) benefit.
16. Continuation of Federal Financial
Participation (FFP) for Institutional
Level of Care for Individuals Receiving
Services as of the Effective Date of the
State Plan HCBS Amendment
If the State modifies institutional LOC
requirements so that they will be more
stringent than the needs-based criteria
for the State plan HCBS benefit, section
1915(i)(5) of the Act permits States the
option to continue receiving FFP for
individuals who are receiving
institutional services in NFs, ICFs/MR,
and applicable hospitals or who are
receiving services under a section 1915
waiver or through an 1115 HCBS
demonstration project that is in effect at
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the time of the modification. We
interpret the reference to section 1915
waivers to include waivers under
sections 1915(c), 1915(d) or 1915(e) of
the Act, which are the section 1915
waivers explicitly identified in section
1915(i)(6)(A) of the Act. Individuals
receiving institutional care or HCBS
under these authorities at the time that
the institutional LOC is modified would
not have to satisfy the more stringent
criteria in order to continue receiving
that care.
FFP under the unmodified criteria
would continue to be available until
such time as the individual is
discharged from the institution, waiver
program, or demonstration, or no longer
requires this LOC. Moving between a
waiver and an institution at the same
LOC, or vice versa, by definition is not
a change in LOC. Therefore, individuals
who transition between waivers and
institutions (for example, transitioning
from an institution to waiver through
the Money Follows the person program)
would retain eligibility for institutional
care and HCBS until they no longer
meet the less stringent LOC
requirements or until they lose
eligibility for Medicaid or for
institutional or waiver services due to a
reason other than the application of the
modified LOC criteria. An example of
this would be if the individual aged out
of a waiver, or if an increase in income
or resources caused the individual to
lose Medicaid eligibility.
In section 1915(i)(5) of the Act, the
statute indicates that FFP remains
available for individuals who meet the
previous institutional criteria. We note
that this does not create a requirement
for States to continue to serve these
individuals; rather, it creates an option
for States to continue to receive FFP in
order to provide care for individuals
who would otherwise lose eligibility
due to the implementation of the new
criteria.
Due to the current requirements on
maintaining eligibility standards,
methodologies and procedures, we
encourage States to consult with CMS
before instituting any changes to LOC
requirements.
17. State Option To Provide HCBS to
Individuals Eligible for Services Under
a Waiver
Section 2402(b) of the Affordable Care
Act added section 1915(i)(6) to the Act,
specifying that States may elect to
provide HCBS to an individual who is
eligible for an approved waiver under
sections 1915(c), (d), (e), or 1115 of the
Act. Section 1915(i)(6)(A) specifies that
individuals who are eligible for a waiver
may receive State plan HCBS under the
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authority of section 1915(i) if they
satisfy the needs-based criteria under
such section and if their income is less
than 300 percent of the supplemental
security income (SSI) Federal benefit
rate (FBR), as established by section
1611(b)(1) of the Act.
We interpret this statute as creating an
option for States to increase the income
limit for the State plan HCBS benefit,
but only for individuals who are eligible
for HCBS through an approved waiver
within the State. We interpret ‘‘eligible’’
to mean that the individual meets all of
the criteria required for entrance into a
HCBS waiver that is approved within
the State, regardless of whether the
individual is actually enrolled and
receiving services through that waiver.
As discussed below, if a State elects this
option, the State must cover the new
optional categorically needy eligibility
group specified at section
1902(a)(10)(A)(ii)(XXII) of the Act, and
individuals who are eligible for a waiver
with income above 150 percent of the
FPL, but below 300 percent of the SSI
benefit rate, may receive State plan
HCBS.
When establishing whether an
individual’s income is below 300
percent of SSI, under section
1915(i)(6)(B), the State should use the
same rules that are applied for the
special income level group specified at
section 1902(a)(10)(A)(ii)(V) of the Act.
Regardless of whether a State elects the
option established by this section, the
State could provide HCBS through both
the section 1915(i) benefit, as well as
through a HCBS waiver to any
individual who meets the financial and
needs-based criteria for both programs
(that is, if an individual meets the
waiver LOC criteria, and the needsbased criteria for the State plan HCBS
benefit, and has income below 150
percent of the FPL, the individual could
receive services under both authorities,
provided that the services are not
duplicative, whether or not the State
elects to include the higher income level
in their section 1915(i) benefit).
When a State elects to include this
option, section 1915(i)(6)(C) of the Act
allows services to differ in type,
amount, duration, or scope from
services provided to individuals who
are eligible for the section 1915(i)
benefit without also being eligible for a
waiver. A State may choose to provide
additional 1915(i) State plan HCBS to
individuals who are eligible for HCBS
under an approved waiver. If a State
does so, it may also elect to establish
additional needs-based criteria for those
services. The establishment of
additional criteria would be under the
State authority to establish needs-based
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criteria for any service in the 1915(i)
benefit (see the discussion in I.B.2 of
this proposed rule for more discussion).
Any additional service(s) provided
through this subsection must be
allowable under section 1915(c)(4)(B)
and may not include room and board. A
State may also include ‘‘other’’ services,
as defined by the State and approved by
the Secretary, within the package of
section 1915(i) services that are limited
to individuals who are eligible for a
waiver. However, because individuals
eligible for a waiver must also satisfy
the needs-based criteria established for
the section 1915(i) benefit to receive
State plan HCBS, a State may not
restrict access to benefits that are
available to other individuals who
receive the State Plan HCBS, except
through a targeting criteria, or through
the establishment of a needs-based
criteria that applies uniformly to all
individuals.
18. Establishment of Optional Eligibility
Group To Provide Full Medicaid
Benefits to Individuals Receiving State
Plan HCBS
Section 2402(d) of the Affordable Care
Act creates a new optional categorically
needy eligibility group, specified at
section 1902(a)(10)(A)(ii)(XXII) of the
Act, for individuals ‘‘who are eligible
for HCBS under the needs-based criteria
established under (1)(A) of 1915(i), or
who are eligible for home and
community-based services under
paragraph (6) of such section, and who
will receive home and communitybased services pursuant to a State plan
amendment under such subsection.’’
Under this group States can elect to
cover individuals who are not otherwise
eligible for Medicaid. For example, an
individual age 65 or older, who has
chronic needs but not at an institutional
level of care and has too much income
and/or resources to qualify for Medical
Assistance under a State’s Medicaid
plan, could be eligible for section
1915(i) services if he/she meets the
needs-based criteria for the section
1915(i) benefit, has income up to 150
percent of the FPL and will receive
section 1915(i) services. Under this
group, States may also elect to cover
individuals with income up to 300
percent of the SSI/FBR who would be
eligible under an existing section
1915(c), (d), (e) waiver or section 1115
waiver and who will receive section
1915(i) services. These individuals do
not have to be receiving services under
an existing section 1915(c), (d), (e)
waiver or section 1115 waiver; the
individual only has to be eligible for the
waiver. Individuals eligible for
Medicaid under this group would be
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eligible for full Medicaid benefits. The
State must also elect the option under
section 1915(i)(6) of the Act if the State
intends to cover individuals with
income up to 300 percent of the SSI/
FBR.
19. State Option To Offer HCBS to
Specific, Targeted Populations
The Affordable Care Act added
section 1915(i)(7) to the Act, which
allows States to target the section
1915(i) benefit to specific populations.
In addition, as of October 1, 2010, States
may design section 1915(i) benefits
without regard to the comparability
requirements contained in section
1902(a)(10)(B) of the Act. As a result,
the State may ‘‘target’’ services, that is,
either provide the 1915(i) benefit only to
individuals in certain Medicaid
eligibility groups, or provide different
services within the 1915(i) benefit to
different groups. Due to the ability to
define targeted populations, a State may
now propose more than one set of
section 1915(i) benefits, with each
benefit package targeted toward a
specific population. A State may also
propose one set of section 1915(i)
benefits that targets multiple
populations, and may offer different
services to each of the defined target
groups within the benefit. Additionally,
a State may propose a section 1915(i)
benefit that does not choose
nonapplication of comparability and
instead uses only the needs-based
criteria to establish eligibility for the
benefit. States may find this to be a less
administratively burdensome approach,
as there is no renewal requirement or
limit to the approval period if the State
does not target the HCBS benefit (see
below for a discussion on limits to the
approval period).
We propose to require that a State that
elects to target the benefit to specific
groups of individuals must submit
objective targeting criteria in the SPA
implementing the HCBS benefit, subject
to approval by CMS. These targeting
criteria may define a target population
or multiple target populations within
parameters of diagnosis, disability,
Medicaid eligibility groups, and/or age.
Within these parameters, targeting
criteria may be similar to those available
through section 1915(c) waivers, as
defined in § 441.301, but we note that
based on experience, these target groups
may not aptly capture the universe of
individuals who could benefit from
section 1915(i) of the Act. Therefore, a
State may also establish broader criteria
that encompass more than one of the
three groups defined in § 441.301, or
that target enrollees based on separate
criteria. However, we note that the
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section 1915(i) benefit is described in
the statute as ‘‘HCBS for Elderly and
Disabled Individuals.’’ Therefore, we
would expect any targeting criteria to
apply to eligibility groups serving those
individuals. We would also expect
targeting criteria to align with the needsbased criteria established for the benefit.
For example, a State could target the
benefit package to any children under
the age of 21 with an intellectual
disability, a developmental disability,
autism, or a behavioral health condition.
A State could also target the benefit
using traditional section 1915(c) groups.
An example of this would be to target
the benefit to individuals age 65 and up.
Further, this targeting option does not
permit States to target the benefit in a
manner that would not comply with
section 1902(a)(23) of the Act regarding
free choice of providers, or that
forestalls the opportunity for
individuals to receive services in the
most integrated setting possible.
Therefore, targeting criteria cannot have
the impact of limiting the pool of
qualified providers from which an
individual would receive services, or
have the impact of requiring an
individual to receive services from the
same entity from which they purchase
their housing. For example, we would
not allow States to establish targeting
criteria that would restrict eligibility to
only individuals who reside in
provider-owned and/or operated
settings.
If a State elects to target the benefit to
a specific population or populations, it
must still establish needs-based criteria
that individuals must meet in order to
be eligible for section 1915(i) services
and the State may also establish needsbased criteria for individual services
within the benefit. The needs-based
criteria may include specific needs that
are applicable to the targeting criteria,
but may also include general needs that
apply across all of the populations
included in the benefit.
20. Five-Year Approval for Targeted
Section 1915(i) HCBS Benefits and
Renewal Requirements
Under sections 1915(i)(7)(B)(i) and (C)
of the Act, if a State chooses to target
State plan HCBS, the SPA approval will
last for a 5-year period with the option
for 5-year renewal periods. There is no
statutory limit on the number of renewal
periods available under this section. At
the end of the initial 5-year period, and
any subsequent renewals, CMS will
review the State’s approved SPA and
evaluate State performance based upon
the requirements contained within that
SPA and the State plan HCBS quality
outcomes.
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We propose that a State must provide
a written request for renewal at least 180
days prior to the end of the approval
period. The request must be
accompanied by a description of any
proposed changes to the benefit, if
applicable. Prior to renewal, CMS will
request evidence of implementation of
the State’s quality improvement strategy
in order to verify compliance with State
plan HCBS requirements. Results of the
quality monitoring process will be used
to identify and make recommendations
on areas of a State’s section 1915(i)
benefit that require modification prior to
renewal. In accordance with section
1915(i)(7)(C) of the Act, we will approve
renewals based upon adherence to
Federal requirements, including
adherence to the State’s phase-in plan,
as approved by CMS.
21. Phase-In of Services and Eligibility
Section 1915(i)(7)(B)(ii) allows States
to phase-in the enrollment of
individuals and/or the provision of
services if the State elects to target the
benefit to specific populations. The
statute indicates that the State must
enroll all eligible individuals and
provide all of the services it has elected
to include in the benefit by the end of
the initial 5-year approval. Although the
option to phase-in services and/or
eligibility may seem contradictory with
the requirements that the benefit be
statewide and not limit enrollment, we
interpret this section to provide States
with the flexibility to prioritize
enrollment to individuals with the
highest need and/or to develop adequate
infrastructure to ensure quality of care,
and the health and safety of
participants, prior to the provision of
services. We do not interpret this option
as providing States the authority to limit
statewideness or to set a numerical limit
on enrollment.
As an example, a State could elect to
begin the provision of services to
individuals with higher needs prior to
the enrollment of all eligible
individuals, based upon the assessment
for eligibility to the benefit. In this
instance, the needs-based criteria would
allow States to identify individuals at
greatest risk for health and safety, and
to prioritize services to those
individuals. Services would then be
phased-in to individuals who qualify for
the benefit but who have less assessed
need.
States are permitted to modify the
available services in a section 1915(i)
benefit through a SPA at any time.
Therefore, we do not believe that this
option permits a State to include a
service within the benefit without
providing it to at least some enrolled
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individuals. However, at the option of a
State, a phase-in plan might temporarily
limit the provision of the entire benefit
package, or of some specific services,
based upon infrastructure
considerations, such as the need to
enroll an adequate number of qualified
providers.
We propose that a State that elects to
target the State plan HCBS benefit and
to phase-in enrollment and/or services
must submit a phase-in plan for
approval by CMS that describes, at a
minimum:
• The criteria used to phase-in
enrollment or service delivery;
• The rationale for phasing-in
services and/or eligibility; and
• Timelines and benchmarks to
ensure that the benefit is available
Statewide to all eligible individuals
within the initial 5-year approval.
If a State elects and CMS approves a
phase-in of services and/or eligibility in
the section 1915(i) SPA, the statute
indicates that the State must enroll all
eligible individuals and provide all of
the services it has elected to include in
the benefit by the end of the initial 5year approval. Therefore, if a State does
not meet its phase-in plan by the end of
the initial 5-year approval of the section
1915(i) benefit, the State will not be able
to renew the benefit.
States are also prohibited from having
a phase-in period longer than 5 years,
and from receiving approval for a new
section 1915(i) submission of a similar
design with a phase-in period when a
similar benefit with phase-in is
discontinued before full
implementation.
We are soliciting comments on
alternative strategies and approaches for
evaluating and approving the option to
phase-in eligibility and enrollment.
C. Effective Date
The effective date on which States
may provide HCBS through the State
plan, as set forth by the DRA, is January
1, 2007. The effective date of the
amendments to the section 1915(i)
benefit, as established by the Affordable
Care Act, is October 1, 2010.
D. The State Plan HCBS Benefit in the
Context of the Medicaid Program as a
Whole
The section 1915(i) State plan HCBS
benefit is subject to provisions of the
Medicaid program as a whole.
Therefore, it is useful to note certain
requirements of the Medicaid program
that have an impact on the
administration of the State plan HCBS
benefit and that are not explicitly
referenced in the regulation.
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To be eligible for the State plan HCBS
benefit, an individual must be included
in an eligibility group that is contained
in the State plan, including if the State
elects, the new eligibility group defined
at section 1902(a)(10)(A)(ii)(XXII) of the
Act. Each individual must meet all
financial and non-financial criteria set
forth in the plan for the applicable
eligibility group.
Children included in eligibility
groups under the State plan may meet
the needs-based criteria and qualify for
benefits under the State plan HCBS
benefit. States may also choose to target
the benefit in a manner that either
excludes children, or limits the benefit
solely to children. HCBS benefits that
are not otherwise available through
1905(a) State plan services under the
Medicaid Early and Periodic Screening,
Diagnostic, and Treatment (EPSDT)
benefit may be furnished to Medicaid
eligible children who meet the State
plan HCBS needs-based eligibility
criteria, and who meet the State’s
medical necessity criteria for the receipt
of services. In addition to meeting
EPSDT requirements through the
provision of 1905(a) services, a State
may also meet a particular child’s needs
under EPSDT through services that are
also available through the 1915(i)
benefit. However, all Medicaid-eligible
children must have full access to
services required under EPSDT, and the
provision of 1915(i) State plan HCBS
should in no way hinder their access to
such services.
We further note that the mandate
under EPSDT applies only to services
authorized by section 1905(a) of the Act.
Therefore, HCBS under section 1915(i)
of the Act are not required under the
EPSDT program. Children who are
eligible for the State plan HCBS benefit
are eligible to receive medically
necessary State plan HCBS, but the State
is not required to provide 1915(i) State
plan HCBS as part of its EPSDT
program. Clinic services (whether or not
furnished in a facility) for individuals
with chronic mental illness are listed in
section 1915(c)(4)(B) of the Act and
therefore may be covered in the State
plan HCBS benefit. If a State chooses to
offer these services, they will be subject
to the clinic upper payment limit (UPL)
at § 447.321. We also note that these
services are defined differently than
other clinic services offered under the
State Plan in that they include services
whether or not they are offered in a
facility.
States may also elect to include
1915(i) benefits as part of a managed
care contract. In the event that State
plan HCBS are included in a managed
care contract, they must meet all
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applicable requirements contained in
§ 438, including actuarial soundness of
rates, cost effectiveness of services, and
CMS contract review and approval.
Additionally, since this benefit is
established through a State plan
amendment process, section 5006(e) of
the American Recovery and
Reinvestment Act of 2009 (Pub. L. 111–
5, enacted on February 17, 2009)
requires the State to seek advice from
Indian health programs and Urban
Indian Organizations on the
establishment of or modification to any
State plan HCBS benefits.
FFP for the 1915(i) benefit is also
subject to deferrals, withholding and
disallowances in accordance with the
requirements of subpart C of 42 CFR
part 440. In the event that CMS
determines a State to be out of
compliance with the requirements of the
HCBS benefit, standard Medicaid
compliance actions will apply.
E. Other Background
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1. Serving All Eligible Individuals
While Targeting Limited Resources
As noted above, section 1915(i) of the
Act applies the general Medicaid
requirements regarding statewideness
and, like other State plan options, does
not allow States to limit enrollment.
Nevertheless, the law offers significant
discretion for defining the population
served. Specifically, States may limit
utilization of the State plan HCBS
benefit through application of the
following provisions of section 1915(i)
of the Act:
• The requirement to set eligibility
standards built on needs-based criteria.
States choose the needs-based criteria
used to establish the thresholds of
program eligibility. States must set a
lower threshold of need, but may also
optionally define an upper threshold of
need beyond which individuals may not
be served under this provision.
• The option to target the benefit to
specific populations. States may
combine needs-based criteria with
targeting criteria in order to create a
very specific benefit that applies to
defined groups of individuals.
• The option to establish needs-based
criteria to determine eligibility for each
State plan HCBS. These criteria may
vary from service to service, and should
assist States in identifying the
individuals who could benefit from
receipt of a particular State plan HCBS.
• The choice to offer a limited
number of services under the State plan
HCBS benefit. The scope of services that
the State chooses to offer may include
any, but need not include all, of the
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services permitted under section
1915(c)(4)(B) of the Act.
• The option to limit the amount or
duration of each service, in accordance
with all Medicaid rules and
requirements.
Since all State plan HCBS must be
provided under a written service plan,
States have the opportunity to review an
individual’s service plan to ensure that
HCBS continue to be responsive to the
needs of the individual.
Additionally, as a reminder, general
Medicaid requirements also apply to the
State plan HCBS benefit. All Medicaid
services are to be provided only to those
who need them according to medical
necessity and needs-based criteria, as
defined by the State. Prior authorization
is available to the State.
2. HCBS Provided in the Community,
Not in Institutions
Section 1915(i) provides States the
option to provide home and
community-based services, but does not
define ‘‘home and community-based.’’
Along with our overarching interest in
making improvements to Medicaid
HCBS, we seek to ensure that Medicaid
is supporting needed strategies for
States in their efforts to meet their
obligations under the ADA and the
Supreme Court decision in Olmstead v.
L.C., 527 U.S. 581 (1999). In the
Olmstead decision, the Court affirmed a
State’s obligations to serve individuals
in the most integrated setting
appropriate to their needs. A State’s
obligations under the ADA and section
504 of the Rehabilitation Act are not
defined by, or limited to, the scope of
requirements of the Medicaid program.
However, the Medicaid program can
provide an opportunity to obtain partial
Federal funding that supports
compliance with the ADA, section 504
of the Rehabilitation Act, and Olmstead
through the provision of Medicaid
services to Medicaid-eligible
individuals.
In the April 4, 2008 Federal Register
(73 FR 18676), we proposed to define
home and community settings for this
new benefit. Then in the June 22, 2009
Federal Register (74 FR 29453), we
published an advance notice of
proposed rulemaking (ANPRM) that
solicited comments on potential
rulemaking for a number of areas within
the section 1915(c) HCBS waiver
program. Specifically, we requested
public input on strategies to define
home and community-based settings
where waiver participants may receive
services. Although the ANPRM is
specific to section 1915(c) waivers, the
services delivered and the settings they
are available in are parallel to the
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section 1915(i) benefit. We recognize a
need for a consistent definition of this
term across Medicaid HCBS.
In response to the 1915(c) ANPRM,
we received comments that supported
the underlying goals to promote
independence, community inclusion,
and the goals of the Olmstead decision.
However, many commenters also
expressed concern about definitions of
home and community-based settings
that limited participant choice, and that
excluded settings that may, in fact,
promote independence and integration.
Since that time, we have facilitated and
participated in multiple stakeholder
discussions related to this issue, and we
also included proposed language for
settings in which HCBS could be
provided to elicit further comments on
this issue in the section 1915(k)
proposed rule published on February
25, 2011 and in the 1915(c) proposed
rule published on April 15, 2011. We
find the public comment process to be
valuable in our attempt to develop the
best policy on this issue for Medicaid
beneficiaries. Therefore, with this rule,
we again invite public comments on
proposed language to establish the
qualities for home and communitybased settings under both sections
1915(i) State plan HCBS and the 1915(k)
Community First Choice State plan
option. It is our goal to align the final
language pertaining to this topic across
the sections 1915(k), 1915(i), and
1915(c) Medicaid HCBS authorities.
We have included proposed language
for settings in which section 1915(i)
services and supports could be provided
to elicit additional comments on this
issue. While it is not practical to create
one singular definition that
encompasses all settings that are home
and community-based, with this rule we
propose quality principles essential in
determining whether a setting is
community-based. We expect States
electing to provide HCBS benefits under
section 1915(i) to include a definition of
home and community-based setting that
incorporates these principles and will
review all SPAs to determine whether
they propose settings that are home or
community-based. We will permit
States with approved section 1915(i)
SPAs a reasonable transition period, a
minimum of one year, to come into
compliance with the HCBS setting
requirements as promulgated in our
final rule.
Recognizing the imperative to provide
clear guidance to States and in
consideration of recent proposals from
States that have clearly exceeded
reasonable standards for HCBS, we are
proposing to clarify now that home and
community-based settings must exhibit
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the following qualities, and such other
qualities as the Secretary determines to
be appropriate, based on the needs of
the individual as indicated in their
person-centered service plan, in order to
be eligible sites for delivery of home and
community-based services:
• The setting is integrated in, and
facilitates the individual’s full access to,
the greater community, including
opportunities to seek employment and
work in competitive integrated settings,
engage in community life, control
personal resources, and receive services
in the community, like individuals
without disabilities;
• The setting is selected by the
individual among all available
alternatives and identified in the
person-centered service plan;
• An individual’s essential personal
rights of privacy, dignity and respect,
and freedom from coercion and restraint
are protected;
• Individual initiative, autonomy,
and independence in making major life
choices, including but not limited to,
daily activities, physical environment,
and with whom to interact are
optimized and not regimented; and
• Individual choice regarding services
and supports, and who provides them,
is facilitated.
In a provider-owned or controlled
residential setting, the following
additional conditions must be met. Any
modifications of the conditions (for
example to address the safety needs of
an individual with dementia) must be
supported by a specific assessed need
and documented in the person-centered
service plan:
++ The unit or room is a specific
physical place that can be owned,
rented, or occupied under a legally
enforceable agreement by the individual
receiving services, and the individual
has, at a minimum, the same
responsibilities and protections from
eviction that the tenants have under the
landlord/tenant laws of the State,
county, city, or other designated entity.
We are soliciting comments as to
whether there are other protections, not
addressed by landlord tenant law, that
should be included;
++ Each individual has privacy in
their sleeping or living unit:
—Units have lockable entrance doors,
with appropriate staff having keys to
doors;
—Individuals share units only at the
individual’s choice; and
—Individuals have the freedom to
furnish and decorate their sleeping or
living units;
++ Individuals have the freedom and
support to control their own schedules
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and activities, and have access to food
at any time;
++ Individuals are able to have
visitors of their choosing at any time;
and
++ The setting is physically
accessible to the individual.
In addition to the aforementioned
criteria there are two criteria that we
have not included in the proposed
regulation, but wish to solicit comment
regarding whether they should be
added. The first is related to the
proposed requirement that in a
provider-owned or controlled
residential setting, any modification of
the conditions must be supported by
specific assessed needs and documented
in the person centered service plan.
This requirement is meant to address
two issues:
• Individuals receiving HCBS must
not have their independence or
freedoms abridged by providers for
convenience, or well-meaning but
unnecessarily restrictive methods for
providing person-centered services and
supports; and
• Individuals with cognitive
disabilities and other impairments may
require modifications of the
aforementioned conditions for their
safety and welfare.
This provision is meant to establish
that service planning is the process in
which these decisions are made, rather
than ad hoc on a daily basis. While the
proposed text establishes the
requirement that any modification to the
conditions are supported by a specific
assessed need and documented in the
person-centered service plan, we are
also considering including language to
explicitly set forth these activities. We
are considering requiring the following
points to be identified: identify a
specific and individualized assessed
safety need; document less intrusive
methods that have been tried but did
not work; include a clear description of
the condition that is directly
proportionate to the specific assessed
safety need; include regular collection
and review of data to measure the
ongoing effectiveness of the
modification; and establishing time
limits for periodic reviews to determine
if the modification can be lifted. We
solicit comment on these points and any
other potential requirements regarding
modifications of the conditions set forth
in this proposed rule. We also wish to
solicit comment on a second criterion
that would include a requirement that
receipt of any particular service or
support cannot be a condition for living
in the unit. In discussing this specific
criterion, we discovered that it could be
read one of two ways. One
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interpretation is that this language does
not require an individual residing in a
provider owned or operated setting to
receive HCBS from the setting provider.
Rather the individual could choose
another qualified individual to provide
HCBS. The other interpretation is that
this language would prevent the owner
of the setting from evicting an
individual because the individual
refused to accept a particular service.
This interpretation could have an effect
on residential settings, such as housing
programs to address homelessness.
Some of these settings include a
structure in which individuals are
required to participate in treatment
(substance use, for example) as a
condition of residing there. We
acknowledge the complexities that arise,
when trying to support an individual’s
right to choose while recognizing that
there are programs and services that
have been developed as a result of
identified service needs. As indicated
earlier, we are specifically soliciting
comments on whether these two criteria
should be included as regulatory
requirements.
We note that home and communitybased settings do not include nursing
facilities, institutions for mental
diseases, intermediate care facilities for
mentally retarded, hospitals, or any
other locations that have the qualities of
an institutional setting as determined by
the Secretary. In considering whether a
setting has the qualities of an
institutional setting, we will exercise a
rebuttable presumption that a setting is
not a home and community-based
setting, and will engage in heightened
scrutiny, for any setting that is located
in a building that is also a publicly or
privately operated facility that provides
inpatient institutional treatment, or in a
building on the grounds of, or
immediately adjacent to, a public
institution, or disability-specific
housing complex. We expect to issue
further guidance regarding such
settings. Other characteristics that could
cause CMS to consider a setting as
‘‘institutional’’ or having the qualities of
an institution would include, but not be
limited to, settings which are isolated
from the larger community, do not allow
individuals to choose whether or with
whom they share a room, limit
individuals’ freedom of choice on daily
living experiences such as meals,
visitors, and activities, or limit
individuals’ opportunities to pursue
community activities.
We have included these provisions to
move toward a stronger articulation of
the qualities that make a setting a home
or truly integrated in the greater
community for individuals living with
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disabilities. We believe that these
principles of home and communitybased settings will support the use of
the Medicaid program to maximize the
opportunities for individuals to access
the benefits of home and community
living.
We specifically invite comments on
whether there are settings in addition to
those currently enumerated in statute,
that are, by their nature, location or
administration inherently noncommunity based, and therefore, should
be expressly excluded from HCBS. We
also invite comments on the
community-based qualities we have
proposed in this rule to ascertain
whether additional or different
characteristics should be included.
In considering comments received
pertaining to this provision of the rule,
we will also include consideration of all
comments received pertaining to the
aligned home and community-based
setting requirements being proposed in
this rule for the section 1915(k)
Community First Choice State Plan
Option. In recognizing the need for a
consistent definition of this term across
Medicaid HCBS, it is our goal to align
the final language pertaining to this
topic across the regulations for sections
1915(i), 1915(k), and 1915(c) Medicaid
HCBS authorities.
We note that this proposal in no way
preempts broad Medicaid requirements,
such as an individual’s right to obtain
services from any willing and qualified
provider of a service.
We further note that States are not
prohibited from funding institutional
care under Medicaid. The exclusion of
these settings from HCBS waivers and
from the State plan HCBS benefit does
not limit the availability of institutional
and facility-based care for those
individuals who require long-term
services and supports, and who freely
choose to receive services in those
settings. However, we believe that these
types of services should not be funded
through authorities that are intended to
promote community-based alternatives
to institutional care. Furthermore, we
believe that the fundamental
requirement that the needs-based
criteria for section 1915(i) be less
stringent than that for institutional care
creates a mandate to ensure that services
are provided in settings that are not
institutional in nature.
While HCBS are not available while
an individual resides in an institution,
HCBS should be available to assist
individuals to leave an institution.
Recognizing that individuals leaving
institutions require assistance to
establish themselves in the community,
we would allow States to include in a
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section 1915(i) benefit, as an ‘‘other’’
service, certain transition services to be
offered to individuals to assist them in
their return to the community. We
propose that community transition
services could be commenced prior to
discharge and could be used to assist
individuals during the period of
transition from an institutional
residence. Additionally, services could
be provided to assist individuals
transitioning to independent living in
the community, as described in a letter
to the State Medicaid Directors on May
9, 2002 (SMDL #02–008). We further
recognize that, for short hospital stays,
an individual may benefit from ongoing
support through the HCBS State Plan for
physical needs over and above such
services available in a hospital, to
ensure smooth transition from clinical
setting to home, and to preserve a sense
of continuity and normalcy (a notion
particularly important for individuals
with intellectual disabilities, cognitive
disabilities associated with aging, and
behavioral health support needs).
Importantly, these services must be
exclusively for the benefit of the
individual, not the hospital, and must
not substitute for services that the
hospital is obligated to provide through
its conditions of participation or
through its obligations under the ADA.
3. Home and Community-Based
Services Do Not Include Room and
Board
Payments for room and board are
expressly prohibited by section
1915(i)(1) of the Act. Except for respite
care furnished in a setting approved by
the State that is not the individual’s
residence, no service or combination of
services may be used to furnish room
and board through the State plan HCBS
benefit.
When an individual must be absent
from his or her residence in order to
receive a service authorized by the
individualized service plan, it may be
impractical to obtain a meal outside the
venue in which the service is provided.
Therefore, in some instances and when
it does not constitute a full nutritional
regimen, the provision of food may be
included as an incidental part of service
delivery. When meals are furnished as
an integral component of the service, we
are proposing to permit the State to
consider the cost of food in the rate it
pays for the State plan HCBS, as the cost
is then considered part of the service
itself. We would not consider the meal
to be an integral part of the State plan
HCBS when two rates are charged to the
public, one that includes a meal and one
that does not include a meal.
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4. Timing of Amendments
We seek to clarify expectations
regarding timing of amendments when
States propose modifications to the
1915(i) benefit. For the purposes of the
1915(i) benefit, we propose that
amendments which result in a reduction
of eligibility or services to 1915(i)
participants must be submitted with a
prospective, rather than retroactive,
effective date.
F. Section 2601 of the Affordable Care
Act: 5-Year Period for Demonstration
Projects
This proposed rule includes changes
to § 430.25 to implement section 2601 of
the Affordable Care Act.
Section 2601 of the Affordable Care
Act adds a new paragraph (2) to section
1915(h) to permit the Secretary, at her
discretion, to approve a waiver that
provides medical assistance for
individuals dually eligible for Medicare
and Medicaid (‘‘dual eligibles’’) for an
initial period of up to 5 years and
renewed for up to 5 years, at the State’s
request. The statute defines a dual
eligible as: ‘‘An individual who is
entitled to, or enrolled for, benefits
under part A of title XVIII, or enrolled
for benefits under part B of title XVIII,
and is eligible for medical assistance
under the State plan under this title or
under a waiver of such plan.’’ This new
authority enhances existing tools
available to improve and coordinate
care and services for this particularly
vulnerable group of beneficiaries. This
change provides an important tool for
States to design programs to better
coordinate services for dual eligible
individuals.
While section 2601 of the Affordable
Care Act does not provide a new type
of waiver, it does provide an important
opportunity for States to simplify the
operation of existing waivers that serve
dually eligible individuals, especially
important when States combine waiver
authorities that have different approval
periods.
A growing number of States provide
care to dual eligible individuals in a
managed care service system. To be
successful, these systems often include
community and institutional long-term
services and supports, utilize or partner
with Medicare managed care plans or
fee-for-service providers to improve care
continuity and individual outcomes,
and minimize disincentives to
community-based or preventive care.
The Medicaid tools available to
establish such an arrangement vary, but
many States seek to use a 1915(b)
Managed Care waiver concurrently with
a 1915(c) Home and Community-Based
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Services waiver. Some States interested
in offering home and community-based
supports to dual eligibles in a managed
care delivery system raised concerns
with the 2-year approval period for the
1915(b) managed care waivers and the
3- and 5-year approval periods for the
1915(c) HCBS waiver program. These
different approval periods present
administrative challenges for States that
pose hurdles to operational success.
Section 2601 of the Affordable Care
Act provides a solution for these
situations, and others where States may
wish to minimize administrative and
renewal requirements in order to better
focus on program implementation and
quality oversight. Section 2601 of the
Affordable Care Act includes an
opportunity for extended approval
periods for sections 1915(b), 1915(c),
1915(d) and 1115 of the Act.
For a State to apply for the extended
approval periods, the demonstration or
waiver program must provide services
for individuals who are dually-eligible
for Medicare and Medicaid. The
approval of such periods is at the
Secretary’s discretion, and
determinations will be made regarding
applications for 5-year waivers in a
manner consistent with the interests of
beneficiaries and the objectives of the
Medicaid program.
We are proposing that if a
demonstration or waiver program does
not serve or excludes dually eligible
individuals, the 5-year approval period
will not be available, and existing
approval period requirements will
apply. In addition, we are proposing to
that in order for coverage-related
waivers to be approved for 5 years
periods, they must meet all necessary
programmatic, financial, and quality
requirements.
The statute provides that the State’s
request for extension of the waiver for
additional 5-year periods will be
approved unless the Secretary
determines that one or more conditions
of the waiver have not been met, that
the waiver would no longer be cost
neutral (for 1915(c) waivers), costeffective (for 1915(b) waivers) or budget
neutral (for 1115 demonstrations), that it
would not be efficient to extend the
waiver, or that it would no longer be
consistent with the purposes of the
Medicaid program. We are proposing to
require that quality oversight
mechanisms must be in place and that
the State must demonstrate compliance
with applicable program requirements,
as well as the terms and conditions of
the waiver as specified by the Secretary.
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G. Prohibition Against Reassignment of
Provider Claims
1. Prohibition on Payment Reassignment
Section 1902(a)(32) of the Act
provides generally that ‘‘no payment
under the plan for care and services
provided to an individual shall be made
to anyone other than such individual or
the person or institution providing such
care or service, under an assignment or
power of attorney or otherwise.’’
The legislative history for this
provision indicates that a primary
purpose of the provision was to curb
perceived abuses that stemmed from
‘‘factoring’’ of accounts receivable by
physicians and individual practitioners.
Factoring is when an individual or an
organization, such as a collection
agency or service bureau, purchases
accounts receivable from a practitioner
for a percentage of their face value.
Section 1902(a)(32) of the Act
contains several specific exceptions to
the general principle of direct payment
to individual practitioners. There are
exceptions for payments for practitioner
services where payment is made to the
employer of the practitioner, and the
practitioner is required as a condition of
employment to turn over fees to the
employer; payments for practitioner
services furnished in a facility when
there is a contractual arrangement under
which the facility bills on behalf of the
practitioner; reassignments to a
governmental agency, through a court
order, or to a billing agent; payments to
a practitioner whose patients were
temporarily served by another identified
practitioner; or payments for a
childhood vaccine administered before
October 1, 1994.
Similar provisions were enacted in
title XVIII of the Act governing the
Medicare program, at sections 1815(c)
and 1842(b)(6) of the Act. Medicare
payment assignment regulations are
codified at 42 CFR part 424, subpart F
(Limitations on Assignment and
Reassignment of Claims). Because CMS
is not proposing to amend or revise the
regulations governing assignment of
Medicare payments in this notice, we do
not further discuss the Medicare rules.
However, we are specifically soliciting
public comment on the issue of
consistency with Medicare payment
policies, as discussed below.
2. Current Medicaid Payment
Assignment Regulations
Medicaid regulations at § 447.10
implement the requirements of section
1902(a)(32) of the Act by providing that
State plans can allow payments to be
made only to certain individuals or
entities. Specifically, payment may only
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be made to the individual practitioner
that provided the service or the
recipient, if he or she is a non-cash
recipient eligible to receive payment
under § 447.25, or under one of the
limited exemptions. In addition, the
regulations specifically state that
‘‘[P]ayment for any service furnished to
a recipient by a provider may not be
made to or through a factor, either
directly or by power of attorney.’’
3. Medicaid Payment Reassignment
The regulations at § 447.10 contain
several enumerated exceptions to the
general direct payment principle that
implement and interpret the statutory
exceptions. There is an exception for
payment in accordance with a
reassignment to a government agency, or
by a court order. There is another
exception for payment to a business
agent, such as a billing service or
accounting firm, that furnishes
statements and receives payments in the
name of the individual practitioner, if
the business agent’s compensation for
this service is related to the cost of
processing the billing, and not
dependent on the collection of the
payment.
There are also three exceptions for
payments to individual practitioners
that reflect statutory exceptions
discussed above.
4. Individual Practitioner Workforce
Stability and Development Concerns
Since the direct payment principle
was originally enacted in 1972 and
expanded in 1977, the definition of
medical assistance under section
1905(a) of the Act has been changed to
permit States to offer coverage of
categories of practitioner services, such
as personal care services, that may be
viewed as unique to the Medicaid
program. For these practitioners, the
Medicaid program may be the primary,
or only, source of payment. Some States
have sought methods to improve and
stabilize the workforce by offering
health and welfare benefits to such
practitioners, and by requiring that such
practitioners pursue periodic training.
Several States have requested that we
consider adopting additional exceptions
to the direct payment principle to
permit withholding from the payment
due to the individual practitioner for
amounts paid by the State directly to
third parties for health and welfare
benefits, training costs, and other
benefits customary for employees. These
amounts would not be retained by the
State, but would be paid to third parties
on behalf of the practitioner for the
stated purpose.
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While section 1902(a)(32) of the Act
does not expressly provide for
additional exceptions to the direct
payment principle, we believe the
circumstances at issue were not
contemplated under section 1902(a)(32)
of the Act and, therefore, that the direct
payment principle should not apply. In
light of the statutory silence in
addressing this circumstance, we are
proposing that the direct payment
principle should not apply because we
think its application would contravene
the fundamental purpose of the
provision. As noted above, the apparent
purpose of the direct payment principle
was to prohibit factoring arrangements.
Therefore, we are proposing an
additional exception to describe
payments that we do not see as within
the intended scope of the statutory
direct payment requirement. Under this
exception, a State could claim as a
provider payment amounts that are not
directly paid to the provider, but are
withheld and paid on behalf of the
provider, such as health and welfare
benefit contributions, training costs, or
other benefits customary for employees.
H. Definition of Home and CommunityBased Settings for the 1915(k)
Community First Choice State Plan
Option
Section 1915(k)(1)(A)(ii) of the Act
provides that home and communitybased attendant services and supports
must be provided in a home and
community-based setting. The statute
specifies that home and communitybased settings do not include a nursing
facility, institution for mental diseases,
or an intermediate care facility for the
mentally retarded. Through the
application process of sections 1915(c)
waivers, 1915(i) HCBS State plan
amendments and section 1905(a) State
plan amendments, we are aware of
settings other than those specified in
section 1915(k)(1)(A)(ii) of the Act that
exhibit qualities of an institutional
setting.
Over the past several years, we have
sought input on how to define the
characteristics of what makes a setting
‘‘home and community-based.’’ In the
section 1915(i) proposed rule published
on April 4, 2008 (73 FR 18676), we
proposed to define home and
community settings for this benefit. In
the advanced notice of proposed
rulemaking published on June 22, 2009
(74 FR 29453), we solicited comments
on potential rulemaking for a number of
areas within the section 1915(c) waiver
program. Specifically, we sought public
input on strategies to define home and
community-based settings where waiver
participants may receive services. Since
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that time, we have facilitated and
participated in multiple stakeholder
discussions related to this issue. In the
proposed rule for section 1915(k)
Community First Choice (CFC) State
plan option published on February 25,
2011 (76 FR 10736), we included the
proposed language for settings in which
CFC services and supports could be
provided to elicit additional comments
on this issue. In an effort to maintain
consistency with this policy we also
proposed similar language in the section
1915(c) proposed rule that published on
April 15, 2011. We received many
thoughtful comments on the proposed
setting provisions published in the CFC
proposed rule published on February
25, 2011. The comments received
indicated to us that the proposed setting
provisions caused more confusion and
disagreement than clarity. In
consideration of these comments, we
decided to revise the setting provision
and publish as a new proposed rule to
allow for additional public comment
before finalizing. We find the public
comment process to be valuable in our
attempt to develop the best policy on
this issue for Medicaid beneficiaries.
Our policy regarding appropriate
settings for the delivery of HCBS, as
evidenced by our review of section
1915(c) waiver requests, has included a
general prohibition on allowing HCBS
in settings that are located on or
adjacent to the campus of a public
institution. We included this
prohibition in the CFC proposed rule
published on February 25, 2011. In
response to the proposed rule, many
commenters indicated strong support
for this policy being incorporated into
the final regulation, along with the
proposal that buildings that included
the delivery of inpatient services would
not constitute acceptable settings for
delivery of HCBS. Another commenter
indicated that CMS should go a step
further and in addition to excluding
settings that are co-located with current
institutions, also exclude settings on the
grounds of former institutions to be
clear that reorganizing and reclassifying
an institution would not meet the
criteria of a community-based setting.
Many commenters believe that it is not
possible for such a setting to ever be
home and community-based. Others
stated that all the characteristics of the
setting should be given weight, and that
we should not establish requirements
based solely on the setting locations or
types (for example, size or the presence
of institutional services offered within
the same building), which would
automatically disqualify a setting from
being appropriate for delivery of HCBS.
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In particular, we heard concerns that
a general prohibition on setting
locations or types could significantly
restrict access to services in settings that
promote aging in place for elderly
individuals, disrupt effective treatment
and support opportunities for
individuals with significant brain
injury, and potentially restrict access to
services in rural areas. Commenters also
expressed concerns that by focusing our
policy on setting locations or physical
characteristics, we were inappropriately
implying that smaller or more scattered
settings were automatically appropriate,
regardless of the quality of care or
degree to which individuals receiving
services in those settings were actually
able to participate in community life, be
assured of health and safety, or able to
control their own daily activities. Many
commenters stated that listing the
excluded settings created unintended
consequences, and could exclude living
arrangements for individuals receiving
attendant services and supports that we
did not intend to prohibit, as well as
permit others that are not integrated and
person-centered.
In response to public comment, we
have developed proposed regulatory
language to focus primarily on those
qualities we deem essential in
determining whether a setting of care is
community-based. We believe the most
effective and consistent way to assure
that individuals with disabilities,
regardless of age or type of disability,
are offered home and community-based
services in the most integrated setting
appropriate to their needs and
preferences, is to focus on the quality
and characteristics of ‘‘home’’ and
‘‘community’’ that assure independence
and integration from the individuals’
perspective. We agree with the many
commenters who suggested this type of
approach is most consistent with a
person-centered system for delivering
care and services.
Some commenters stated that if an
individual or his or her family
‘‘chooses’’ a residence, it is therefore a
‘‘home and community-based’’ setting.
We disagree, as individuals can and do
choose to receive services in
institutional settings. In addition, this
reasoning is especially suspect in
situations where an individual may not
be given the option of receiving services
in a variety of settings outside of an
institution (for example, in their own
home or apartment or, depending on the
service, in a competitive employment
situation), but rather is offered services
only in a provider-owned or operated
congregate setting.
We received a range of responses as
to whether disability-specific congregate
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settings are appropriate settings for
delivery of HCBS. Some individuals and
organizations are articulate about their
right to live with anyone of their
choosing, including those with
disabilities. Others maintain that the
only way to end unwanted segregation
and forced ‘‘choices’’ is to forbid all
segregation by disability, and that
integration by definition means
interaction with non-disabled
individuals. All agree that unwilling
segregation is a violation of civil rights.
The Department of Justice has initiated
a number of actions finding that States
are violating the ADA by failing to
provide more integrated alternatives to
individuals in congregate settings whose
residents are primarily or exclusively
individuals with disabilities. States’
obligations under the ADA and Section
504 of the Rehabilitation Act are
independent of, and are not limited by,
their obligations under Medicaid,
including the requirements of CFC,
section 1915(c) of the Act, or section
1915(i) of the Act. States should
carefully evaluate their strategies for
offering services in community-based
settings and consider whether
individuals have meaningful options
beyond a segregated option.
In addition, some commenters stated
that community can be defined in many
ways, and therefore that home and
community-based care could include
integration into a community of peers;
that is, in a disability-specific
congregate or campus setting that
includes a rich array of supports and
activities within the setting of care. We
acknowledge the importance of peer
relationships but we do not agree that a
community of one’s peers is the same as
‘‘community based’’ in terms of settings
in which HCBS is delivered. An
important purpose of home and
community-based services is to assist
individuals to be able to live fully
integrated in the greater, non-disabled
community.
To provide greater clarity, we are
proposing language to establish that
home and community-based settings
must exhibit specific qualities to be
eligible sites for delivery of home and
community-based services. We have
included these provisions to move
toward a stronger articulation of the
qualities that make a setting a home or
truly integrated in the broader
community for individuals living with
disabilities. These are the qualities most
often articulated by persons with
disabilities as key determinants of
independence and community
integration. We believe that these
principles of home and communitybased settings will support the use of
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the Medicaid program to maximize the
opportunities for individuals to access
the benefits of home and community
living. We expect States electing to
provide benefits under section 1915(k)
to include a definition of home and
community-based setting that
incorporates these principles and will
review all SPAs to determine whether
they propose settings that are home or
community-based. We will permit
States with approved section 1915(k)
SPAs a reasonable transition period, a
minimum of one year, to come into
compliance with the HCBS setting
requirements as promulgated in our
final rule. Under the regulation, settings
must exhibit the following qualities, and
such other qualities as the Secretary
determines to be appropriate, based on
the needs of the individual as indicated
in their person-centered service plan, in
order to be eligible sites for delivery of
home and community-based services:
• The setting is integrated in, and
facilitates the individual’s full access to,
the greater community including
opportunities to seek employment and
work in competitive integrated settings,
engage in community life, control
personal resources, and receive services
in the community, like individuals
without disabilities;
• The setting is selected by the
individual among all available
alternatives and is identified in the
person-centered service plan;
• An individual’s essential personal
rights of privacy, dignity and respect,
and freedom from coercion and restraint
are protected;
• Individual initiative, autonomy,
and independence in making life
choices, including but not limited to,
daily activities, physical environment,
and with whom to interact are
optimized and not regimented; and
• Individual choice regarding services
and supports, and who provides them,
is facilitated.
In a provider-owned or controlled
residential setting, the following
additional conditions must be met. Any
modification of the conditions, for
example to address the safety needs of
an individual with dementia, must be
supported by specific assessed needs
and documented in the person centered
service plan:
• The unit or room is a specific
physical place that can be owned,
rented or occupied under another
legally enforceable agreement by the
individual receiving services, and the
individual has, at a minimum, the same
responsibilities and protections from
eviction that the tenants have under the
landlord tenant laws of the State,
county, city, or other designated entity.
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We are soliciting comments as to
whether there are other protections, not
addressed by landlord tenant laws that
should be included.
++ Each individual has privacy in
their sleeping or living unit:
– – Units have lockable entrance
doors, with appropriate staff having
keys to doors;
– – Individuals share units only at the
individual’s choice; and
– – Individuals have the freedom to
furnish and decorate their sleeping or
living units;
++ Individuals have the freedom and
support to control their own schedules
and activities, and have access to food
at any time;
++ Individuals are able to have
visitors of their choosing at any time;
and
++ The setting is physically
accessible to the individual.
In addition to the aforementioned
criteria there are two criteria that we
have not included in the proposed
regulation, but wish to solicit comment
regarding whether they should be
added. The first is related to the
proposed requirement that in a
provider-owned or controlled
residential setting, any modification of
the conditions must be supported by
specific assessed needs and documented
in the person centered service plan.
This requirement is meant to address
two issues:
(1) Individuals receiving HCBS must
not have their independence or
freedoms abridged by providers for
convenience, or well-meaning but
unnecessarily restrictive methods for
providing services and supports; and
(2) Individuals with cognitive
disabilities and other impairments may
require modifications of the
aforementioned conditions for their
safety and welfare.
This provision is meant to establish
that service planning is the process in
which these decisions are made, rather
than ad hoc on a daily basis. While the
proposed text establishes the
requirement that any modification to the
conditions are supported by a specific
assessed need and documented in the
person-centered service plan, we are
also considering including language to
explicitly set forth these activities. We
are considering requiring the following
points to be identified: Identify a
specific and individualized assessed
safety need; document less intrusive
methods of meeting that have been tried
but did not work; include a clear
description of the condition that is
directly proportionate to the specific
assessed safety need; include regular
collection and review of data to measure
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the ongoing effectiveness of the
modification; and establishing time
limits for periodic reviews to determine
if the modification can be lifted. We
solicit comment on these points and any
other potential requirements regarding
modifications of the conditions set forth
in this proposed rule. We also wish to
solicit comment on a second criterion
that would include a requirement that
receipt of any particular service or
support cannot be a condition for living
in the unit. In discussing this specific
criterion, we discovered that it could be
read one of two ways. One
interpretation is that this language does
not require an individual residing in a
provider owned or operated setting to
receive HCBS from the setting provider.
Rather the individual could choose
another qualified individual to provide
HCBS. The other interpretation is that
this language would prevent the owner
of the setting from evicting an
individual because the individual
refused to accept a particular service.
This interpretation could have an effect
on residential settings, such as housing
programs to address homelessness.
Some of these settings include a
structure in which individuals are
required to participate in treatment
(substance use, for example) as a
condition of residing there. We
acknowledge the complexities that arise,
when trying to support an individual’s
right to choose while recognizing that
there are programs and services that
have been developed as a result of
identified service needs. As indicated
earlier, we are specifically soliciting
comments on whether these two criteria
should be included as regulatory
requirements.
Additionally, in an effort to be
consistent with other authorities
providing home and community-based
services, we propose to exclude
hospitals as a community setting for the
provision of Community First Choice
Option. We believe this exclusion aligns
with section 1915(k)(1)(A)(ii) of the Act
requiring that services are provided in a
home and community-based setting and
section 1915(k)(3)(B) of the Act
requiring services are provided in the
most integrated setting appropriate to
the individual’s needs. We would like to
clarify that the hospital prohibition
applies to hospitals certified for the
provision of long-term care services. We
recognize that individuals with
disabilities utilize personal attendant
services and supports for various
activities of daily living and
instrumental activities of daily living.
As a result, we understand that
individuals will likely have a continued
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need for assistance while experiencing a
short-term stay in general acute hospital
settings. Therefore, while services
provided in a general acute care hospital
are not CFC services, individuals who
have an assessed need for assistance
with IADLs may continue to receive
such services while an inpatient in an
acute hospital setting. We would like to
invite comment on this approach.
Lastly, we are proposing to include
the list of the three prohibited
institutional settings specified in
statute, as settings in which CFC
services and supports may not be
provided, along with a general
prohibition on any other locations that
have qualities of an institutional setting,
as determined by the Secretary.
In considering whether a setting has
the qualities of an institutional setting
for implementation of CFC, we will
exercise a rebuttable presumption, as we
will for the 1915(i) State plan HCBS
benefit, that a setting is not a home and
community-based setting, and will
engage in heightened scrutiny, for any
setting that is located in a building that
is also a publicly or privately operated
facility that provides inpatient
institutional treatment, or in a building
on the grounds of, or immediately
adjacent to, a public institution, or
disability-specific housing complex. We
expect to issue further guidance
regarding such settings. Other
characteristics that could cause us to
consider a setting as ‘‘institutional’’ or
having the qualities of an institution
would include, but not be limited to,
settings which are isolated from the
broader community, do not allow
individuals to choose whether or with
whom they share a room, limit
individuals’ freedom of choice on daily
living experiences such as meals,
visitors, and activities, or limit
individuals’ opportunities to pursue
community activities.
Specifically, as with the 1915(i)
proposed rule, we would invite
comments on the specific qualities we
have proposed. In addition, we are
soliciting comments as to whether there
are settings in addition to those
currently enumerated in statute, that
are, by their nature, location or
administration inherently noncommunity based, regardless of the
nature of an individual’s disability or
age, and therefore, should be expressly
excluded from HCBS. Issuing the
revised setting provisions as a proposed
notice will allow us to consider
additional perspectives from the public
on the modifications. In considering
comments received pertaining to the
setting provision of the section 1915(k)
rule, we will also include full
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consideration of all comments received
regarding the aligned home and
community-based setting requirements
being proposed in this rule and section
1915(i). In recognizing the need for a
consistent definition of this term across
Medicaid HCBS, it is our goal to align
the final language pertaining to this
topic across the regulations pertaining
to sections 1915(i), 1915(k), and 1915(c)
Medicaid HCBS authorities.
Along with our overarching interest in
making improvements to Medicaid
HCBS, we seek to ensure that Medicaid
is supporting needed strategies for
States in their efforts to meet their
obligations under the ADA and the
Supreme Court decision in Olmstead v.
L.C., 527 U.S. 581 (1999). In the
Olmstead decision, the Court affirmed a
State’s obligations to serve individuals
in the most integrated setting
appropriate to their needs. A State’s
obligations under the ADA and section
504 of the Rehabilitation Act are not
defined by, or limited to, the scope or
requirements of the Medicaid program.
However, the Medicaid program can
provide an important opportunity to
obtain Federal funding that supports
compliance with the ADA, section 504
of the Rehabilitation Act, and Olmstead
through the provision of Medicaid
services to Medicaid-eligible
individuals. Additionally, we expect
States through the requirement at
§ 441.677(b) to have a comprehensive
quality assurance system, to develop
individual outcome measures that
would support the State’s compliance
with providing CFC services in
accordance with the individual’s
person-centered plan and in a setting
that meets the home and communitybased setting criteria set forth in this
regulation.
III. Provisions of the Proposed Rule
To incorporate the policies and
implement the statutory provisions
described above, we are proposing the
following revisions:
A. State Organization and General
Administration (Part 431)
In § 431.54, we are proposing to add
paragraphs (a)(3) and (h) to include
State plan HCBS as exceptions to
comparability and community income
and resource rules.
B. Eligibility in the States, District of
Columbia, the Northern Mariana
Islands, and American Samoa (Part 435)
and Eligibility in Guam, Puerto Rico and
the Virgin Islands (Part 436)
In § 435.219 and § 436.219, we are
proposing to add a provision to
implement the optional categorical
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eligibility group created by section
1902(a)(10)(A)(ii)(XXII) of the Act for
individuals, ‘‘who are eligible for home
and community-based services under
the needs-based criteria established
under (1)(A) of 1915(i), or who are
eligible for home and community-based
services under paragraph (6) of such
section, and who will receive home and
community-based services pursuant to a
State plan amendment under such
subsection.’’ By using the word ‘‘or’’ we
interpret that the statute creates two
distinct eligibility groups under section
1902(a)(10)(A)(ii)(XXII) of the Act with
two sets of requirements, as follows:
(1) Those who are eligible for HCBS
under the needs-based criteria
established under section 1915(i)(1)(A)
of the Act; or
(2) Those who are eligible for HCBS
under paragraph (6) of such section, and
who will receive HCBS pursuant to a
State plan amendment under such
subsection.
We believe that we have the following
flexibility in defining eligibility for the
first subset of this group of individuals:
• The first subset is made up of
individuals who are not otherwise
eligible for Medicaid. We believe that
this interpretation is consistent with
Congressional intent because this policy
allows individuals who would not
otherwise be eligible for Medicaid
because they are not in a category (for
example, certain adults prior to January
1, 2014) to become Medicaid eligible
and receive section 1915(i) services. The
early option established by section
1902(k)(2) of the Act covers individuals
who are not otherwise categorically
eligible for Medicaid. The new group
defined in section 1902(a)(10)(A)(i)(VIII)
of the Act, which goes into effect in
2014, also will cover individuals not
eligible under the existing categorical
groups listed in section 1902(a)(10) of
the Act.
• Even though the description of the
eligibility group in the statute at section
1902(a)(10)(A)(ii)(XXII) of the Act does
not explicitly include an income cap we
believe that a standard of 150 percent of
the FPL, which is the same as the
current income cap for individuals
eligible under the State plan receiving
section 1915(i) services, is reasonable.
The needs-based criteria are described
in section 1915(i)(1)(A) of the Act,
which provides additional conditions
for the provision of State plan HCBS
under section 1915(i)(1) to individuals
who are eligible under the State
Medicaid plan and whose income does
not exceed 150 percent of the FPL. In
addition, the amendments to section
1915(i) of the Act in section 2402(b) of
the Affordable Care Act which establish
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a new option to cover individuals
eligible for HCBS under a waiver, gives
States this option ‘‘in addition to
continuing to provide such services’’ to
individuals satisfying the needs-based
criteria. Prior to the effective date of the
new eligibility group under section
1902(a)(10)(A)(ii)(XXII) of the Act,
States could only provide HCBS under
section 1915(i) to those eligible under
an existing State plan group whose
income did not exceed 150 percent of
the FPL and who met the needs-based
criteria.
• Section 1902 of the Act requires
States to use methods of determining
income that are reasonable, consistent
with the objectives of the Medicaid
program, simple to administer, and in
the best interests of the beneficiary. For
purposes of determining income for this
group, we believe the SSI program’s
rules (which are currently used in
Medicaid for determining income
eligibility for individuals aged 65 or
older and people with disabilities) meet
these criteria. Like the individuals
covered under the SSI-related Medicaid
eligibility category, many individuals
eligible under this group will have
disabilities or chronic illnesses. The SSI
program provides for a number of
income disregards specifically
applicable to persons with disabilities
that are not available under other
program methodologies. States may also
elect to use less restrictive income
methodologies than are used under SSI.
Any less restrictive methodology should
apply to all members of the group.
• While the rules of the SSI program
are an example of a methodology that
we believe meets the requirements for
determining income eligibility for this
group, this does not preclude States
from describing other methodologies in
their SPAs that they believe also meet
those requirements. We encourage
States considering the use of other
methodologies to discuss them with
CMS before actually submitting a SPA.
• The statute does not refer to any
resource test for this group and we are
proposing that States may not apply a
resource test in determining eligibility
for this subset of the new group. We
believe that not applying a resource test
for this subset would be consistent with
the absence of a resource test for the
eligibility group described under section
1902(a)(10)(A)(i)(VIII) of the Act and the
option for States to cover such
individuals prior to January 1, 2014.
• The section 1915(i) statute does
require that these individuals must
receive section 1915(i) services in order
to be eligible for Medicaid.
• Once eligible for Medicaid in this
group, the individual will be eligible for
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all Medicaid services, not just section
1915(i) services.
The second subset of this group
consists of individuals eligible for home
and community-based services under an
existing State waiver or demonstration.
In determining eligibility for individuals
with income that does not exceed 300
percent of the SSI/FBR, individuals
must be eligible for an existing section
1915(c), (d), or (e) waiver or a waiver
under section 1115, even though they
do not have to receive services under
these authorities. For individuals with
income that does not exceed 300
percent of the SSI/FBR, we believe that
there is little flexibility under the statue
in determining eligibility for this subset,
therefore—
• The individual must be eligible for
a section 1915(c) waiver;
• The State must follow eligibility
and post eligibility rules of an approved
section 1915(c) waiver. More
information regarding HCBS waiver
eligibility and post eligibility rules is
available in the HCBS waiver Technical
Guide, online at www.hcbswaivers.net;
• Income and resource rules of the
special income level group apply;
• Section 1902(r)(2) of the Act income
disregards do not apply because income
eligibility under the special income
level group is determined using a gross
income test that caps income at 300
percent of the SSI/FBR;
• Section 1902(r)(2) of the Act
resource disregards apply;
• The individual must receive section
1915(i) services as a condition of
Medicaid eligibility;
• If the State elects to cover
individuals with income up to 300
percent of the SSI/FBR, it must elect the
option under section 1915(i)(6) under
the State plan; and
• The individual will be eligible for
all Medicaid services, not just section
1915(i) services.
Additionally, when electing this new
eligibility group States will have
multiple options. States can cover—
(1) Individuals who meet the needsbased criteria established under section
1915(i)(1)(A) of the Act with income up
to 150 percent of the FPL and
individuals who meet the needs-based
criteria established under 1915(i)(1)(A)
eligible for HCBS under a waiver with
income up to 300 percent of the SSI/
FBR; or
(2) The subset of individuals who
meet the needs-based criteria
established under section 1915(i)(1)(A)
of the Act with income up to 150
percent of the FPL; or
(3) The subset of individuals who
meet the needs-based criteria
established under section 1915(i)(1)(A)
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of the Act eligible for HCBS under a
waiver with income up to 300 percent
of the SSI/FBR.
In order for States to elect any of the
options listed above with respect to the
new eligibility group, they must
continue to cover individuals described
in 1915(i)(1).
This is not the first time that an
eligibility group has been treated in this
manner; the aged or disabled poverty
level group described at section
1902(m)(1) of the Act permits States to
cover aged and disabled individuals, the
aged only, or disabled only individuals.
We invite comment on the eligibility
provisions of § 435.219 and § 436.219 of
the regulation.
C. Services: General Provisions (Part
440)
In § 440.1, we are proposing to add a
reference to a new statutory basis to
read ‘‘1915(i) HCBS furnished under a
State plan to elderly and disabled
individuals under the provisions of part
441, subpart L.’’
In § 440.180, we are proposing to
revise the heading ‘‘Home or
community-based services’’ to read
‘‘Home and community-based waiver
services’’ to standardize the term ‘‘home
and community-based services’’ and
clarify that this section concerns only
HCBS provided through 1915(c)
waivers.
In part 440 subpart A, we are
proposing to add § 440.182, ‘‘State plan
home and community-based services’’,
which would define a new optional
Medicaid service for which FFP is
available to States, as specified in part
441, subpart K.
In § 440.182(a), we propose that the
services authorized in section 1915(i) of
the Act, and meeting the requirements
outlined in proposed subpart K, be
known as ‘‘State plan home and
community-based services.’’ When
referring to the specific service(s)
offered under the State plan HCBS
benefit listed in § 440.180(b), we use the
term ‘‘State plan HCBS.’’ When referring
to overall State activities under section
1915(i) of the Act as described in
subpart K, we use the term ‘‘benefit’’, or
‘‘State plan HCBS benefit’’.
In § 440.182(b) and § 440.182(c)(1), we
propose that the optional State plan
HCBS benefit may consist of any or all
of the HCBS listed in section 1915(c)(4)
for waiver programs, as specified in
regulation at § 440.180. Because section
1915(i) of the Act defines services by
reference to section 1915(c) of the Act,
we believe that the regulatory
requirements should be parallel, except
for the ‘‘other’’ services which the
Secretary has the authority to approve
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for an HCBS waiver. In HCBS waivers,
other services must be cost-effective and
must be necessary to prevent
institutionalization. However, the State
plan HCBS does not require costneutrality and some individuals will be
eligible for section 1915(i) of the Act
without meeting an institutional LOC.
Therefore, we list the permitted services
for the State plan HCBS benefit in
§ 440.182 identically to the services
specified in § 440.180 for HCBS waivers,
except for ‘‘other’’ services. We require
‘‘other’’ services to be appropriate for
individuals who meet the needs-based
criteria that the State defines for the
benefit. We further specify that the
conditions set forth in § 440.180(b) for
services to individuals with chronic
mental illness, and in § 440.180(c) for
expanded habilitation services, apply to
State plan HCBS services.
In particular, due to concern over
duplication of habilitation services and
the State-defined ‘‘other services,’’ we
propose to require at § 441.662(a)(7) and
§ 441.662(a)(8) (regarding requirements
for independent assessment),
explanations of the manner in which
non-duplication of services will be
documented in the assessment of each
individual receiving habilitation
services or Secretary approved other
services. Additionally, since some
individuals may be simultaneously
receiving services through a HCBS
waiver and the section 1915(i) benefit,
we require in § 441.662(a)(9)
documentation that the services
provided through 1915(c) and 1915(i)
authorities may not be duplicative for
the same individual. This would also
include coordination of assessments,
service plan development, and casemanagement to ensure that individuals
receiving services under both
authorities are not subject to multiple
assessments and service plans.
Section 1915(i) of the Act prohibits
reimbursement for room and board. At
§ 440.182(c), we propose to state that,
except for respite care furnished in a
setting approved by the State that is not
the individual’s residence, no service or
combination of services may be used to
furnish room and board through the
State plan HCBS benefit. When meals
are furnished as an integral component
of the service, we are proposing to
permit the State to consider the cost of
food in the rate it pays for the State plan
HCBS, as the cost is then considered
part of the service itself. We would not
consider the meal to be an integral part
of the State plan HCBS when two rates
are charged to the public, one that
includes a meal and one that does not
include a meal.
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Finally, we propose that a State may
claim FFP for a portion of the rent and
food expenses that may be reasonably
attributed as a service cost to
compensate an unrelated caregiver
providing State plan HCBS, who is
residing in the same household with the
recipient. We propose, as is permitted in
HCBS waivers under section 1915(c)(1)
and § 441.310(a)(2)(ii), that FFP is
available only for the reasonable
additional rent and food costs of the
caregiver residing in the recipient’s
home, not to support the cost of a
caregiver’s household in which the
recipient resides. We would therefore
provide that FFP not be available for
caregiver rent and food costs when the
residence is owned or leased by the
caregiver.
D. Services: Requirements and Limits
Applicable to Specific Services (Part
441)
In April 4, 2008, we issued a
proposed rule in the Federal Register
titled ‘‘Medicaid Program; Home and
Community-Based State Plan Services.’’
In that proposed ruled, we specified that
we would set forth our proposals in 42
CFR part 441 initially proposed in new
subpart K titled ‘‘State Plan Home and
Community-Based Services for Elderly
and Disabled Individuals,’’ consisting of
§ 441.650 through § 441.677, which
describes requirements for providing the
State plan HCBS benefit. This
construction parallels that for HCBS
waivers, which are the subject of
subpart G of part 441. Subsequently, we
published a proposed rule (76 FR
10736) on February 25, 2011 in the
Federal Register titled ‘‘Medicaid
Program; Community First Choice
Option,’’ which also proposed the
addition of subpart K to part 441.
Therefore, we are proposing to specify
that the proposed provisions for the
‘‘State Plan Home and CommunityBased Services for Elderly and Disabled
Individuals’’ in subpart K under
§ 441.550 through § 441.577 be
redesignated as subpart L (§ 441.650
through § 441.677).
In this new subpart, it is necessary in
several paragraphs to indicate that
certain provisions apply to an
individual or an individual’s
representative. To reduce redundancy,
we indicate in those paragraphs that
‘‘individual’’ means the eligible
individual and, if applicable, the
individual’s representative, to the extent
of the representative’s authority
recognized by the State. ‘‘Individual and
representative’’ more accurately convey
the person-centered process than
‘‘individual or representative’’. This
provision clarifies that there is no
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implication that individuals will or will
not have representatives.
E. Basis and Purpose (§ 441.650)
We set forth in § 441.650 language to
implement the provisions of section
1915(i) of the Act permitting States to
offer HCBS to qualified elderly and
disabled individuals under the State
plan. Those services are listed in
§ 440.182, and are described by the
State, including any limitations of the
services. This optional benefit is known
as the State plan HCBS benefit. This
subpart describes what a State Medicaid
plan must provide, and defines State
responsibilities.
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F. State Plan Requirements (§ 441.653)
In § 441.653, we propose that a State
plan that includes HCBS for elderly and
disabled individuals must meet the
requirements of this subpart. We would
require that the State plan amendment
in which the State establishes the State
plan HCBS benefit satisfy the
requirements set forth in this proposed
regulation.
G. Eligibility for Home and CommunityBased Services Under Section 1915(i)(1)
of the Act (§ 441.656)
We propose in § 441.656(a)(1) to
require that if the State Medicaid agency
elects to provide the 1915(i) HCBS
benefit, it must provide services to
categorically needy individuals who are
eligible for Medicaid under an eligibility
group that is covered under its State
Medicaid plan and who have income
that does not exceed 150 percent of the
FPL. The State may also elect to provide
the section 1915(i) HCBS benefit to
medically needy individuals.
To implement the intent of the
Congress that the benefit be ‘‘home and
community-based,’’ we would require in
§ 441.656(a) that the individual reside in
the home or community, not in an
institution, according to quality
principles for community-based settings
prescribed by the Secretary. As
discussed in section II.E.2. of this
proposed rule, there are a variety of
living arrangements that promote
independence and community
integration, as well as arrangements that
do not.
We would require in § 441.656(b) that
the individual must meet the needsbased eligibility criteria as set forth in
§ 441.659. We propose in § 441.656(c)
that individuals are not eligible for the
State plan HCBS benefit until they have
met all eligibility requirements,
including the need for at least one
service provided under the State plan as
part of the HCBS benefit at a frequency
identified by the State. Finally, we
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require that, in the event that a State
elects not to apply comparability
requirements to the benefit, an
individual must meet the State-defined
and CMS approved targeting criteria in
order to establish eligibility.
We propose in § 435.219(b) and
§ 436.219(b) that States may elect under
section 1915(i)(6) of the Act the option
to provide home and community-based
State plan services to individuals
eligible under a section 1915(c), (d), (e)
or section 1115 waiver who have
income up to 300 percent of the SSI/
FBR.
We also propose in § 441.656(e)(1)
that States may elect to follow
institutional income and resource
eligibility rules for the medically needy
living in the community.
Nonapplication of the requirements of
section 1902(a)(10)(C)(i)(III) of the Act
allows States to treat medically needy
individuals as if they are living in an
institution by not deeming income and
resources from an ineligible family
member. We use the term ‘‘not to apply’’
instead of ‘‘waive’’ since this is an
election made by the State and does not
require a waiver by the Secretary. We
further propose that States may elect not
to apply section 1902(a)(10)(B) of the
Act, concerning comparability of
services in Medicaid, which permits the
State plan HCBS benefit to be targeted
towards specific populations. In this
section, we indicate that a State may
elect to establish targeting criteria for
the section 1915(i) benefit and for any
specific services within that benefit,
subject to CMS approval, based on
factors such as age, diagnosis, and/or
disability. These criteria provide States
with the option to provide State plan
HCBS services to specific populations,
including specific Medicaid eligibility
groups, but allows flexibility to combine
multiple target groups within one
benefit and to provide different services
to each group. Targeting criteria cannot
have the impact of limiting the pool of
qualified providers from which an
individual would receive services, or
have the impact of requiring an
individual to receive services from the
same entity from which they purchase
their housing.
H. Needs-Based Criteria and Evaluation
(§ 441.659)
The statute uses a number of terms at
times interchangeably. In general, in
§ 441.659 we adopt the wording used
most frequently in the law, and specify
a term for each requirement. For
example, regarding the terms
‘‘assessment’’ and ‘‘evaluation,’’ we
would adopt the language in section
1915(i)(1)(H)(ii) of the Act, which refers
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to the ‘‘independent evaluation’’ and the
‘‘independent assessment.’’
1. Needs-Based Eligibility Criteria
In § 441.659(a), we propose that States
establish needs-based criteria for
determining an individual’s eligibility
under the State plan for HCBS, and may
establish needs-based criteria for each
specific service. We do not define
support needs, as we believe that States
should have the flexibility to match
eligibility criteria to the nature of the
services they would provide under the
HCBS benefit. By statute, the needsbased criteria would consist of needs for
specified types of support, such as
assistance with ADLs, IADLs, or other
risk factors defined by the State. We
propose to require that State-defined
risk factors affecting eligibility may be
included as needs-based eligibility
criteria in the State plan amendment.
While we do not propose requirements
for State-defined risk factors, we believe
that as needs-based criteria, risk factors
should be related to support needs, such
as lack of availability of family members
or other unpaid caregivers willing and
able to provide necessary care.
We distinguish support needs from
other types of characteristics. We
propose that a distinguishing
characteristic of needs-based criteria is
that they can only be ascertained for a
given person through an individual
evaluation. This differentiates a
targeting criterion such as a diagnosis,
which many individuals may
identically share, from a support need,
which will vary widely among those
individuals with the same diagnosis.
We note that the regulation requires
only that the needs-based criteria for the
State plan HCBS benefit establish the
lowest threshold of need to enroll in the
benefit. There is an upper limit of need
to be eligible for the HCBS benefit only
if the State so specifies in the needsbased eligibility criteria. The more
stringent institutional criteria required
in § 441.559(b) of this section do not
constitute an upper limit of need to be
eligible for the State plan HCBS benefit.
The institutional criteria are only a
lowest threshold of need to receive
institutional services. We also note that
section 1915(i)(1) of the Act clarifies
that State plan HCBS are not required to
be direct alternatives to institutional
care. The statute specifically provides
that the State plan HCBS benefit does
not need to meet the section 1915(c)
requirement that, but for the services
provided under the HCBS waiver, the
individual would require institutional
care.
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2. More Stringent Institutional and
Waiver Needs-Based Criteria
In § 441.659(b), we propose that the
State plan HCBS benefit is available to
a State only if individuals may
demonstrate a lower level of need to
obtain State plan HCBS than is required
to obtain institutional or waiver
services. States that have functional
LOC criteria for institutions (that meet
the requirements in § 441.659(a)(1)),
may have no need to modify their
existing institutional criteria so long as
the needs-based eligibility criteria
established for State plan HCBS are less
stringent. States without need-based
institutional LOC criteria must add
need-based requirements to their LOC
assessments in order to establish the
State plan HCBS benefit.
We propose in § 441.659(b) to define
by reference to statute and regulation
the institutions for which section
1915(i) of the Act requires more
stringent eligibility criteria. NF and ICF/
MR are so cited. We interpret the
reference in section 1915(i)(1)(B) of the
Act to hospitals to mean facilities
certified by Medicaid as hospitals that
are providing long-term care services or
services related to the HCBS to be
provided under the benefit. The
proposed regulation requires that States
have or establish for such hospitals (if
any), needs-based criteria for admission
that are more stringent than those for
eligibility in the State plan HCBS
benefit. We further propose, when the
State covers more than one service in
the State plan HCBS benefit, to require
that any needs-based criteria for
individual HCBS may not have the
effect of limiting who can benefit from
the State plan HCBS in an unreasonable
way, as determined by the Secretary.
In § 441.659(b), we further propose to
require that the more stringent needsbased criteria for institutions and
waivers be part of the State’s LOC
processes, to ensure that the criteria are
uniformly utilized. We would require
that these more-stringent needs-based
criteria be submitted for comparison
with the State plan amendment that
establishes the State plan HCBS benefit.
We note that needs-based criteria, as
defined in § 441.659(a) require an
evaluation to determine the individual’s
support needs. Therefore, the
assessment process for institutional
levels of care that include needs-based
criteria must include an individual
evaluation of support needs. We also
propose to require that the State’s more
stringent institutional and waiver needsbased criteria be in effect by the
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effective date of the State plan HCBS
benefit.8
Finally, in § 441.659(b)(2), we propose
that if a State modifies its institutional
level of criteria in order to satisfy the
requirement that the levels of care be
more stringent than the needs-based
eligibility criteria for the State plan
HCBS benefit, the States may continue
to receive FFP when serving individuals
who were eligible under the previous
criteria. Exemption from the more
stringent criteria is indefinite, but ends
when the individual is discharged from
the facility or waiver, the individual
becomes ineligible for Medicaid due to
factors unrelated to the LOC
determination, or the individual no
longer meets the criteria for the
applicable LOC. We note that in longterm care facilities a transfer is not a
discharge and would not cause the
individual to lose this exemption.
Similarly, if an individual transitions
from an institution to a waiver it would
not result in a separate LOC, and would
not cause the individual to lose this
exemption. States would determine the
effect of any subsequent changes to
general LOC requirements (unrelated to
the more stringent criteria) upon
individuals with this exemption.
Additionally, nothing in this subsection
would prevent the State from
determining whether the person
remains eligible for Medicaid based on
other factors, such as income or
residency.
3. Adjustment Authority
In § 441.659(c), we propose to permit
States under certain conditions to
adjust, without prior approval from the
Secretary, the needs-based eligibility
criteria and service criteria (if any)
established under § 441.659(a), in the
event that the State experiences
enrollment in excess of the number
projected to be served by the HCBS
benefit. We propose a retroactive
effective date, as approved by the
Secretary, for the State plan amendment
modifying the needs-based criteria
under § 441.659(c)(1). We set forth the
following conditions required by the
statute.
The State must provide for at least 60
days notice to the Secretary, the public,
and we would propose to require, each
enrollee. Since the effect of adjusted
criteria would be to reduce the scope of
services, eligibility for services, or
eligibility for the entire State plan HCBS
benefit, the adjusted criteria established
8 Although not included in the regulation, we
would caution states against raising the LOC due to
the maintenance of eligibility requirements
included in the Affordable Care Act.
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under this subsection would not apply
to individuals already enrolled in the
State plan HCBS. If the State also
adjusts institutional levels of care, the
adjusted institutional levels of care may
not be less stringent than the
institutional LOC prior to the effective
date of the State plan HCBS benefit.
Additionally, in § 441.659(b), we
indicate that any changes to the
institutional LOC criteria under the
State adjustment authority contained in
§ 441.659(c) are subject to the same
requirements as an adjustment to the
institutional LOC criteria under
§ 441.659(b).
In § 441.659(c), we further propose to
explicitly require that the adjusted
needs-based eligibility criteria for the
State plan HCBS benefit must be less
stringent than needs-based institutional
LOC criteria in effect at the time of the
adjustment.
We propose that the notice to the
Secretary be submitted as a State plan
amendment. In order to implement the
adjustment authority without prior
approval of the Secretary, the Secretary
would approve a State plan amendment
adjusting the needs-based HCBS benefit
eligibility criteria with a retroactive
effective date, as early as 60 days after
the State notified each enrollee, the
Secretary, and the public, (or whichever
is later). Under the provision of section
1915(i)(1)(D)(ii) of the Act, the Secretary
will evaluate the State’s adjusted criteria
for compliance with the provisions of
this paragraph and subpart L. We also
note that while the State may under this
provision implement the adjusted
criteria as early as 60 days after
notification and before the State plan
amendment is retroactively approved,
the State is at risk for any actions it
takes that are later disapproved.
Finally, we would require that the
State notify affected individuals of their
right to a fair hearing in accordance
with 42 CFR part 431, subpart E.
4. Independent Evaluation and
Determination of Eligibility
In § 441.659(d), we propose that
eligibility for the State plan HCBS
benefit be determined by an
independent evaluation of each
individual, applying the general
eligibility requirements in § 441.656 of
this subpart, and the needs-based
criteria that the State has established
under § 441.659(a). Independence of the
review requires meeting the conflict of
interest standards set forth in § 441.568,
where provider qualifications for
evaluators are specified.
The evaluation must assess an
individual’s support needs and
strengths. We interpret this provision of
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the statute to indicate that the
evaluation process draws conclusions
about supports that the individual
requires because of age or disability, and
supports that the individual does not
require because of abilities to perform
those functions independently. The
evaluation compares those conclusions
with the needs-based eligibility criteria
for the State plan HCBS benefit to
determine eligibility for the benefit.
Section 1915(i)(1)(D)(i) of the Act
provides that the State may take into
account the need for significant
assistance to perform ADLs, indicating
that the statute does not require that
eligibility be dependent upon assistance
for ADLs.
We note that appraisal of whether an
individual has need for, and meets
additional needs-based criteria (if any)
for specific HCBS offered under the
benefit, is part of the independent
assessment and service plan
development process. However, this
assessment affects eligibility for the
benefit in that we propose at
§ 441.656(a)(ii)(5) that individuals are
considered enrolled in the State plan
HCBS benefit only if they are assessed
to require at least one home and
community-based service offered under
the State plan benefit in addition to
meeting the eligibility and needs-based
criteria for the benefit.
The evaluation process designed by
the State would reflect the nature of the
State plan HCBS benefit designed by the
State. However, in order to meet the
forgoing requirements, all independent
evaluations require specific information
about each individual’s support needs,
sufficient to draw the appropriate
conclusions. In some cases this
information may be well documented
and current in the individual’s existing
records. In other cases, we would
require that the evaluator obtain this
information by whatever means are
appropriate to secure a valid appraisal
of the individual’s current needs. This
requirement could include professional
assessment of certain functional
abilities. State evaluation procedures
that rely solely on review of medical
records would not meet these
requirements.
5. Periodic Redetermination
In § 441.659(e), we propose that
individuals receiving the State plan
HCBS benefit must be reevaluated at a
frequency defined by the State, but not
less than every 12 months, to determine
whether the individuals continue to
meet eligibility requirements. The
independent reevaluations must meet
the requirements for initial independent
evaluations specified in § 441.659(d).
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I. Independent Assessment (§ 441.662)
In § 441.662, we propose
requirements for independent
assessment of need of each individual
who has been determined by the
independent evaluation to be eligible for
the State plan HCBS benefit. The
purpose of the assessment is to obtain,
in combination with the findings of the
independent eligibility evaluation, all
the information necessary to establish a
service plan. The assessment is based on
the needs of the individual, which we
believe precludes assessment protocols
that primarily determine diagnoses, or
only assess function. Assessment
protocols must not assign supports
automatically by functional limitation.
The independent assessment must
determine the specific supports needed
to address the individual’s unique
circumstances and needs, including
other services available through
Medicaid and other State and Federal
programs.
The assessment also applies the
State’s needs-based criteria (if any) for
each service. We propose that an
individual be considered enrolled in the
State plan HCBS benefit only if the
assessment finds that the individual
needs and meets the needs-based
criteria (if any) for at least one State
plan HCBS. This proposed requirement
is to provide States with a mechanism
to prevent the situation of an individual
being eligible for the State plan HCBS
benefit but not able to receive any of the
services it offers; or for establishing
Medicaid eligibility through the benefit
without actually receiving State plan
HCBS services. Such a circumstance
could, among other problems, be of no
utility to the individual, and may make
it difficult for the State to meet an
assessed need. Furthermore, the
eligibility group defined in section
1902(a)(10)(a)(ii)(XXII) of the Act
requires an individual to receive State
plan HCBS in order to establish
Medicaid eligibility through that
category.
We propose to require in
§ 441.662(a)(1) that the assessment
include a face-to-face meeting with the
individual (‘‘individual’’ meaning in
this context, if applicable, the
individual and the individual’s
authorized representative). We further
propose that a ‘‘face-to-face’’ meeting
could be performed through
telemedicine or other information
technology medium, if the health care
professional performing the assessment
meets provider qualifications that
includes additional training
requirements for the operation of the
information technology, the individual
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receives support during the assessment
including the use of any necessary onsite staff, and the individual provides
informed consent. In § 441.662(a)(1)(i),
we propose to require that the
assessment is performed by an agent
that is independent and qualified as
defined in § 441.668. The assessment is
to be guided by best practice and
research on effective strategies that
result in improved health and quality of
life outcomes. We further propose that
the assessment includes consultation, as
appropriate, with other responsible
parties. The assessment must include an
examination of the individual’s relevant
history, medical records, and care and
support needs, including the findings
from the independent eligibility
evaluation.
If self-direction of services is offered
by the State and elected by the
individual, the independent assessment
must include a self-direction appraisal
as described in § 441.674.
For individuals receiving habilitation
services, we propose to require
documentation that no services are
provided under Medicaid that would
otherwise be available to the individual,
specifically including but not limited to
services available to the individual
through a program funded under section
110 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973.
We believe that these documentation
requirements would provide a clear
method for States to comply with
Federal requirements, focus only on the
individuals for whom these
circumstances could apply, and would
not add significantly to the burden of
the assessment. We further propose that
the assessment must ensure that
services received through Secretaryapproved ‘‘other’’ services are not
duplicative of any other services
provided through the Medicaid Stateplan or through another State or Federal
program. We note that extended State
plan services would not be considered
duplicative, since those services are not
available to individuals through the
State plan. We further note that
payments must also be in accordance
with section1903(c) of the Act. Finally,
we require that the assessment must
ensure that any individual
simultaneously enrolled in State plan
HCBS and receiving HCBS through a
waiver does not receive duplicative
services. We would include case
management, assessment, and service
plan development in the services that
may not be duplicative. This does not
necessarily mean that an individual
cannot have more than one case
manager, but instead is meant to ensure
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that services are coordinated across
multiple programs, and that individuals
are not required to develop multiple
service plans.
Finally, in § 441.662(b), we propose to
require that the independent assessment
of need is conducted at least every 12
months and as needed when the
individual’s needs and circumstances
change significantly, in order to revise
the service plan.
J. Service Plan (§ 441.665)
In § 441.665 we propose to require
that based on the independent
assessment specified in § 441.662, the
State develops (or approves, if the plan
is developed by others) a service plan
through a person-centered planning
process.
We propose that the service plan must
be developed jointly with the
individual. While we propose several
specific requirements for the process of
developing a service plan, we note that
the intent of these requirements is to
ensure a process with shared authority
between the individual and the agency
or agent. To achieve this intent, States
must affirmatively and creatively work
to establish such shared authority.
The assessment must include
consultation with appropriate persons.
While we include examples, we do not
propose any required or excluded
category of persons to consult. When the
service plan is finalized between the
parties, a written copy is provided to the
individual.
Also, in § 441.665(a), we propose
certain content to be required in the
service plan. The person-centered
service plan must identify the specific
State plan HCBS to be provided to the
individual, that take into account the
individual’s strengths, preferences,
needs (clinical and support), and
desired outcomes. We are proposing
that the service plan should be
constructed in a manner that promotes
service delivery and independent living
in the most integrated setting possible.
Therefore, we propose that the plan
must not only address medical and
support needs, but should also reflect
other individual goals related to
community living to the extent that
services covered under the State
Medicaid plan would be available to
support such goals. In the planning
process, the degree of assistance with
ADLs available to the individual outside
of the State plan HCBS benefit may be
taken into account in planning the
scope and frequency of HCBS to be
provided. Thus, the service plan
provides for all needed services to the
individual while preventing provision
of duplicative or unnecessary services.
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We propose a single service plan for
both self-directed and non self-directed
services. When individuals self-direct
some or all of their HCBS, the service
plan includes the information required
in § 441.674.
We further propose to require that the
service plan be reviewed and revised at
least every 12 months, and as needed
when the individual’s circumstances or
needs change significantly.
Finally, we propose that the
individual must share the authority for
developing and implementing the
service plan. This shared authority
increases the individual’s self-efficacy
and involvement in the activities and
outcomes contained within the service
plan.
K. Provider Qualifications (§ 441.668)
In § 441.668, we propose to require
that the State provide assurance that
necessary safeguards have been taken to
protect the health and welfare of the
enrollees in State plan HCBS by
provision of adequate standards for all
types of providers of HCBS. States must
define qualifications for providers of
HCBS services, and for those persons
who conduct independent evaluation of
eligibility for State plan HCBS,
independent assessment of need, and
are involved with developing the
service plan.
We propose at § 441.668(b) and (c) to
require minimum qualifications for
individuals and agencies who conduct
independent evaluation of eligibility for
State plan HCBS, independent
assessment of need, and are involved
with developing the service plan. We
will refer to these individuals and
entities involved with determining
access to care as ‘‘agents’’ to distinguish
this role from providers of services. We
believe that these qualifications are
important safeguards for individuals
enrolled in the State plan HCBS benefit
and propose that they be required
whether activities of the agents are
provided as an administrative activity or
whether some of the activities are
provided as a Medicaid service. At a
minimum, these qualifications include
conflict of interest standards, and for
providers of assessment and service
plan development, these qualifications
must include training in assessment of
individuals whose physical or mental
condition may trigger a need for HCBS
and supports, and an ongoing
knowledge of current best practices to
improve health and quality of life
outcomes.
The minimum conflict of interest
standards we propose to require ensure
that the agent is not a relative of the
individual or responsible for the
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individual’s finances or health-related
decisions. The standards also require
that the agent must not hold financial
interest in any of the entities that
provide care. Relatives and decision
makers are required to be permitted in
the assessment and planning process, as
appropriate, but we do not see any
necessity or value in family members
being responsible for evaluation,
assessment, or planning. Our experience
with HCBS in waivers indicates that
assessment and service plan
development should not be performed
by providers of the services prescribed.
However, we recognize that in some
circumstances there are acceptable
reasons for a single provider of service
that performs all of those functions. In
this case, the Secretary would require
the State Plan to include provisions
assuring separation of functions within
the provider entity.
L. Definition of Individual’s
Representative (§ 441.671)
In § 441.671, we propose to define the
term ‘‘individual’s representative’’ to
encompass any party that is authorized
to represent the individual for the
purpose of making personal or health
care decisions, either under State law or
under the policies of the State Medicaid
agency. We do not propose to regulate
the relationship between an individual
enrolled in the State plan HCBS benefit
and his or her authorized representative,
but note that States should have policies
to assess for abuse or excessive control
and ensure that representatives conform
to applicable State requirements. We
note that States must not refuse to allow
a freely-chosen person to serve as a
representative unless the State has
tangible evidence that the representative
is not acting in the best interest of the
individual, or that the representative is
incapable of performing the required
functions.
M. Self-Directed Services (§ 441.674)
We propose in § 441.674 to permit
States to offer an election for selfdirecting HCBS. We propose regulations
containing the specific requirements for
self-direction found in section
1915(i)(1)(G)(iii) of the Act. In
§ 441.674(a), we define ‘‘self-direction.’’
Provisions related to self-direction
apply to an individual or an
individual’s representative. In
§ 441.674(b), we propose that when an
individual chooses self-direction, the
independent assessment and personcentered planning required under
§ 441.662 and § 441.665 would include
examination of the support needs of the
individual to self-direct the purchase of,
or control the receipt of, such services.
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The evaluation should not reject
election to self-direct based solely on
the individual’s disability or a
manifestation of his or her disability.
We therefore propose to require that the
evaluation for self-direction result in a
determination of ability to self-direct
both with and without specified
supports.
These regulations are consistent with
our policy for self-direction under
section 1915(c) HCBS waivers. We
propose to require in § 441.674(b) that
the service plan indicate the HCBS to be
self-directed and the methods by which
the individual will plan, direct, or
control the services; the role of family
or others who will participate in the
HCBS; and risk management techniques.
Our experience with HCBS waivers
indicates that contingency plans are an
important protection for the individual,
in the absence of an agency that would
otherwise be responsible for absent
workers or other common problems.
Contingency plans are most effective
when designed for the unique
circumstances of each self-directing
individual. We propose that the service
plan describe the process for facilitating
voluntary and involuntary transition
from self-direction. When the service
plan is finalized between the parties, a
written copy is provided to the
individual, as required in the proposed
plan on care requirements at
§ 441.665(a).
In § 441.674(c) and (d), we define selfdirection of services in terms of
employer authority and budget
authority, as we have with self-directed
HCBS in Medicaid section 1915(c)
waivers. In § 441.674(c), employer
authority is defined as the ability to
select, manage, or dismiss providers of
the State plan HCBS. We propose that
the service plan must specify the
authority to be assumed by the
individual and the individual’s
representative, any parties responsible
for functions outside the assumed
authority, and the financial management
supports to be provided as required in
§ 441.674(e).
In § 441.674(d), we propose to define
budget authority as an individualized
budget which identifies the dollar value
of the services and supports under the
control and direction of the individual.
We propose that the service plan must
specify the method for calculating the
dollar values in the budget, a process for
adjusting the budget to reflect changes
in assessment and service plan, a
procedure to evaluate expenditures
under the budget, and the financial
management supports, as required in
§ 441.674(e), to be provided. We clarify
here that while budget authority grants
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control of expenditures to the
individual, it does not include
performing the transactions or
conveying cash to the individual or
representative.
In § 441.674(e), we propose to define
functions in support of self-direction
that the State must offer, based on our
experience with self-directed HCBS in
section 1915(c) waivers and section
1115 demonstrations. These provisions
are required in order to equip
individuals for success in managing
their services, and to comply with
Federal, State, and local requirements,
particularly the many tax, labor, and
insurance issues that arise when the
self-directing individual is the employer
of record. Supports for self-direction
should provide the technical expertise
and business functions that will free
individuals to exercise choice and
control over their experience of the
HCBS provided to them.
N. State Plan HCBS Administration:
State Responsibilities and Quality
Improvement (§ 441.677)
1. State Responsibilities
We would require in § 441.677(a)(1)(i)
that the State annually provide CMS
with the projected number of
individuals to be enrolled in the benefit,
and the actual number of unduplicated
individuals enrolled in the State plan
HCBS benefit in the previous year.
Section 1915(i) of the Act authorizes
a State to elect not to apply
comparability requirements, thus
permitting States to target the entire
1915(i) benefit, specific services within
the benefit, or both. We clarify in
§ 441.677(a)(1)(ii) that the State may not
limit enrollee access to services in the
benefit for any reason other than
assessed need or targeting criteria. This
includes the requirement that services
be provided to all individuals who are
assessed to meet the targeting criteria
and needs-based criteria, regardless of
income. This is an important distinction
between the limits States place on the
services to be offered when they design
the benefit, as opposed to limiting
access to the services that are in the
benefit for particular enrolled
individuals. As discussed in section
II.E.1 of this proposed rule, States have
a number of permitted methods to
control utilization. We propose that
once an individual is found eligible and
enrolled in the benefit, access to offered
services can only be limited by medical
necessity. Medical necessity in the State
plan HCBS benefit is determined by the
needs-based criteria, as evaluated by the
independent assessment and person
centered service plan. By not limiting
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access, we mean that an enrollee must
receive any or all of the HCBS offered
by the benefit, in scope and frequency
up to any limits on those services
defined in the State plan, to the degree
the enrollee is determined to need them.
Enrollees should receive no more, and
no fewer, HCBS than they are
determined to require. We note that one
function of the service plan as proposed
at § 441.665(a)(3) is to prevent the
provision of unnecessary, duplicative,
or inappropriate care.
2. Administration
We propose in § 441.677(a)(2)(i) an
option for presumptive payment. In
accordance with section 1915(i) of the
Act, the State may provide for a period
of presumptive payment, not to exceed
60 days, for evaluation of eligibility for
the State plan HCBS benefit and
assessment of need for HCBS. This
period of presumptive payment would
be available for individuals who have
been determined to be Medicaid
eligible, and whom the State has reason
to believe may be eligible for the State
plan HCBS benefit. We propose that FFP
would be available for evaluation and
assessment as administration of the
approved State plan prior to an
individual’s determination of eligibility
for and receipt of other 1915(i) services.
If the individual is found not eligible for
the State plan HCBS benefit, the State
may claim the evaluation and
assessment as administration, even
though the individual would not be
considered to have participated in the
benefit for purposes of determining the
annual number of individuals served by
the benefit. FFP would not be available
during this presumptive period for
receipt of State plan HCBS.
In § 441.677(a)(2)(ii), we indicate that
a State may elect to phase-in the
provision of services or the enrollment
of individuals if the State also elects not
to apply comparability requirements
and to target the benefit to specific
populations. However, there is no
authority to limit the numerical
enrollment in the benefit or to create
waiting lists. Therefore, we propose that
any phase-in of services may not be
based on a numerical cap on enrollees.
Instead, a State may choose to phase-in
the benefit or the provision of specific
services based on the assessed need of
individuals, the availability of
infrastructure to provide services, or
both. Infrastructure is defined as the
availability of qualified providers or of
physical structures and information
technology necessary to provide any
service or set of services.
A State that elects to phase-in the
benefit must submit a plan, subject to
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CMS approval, that details the criteria
used for phasing in the benefit. In the
event that a State elects to phase-in the
benefit based on needs, all individuals
who meet the criteria described in the
phase-in plan must receive services. If a
State elects to phase-in services based
upon infrastructure, the plan must
describe the capacity limits, strategies to
increase capacity, and must assure that
services will be provided to all
individuals who are able to acquire a
willing and qualified provider. Any
phase-in plan must provide assurance
that the benefit, and all included
services, will be available statewide to
all eligible individuals within the first
5-year approval period.
In § 441.677(a)(2)(iii), we propose that
a State plan amendment submitted to
establish the State plan HCBS benefit
must include a reimbursement
methodology for each covered service.
In some States, reimbursement methods
for self-directed services may differ from
the same service provided without selfdirection. In such cases, the
reimbursement methodology for the
self-directed services must also be
described.
In § 441.677(a)(2)(iv), we propose that
the State Medicaid agency describe the
line of authority for operating the State
plan HCBS benefit. The State plan
HCBS benefit requires several functions
to be performed in addition to the
service(s) provided, such as eligibility
evaluation, assessment, and developing
a service plan. To the extent that the
State Medicaid agency delegates these
functions to other entities, we propose
that the agency describe the methods by
which it will retain oversight and
responsibility for those activities, and
for the operation and quality
improvement of the benefit as a whole.
In § 441.677(a)(2)(v), we include a
provision regarding the effective dates
of amendments with substantive
changes. Substantive changes may
include, but are not limited to changes
in eligible populations, constriction of
service amount, duration or scope, or
other modifications as determined by
the Secretary. We would add regulatory
language reflective of our guidance that
1915(i) amendments with changes that
CMS determines to be substantive may
only take effect on or after the date
when the amendment is approved by
CMS, and must be accompanied by
information on how the State has
assured smooth transitions and minimal
adverse impact on individuals impacted
by the change.
In § 441.677(a)(2)(vi), we indicate that
State plan amendments including
targeting criteria are subject to a 5-year
approval period and that successive
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approval periods are subject to CMS
approval, contingent upon State
adherence to Federal requirements. In
order to renew State plan HCBS for an
additional 5-year period, the State must
provide a written request for renewal to
CMS at least 180 days prior to the end
of each approval period.
3. Quality Improvement Strategy
We propose in § 441.677(b) the
guidelines for quality assurance
required in the statute at section
1915(i)(1)(H)(i) of the Act. We propose
to require a State, for quality assurance
purposes, to maintain a quality
improvement strategy for its State plan
HCBS benefit. The State’s quality
improvement strategy should reflect the
nature and scope of the benefit the State
will provide.
We propose that the State plan HCBS
benefit include a quality improvement
strategy consisting of a continuous
quality improvement process, and
outcome measures for program
performance, quality of care, and
individual experience, as approved and
prescribed by the Secretary, and
applicable to the nature of the benefit.
In § 441.677(b), we propose to require
States to have program performance
measures, appropriate to the scope of
the benefit, designed to evaluate the
State’s overall system for providing
HCBS. ‘‘Program performance’’
measures can be described as process
and infrastructure measures, such as
whether plans of care are developed in
a timely and appropriate manner, or
whether all providers meet the required
qualifications to provide services under
the benefit. In § 441.677(b)(1), we also
propose to require States to have quality
of care measures as approved or
prescribed by the Secretary. Quality of
care measures may focus on program
standards, systems performance, and
individual outcomes.
P. Section 2601 of the Affordable Care
Act: 5-Year Period for Demonstration
Projects: Waiver Requirements
(§ 430.25)
Section 2601 of the Affordable Care
Act provides the opportunity for the
Secretary to approve certain waivers for
periods of up to 5 years. The proposed
regulation includes an addition at
§ 430.25(h)(2)(i) and § 430.25(h)(2)(ii) to
indicate the availability of extended
approval periods for initial section
1915(c) waivers which are currently
approved for 3-year periods (the
renewals are already 5-year intervals),
and for initial and renewal section
1915(b) waivers, which are currently
approved for 2-year periods. In all cases,
the extended approval period is only
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available for waivers that provide
medical assistance to dual eligible
individuals, and that meet all applicable
statutory, regulatory, quality and
programmatic requirements. The current
§ 430.25(h)(2)(ii) also includes reference
to section 1916 of the Act, which
remains unchanged by the Affordable
Care Act. As such, we have created a
new § 430.25(h)(2)(iii) to retain the
original regulatory text specific to
section 1916 of the Act.
Q. Prohibition Against Reassignment of
Provider Claims (§ 447.10)
Under title XIX of the Act, State
Medicaid programs generally can only
pay for Medicaid-covered practitioner
services through direct payments to the
treating practitioners. States can
develop payment rates that include
considerations for costs related to health
and welfare benefits, training, and other
costs. Consistent with the statutory
provision at section 1902(a)(32) of the
Act, and reflected in current regulations
at § 447.10, the entire rate must be paid
to the individual practitioner who
provided the service, unless certain
statutory exceptions apply.
With respect to classes of
practitioners for whom the State’s
Medicaid program is the only or
primary payer, the ability of the State to
ensure a stable and qualified workforce
may be adversely affected by the
inability to withhold funds and make
payments on behalf of the individual
practitioner for health and welfare
benefit contributions, training costs, and
other benefits customary for employees.
Withholding funds for these purposes is
an efficient and effective method for
ensuring that the workforce has
provision for basic needs and is
adequately trained for their functions.
Direct payment of funds to third parties
on behalf of the practitioner may
simplify program operations for the
State and be viewed as advantageous by
the practitioner. In addition, direct
payment of funds to third parties on
behalf of the practitioners may ensure
that beneficiaries have greater access to
such practitioners and higher quality
services.
The statutory direct payment
provision was intended to address the
issue of factoring, and there is no
indication that its purpose was to
restrict State flexibility in investing in
its workforce or quality improvement
programs. In particular, we do not
believe that the statutory direct payment
provision addresses the unique
circumstances that arise when the
Medicaid program is the primary source
of reimbursement for a class of
practitioners.
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We propose to interpret the scope of
the direct payment provision to not
include the circumstance when the
Medicaid program operates as a primary
payer for a class of practitioners, and
assumes the ordinary responsibilities
required in that circumstance to assure
workforce stability and quality. This
exception from the scope of the direct
payment provision would be limited to
situations in which payment is made
under a State law that authorizes
payments on behalf of an individual
practitioner to a third party for health
and welfare benefit costs, training costs,
or other benefits customary for
employees. The legislative history of
section 1902(a)(32) of the Act indicates
that such a situation is not within the
scope of ‘‘assignments’’ or ‘‘powers of
attorney’’ that were considered at the
time, or even of the same nature.
Instead, such payments are more of an
ordinary arrangement to further
workforce stability and quality.
The proposed change would permit
each State the option to elect such
payment arrangements to the extent that
the State determines that they would
further State objectives; however, States
would not be required to elect the
payment arrangements. States will need
to review their individual circumstances
and workforce needs to determine if the
measures would help ensure a stable,
high-performing workforce for the
benefit of the entire Medicaid
population seeking the services.
Within broad Federal Medicaid law
and regulation, CMS has long sought to
ensure maximum State flexibility to
design State-specific payment
methodologies that help ensure a strong,
committed, and well-trained work force.
Currently, certain categories of
Medicaid covered services, for which
Medicaid is a primary payer, such as
home health and personal care services,
suffer from especially high rates of
turnover and low levels of participation.
This proposed rule would provide to
States additional tools to help foster a
stable and high-performing workforce.
Medicaid programs would be able, as
authorized under State law, to deduct
from the practitioner’s reimbursement
and remit to third parties amounts for
health and welfare benefit
contributions, training costs, and other
benefits customary for employees.
We believe that permitting such
payment arrangements would enhance
the ability of the practitioners to
perform their functions as health care
professionals. The Medicaid program, at
both the State and Federal levels, has a
strong interest in ensuring the
development and maintenance of a
committed, well-trained workforce.
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We propose to provide States this
flexibility by enumerating an additional
exception to the payment limitations for
individual practitioners at § 447.10(g).
Specifically, the proposed rule would
add a new provision at § 447.10(g)(4) to
define permissible payments in the case
of individual practitioners for whom the
Medicaid program is the primary source
of revenue to include payment
authorized by State law to be made to
a third party on behalf of the individual
practitioner for health and welfare
benefit contributions, training costs, and
other benefits customary for employees.
To the extent that State laws require
practitioners to participate in such a
payment arrangement, a State could
elect in its Medicaid State plan that the
payment arrangement would be
automatic. If, however, State law does
not require participation by individual
practitioners in such payment
arrangements, but authorizes voluntary
participation, the State would only be
allowed to deduct amounts from the
payment rate and forward them to a
third party with the express permission
of each individual practitioner. In that
instance, the individual practitioner
would need to authorize the payment
arrangement on a voluntary basis, prior
to any deduction from the provider
payment. In either case, the amounts
remitted to a third party would be on
behalf of the individual practitioner.
As proposed, a State would not be
able to claim as a separate expenditure
under its approved Medicaid State plan
amounts that are withheld from
payments to individual practitioners for
these cost categories (health and welfare
benefit contributions, training, and
similar benefits customary for
employees). Under the proposed rule,
should a State wish to recognize such
costs, they would need to be included
as part of the rate paid for the service
in order to eligible for Federal matching
funds. No Federal matching funds
would available for such amounts apart
from the Federal match available for rate
paid by the State for the medical
assistance service. These costs could not
be claimed by the Medicaid agency
separately as an administrative expense.
As a result, the proposed rule would
have little to no impact on Federal
Medicaid funding levels.
We are specifically soliciting public
comments on the extent to which the
proposed payment arrangements would
benefit States and practitioners, as well
as any adverse impacts it may have that
have not been anticipated. Additionally,
we are seeking comments on other
exceptions to the general prohibition on
assignment of practitioner claims that
might similarly simplify and streamline
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States’ operations of their Medicaid
plans and payment processes. Finally,
we are specifically requesting comments
on the intersection between Medicaid
and Medicare regulations governing
assignment of payments and any
potential contradictions therein.
R. Section 2401 of the Affordable Care
Act: Community First Choice State Plan
Option: Home and Community-Based
Setting Requirements (§ 441.530)
Section 1915(k)(1)(A)(ii) of the Act
provides that a home and communitybased setting does not include a nursing
facility, institution for mental diseases,
or an intermediate care facility for the
mentally retarded. We propose at
§ 441.530 to adopt this statutory
language in our regulations.
Additionally, to provide greater clarity,
we are proposing language to establish
that home and community-based
settings must exhibit specific qualities
to be eligible sites for delivery of home
and community-based services.
IV. Response to Comments
Because of the large number of public
comments we normally receive on
Federal Register documents, we are not
able to acknowledge or respond to them
individually. We will consider all
comments we receive by the date and
time specified in the DATES section of
this preamble, and, when we proceed
with a subsequent document, we will
respond to the comments in the
preamble to that document.
V. Collection of Information
Requirements
Under the Paperwork Reduction Act
of 1995, we are required to provide 60day notice in the Federal Register and
solicit public comment before a
collection of information requirement is
submitted to the Office of Management
and Budget (OMB) for review and
approval. In order to fairly evaluate
whether an information collection
should be approved by OMB, section
3506(c)(2)(A) of the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995 requires that we
solicit comment on the following issues:
• The need for the information
collection and its usefulness in carrying
out the proper functions of our agency.
• The accuracy of our estimate of the
information collection burden.
• The quality, utility, and clarity of
the information to be collected.
• Recommendations to minimize the
information collection burden on the
affected public, including automated
collection techniques.
We are soliciting public comment on
each of these issues for the following
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sections of this document that contain
information collection requirements:
A. ICRs Regarding Individuals Receiving
State Plan Home and Community-Based
Services (§ 435.219(b) and § 436.219(b))
To cover the categorically needy
eligibility group, the State would be
required to submit a SPA and may elect
to cover individuals who meet certain
requirements in § 435.219(a) or
§ 436.219(a). The burden associated
with this requirement is the time and
effort put forth by the State to complete,
review, process and transmit/submit the
pre-print which describes the eligibility
criteria for the group. We estimate it
would take each State 30 hours to meet
this one-time requirement. We estimate
that on an annual basis, 3 States will
submit a SPA to meet these
requirements; therefore, the total annual
burden hours for this requirement is 90
hours. We believe that a State employee,
with pay equivalent to GS–13 step one
($34.34 per hour) would be responsible
for this requirement. Thus, the cost for
each State is anticipated to be $1,030;
this equates to an annual cost of $3,091.
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B. ICRs Regarding Eligibility for State
Plan HCBS (§ 441.656)
If a State elects to target the benefit to
specific populations, § 441.656(b)(2)
requires submission of targeting criteria
to CMS. The burden associated with this
requirement is the time and effort put
forth by the State to establish such
criteria. We estimate it would take 1
State 10 hours to meet this one-time
requirement. We estimate that on an
annual basis, 3 States will submit a SPA
to offer the State plan HCBS benefit that
targets specific populations, and be
affected by this requirement; therefore,
the total annual burden hours for this
requirement is 30 hours. We believe that
a State employee, with pay equivalent to
GS–13 step one ($34.34 per hour) would
be responsible for this requirement.
Thus, the cost for each State is
anticipated to be $343; this equates to
an annual cost of $1,030.
C. ICRs Regarding Needs-Based Criteria
and Evaluation (§ 441.659)
Section 441.659(a) requires a State to
establish needs-based criteria for
determining an individual’s eligibility
under the State plan for the HCBS
benefit, and may establish needs-based
criteria for each specific service. The
burden associated with this requirement
is the time and effort put forth by the
State to establish such criteria. We
estimate it would take 1 State 24 hours
to meet this requirement. We estimate
that on an annual basis, 3 States will
submit a SPA to offer the State plan
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HCBS benefit, and be affected by this
one-time requirement; therefore, the
total annual burden hours for this
requirement is 72 hours. We believe that
a State employee, with pay equivalent to
GS–13 step one ($34.34 per hour) would
be responsible for this requirement.
Thus, the cost for each responding State
is anticipated to be $824; this equates to
an annual cost of $2,472.
Section 441.659(b) reads that if a State
defines needs-based criteria for
individual State plan home and
community-based services, the needsbased institutional eligibility criteria
must be more stringent than the
combined effect of needs-based State
plan HCBS benefit eligibility criteria
and individual service criteria. Section
441.659(b)(1)(ii) requires the State to
submit the more stringent criteria to
CMS for inspection with the State plan
amendment that establishes the State
Plan HCBS benefit.
The burden associated with this
requirement is the time and effort for
the State to define the more stringent
criteria and submit it to CMS along with
the State plan amendment that
establishes the HCBS benefit. We
anticipate 3 States would be affected by
this requirement on an annual basis and
it would require 1 hour to prepare and
submit this information. The one-time
burden associated with this requirement
is 3 hours. We believe that a State
employee, with pay equivalent to GS–13
step one ($34.34 per hour) would be
responsible for this requirement. Thus,
the cost for each State is anticipated to
be $34; this equates to an annual cost of
$102. This would be a one time burden
for each responding State.
Section 441.659(c) reads that a State
may modify the needs-based criteria
established under paragraph (a) of this
section, without prior approval from the
Secretary, if the number of individuals
enrolled in the State plan HCBS benefit
exceeds the projected number submitted
annually to CMS.
Section 441.659(c)(1) requires the
State to provide at least 60 days notice
of the proposed modification to the
Secretary, the public, and each
individual enrolled in the State plan
HCBS benefit. The State notice to the
Secretary will be considered an
amendment to the State plan.
Section 441.659(c)(2) requires the
State notice to the Secretary be
submitted as an amendment to the State
plan.
The burden associated with the
requirements found under § 441.659(c)
is the time and effort put forth by the
State to modify the needs-based criteria
and provide notification of the proposed
modification to the Secretary. We
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estimate it would take 1 State 24 hours
to make the modifications and provide
notification. This would be a one-time
burden.
The total annual burden of these
requirements (§ 441.659(c),
§ 441.659(c)(1), and § 441.659(c)(2))
would vary according to the number of
States who choose to modify their
needs-based criteria. We do not expect
any States to make this modification in
the next 3 years, thus there is no
anticipated burden.
Section 441.659(d) states that
eligibility for the State plan HCBS
benefit is determined, for individuals
who meet the requirements of
§ 441.656(a)(1) through (5), through an
independent evaluation of each
individual that meets the specified
requirements. Section 441.659(d)(5)
requires the evaluator to obtain
information from existing records, and
when documentation is not current and
accurate, obtain any additional
information necessary to draw a valid
conclusion about the individual’s
support needs. Section 441.659(e)
requires at least annual reevaluations.
The burden associated with this
requirement is the time and effort put
forth by the evaluator to obtain
information to support their conclusion.
We estimate it would take one evaluator
2 hours per participant to obtain
information as necessary. The total
annual burden of this requirement
would vary according to the number of
participants in each State who may
require and be eligible for home and
community-based services under the
State plan. The individuals performing
this assessment would vary based upon
State benefit design, but will likely
include individuals such as registered
nurses, qualified mental retardation
professionals, qualified mental health
professionals, case managers, or other
professional staff with experience
providing services to individuals with
disabilities or the elderly. While there is
burden associated with this
requirement, we believe the burden is
exempt as defined in 5 CFR 1320.3(b)(2)
because the time, effort, and financial
resources necessary to comply with this
requirement would be incurred by
persons in the normal course of their
activities.
D. ICRs Regarding Independent
Assessments (§ 441.662)
Section 441.662 requires the State to
provide for an independent assessment
of need in order to establish a service
plan. At a minimum, the plan must
meet the requirements as discussed
under § 441.665.
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While the burden associated with the
requirements under § 441.662 is subject
to the PRA, we believe the burden is
exempt as defined in 5 CFR 1320.3(b)(2)
because the time, effort, and financial
resources necessary to comply with this
requirement would be incurred by
persons in the normal course of their
activities.
E. ICRs Regarding State Plan HCBS
Administration: State Responsibilities
and Quality Improvement (§ 441.677)
Section 441.677(a)(1)(i) reads that a
State will annually provide CMS with
the projected number of individuals to
be enrolled in the benefit, and the actual
number of unduplicated individuals
enrolled in State plan HCBS in the
previous year.
The burden associated with this
requirement is the time and effort put
forth by the State to annually project the
number of individuals who will enroll
in State plan HCBS. We estimate it will
take one State 2 hours to meet this
requirement. The total annual burden of
these requirements would vary
according to the number of States
offering the State plan HCBS benefit.
The maximum total annual burden is
112 hours (56 States × 2 hours = 112
hours). We believe that a State
employee, with pay equivalent to GS–13
step one ($34.34 per hour) would be
responsible for this requirement. Thus,
the anticipated for each State is
anticipated to be $69; this equates to a
maximum annual cost of $3,864 if all 56
States elect to provide this benefit.
There are currently six States with
approved State plan HCBS benefits.
Thus, we anticipate based on current
benefits that the total annual aggregated
burden will be $414.
Section 441.677(a)(2)(iii) reads that
the SPA to provide State plan HCBS
must contain a description of the
reimbursement methodology for each
covered service.
The burden associated with this
requirement is the time and effort put
forth by the State to describe the
reimbursement methodology for each
State plan HCBS. We estimate that it
will take one State an average of 2 hours
to determine the reimbursement
methodology for one covered HCBS.
This would be a one-time burden. The
total annual burden for this requirement
would vary according to the number of
services that the State chooses to
include in the State plan HCBS benefit.
We believe that a State employee, with
pay equivalent to GS–13 step one
($34.34 per hour) would be responsible
for this requirement. Thus, the cost to
each State for each covered service is
anticipated to be $69; this would vary
based upon the number of services
covered. This would be an annual
burden for each responding State. Since
we have estimated that 3 States will
annually describe the reimbursement
methodology, the total annual
aggregated burden associated with this
requirement is estimated to be $207.
Section 441.677(a)(2)(iv) reads that
the SPA to provide State plan HCBS
must contain a description of the State
Medicaid agency line of authority for
operating the State plan HCBS benefit,
including distribution of functions to
other entities.
The burden associated with this
requirement is the time and effort put
forth by the State to describe the State
Medicaid agency line of authority. We
estimate it will take one State 2 hours
to meet this requirement. Since we have
estimated that 3 States will annually
request State plan HCBS, the total
annual burden associated with this
requirement is estimated to be 6 hours.
This would be a one-time burden for
each responding State. We believe that
a State employee, with pay equivalent to
GS–13 step one ($34.34 per hour) would
be responsible for this requirement.
Thus, the cost for each State is
anticipated to be $69.
Section 441.677(a)(2)(vi) limits the
approval period for States that target the
benefit to specific populations. If a State
elects to target the benefit, this section
requires a renewal application every 5
years in order to continue operation of
the benefit. Actual time to meet this
requirement will vary depending on the
scope of the program and any changes
the State includes. However, we
estimate that it will take one State an
average of 40 hours to meet this
requirement. This includes reviewing
the previous submission, making any
necessary changes to the State plan
document(s), and communicating with
CMS regarding the renewal. This burden
would occur once every five years and
would be recurring. We estimate that,
beginning in 2016, 3 States will
annually request renewal and the total
burden will be 120 hours. We believe
that a State employee, with pay
equivalent to GS–13 step one ($34.34
per hour) would be responsible for this
requirement. Thus, the cost for each
State is anticipated to be $1,374; this
equates to an annual cost of $4,122. This
would be a burden for each State that
targets its benefit once every 5 years;
however, this burden will not take effect
until 2016.
Section 441.677(b) requires States to
develop and implement a quality
improvement strategy that includes
methods for ongoing measurement of
program performance, quality of care,
and mechanisms for remediation and
improvement proportionate to the scope
of services in the State plan HCBS
benefit and the number of individuals to
be served, and make this information
available to CMS upon the frequency
determined by the Secretary or upon
request.
The burden associated with this
requirement is the time and effort put
forth by the State to develop and
implement a quality improvement
strategy, and to make this information
available to CMS upon the frequency
determined by the Secretary or upon
request. We estimate it will take one
State 45 hours for the development of
the strategy, and for making information
available to CMS. The total annual
burden of these requirements would
vary according to the number of States
offering the State plan HCBS benefit.
The maximum total annual burden is
estimated to be 2,520 hours (56 States ×
45 hours = 2,520 hours). We estimate
that the burden associated with
implementation of the quality
improvement strategy will greatly vary,
as the necessary time and effort to
perform these activities is dependent
upon the scope of the benefit and the
number of persons receiving State plan
HCBS. We believe that a State
employee, with pay equivalent to GS–13
step one ($34.34 per hour) would be
responsible for this requirement. Thus,
the cost for each State is anticipated to
be $1,545; this equates to a maximum
annual cost of $86,537. Currently, there
are six States with approved benefits,
thus we anticipate an annual burden
based on current States of $9,270.
TABLE 1—ANNUAL RECORDKEEPING AND REPORTING REQUIREMENTS
Regulation section(s)
OMB
Control
No.
435.219(b) and 436.219(b) .......
0938–1148
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Jkt 226001
Responses
Respondents
Burden per
response
(hours)
Total annual
burden
(hours)
Hourly labor
cost of
reporting ($)
3
30
90
34.34
3
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Total
labor
cost of
reporting
($)
Frm 00035
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E:\FR\FM\03MYP2.SGM
1,030
03MYP2
Total
capital/
maintenance
costs ($)
Total cost
($)
0
1,030
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TABLE 1—ANNUAL RECORDKEEPING AND REPORTING REQUIREMENTS—Continued
Regulation section(s)
OMB
Control
No.
441.656(b)(2) .............................
441.659(a) .................................
441.659(b) .................................
441.677(a)(1)(i) .........................
441.677(a)(2)(iii) ........................
441.677(a)(2)(iv) ........................
441.677(b) .................................
0938–1148
0938–1148
0938–1148
0938–1148
0938–1148
0938–1148
0938–1148
Total ...................................
....................
Total annual
burden
(hours)
Hourly labor
cost of
reporting ($)
3
3
3
6
3
3
6
3
3
3
6
3
3
6
10
24
1
2
2
2
45
30
72
3
12
6
6
270
34.34
34.34
34.34
34.34
34.34
34.34
34.34
1,030
2,472
103
414
207
207
9,270
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1,030
2,472
103
414
207
207
9,270
....................
....................
....................
489
....................
14,733
0
14,733
VI. Regulatory Impact Analysis
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A. Introduction
We have examined the impacts of this
rule as required by Executive Order
12866 on Regulatory Planning and
Review (September 30, 1993) and
Executive 13563 on Improving
Regulation and Regulatory Review
(January 18, 2011). Executive Orders
12866 and 13563 direct agencies to
assess all costs and benefits of available
regulatory alternatives and, if regulation
is necessary, to select regulatory
approaches that maximize net benefits
(including potential economic,
environmental, public health and safety
effects, distributive impacts, and
equity). Executive Order 13563
emphasizes the importance of
quantifying both costs and benefits, of
reducing costs, of harmonizing rules,
and of promoting flexibility. A
regulatory impact analysis (RIA) must
be prepared for major rules with
economically significant effects ($100
million or more in any one year). This
proposed rule has been designated an
‘‘economically significant’’ rule under
section 3(f)(1) of Executive Order 12866.
Accordingly, the rule has been reviewed
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Total
capital/
maintenance
costs ($)
Burden per
response
(hours)
We have submitted a copy of this
proposed rule to OMB for its review of
the information collection requirements
described above. These requirements are
not effective until they have been
approved by OMB.
If you have comments on these
information collection and record
keeping requirements, please do either
of the following:
1. Submit your comments
electronically as specified in the
ADDRESSES section of this proposed rule;
or
2. Submit your comments to the
Office of Information and Regulatory
Affairs, Office of Management and
Budget, Attention: CMS Desk Officer,
CMS–2249–P2. Fax: (202) 395–5806; or
Email: OIRA submission@omb.eop.gov.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Total
labor
cost of
reporting
($)
Responses
Respondents
by the Office of Management and
Budget.
B. Statement of Need
The State plan HCBS benefit is
authorized under section 1915(i) of the
Act. Section 1915(i) was created by the
Deficit Reduction Act of 2005 and was
amended by the Affordable Care Act of
2010. The resulting statute provides
States with authority to establish State
plan HCBS benefits in their Medicaid
program.
These regulations are necessary in
order to include the State plan HCBS
within the Code of Federal Regulations.
Additionally, these regulations provide
States with direction and clarity
regarding the framework under which
the programs can be established.
C. Overall Impacts
We estimate that, as a result of this
proposed rule, the Medicaid cost impact
for fiscal year (FY) 2012 would be $80
million for the Federal share and $60
million for the State share. The
estimates are adjusted for a phase-in
period during which States gradually
elect to offer the State plan HCBS
benefit.
D. Detailed Impacts
1. State Plan HCBS
State Medicaid programs will make
use of the optional flexibility afforded
by the State plan HCBS benefit to
provide needed long-term care HCBS to
eligible individuals the State has not
had means to serve previously, or to
provide services to these individuals
more efficiently and effectively. The
State plan HCBS benefit will afford
States a new means to comply with
requirements of the Olmstead decision,
to serve individuals in the most
integrated setting.
The cost of these services will be
dependent upon the number of States
electing to offer the benefit, the scope of
the benefits States design, and the
degree to which the benefits replace
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Total cost
($)
existing Medicaid services. States have
more control over expenditures for this
benefit than over other State plan
services. For States that choose to offer
these services, States may specify limits
to the scope of HCBS, target the benefit
to specific populations, and have the
option to tighten needs-based criteria
requirements if costs escalate too
rapidly.
If States elect to include the new
optional group, eligibility could be
expanded because the group may
include individuals who would not
otherwise be eligible for Medicaid.
However, costs of the State plan HCBS
benefit may be offset by lowered
potential Federal and State costs of
more expensive institutional care.
Additionally, the requirement for a
written individualized service plan, and
the provision of needed HCBS in
accordance with the individualized
service plan, may discourage
inappropriate utilization of costly
services such as emergency room care
for routine procedures, which may be
beneficial to Medicare and Medicaid
when individuals are eligible for both
programs. If a State targets this benefit,
only individuals who meet the targeting
criteria would receive 1915(i) services
and be eligible for the group, thus
limiting Medicaid expansion.
After considering these factors, we
assumed that, if all States adopted this
measure, program expenditures would
increase by 1 percent of current HCBS
expenditure projections. We further
assumed that ultimately, States
representing 50 percent of the eligible
population would elect to offer this
benefit, and that this ultimate level
would be reached in FY 2014, with a
phase-in period until then. Based on
these assumptions, the Federal and
State cost estimates are shown in
Table 2.
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TABLE 2—MEDICAID COST ESTIMATES RESULTING FROM CHANGES TO THE STATE PLAN
[HCBS Benefit (FYs 2012–2016, in $millions]
FY12
The effect on Medicaid beneficiaries
who receive the State plan HCBS benefit
will be substantial and beneficial in
States where optional 1915(i) State plan
HCBS are included, as it will provide
eligible individuals with the
opportunity to receive needed long-term
care services and supports in their
homes and communities.
The State plan HCBS benefit will
afford business opportunities for
providers of the HCBS. We do not
anticipate any effects on other
providers. Section 1915(i) of the Act
delinks the HCBS from institutional
LOC, and requires that eligibility criteria
for the benefit include a threshold of
need less than that for institutional
LOC, so that it is unlikely that large
numbers of participants in the State
plan HCBS benefit will be discharged
from the facilities of Medicaid
institutional providers. There may be
some redistribution of services among
providers of existing non-institutional
Medicaid services into State plan HCBS,
but providers who meet qualifications
for the State plan HCBS benefit have the
option to enroll as providers of HCBS.
This rule has no direct effect on the
Medicare program; however, an indirect
and beneficial effect may occur if
individuals eligible for both Medicare
and Medicaid are enrolled in a State
plan HCBS program.
E. Alternatives Considered
This proposed rule incorporates
provisions of new section 1915(i) of the
Act into Federal regulations, providing
for Medicaid coverage of a new optional
State plan benefit to furnish home and
community-based State plan services.
The statute provides States with an
option under which to draw Federal
matching funds; it does not impose any
requirements or costs on existing State
programs, on providers, or upon
beneficiaries. States retain their existing
authority to offer HCBS through the
existing authority granted under section
1915(c) waivers and under section 1115
waivers. States can also continue to
offer, and individuals can choose to
receive, some but not all components of
HCBS allowable under section 1915(i)
through existing State plan services
such as personal care or targeted case
management services. Therefore, this
rule is entirely optional for States. We
solicit comment on the analysis within
the ‘‘Alternatives Considered’’ section.
Alternatives to this proposed rule
include:
(1) Not Publishing a Rule: Section
1915(i) of the Act was effective January
1, 2007. States may propose SPAs to
establish the State plan HCBS benefit
with or without this proposed rule. We
considered whether this statute could be
self-implementing and require no
regulation. Section 1915(i) of the Act is
complex; many States have contacted us
for technical assistance in the absence of
published guidance, and some have
indicated they are waiting to submit a
State plan amendment until there is a
rule. We further considered whether a
State Medicaid Director letter would
provide sufficient guidance regarding
CMS review criteria for approval of an
SPA. We conclude that section 1915(i)
of the Act establishes significant new
features in the Medicaid program, and
that it was important to provide States
and the public the published invitation
for comment provided by this proposed
rule. Finally, State legislation and
judicial decisions are not alternatives to
a Federal rule in this case since section
1915(i) of the Act provides Federal
benefits.
FY14
FY15
FY16
$80
60
Federal Share ............................................................................................................................................
State Share ................................................................................................................................................
FY13
$120
90
$170
125
$190
145
$215
160
(2) Modification of Existing Rules: We
considered modifying existing
regulations at 42 CFR part 440.180, part
441 subpart G, Home and CommunityBased Services: Waiver Requirements,
which implement the section 1915(c)
HCBS waivers, to include the authority
to offer the State plan HCBS benefit.
This would have the advantage of not
duplicating certain requirements
common to both types of HCBS.
However, we believe that any such
efficiency would be outweighed by the
substantial discussion that would be
required of the differences between the
Secretary’s discretion to approve
waivers under section 1915(c) of the
Act, and authority to offer HCBS under
the State plan at section 1915(i) of the
Act. While Congress clearly considered
the experience to date with HCBS under
waivers when constructing section
1915(i) of the Act, it did not choose to
modify section 1915(c) of the Act, but
chose instead to create a new authority
at section 1915(i) of the Act.
F. Accounting Statement
As required by OMB Circular A–4
(available at https://
www.whitehouse.gov/omb/
circulars_a004_a-4), in the Table 3, we
have prepared an accounting statement
showing the classification of the
transfers associated with the provisions
of this proposed rule. This table
provides our best estimate of the
proposed increase in aggregate Medicaid
outlays resulting from offering States the
option to provide the State plan HCBS
benefit established in section 1915(i) of
the Act and proposed by CMS–2249–P
(Medicaid program; Home and
Community-Based State Plan Services).
TABLE 3—ACCOUNTING STATEMENT: CLASSIFICATION OF ESTIMATED TRANSFERS, FROM FYS 2012 TO 2016
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[In $millions]
Category
TRANSFERS
Annualized Monetized Transfers .................................................................
3% Units Discount Rate ..............
$153.0 .........................................
From Whom To Whom? ..............................................................................
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7% Units Discount Rate.
$150.4.
Federal Government to Providers
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TABLE 3—ACCOUNTING STATEMENT: CLASSIFICATION OF ESTIMATED TRANSFERS, FROM FYS 2012 TO 2016—Continued
[In $millions]
Category
TRANSFERS
Other Annualized Monetized Transfers .......................................................
3% Units Discount Rate ..............
$114.5 .........................................
From Whom To Whom? ..............................................................................
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G. Conclusion
We anticipate that States will make
widely varying use of the section 1915(i)
State plan HCBS benefit to provide
needed long-term care services for
Medicaid beneficiaries. These services
will be provided in the home or
alternative living arrangements in the
community, which is of benefit to the
beneficiary and is less costly than
institutional care. Requirements for
independent evaluation and assessment,
individualized care planning, and
requirements for a quality improvement
program will promote efficient and
effective use of Medicaid expenditures
for these services.
VII. Regulatory Flexibility Act Analysis
The Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
(September 19, 1980, Pub. L. 96–354), as
modified by the Small Business
Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of
1996 (SBREFA) (Pub. L. 104–121),
requires agencies to determine whether
proposed or final rules would have a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities
and, if so, to prepare a Regulatory
Flexibility Analysis and to identify in
the notice of proposed rulemaking or
final rulemaking any regulatory options
that could mitigate the impact of the
proposed regulation on small
businesses. For purposes of the RFA,
small entities include businesses that
are small as determined by size
standards issued by the Small Business
Administration, nonprofit organizations,
and small governmental jurisdictions).
Individuals and States are not included
in the definition of a small business
entity.
For purposes of the RFA, we assume
that approximately 75 percent of
Medicaid providers are considered
small businesses according to the Small
Business Administration’s size
standards (with total revenues of $35
million or less in any one year), and 80
percent are nonprofit organizations.
Medicaid providers are required, as a
matter of course, to follow the
guidelines and procedures as specified
in State and Federal laws and
regulations. Furthermore, this rule
imposes no requirements or costs on
providers or suppliers for their existing
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7% Units Discount Rate.
$112.5.
State Governments to Providers
activities. The rule implements a new
optional State plan benefit established
in section 1915(i) of the Act. Small
entities that meet provider
qualifications and choose to provide
HCBS under the State plan will have a
business opportunity under this
proposed rule. The Secretary has
determined that this proposed rule will
not have a significant economic impact
on a substantial number of small
entities.
In addition, section 1102(b) of the
Social Security Act requires us to
prepare a regulatory impact analysis if
a rule may have a significant impact on
the operations of a substantial number
of small rural hospitals. This analysis
must conform to the provisions of
section 603 of the RFA. For purposes of
section 1102(b) of the Act, we define a
small rural hospital as a hospital that is
located outside of a metropolitan
statistical area and has fewer than 100
beds. This proposed rule does not offer
a change in the administration of the
provisions related to small rural
hospitals. Therefore, the Secretary has
determined that this proposed rule will
not have a significant impact on the
operations of a substantial number of
small rural hospitals.
implications. Since this regulation does
not impose any costs on State or local
governments, the requirements of E.O.
13132 are not applicable.
VIII. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
Analysis
Section 202 of the Unfunded
Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (March
22, 1995, Pub. L. 104–4) requires that
agencies assess anticipated costs and
benefits before issuing any rule whose
mandates require spending in any one
year of $100 million in 1995 dollars,
updated annually for inflation. In 2012,
that threshold is approximately $139
million. This proposed rule does not
mandate any spending by State, local, or
tribal governments, in the aggregate, or
by the private sector, of $139 million.
42 CFR Part 441
Aged, Family planning, Grant
programs—health, Infants and children,
Medicaid, Penalties, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
IX. Federalism Analysis
Executive Order 13132 on Federalism
(August 4, 1999) establishes certain
requirements that an agency must meet
when it promulgates a proposed rule
(and subsequent final rule) that imposes
substantial direct requirement costs on
State and local governments, preempts
State law, or otherwise has Federalism
PO 00000
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List of Subjects
42 CFR Part 430
Administrative practice and
procedure, Grant programs—health,
Medicaid, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
42 CFR Part 431
Grant programs—health, Health
facilities, Medicaid, Privacy, Reporting
and recordkeeping requirements.
42 CFR Part 435
Aid to Families with Dependent
Children, Grant programs—health,
Medicaid, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Supplemental Security
Income, Wages.
42 CFR Part 436
Aid to Families with Dependent
Children, Grant programs—health,
Guam, Medicaid Puerto Rico,
Supplemental Security Income (SSI),
Virgin Islands.
42 CFR Part 440
Grant programs—health, Medicaid.
42 CFR Part 447
Accounting, Administrative practice
and procedure, Drugs, Grant programs—
health, Health facilities, Health
professions, Medicaid, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements, Rural
areas.
For the reasons set forth in the
preamble, the Centers for Medicare &
Medicaid Services proposes to amend
42 CFR chapter IV as set forth below:
PART 430—GRANTS TO STATES FOR
MEDICAL ASSISTANCE PROGRAMS
1. The authority citation for part 430
continues to read as follows:
Authority: Sec. 1102 of the Social Security
Act (42 U.S.C. 1302).
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and 1902(a)(10)(C)(i)(III) of the Act, with
respect to such services.
*
*
*
*
*
(h) State plan home and communitybased services. The requirements of
§ 440.240 of this chapter related to
comparability of services do not apply
with respect to State plan home and
community-based services defined in
§ 440.182 of this chapter.
Subpart B—State Plans
2. Section 430.25 is amended by—
A. Revising paragraphs (h)(2)(i) and
(ii).
B. Adding paragraph (h)(2)(iii).
The revisions and addition read as
follows:
§ 430.25 Waivers of State plan
requirements.
*
*
*
*
*
(h) * * *
(2) Duration of waivers. (i) Home and
community-based services under section
1915(c) of the Act. The initial waiver is
for a period of 3 years and may be
renewed thereafter for periods of 5
years. For waivers that include
individuals who are dually eligible for
Medicare and Medicaid, 5-year initial
approval periods may be granted at the
discretion of the Secretary for waivers
meeting all necessary programmatic,
financial and quality requirements.
(ii) Waivers under section 1915(b) of
the Act. The initial waiver is for a
period of 2 years and may be renewed
for additional periods of up to 2 years
as determined by the Administrator. For
waivers that include individuals who
are dually eligible for Medicare and
Medicaid, 5-year initial and renewal
approval periods may be granted at the
discretion of the Secretary for waivers
meeting all necessary programmatic,
financial and quality requirements.
(iii) Waivers under section 1916 of the
Act. The initial waiver is for a period of
2 years and may be renewed for
additional periods of up to 2 years as
determined by the Administrator.
*
*
*
*
*
PART 431—STATE ORGANIZATION
AND GENERAL ADMINISTRATION
3. The authority citation for part 431
continues to read as follows:
Authority: Sec. 1102 of the Social Security
Act (42 U.S.C. 1302).
Subpart B—General Administrative
Requirements
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4. Section 431.54 is amended by
adding paragraphs (a)(3) and (h) to read
as follows:
§ 431.54 Exceptions to certain State plan
requirements.
(a) * * *
(3) Section 1915(i) of the Act provides
that a State may provide, as medical
assistance, home and community-based
services under an approved State plan
amendment that meets certain
requirements, without regard to the
requirements of sections 1902(a)(10)(B)
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objectives of the Medicaid program,
simple to administer, and in the best
interests of the beneficiary. Income
methodologies may include use of
existing income methodologies, such as
the SSI program rules. However, subject
to the Secretary’s approval, the agency
may use other income methodologies
that meet the requirements of this
paragraph (c).
PART 435—ELIGIBILITY IN THE
STATES, DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA,
THE NORTHERN MARIANA ISLANDS,
AND AMERICAN SAMOA
PART 436—ELIGIBILITY IN GUAM,
PUERTO RICO AND THE VIRGIN
ISLANDS
5. The authority citation for part 435
continues to read as follows:
Authority: Sec. 1102 of the Social Security
Act (42 U.S.C. 1302).
Subpart C—Options for Coverage
6. Section 435.219 is added to subpart
C to read as follows:
§ 435.219 Individuals receiving State plan
home and community-based services.
If the agency provides home and
community-based services to
individuals described in section
1915(i)(1), the agency, under its State
plan, may, in addition, provide
Medicaid to any group or groups of
individuals in the community who are
described in one or both of the
paragraphs under paragraphs (a) or (b)
of this section.
(a) Individuals who—
(1) Are not otherwise eligible for
Medicaid;
(2) Have income that does not exceed
150 percent of the Federal poverty line
(FPL);
(3) Meet the needs-based criteria
under § 441.659 of this chapter; and
(4) Will receive State plan home and
community-based services as defined in
§ 440.182 of this chapter.
(b) Individuals who—
(1) Would be determined eligible by
the agency under an existing waiver or
demonstration project under sections
1915(c), 1915(d), 1915(e) or 1115 of the
Act, but are not required to receive
services under such waivers or
demonstration projects;
(2) Have income that does not exceed
300 percent of the Supplemental
Security Income Federal Benefit Rate
(SSI/FBR); and
(3) Will receive State plan home and
community-based services as defined in
§ 440.182 of this chapter.
(c) For purposes of determining
eligibility under paragraph (a) of this
section, the agency may not take into
account an individual’s resources and
must use income standards that are
reasonable, consistent with the
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7. The authority citation for part 436
continues to read as follows:
Authority: Sec. 1102 of the Social Security
Act (42 U.S.C. 1302).
Subpart C—Options for Coverage
8. Section 436.219 is added to subpart
C to read as follows:
§ 436.219 Individuals receiving State plan
home and community-based services.
If the agency provides home and
community-based services to
individuals described in section
1915(i)(1) of the Act, the agency, under
its State plan, may, in addition, provide
Medicaid to any group or groups of
individuals in the community who are
described in one or both of paragraphs
(a) or (b) of this section.
(a) Individuals who—
(1) Are not otherwise eligible for
Medicaid;
(2) Have income that does not exceed
150 percent of the Federal poverty line
(FPL);
(3) Meet the needs-based criteria
under § 441.659 of this chapter; and
(4) Will receive State plan home and
community-based services as defined in
§ 440.182 of this chapter.
(b) Individuals who—
(1)Would be determined eligible by
the agency under an existing waiver or
demonstration project under sections
1915(c), 1915(d), 1915(e) or 1115 of the
Act, but are not required to receive
services under such waivers or
demonstration projects;
(2) Have income that does not exceed
300 percent of the Supplemental
Security Income Federal Benefit Rate
(SSI/FBR); and
(3) Will receive State plan home and
community-based services as defined in
§ 440.182 of this chapter.
(c) For purposes of determining
eligibility under paragraph (a) of this
section, the agency may not take into
account an individual’s resources and
must use income standards that are
reasonable, consistent with the
objectives of the Medicaid program,
simple to administer, and in the best
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interests of the beneficiary. Income
methodologies may include use of
existing income methodologies, such as
the rules of the OAA, AB, APTD or
AABD programs. However, subject to
the Secretary’s approval, the agency
may use other income methodologies
that meet the requirements of this
paragraph (c).
PART 440—SERVICES: GENERAL
PROVISIONS
9. The authority citation for part 440
continues to read as follows:
Authority: Sec. 1102 of the Social Security
Act (42 U.S.C. 1302).
Subpart A—Definitions
10. Section 440.1 is amended by
adding the new statutory basis in
alphanumerical order to read as follows:
§ 440.1
Basis and purpose.
*
*
*
*
*
1915(i) Home and community-based
services furnished under a State plan to
elderly and disabled individuals.
11. Section 440.180 is amended by
revising the heading to read as follows:
§ 440.180 Home and community-based
waiver services.
*
*
*
*
*
12. Section 440.182 is added to
subpart A to read as follows:
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§ 440.182 State plan home and
community-based services.
(a) Definition. State plan home and
community-based services (HCBS)
benefit means the services listed in
paragraph (c) of this section when
provided under the State’s plan (rather
than through an HCBS waiver program)
for individuals described in paragraph
(b) of this section.
(b) State plan HCBS coverage. State
plan HCBS can be made available to
individuals who—
(1) Are eligible under the State plan
and have income, calculated using the
otherwise applicable rules, including
any less restrictive income disregards
used by the State for that group under
section 1902(r)(2) of the Act, that does
not exceed 150 percent of the Federal
Poverty Line (FPL); and
(2) In addition to the individuals
described in paragraph (b)(1) of this
section, to individuals based on the
State’s election of the eligibility groups
described in § 435.219(b) or § 436.219(b)
of this chapter.
(c) Services. The State plan HCBS
benefit consists of one or more of the
following services:
(1) Case management services.
(2) Homemaker services.
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(3) Home health aide services.
(4) Personal care services.
(5) Adult day health services.
(6) Habilitation services, which
include expanded habilitation services
as specified in § 440.180(c) of this
subpart.
(7) Respite care services.
(8) Subject to the conditions in
§ 440.180 of this subpart, for individuals
with chronic mental illness:
(i) Day treatment or other partial
hospitalization services;
(ii) Psychosocial rehabilitation
services;
(iii) Clinic services (whether or not
furnished in a facility).
(9) Other services requested by the
agency and approved by the Secretary as
consistent with the purpose of the
benefit.
(d) Exclusion. FFP is not available for
the cost of room and board in State plan
HCBS. The following HCBS costs are
not considered room or board for
purposes of this exclusion:
(1) The cost of temporary food and
shelter provided as an integral part of
respite care services in a facility
approved by the State.
(2) Meals provided as an integral
component of a program of adult day
health services or another service and
consistent with standard procedures in
the State for such a program.
(3) A portion of the rent and food
costs that may be reasonably attributed
to an unrelated caregiver providing
State plan HCBS who is residing in the
same household with the recipient, but
not if the recipient is living in the home
of the caregiver or in a residence that is
owned or leased by the caregiver.
PART 441—SERVICES:
REQUIREMENTS AND LIMITS
APPLICABLE TO SPECIFIC SERVICES
13. The authority citation for part 441
continues to read as follows:
Authority: Sec. 1102 of the Social Security
Act (42 U.S.C. 1302).
14. Section 441.530 is added to read
as follows:
§ 441.530
Setting.
Home and Community-Based
(a) States must make available
attendant services and supports in a
home and community-based setting
consistent with both paragraphs (a)(1)
and (2) of this section.
(1) Home and community-based
settings shall have all of the following
qualities, and such other qualities as the
Secretary determines to be appropriate,
based on the needs of the individual as
indicated in their person-centered
service plan:
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(i) The setting is integrated in, and
facilitates the individual’s full access to,
the greater community, including
opportunities to seek employment and
work in competitive integrated settings,
engage in community life, control
personal resources, and receive services
in the community, in the same manner
as individuals without disabilities.
(ii) The setting is selected by the
individual from among all available
alternatives and is identified in the
person-centered service plan.
(iii) An individual’s essential personal
rights of privacy, dignity and respect,
and freedom from coercion and restraint
are protected.
(iv) Individual initiative, autonomy,
and independence in making life
choices, including but not limited to,
daily activities, physical environment,
and with whom to interact are
optimized and not regimented.
(v) Individual choice regarding
services and supports, and who
provides them, is facilitated.
(vi) In a provider-owned or controlled
residential setting, the following
additional conditions must be met. Any
modification of the conditions, for
example, to address the safety needs of
an individual with dementia, must be
supported by a specific assessed need
and documented in the person-centered
service plan:
(A) The unit or room is a specific
physical place that can be owned,
rented or occupied under another
legally enforceable agreement by the
individual receiving services, and the
individual has, at a minimum, the same
responsibilities and protections from
eviction that tenants have under the
landlord tenant law of the State, county,
city or other designated entity;
(B) Each individual has privacy in
their sleeping or living unit:
(1) Units have lockable entrance
doors, with appropriate staff having
keys to doors;
(2) Individuals share units only at the
individual’s choice; and
(3) Individuals have the freedom to
furnish and decorate their sleeping or
living units.
(C) Individuals have the freedom and
support to control their own schedules
and activities, and have access to food
at any time;
(D) Individuals are able to have
visitors of their choosing at any time;
and
(E) The setting is physically accessible
to the individual.
(2) Home and community-based
settings do not include the following:
(i) A nursing facility;
(ii) An institution for mental diseases;
(iii) An intermediate care facility for
the mentally retarded;
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(iv) A hospital providing long-term
care services; or
(v) Any other locations that have
qualities of an institutional setting, as
determined by the Secretary. The
Secretary will apply a rebuttable
presumption that a setting is not a home
and community-based setting, and
engage in heightened scrutiny, for any
setting that is located in a building that
is also a publicly or privately operated
facility that provides inpatient
institutional treatment, or in a building
on the grounds of, or immediately
adjacent to, a public institution, or
disability-specific housing complex.
15. A new subpart L, consisting of
§§ 441.650 through 441.677, is added to
read as follows:
Subpart K—State Plan Home and
Community-Based Services for Elderly
and Disabled Individuals
Sec.
441.650 Basis and purpose.
441.653 State plan requirements.
441.656 State plan home and communitybased services under the Act.
441.659 Needs-based criteria and
evaluation.
441.662 Independent assessment.
441.665 Person-centered service plan.
441.668 Provider qualifications.
441.671 Definition of individual’s
representative.
441.674 Self-directed services.
441.677 State plan HCBS administration:
State responsibilities and quality
improvement.
Subpart L State Plan Home and
Community-Based Services for the
Elderly and Individuals With
Disabilities
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§ 441.650
Basis and purpose.
Section 1915(i) of the Act permits
States to offer one or more home and
community-based services (HCBS)
under their State Medicaid plans to
qualified individuals with disabilities or
individuals who are elderly. Those
services are listed in § 440.182 of this
chapter, and are described by the State,
including any limitations of the
services. This optional benefit is known
as the State plan HCBS benefit. This
subpart describes what a State Medicaid
plan must provide when the State elects
to include the optional benefit, and
defines State responsibilities.
§ 441.653
State plan requirements.
A State plan that provides 1915(i)
State plan home and community-based
services must meet the requirements of
this subpart.
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§ 441.656 State plan home and
community-based services under the Act.
(a) Home and Community-Based
Setting. Under section 1915(i)(1) of the
Act, States must make State plan HCBS
available in a home and communitybased setting consistent with both
paragraphs (a)(1) and (2) of this section.
(1) Home and community-based
settings shall have all of the following
qualities, and such other qualities as the
Secretary determines to be appropriate,
based on the needs of the individual as
indicated in their person-centered
service plan:
(i) The setting is integrated in, and
facilitates the individual’s full access to,
the greater community including
opportunities to seek employment and
work in competitive integrated settings,
engage in community life, control
personal resources, and receive services
in the community, in the same manner
as individuals without disabilities.
(ii) The setting is selected by the
individual from among all available
alternatives and is identified in the
person–centered service plan.
(iii) An individual’s essential personal
rights of privacy, dignity and respect,
and freedom from coercion and restraint
are protected.
(iv) Individual initiative, autonomy,
and independence in making life
choices, including but not limited to,
daily activities, physical environment,
and with whom to interact are
optimized and not regimented.
(v) Individual choice regarding
services and supports, and who
provides them, is facilitated.
(vi) In a provider-owned or controlled
residential setting, the following
additional conditions must be met. Any
modification of the conditions, for
example, to address the safety needs of
an individual with dementia, must be
supported by a specific assessed need
and documented in the person-centered
service plan:
(A) The unit or room is a specific
physical place that can be owned,
rented, or occupied under a legally
enforceable agreement by the individual
receiving services, and the individual
has, at a minimum, the same
responsibilities and protections from
eviction that tenants have under the
landlord/tenant law of the State, county,
city, or other designated entity;
(B) Each individual has privacy in
their sleeping or living unit:
(1) Units have lockable entrance
doors, with appropriate staff having
keys to doors;
(2) Individuals share units only at the
individual’s choice; and
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(3) Individuals have the freedom to
furnish and decorate their sleeping or
living units.
(C) Individuals have the freedom and
support to control their own schedules
and activities, and have access to food
at any time;
(D) Individuals are able to have
visitors of their choosing at any time;
and
(E) The setting is physically accessible
to the individual.
(2) Home and community-based
settings do not include the following:
(i) A nursing facility;
(ii) An institution for mental diseases;
(iii) An intermediate care facility for
the mentally retarded;
(iv) A hospital; or
(v) Any other locations that have
qualities of an institutional setting, as
determined by the Secretary. The
Secretary will apply a rebuttable
presumption that a setting is not a home
and community-based setting, and
engage in heightened scrutiny, for any
setting that is located in a building that
is also a publicly or privately operated
facility that provides inpatient
institutional treatment, or in a building
on the grounds of, or immediately
adjacent to, a public institution, or
disability-specific housing complex.
(b) Needs-Based Eligibility
Requirement. Meet needs-based criteria
for eligibility for the State plan HCBS
benefit, as required in § 441.659(a).
(c) Minimum State plan HCBS
Requirement. Be assessed to require at
least one section 1915(i) home and
community-based service at a frequency
determined by the State, as required in
§ 441.662(a)(5).
(d) Target Population. Meet any
applicable targeting criteria defined by
the State under the authority of
paragraph (b)(2) of this section.
(e) Nonapplication. The State may
elect in the State plan amendment
approved under this subpart not to
apply the following requirements when
determining eligibility:
(1) Section 1902(a)(10)(C)(i)(III) of the
Act, pertaining to income and resource
eligibility rules for the medically needy
living in the community, but only for
the purposes of providing State plan
HCBS.
(2) Section 1902(a)(10)(B) of the Act,
pertaining to comparability of Medicaid
services, but only for the purposes of
providing section 1915(i) State plan
HCBS. In the event that a State elects
not to apply comparability
requirements:
(i) The State must describe the
group(s) receiving State plan HCBS,
subject to the Secretary’s approval.
Targeting criteria cannot have the
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impact of limiting the pool of qualified
providers from which an individual
would receive services, or have the
impact of requiring an individual to
receive services from the same entity
from which they purchase their
housing. These groups must be defined
on the basis of any combination of—
(A) Age;
(B) Diagnosis;
(C) Disability; or
(D) Medicaid Eligibility Group.
(ii)The State may elect in the State
plan amendment to limit the availability
of specific services defined under the
authority of § 440.182(b) or to vary the
amount, duration, or scope of those
services, to one or more of the group(s)
described in this paragraph.
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§ 441.659 Needs-based criteria and
evaluation.
(a) Needs-based criteria. The State
must establish needs-based criteria for
determining an individual’s eligibility
under the State plan for the HCBS
benefit, and may establish needs-based
criteria for each specific service. Needsbased criteria are factors used to
determine an individual’s requirements
for support, and may include risk
factors. The criteria are not
characteristics that describe the
individual or the individual’s condition.
A diagnosis is not a sufficient factor on
which to base a determination of need.
A criterion can be considered needsbased if it is a factor that can only be
ascertained for a given person through
an individualized evaluation of need.
(b) More stringent institutional and
waiver needs-based criteria. The State
plan HCBS benefit is available only if
the State has in effect needs-based
criteria (as defined in paragraph (a) of
this section), for receipt of services in
nursing facilities as defined in section
1919(a) of the Act, intermediate care
facilities for the mentally retarded as
defined in § 440.150 of this chapter, and
hospitals as defined in § 440.10 of this
chapter for which the State has
established long-term level of care
(LOC) criteria, or waivers offering
HCBS, and these needs-based criteria
are more stringent than the needs-based
criteria for the State plan HCBS benefit.
If the State defines needs-based criteria
for individual State plan home and
community-based services, it may not
have the effect of limiting who can
benefit from the State plan HCBS in an
unreasonable way, as determined by the
Secretary.
(1) These more stringent criteria must
meet the following requirements:
(i) Be included in the LOC
determination process for each
institutional service and waiver.
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(ii) Be submitted for inspection by
CMS with the State plan amendment
that establishes the State Plan HCBS
benefit.
(iii) Be in effect on or before the
effective date of the State plan HCBS
benefit.
(2) In the event that the State modifies
institutional LOC criteria to meet the
requirements under paragraph (b) or
(c)(7) of this section that such criteria be
more stringent than the State plan HCBS
needs-based eligibility criteria, States
may continue to receive FFP for
individuals receiving institutional
services or waiver HCBS under the LOC
criteria previously in effect.
(c) Adjustment authority. The State
may modify the needs-based criteria
established under paragraph (a) of this
section, without prior approval from the
Secretary, if the number of individuals
enrolled in the State plan HCBS benefit
exceeds the projected number submitted
annually to CMS. The Secretary will
approve a retroactive effective date for
the State plan amendment modifying
the criteria, as early as the day following
the notification period required under
paragraph (c)(1) of this section, if all of
the following conditions are met:
(1) The State provides at least 60 days
notice of the proposed modification to
the Secretary, the public, and each
individual enrolled in the State plan
HCBS benefit.
(2) The State notice to the Secretary
is submitted as an amendment to the
State plan.
(3) The adjusted needs-based
eligibility criteria for the State plan
HCBS benefit are less stringent than
needs-based institutional and waiver
LOC criteria in effect after the
adjustment.
(4) Individuals who were found
eligible for the State plan HCBS benefit
before modification of the needs-based
criteria under this adjustment authority
must remain eligible for the HCBS
benefit until such time as:
(i) The individual no longer meets the
needs-based criteria used for the initial
determination of eligibility; or
(ii) The individual is no longer
eligible for or enrolled in Medicaid or
the HCBS benefit.
(5) Any changes in service due to the
modification of needs-based criteria
under this adjustment authority are
treated as actions as defined in
§ 431.201 and are subject to the
requirements of Part 431 Subpart E of
this chapter.
(6) In the event that the State also
needs to modify institutional LOC
criteria to meet the requirements under
paragraph (b) of this section that such
criteria be more stringent than the State
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plan HCBS needs-based eligibility
criteria, the State may adjust the
modified institutional LOC criteria
under this adjustment authority. The
adjusted institutional LOC criteria must
be at least as stringent as those in effect
before they were modified to meet the
requirements in paragraph (b) of this
section.
(d) Independent evaluation and
determination of eligibility. Eligibility
for the State plan HCBS benefit must be
determined through an independent
evaluation of each individual according
to the requirements of § 441.656(a)(1)
through (5) of this subpart. The
independent evaluation complies with
the following requirements:
(1) Is performed by an agent that is
independent and qualified as defined in
§ 441.668 of this subpart.
(2) Applies the needs-based eligibility
criteria that the State has established
under paragraph (a) of this section, and
the general eligibility requirements
under § 441.656(a)(1) through (3) and
(b)(2) of this subpart.
(3) Includes consultation with the
individual, and if applicable, the
individual’s authorized representative.
(4) Assesses the individual’s support
needs.
(5) Uses only current and accurate
information from existing records, and
obtains any additional information
necessary to draw valid conclusions
about the individual’s support needs.
(6) Evaluations finding that an
individual is not eligible for the State
plan HCBS benefit are treated as actions
defined in § 431.201 of this chapter and
are subject to the requirements of part
431 subpart E of this chapter.
(e) Periodic redetermination.
Independent reevaluations of each
individual receiving the State plan
HCBS benefit must be performed at least
every 12 months, to determine whether
the individual continues to meet
eligibility requirements.
Redeterminations must meet the
requirements of paragraph (d) of this
section.
§ 441.662
Independent assessment.
(a) Requirements. For each individual
determined to be eligible for the State
plan HCBS benefit, the State must
provide for an independent assessment
of needs, which may include the results
of a standardized functional needs
assessment, in order to establish a
service plan. In applying the
requirements of section 1915(i)(1)(F) of
the Act, the State must:
(1) Perform a face-to-face assessment
of the individual by an agent that is
independent and qualified as defined in
§ 441.668 of this subpart and with a
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person-centered process guided by best
practice and research on effective
strategies that result in improved health
and quality of life outcomes.
(i) For the purposes of this section, a
face-to-face assessment may include
assessments performed by telemedicine,
or other information technology
medium, if the following conditions are
met:
(A) The health care professional(s)
performing the assessment meets the
provider qualifications defined by the
State, including any additional
qualifications or training requirements
for the operation of required
information technology.
(B) The individual receives
appropriate support during the
assessment, including the use of any
necessary on-site support-staff.
(C) The individual provides informed
consent for this type of assessment.
(ii) [Reserved]
(2) Conduct the assessment in
consultation with the individual, and if
applicable, the individual’s authorized
representative, and include the
opportunity for the individual to
identify other persons to be consulted,
such as, but not limited to, the
individual’s spouse, family, guardian,
and treating and consulting health and
support professionals responsible for
the individual’s care.
(3) Examine the individual’s relevant
history including the findings from the
independent evaluation of eligibility,
medical records, an objective evaluation
of functional ability, and any other
records or information needed to
develop the service plan as required in
§ 441.665 of this subpart.
(4) Include in the assessment the
individual’s physical and behavioral
health care and support needs, strengths
and preferences, available service and
housing options, and when unpaid
caregivers will be relied upon to
implement the service plan, a caregiver
assessment.
(5) Apply the State’s needs-based
criteria for each service (if any) that the
individual may require. Individuals are
considered enrolled in the State plan
HCBS benefit only if they meet the
eligibility and needs-based criteria for
the benefit, and are also assessed to
require and receive at least one home
and community-based service offered
under the State plan for medical
assistance.
(6) Include in the assessment, if the
State offers individuals the option to
self-direct a State plan home and
community-based service or services,
any information needed for the selfdirected portion of the service plan, as
required in § 441.674(b) of this subpart,
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including the ability of the individual
(with and without supports) to exercise
budget or employer authority.
(7) Include in the assessment, for
individuals receiving habilitation
services, documentation that no
Medicaid services are provided which
would otherwise be available to the
individual, specifically including but
not limited to services available to the
individual through a program funded
under section 110 of the Rehabilitation
Act of 1973, or the Individuals with
Disabilities Education Improvement Act
of 2004.
(8) Include in the assessment and
subsequent service plan, for individuals
receiving Secretary approved services
under the authority of § 440.182 of this
chapter, documentation that no State
plan HCBS services are provided which
would otherwise be available to the
individual through other Medicaid
services or other Federally funded
programs.
(9) Include in the assessment and
subsequent service plan, for individuals
receiving HCBS through a waiver
approved under § 441.300 of this
subpart, documentation that HCBS
provided through the State plan and
waiver are not duplicative.
(10) Coordinate the assessment and
subsequent service plan with any other
assessment or service plan required for
services through a waiver authorized
under section 1115 or section 1915 of
the Social Security Act.
(b) Reassessments. The independent
assessment of need must be conducted
at least every 12 months and as needed
when the individual’s support needs or
circumstances change significantly, in
order to revise the service plan.
§ 441.665
Person-centered service plan.
(a) Person-centered planning process.
Based on the independent assessment
required in § 441.662 of this subpart, the
State must develop (or approve, if the
plan is developed by others) a written
service plan jointly with the individual
(including, for purposes of this
paragraph, the individual and the
individual’s authorized representative if
applicable). The person-centered
planning process is driven by the
individual. The process:
(1) Includes people chosen by the
individual.
(2) Provides necessary information
and support to ensure that the
individual directs the process to the
maximum extent possible, and is
enabled to make informed choices and
decisions.
(3) Is timely and occurs at times and
locations of convenience to the
individual.
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26403
(4) Reflects cultural considerations of
the individual.
(5) Includes strategies for solving
conflict or disagreement within the
process, including clear conflict-ofinterest guidelines for all planning
participants.
(6) Offers choices to the individual
regarding the services and supports they
receive and from whom.
(7) Includes a method for the
individual to request updates to the
plan.
(8) Records the alternative home and
community-based settings that were
considered by the individual.
(b) The person-centered service plan.
The person-centered service plan must
reflect the services and supports that are
important for the individual to meet the
needs identified through an assessment
of functional need, as well as what is
important to the individual with regard
to preferences for the delivery of such
services and supports. Commensurate
with the level of need of the individual,
and the scope of services and supports
available under the State plan HCBS
benefit, the plan must:
(1) Reflect that the setting in which
the individual resides is chosen by the
individual.
(2) Reflect the individual’s strengths
and preferences.
(3) Reflect clinical and support needs
as identified through an assessment of
functional need.
(4) Include individually identified
goals and desired outcomes.
(5) Reflect the services and supports
(paid and unpaid) that will assist the
individual to achieve identified goals,
and the providers of those services and
supports, including natural supports.
Natural supports cannot supplant
needed paid services unless the natural
supports are unpaid supports that are
provided voluntarily to the individual
in lieu of State plan HCBS.
(6) Reflect risk factors and measures
in place to minimize them, including
Individualized backup plans.
(7) Be understandable to the
individual receiving services and
supports, and the individuals important
in supporting him or her.
(8) Identify the individual and/or
entity responsible for monitoring the
plan.
(9) Be finalized and agreed to in
writing by the individual and signed by
all individuals and providers
responsible for its implementation.
(10) Be distributed to the individual
and other people involved in the plan.
(11) Include those services, the
purchase or control of which the
individual elects to self-direct, meeting
the requirements of § 441.574(b) through
(d) of this subpart.
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(12) Prevent the provision of
unnecessary or inappropriate care.
(13) Other requirements as
determined by the Secretary.
(c) Reviewing the person-centered
service plan. The person-centered
service plan must be reviewed, and
revised upon reassessment of functional
need as required in § 441.662 of this
subpart, at least every 12 months, when
the individual’s circumstances or needs
change significantly, and at the request
of the individual.
wreier-aviles on DSK7SPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS2
§ 441.668
Provider qualifications.
(a) Requirements. The State must
provide assurances that necessary
safeguards have been taken to protect
the health and welfare of enrollees in
State plan HCBS, and must define in
writing standards for providers (both
agencies and individuals) of HCBS
services and for agents conducting
individualized independent evaluation,
independent assessment, and service
plan development.
(b) Conflict of interest standards. The
State must define conflict of interest
standards that ensure the independence
of individual and agency agents who
conduct (whether as a service or an
administrative activity) the independent
evaluation of eligibility for State plan
HCBS, who are responsible for the
independent assessment of need for
HCBS, or who are responsible for the
development of the service plan. The
conflict of interest standards apply to all
individuals and entities, public or
private. At a minimum, these agents
must not be any of the following:
(1) Related by blood or marriage to the
individual, or to any paid caregiver of
the individual.
(2) Financially responsible for the
individual.
(3) Empowered to make financial or
health-related decisions on behalf of the
individual.
(4) Holding financial interest, as
defined in § 411.354 of this chapter, in
any entity that is paid to provide care
for the individual.
(5) Providers of State plan HCBS for
the individual, or those who have an
interest in or are employed by a
provider of State plan HCBS for the
individual, except when the State
demonstrates that the only willing and
qualified agent to perform independent
assessments and develop plans of care
in a geographic area also provides
HCBS, and the State devises conflict of
interest protections including separation
of agent and provider functions within
provider entities, which are described in
the State plan for medical assistance
and approved by the Secretary, and
individuals are provided with a clear
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and accessible alternative dispute
resolution process.
(c) Training. Qualifications for agents
performing independent assessments
and plans of care must include training
in assessment of individuals whose
physical or mental conditions trigger a
potential need for home and
community-based services and
supports, and current knowledge of best
practices to improve health and quality
of life outcomes.
§ 441.671 Definition of individual’s
representative.
In this subpart, the term individual’s
representative means, with respect to an
individual being evaluated for, assessed
regarding, or receiving State plan HCBS,
the following:
(a) The individual’s legal guardian or
other person who is authorized under
State law to represent the individual for
the purpose of making decisions related
to the person’s care or well-being.
(b) Any other person who is
authorized by policy of the State
Medicaid Agency to represent the
individual including but not limited to
a parent, a family member, or an
advocate for the individual.
(c) When the State authorizes
representatives in accordance with
paragraph (b) of this section, the State
must have policies describing the
process for authorization; the extent of
decision-making authorized; and
safeguards to ensure that the
representative functions in the best
interests of the participant. States may
not refuse the authorized representative
that the individual chooses, unless in
the process of applying the
requirements for authorization, the State
discovers and can document evidence
that the representative is not acting in
the best interest of the individual or
cannot perform the required functions.
§ 441.674
Self-directed services.
(a) State option. The State may choose
to offer an election for self-directing
HCBS. The term ‘‘self-directed’’ means,
with respect to State plan HCBS listed
in § 440.182 of this chapter, services
that are planned and purchased under
the direction and control of the
individual, including the amount,
duration, scope, provider, and location
of the HCBS. For purposes of this
paragraph, individual means the
individual and, if applicable, the
individual’s representative as defined in
§ 441.671 of this subpart.
(b) Service plan requirement. Based
on the independent assessment required
in § 441.662 of this subpart, the State
develops a service plan jointly with the
individual as required in § 441.665 of
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Sfmt 4702
this subpart. If the individual chooses to
direct some or all HCBS, the service
plan must meet the following additional
requirements:
(1) Specify the State plan HCBS that
the individual will be responsible for
directing.
(2) Identify the methods by which the
individual will plan, direct or control
services, including whether the
individual will exercise authority over
the employment of service providers
and/or authority over expenditures from
the individualized budget.
(3) Include appropriate risk
management techniques that explicitly
recognize the roles and sharing of
responsibilities in obtaining services in
a self-directed manner and assure the
appropriateness of this plan based upon
the resources and support needs of the
individual.
(4) Describe the process for facilitating
voluntary and involuntary transition
from self-direction including any
circumstances under which transition
out of self-direction is involuntary.
(c) Employer authority. If the service
plan includes authority to select,
manage, or dismiss providers of the
State plan HCBS, the plan must meet
the following requirements:
(1) Specify the authority to be
assumed by the individual, any limits to
the authority, and specify parties
responsible for functions outside the
authority to be assumed.
(2) Specify the financial management
supports, as required in paragraph (e) of
this section, to be provided.
(d) Budget authority. If the service
plan includes an individualized budget
(which identifies the dollar value of the
services and supports under the control
and direction of the individual), the
plan must meet the following
requirements:
(1) Describe the method for
calculating the dollar values in the
budget, based on reliable costs and
service utilization.
(2) Define a process for making
adjustments in dollar values to reflect
changes in an individual’s assessment
and service plan.
(3) Provide a procedure to evaluate
expenditures under the budget.
(4) Specify the financial management
supports, as required in paragraph (e) of
this section, to be provided.
(5) Not result in payment for medical
assistance to the individual.
(e) Functions in support of selfdirection. When the State elects to offer
self-directed State plan HCBS, it must
offer the following individualized
supports to individuals receiving the
services and their representatives:
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(1) Information and assistance
consistent with sound principles and
practice of self-direction.
(2) Financial management supports to
meet the following requirements:
(i) Manage Federal, State, and local
employment tax, labor, worker’s
compensation, insurance, and other
requirements that apply when the
individual functions as the employer of
service providers.
(ii) Function as employer of record
when the individual elects to exercise
supervisory responsibility without
employment responsibility.
(iii) Make financial transactions on
behalf of the individual when the
individual has personal budget
authority.
(iv) Maintain separate accounts for
each individual’s budget and provide
periodic reports of expenditures against
budget in a manner understandable to
the individual.
wreier-aviles on DSK7SPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS2
§ 441.677 State plan HCBS administration:
State responsibilities and quality
improvement.
(a) State plan HCBS administration.
(1) State responsibilities. The State must
carry out the following responsibilities
in administration of its State plan
HCBS:
(i) Number served. The State will
annually provide CMS with the
projected number of individuals to be
enrolled in the benefit and the actual
number of unduplicated individuals
enrolled in State plan HCBS in the
previous year.
(ii) Access to services. The State must
grant access to all State plan HCBS
assessed to be needed in accordance
with a service plan consistent with
§ 441.665 of this subpart, to individuals
who have been determined to be eligible
for the State plan HCBS benefit, subject
to the following requirements:
(A) A State must determine that
provided services meet medical
necessity criteria;
(B) A State may limit access to
services through targeting criteria
established by § 441.656(b)(2) of this
subpart; and
(C) A State may not limit access to
services based upon the income of
individuals, the cost of services, or the
individual’s location in the State.
(iii) Appeals. A State must provide
individuals with the right to appeal
terminations, suspensions, or reductions
of Medicaid eligibility or covered
services as described in part 431,
subpart E.
(2) Administration. (i) Option for
presumptive payment. (A) The State
may provide for a period of presumptive
payment, not to exceed 60 days, for
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Jkt 226001
Medicaid eligible individuals the State
has reason to believe may be eligible for
the State plan HCBS benefit. FFP is
available for both services that meet the
definition of medical assistance and
necessary administrative expenditures
for evaluation of eligibility for the State
plan HCBS benefit under § 441.659(d) of
this subpart and assessment of need for
specific HCBS under § 441.662(a) of this
subpart, prior to an individual’s receipt
of State plan HCBS services or
determination of ineligibility for the
benefit.
(B) If an individual the State has
reason to believe may be eligible for the
State plan HCBS benefit and is
evaluated and assessed under the
presumptive payment option and found
not to be eligible for the benefit, FFP is
available for services that meet the
definition of medical assistance and
necessary administrative expenditures.
The individual so determined will not
be considered to have enrolled in the
State plan HCBS benefit for purposes of
determining the annual number of
participants in the benefit.
(ii) Option for Phase-in of Services
and Eligibility. (A) In the event that a
State elects to establish targeting criteria
through § 441.656(b)(2) of this subpart,
the State may limit the enrollment of
individuals or the provision services to
enrolled individuals based upon criteria
described in a phase-in plan, subject to
CMS approval. A State which elects to
target the State plan HCBS benefit and
to phase-in enrollment and/or services
must submit a phase-in plan for
approval by CMS that describes, at a
minimum:
(1) The criteria used to limit
enrollment or service delivery;
(2) The rationale for phasing-in
services and/or eligibility; and
(3) Timelines and benchmarks to
ensure that the benefit is available
statewide to all eligible individuals
within the initial 5-year approval.
(B) If a State elects to phase-in the
enrollment of individuals based on
highest need, the phase-in plan must
use the needs-based criteria described in
§ 441.659(a) of this subpart to establish
priority for enrollment. Such criteria
must be based upon the assessed need
of individuals, with higher-need
individuals receiving services prior to
individuals with lower assessed need.
(C) If a State elects to phase-in the
provision of any services, the phase-in
plan must include a description of the
services that will not be available to all
eligible individuals, the rationale for
limiting the provision of services, and
assurance that all individuals with
access to a willing and qualified
provider may receive services.
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26405
(D) The plan may not include a cap
on the number of enrollees.
(E) The plan must include a timeline
to assure that all eligible individuals
receive all included services prior to the
end of the first 5-year approval period,
described in paragraph (a)(2)(vi) of this
section.
(iii) Reimbursement methodology.
The State plan amendment to provide
State plan HCBS must contain a
description of the reimbursement
methodology for each covered service.
To the extent that the reimbursement
methodologies for any self-directed
services differ from those descriptions,
the method for setting reimbursement
methodology for the self-directed
services must also be described.
(iv) Operation. The State plan
amendment to provide State plan HCBS
must contain a description of the State
Medicaid agency line of authority for
operating the State plan HCBS benefit,
including distribution of functions to
other entities.
(v) Modifications. The agency may
request that modifications to the benefit
be made effective retroactive to the first
day of a fiscal year quarter, or another
date after the first day of a fiscal year
quarter, in which the amendment is
submitted, unless the amendment
involves substantive change.
Substantive changes may include, but
are not limited to, the following:
(A) Revisions to services available
under the benefit including elimination
or reduction in services, and changes in
the scope, amount and duration of the
services.
(B) Changes in the qualifications of
service providers, rate methodology, or
the eligible population.
(1) Request for Amendments. A
request for an amendment that involves
a substantive change as determined by
CMS—
(i) May only take effect on or after the
date when the amendment is approved
by CMS; and
(ii) Must be accompanied by
information on how the State will
ensure for transitions with minimal
adverse impact on individuals impacted
by the change.
(2) [Reserved]
(vi) Periods of approval. (A) If a State
elects to establish targeting criteria
through § 441.656(b)(2) of this subpart,
the approval of the State Plan
Amendment will be in effect for a
period of 5 years from the effective date
of the amendment. To renew State plan
HCBS for an additional 5-year period,
the State must provide a written request
for renewal to CMS at least 180 days
prior to the end of the approval period.
CMS approval of a renewal request is
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wreier-aviles on DSK7SPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS2
contingent upon State adherence to
Federal requirements.
(B) If a State does not elect to
establish targeting criteria through
§ 441.656(b)(2) of this subpart, the
limitations on length of approval does
not apply.
(b) Quality improvement strategy:
Program performance and quality of
care. States must develop and
implement an HCBS quality
improvement strategy that includes a
continuous improvement process and
measures of program performance and
experience of care. The strategy must be
proportionate to the scope of services in
the State plan HCBS benefit and the
number of individuals to be served. The
State will make this information
available to CMS at a frequency
determined by the Secretary or upon
request.
(1) Quality Improvement Strategy. The
quality improvement strategy must
include all of the following:
(i) Incorporate a continuous quality
improvement process that includes
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Jkt 226001
monitoring, remediation, and quality
improvement.
(ii) Be evidence-based, and include
measures as determined by the
Secretary.
(iii) Provide evidence of program
performance and the establishment of
sufficient infrastructure to effectively
implement the program.
(iv) Measure individual outcomes
associated with the receipt of HCBS,
related to the implementation of goals
included in the individual service plan.
(2) [Reserved]
PART 447—PAYMENTS FOR
SERVICES
16. The authority citation for part 447
continues to read as follows:
Authority: Sec. 1102 of the Social Security
Act (42 U.S.C. 1302).
17. Section 447.10 is amended by
adding paragraph (g)(4) to read as
follows:
PO 00000
Frm 00046
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 9990
§ 447.10 Prohibition Against
Reassignment of Provider Claims
(g) * * *
(4) In the case of a class of
practitioners for which the Medicaid
program is the primary source of
revenue, payment may be made to a
third party on behalf of the individual
practitioner for benefits such as health
insurance, skills training and other
benefits customary for employees.
*
*
*
*
*
Authority
(Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance
Program No. 93.778, Medical Assistance
Program)
Dated: April 24, 2012.
Marilyn Tavenner,
Acting Administrator, Centers for Medicare
& Medicaid Services.
Approved: April 24, 2012.
Kathleen Sebelius,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2012–10385 Filed 4–26–12; 4:15 pm]
BILLING CODE 4120–01–P
E:\FR\FM\03MYP2.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 77, Number 86 (Thursday, May 3, 2012)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 26362-26406]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2012-10385]
[[Page 26361]]
Vol. 77
Thursday,
No. 86
May 3, 2012
Part II
Department of Health and Human Services
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Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services
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42 CFR Parts 430, 431, 435, et al.
Medicaid Program; State Plan Home and Community-Based Services, 5-Year
Period for Waivers, Provider Payment Reassignment, and Setting
Requirements for Community First Choice; Proposed Rule
Federal Register / Vol. 77 , No. 86 / Thursday, May 3, 2012 /
Proposed Rules
[[Page 26362]]
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DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services
42 CFR Parts 430, 431, 435, 436, 440, 441, and 447
[CMS-2249-P2]
RIN 0938-AO53
Medicaid Program; State Plan Home and Community-Based Services,
5-Year Period for Waivers, Provider Payment Reassignment, and Setting
Requirements for Community First Choice
AGENCY: Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), HHS.
ACTION: Proposed rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This proposed rule would revise Medicaid regulations to define
and describe State plan home and community-based services (HCBS) under
the Social Security Act (the Act) as added by the Deficit Reduction Act
of 2005 and amended by the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act
of 2010 (Affordable Care Act \1\). This proposed rule offers States new
flexibility in providing necessary and appropriate services to elderly
and disabled populations and reflects CMS' commitment to the general
principles of the President's Executive Order released January 18,
2011, entitled ``Improving Regulation and Regulatory Review.'' In
particular, this rule does not require the eligibility link between
HCBS and institutional care that exists under the Medicaid HCBS waiver
program. This regulation would describe Medicaid coverage of the
optional State plan benefit to furnish home and community-based
services and receive Federal matching funds. As a result, States will
be better able to design and tailor Medicaid services to accommodate
individual needs. This may result in improved patient outcomes and
satisfaction, while enabling States to effectively manage their
Medicaid resources.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Affordable Care Act: Patient Protection and Affordable Care
Act of 2010, Public Law 111-148 as amended by the Health Care and
Education Reconciliation Act of 2010, Public Law 111-152.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
This proposed rule would also amend Medicaid regulations consistent
with the requirements of the Affordable Care Act, which amended the Act
to provide authority for a 5-year duration for certain demonstration
projects or waivers under the Act, at the discretion of the Secretary,
when they involve individuals dually eligible for Medicaid and Medicare
benefits.
In addition, this proposed rule would provide an additional limited
exception to the general requirement that payment for services under a
State plan must be made directly to the individual practitioner
providing a service when the Medicaid program is the primary source of
reimbursement for a class of individual practitioners. This exception
would allow payments to be made to other parties to benefit the
providers by ensuring health and welfare, and training. We are
including the payment reassignment provisions in this HCBS proposed
rule because State's Medicaid programs often operate as the primary or
only payer for the class of practitioners that includes HCBS service
providers.
Finally, this proposed rule would also amend Medicaid regulations
to provide home and community-based setting requirements of the
Affordable Care Act for the Community First Choice State plan option.
DATES: To be assured consideration, comments must be received at one of
the addresses provided below, no later than 5 p.m., e.d.t., on June 4,
2012.
ADDRESSES: In commenting, please refer to file code CMS-2249-P2.
Because of staff and resource limitations, we cannot accept comments by
facsimile (FAX) transmission.
You may submit comments in one of four ways (please choose only one
of the ways listed):
1. Electronically. You may submit electronic comments on this
regulation to https://www.regulations.gov. Follow the ``Submit a
comment'' instructions.
2. By regular mail. You may mail written comments to the following
address ONLY: Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, Department of
Health and Human Services, Attention: CMS-2249-P2, P.O. Box 8016,
Baltimore, MD 21244-8016.
Please allow sufficient time for mailed comments to be received
before the close of the comment period.
3. By express or overnight mail. You may send written comments to
the following address ONLY: Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services,
Department of Health and Human Services, Attention: CMS-2249-P2, Mail
Stop C4-26-05, 7500 Security Boulevard, Baltimore, MD 21244-1850.
4. By hand or courier. If you prefer, you may deliver (by hand or
courier) your written comments before the close of the comment period
to either of the following addresses:
a. For delivery in Washington, DC--Centers for Medicare & Medicaid
Services, Department of Health and Human Services, Room 445-G, Hubert
H. Humphrey Building, 200 Independence Avenue SW., Washington, DC
20201.
(Because access to the interior of the Hubert H. Humphrey Building
is not readily available to persons without Federal government
identification, commenters are encouraged to leave their comments in
the CMS drop slots located in the main lobby of the building. A stamp-
in clock is available for persons wishing to retain a proof of filing
by stamping in and retaining an extra copy of the comments being
filed.)
b. For delivery in Baltimore, MD--Centers for Medicare & Medicaid
Services, Department of Health and Human Services, 7500 Security
Boulevard, Baltimore, MD 21244-1850.
If you intend to deliver your comments to the Baltimore address,
please call telephone number (410) 786-7195 in advance to schedule your
arrival with one of our staff members.
Comments mailed to the addresses indicated as appropriate for hand
or courier delivery may be delayed and received after the comment
period.
Submission of comments on paperwork requirements. You may submit
comments on this document's paperwork requirements by following the
instructions at the end of the ``Collection of Information
Requirements'' section in this document.
For information on viewing public comments, see the beginning of
the SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Kathy Poisal, (410) 786-5940.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Inspection of Public Comments: All comments received before the
close of the comment period are available for viewing by the public,
including any personally identifiable or confidential business
information that is included in a comment. We post all comments
received before the close of the comment period on the following Web
site as soon as possible after they have been received: https://www.regulations.gov. Follow the search instructions on that Web site to
view public comments.
Comments received timely will also be available for public
inspection as they are received, generally beginning approximately 3
weeks after publication of a document, at the headquarters of the
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, 7500 Security Boulevard,
Baltimore, Maryland 21244, Monday through Friday of each week from 8:30
a.m. to 4 p.m. To schedule an appointment to view public comments,
phone 1-800-743-3951.
[[Page 26363]]
Table of Contents
I. Executive Summary
II. Background
A. Expanded Access to Home and Community-Based Services for the
Elderly and Disabled Under Section 1915(i) of the Act: History of
Section 1915(i) of the Act
B. Overview of the State Plan Home and Community-Based Services
(HCBS) Benefit To Provide HCBS for the Elderly and Individuals With
Disabilities
1. Services
2. Eligibility
3. Number Served
4. Independent Evaluation
5. Adjustment Authority
6. Independent Assessment
7. Person-Centered Service Plan
8. Self-Direction
9. Quality Assurance
10. Conflict of Interest
11. Eligibility Redeterminations; Appeals
12. Option for Presumptive Eligibility for Assessment
13. Individual's Representative
14. Nonapplication
15. No Effect on Waiver Authority
16. Continuation of Federal Financial Participation (FFP) for
Institutional Level of Care for Individuals Receiving Services as of
the Effective Date of the State Plan HCBS Amendment
17. State Option To Provide HCBS to Individuals Eligible for
Services Under a Waiver
18. Establishment of Optional Eligibility Group To Provide Full
Medicaid Benefits to Individuals Receiving State Plan HCBS
19. State Option To Offer HCBS to Specific, Targeted Populations
20. Five-Year Approval for Targeted Section 1915(i) HCBS
Benefits and Renewal Requirements
21. Phase-In of Services and Eligibility
C. Effective Date
D. The State Plan HCBS Benefit in the Context of the Medicaid
Program as a Whole
E. Other Background
F. Section 2601 of the Affordable Care Act: 5-Year Period for
Demonstration Projects
G. Prohibition Against Reassignment of Provider Claims
H. Definition of Home and Community-Based Settings for the
1915(k) Community First Choice State Plan Option
III. Provisions of the Proposed Rule
A. State Organization and General Administration (Part 431)
B. Eligibility in the States, District of Columbia, the Northern
Mariana Islands, and American Samoa (Part 435) and Eligibility in
Guam, Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands (Part 436)
C. Services: General Provisions (Part 440)
D. Services: Requirements and Limits Applicable to Specific
Services (Part 441)
E. Basis and Purpose (Sec. 441.650)
F. State Plan Requirements (Sec. 441.653)
G. Eligibility for Home and Community-Based Services Under
Section 1915(i)(1) of the Act (Sec. 441.656)
H. Needs-Based Criteria and Evaluation (Sec. 441.659)
I. Independent Assessment (Sec. 441.662)
J. Service Plan (Sec. 441.665)
K. Provider Qualifications (Sec. 441.668)
L. Definition of Individual's Representative (Sec. 441.671)
M. Self-Directed Services (Sec. 441.674)
N. State Plan HCBS Administration: State Responsibilities and
Quality Improvement (Sec. 441.677)
P. Section 2601 of the Affordable Care Act: 5-Year Period for
Demonstration Projects: Waiver Requirements (Sec. 430.25)
Q. Prohibition Against Reassignment of Provider Claims (Sec.
447.10)
R. Section 2401 of the Affordable Care Act: Community First
Choice State Plan Option: Home and Community-Based Setting
Requirements (Sec. 441.530)
IV. Response to Comments
V. Collection of Information Requirements
VI. Regulatory Impact Analysis
VII. Regulatory Flexibility Act Analysis
VIII. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act Analysis
IX. Federalism Analysis
Regulation Text
Acronyms
Because of the many terms to which we refer by acronym in this
proposed rule, we are listing the acronyms used and their corresponding
terms in alphabetical order below.
ADA Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 (Pub. L. 110-325)
ADLs Activities of daily living
AHRQ Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality
ANPRM Advance Notice of Proposed Rulemaking
CFC Community First Choice (1915(k) State plan Option)
CHIPRA Children's Health Insurance Program Reauthorization of 2009
(Pub. L. 111-3)
CMS Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services
DRA Deficit Reduction Act of 2005 (Pub. L. 109-171)
EPSDT Early and Periodic Screening, Diagnosis and Treatment
FBR Federal benefit rate
FFP Federal financial participation
FPL Federal poverty line
FY Federal fiscal year
HCBS Home and Community-Based Services
HHS Department of Health and Human Services
IADLs Instrumental activities of daily living
ICF/MR Intermediate care facility for the mentally retarded
LOC Level of care
NF Nursing facility
OBRA'81 Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1981 (Pub. L. 97-35)
OT Occupational therapy
PT Physical therapy
RFA Regulatory Flexibility Act
SPA State Plan Amendments
SSI Supplemental Security Income
SSI/FBR Supplemental Security Income Federal Benefit Rate
UPL Upper payment limit
I. Executive Summary
A. Purpose
This proposed rule would amend the Medicaid regulations to define
and describe State plan home and community-based services (HCBS). This
regulation outlines the optional State plan benefit to furnish home and
community-based State plan services and draw Federal matching funds. As
a result, States will be able to design and tailor Medicaid services to
better accommodate individual needs. This may result in improved
patient outcomes and satisfaction, while enabling States to effectively
manage their Medicaid resources.
This proposed rule would also amend Medicaid regulations consistent
with the requirements of section 2601 of the Patient Protection and
Affordable Care Act of 2010 (Affordable Care Act), which added section
1915(h)(2) to the Act to provide authority for a 5-year duration for
certain demonstration projects or waivers under sections 1115, 1915(b),
(c), or (d) of the Act, at the discretion of the Secretary, when they
involve individuals who are dually eligible for both Medicaid and
Medicare benefits.
In addition, this proposed rule would provide an additional limited
exception to the general requirement that payment for services under a
State plan must be made directly to the individual practitioner
providing a service when the Medicaid program is the primary source of
reimbursement for a class of individual practitioners. This exception
would allow payments to be made to other parties to benefit the
providers by ensuring workforce stability, health and welfare, and
trainings, and provide added flexibility to the State. We are including
the payment reassignment provision in the HCBS proposed rule because
States' Medicaid programs often operate as the primary or only payer
for the class of practitioners that includes HCBS service providers.
This proposed rule would also amend Medicaid regulations to provide
home and community-based setting requirements related to section 2401
of the Affordable Care Act for the section 1915(k) Community First
Choice State plan option.
B. Summary of the Major Provisions
1. Section 1915(i) State Plan Home Community-Based Services
The Deficit Reduction Act (DRA) added a new provision to the
Medicaid statute entitled ``Expanded Access to Home and Community-Based
Services
[[Page 26364]]
for the Elderly and Disabled.'' This provision allows States to provide
HCBS (as an optional program) under their State Medicaid plans. This
option allows States to receive Federal financial participation for
services that were previously eligible for Federal funds only under
waiver or demonstration projects. This provision was further amended by
the Affordable Care Act. The statute now provides additional options
for States to design and implement HCBS under the Medicaid State Plan.
In April 4, 2008, we published a proposed rule to amend Medicaid
regulations to implement HCBS under the DRA. That proposed rule was not
finalized, and with the passage of section 2402 of the Affordable Care
Act, some previously proposed regulations would no longer be in
compliance with the current law under section 1915(i) of the Act. In
addition, several new provisions were added. Specifically, the
Affordable Care Act amended the statute by adding a new optional
categorical eligibility group for individuals to provide full Medicaid
benefits to certain individuals who will be receiving HCBS. It also
authorized States to elect not to comply with section 1902(a)(10)(B) of
the Act pertaining to comparability of Medicaid services. After closely
analyzing the Affordable Care Act provisions, we concluded that a new
proposed rule was necessary. This proposed rule retains a large portion
of the policies contained within the April 4, 2008 proposed rule, and
updates some of our previous proposals to reflect comments that we
received on the April 4, 2008 proposed rule as well as the statutory
changes that were made by the Affordable Care Act.
2. Section 2601 of the Affordable Care Act: 5-Year Period for Certain
Demonstration Projects and Waivers
This proposed rule also provides for a 5-year approval or renewal
period, subject to the discretion of the Secretary, for certain
Medicaid waivers. Specifically, this time period would apply for
demonstration and waiver programs through which a State serves
individuals who are dually eligible for both Medicare and Medicaid
benefits.
3. Provider Payment Reassignments
Section 1902(a)(32) of the Act provides that State plans can allow
payments to be made only to certain individuals or entities.
Specifically, payment may only be made to an individual practitioner
who provided the service. The statute provides several specific
exceptions to the general principle of direct payment to the individual
practitioner.
Over the years, some States have requested that we consider
adopting additional exceptions to the direct payment principle to
permit withholding from the payment due to the individual practitioner
for amounts paid by the State directly to third parties for health and
welfare benefits, training costs and other benefits customary for
employees. These amounts would not be retained by the State, but would
be remitted to third parties on behalf of the practitioner for the
stated purpose.
While the statute does not expressly provide for additional
exceptions to the direct payment principle, we believe the
circumstances at issue were not contemplated under the statute.
Therefore, we are proposing that the direct payment principle should
not apply because we think its application would contravene the
fundamental purpose of this provision. The apparent purpose of the
direct payment principle was to prohibit factoring arrangements, and
not to preclude a Medicaid program that is functioning as the
practitioner's primary source of revenue from fulfilling the basic
responsibilities that are associated with that role. Therefore, we are
proposing an additional exception to describe payments that we do not
see as within the intended scope of the statutory direct payment
requirement, that would allow the State to claim as a provider payment
amounts that are not directly paid to the provider, but are withheld
and remitted to a third party on behalf of the provider for health and
welfare benefit contributions, training costs, and other benefits
customary for employees.
4. Section 2401 of the Affordable Care Act: Community First Choice
State Plan Option: Home and Community-Based Setting Requirements
Section 1915(k)(1)(A)(ii) of the Act provides that home and
community-based attendant services and supports must be provided in a
home and community-based setting. The statute specifies that home and
community-based settings do not include a nursing facility, institution
for mental diseases, or an intermediate care facility for the mentally
retarded.\2\ We propose to adopt this statutory language in our
regulations. Additionally, to provide greater clarity, we are proposing
language to establish that home and community-based settings must
exhibit specific qualities to be eligible sites for delivery of home
and community-based services.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ Although we recognize that the language used here is
outdated, and that ``intellectual disability'' is the appropriate
way to discuss this type of disability, the Social Security Act
still refers to these types of facilities in this manner.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
After consideration of comments received in response to the
Community First Choice (CFC) proposed rule published on February 25,
2011, we decided to revise the setting provision and publish our
proposed definition as a new proposed rule to allow for additional
public comment before finalizing. Since CFC and section 1915(i) both
pertain to home and community-based services, we have aligned this CFC
proposed language with the section 1915(i) proposed home and community-
based setting requirements also included in this rule. We find the
public comment process to be valuable in our attempt to develop the
best policy on this issue for Medicaid beneficiaries. Therefore, we
plan to fully consider all comments received, and align decision making
and language pertaining to home and community-based setting
requirements across CFC, section 1915(i) State plan HCBS, as well as
section 1915(c) HCBS waivers.
C. Summary of Costs and Benefits
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Provision description Total costs Total benefits
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1915(i) State Plan Home Community- We estimate that, adjusted for a We anticipate that States will make
Based Services. phase-in period during which States varying use of the State plan HCBS
gradually elect to offer the State benefit provisions to provide
plan HCBS benefit, in fiscal year needed long-term care services for
(FY) 2012 the estimated Federal cost Medicaid beneficiaries. These
would be $80 million, and the services will be provided in the
estimated State cost would be $60 home or alternative living
million. arrangements in the community,
which is of benefit to the
beneficiary, and is less costly
than institutional care.
[[Page 26365]]
Section 2601 of the Affordable Care No impact on Federal or State As this provision elongates the time
Act: 5-Year Period for Medicaid funding. This rule is period under which States may
Demonstration Projects (Waivers). voluntary on the part of States. operate certain waiver programs
without renewal, it will help
States to minimize administrative
and renewal requirements in order
to better focus on program
implementation and quality
oversight.
Provider Payment Reassignments..... We do not anticipate any impact on This rule proposes additional
Federal Medicaid funding. This rule operational flexibilities for
is voluntary on the part of States. States to ensure a strong provider
workforce. There is also no impact
on individual practitioners, even
though the proposed rule would
allow States to deduct or withhold
portions of such payments under the
specific circumstances described in
the proposed rule. State budgets
will not likely be significantly
affected because the operational
flexibilities in the proposed rule
would only facilitate the transfer
of funds between participating
entities, rather than the addition
or subtraction of new funds.
Section 2401 of the Affordable Care We do not believe there is an impact This rule will provide States with
Act: Community First Choice State on Federal or State Medicaid funding necessary guidance to support
Plan Option: Home and Community- as the purpose of the rule is merely compliance with the requirement
Based Setting Requirements. to define home and community-based that CFC services are provided in a
settings in which CFC services may home or community based-setting.
be provided. This rule also provides beneficiary
protections to support an
individual's choice to receive home
and community-based services in a
manner that allows for integration
with the greater community.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
II. Background
A. Expanded Access to Home and Community-Based Services for the Elderly
and Disabled Under Section 1915(i) of the Social Security Act: History
of Section 1915(i) of the Act
Section 6086 of the Deficit Reduction Act of 2005 (Pub. L. 109-171,
enacted February 8, 2006) (DRA) entitled ``Expanded Access to Home and
Community-Based Services for the Elderly and Disabled,'' added section
1915(i) to the Social Security Act (the Act) to allow States, at their
option, to provide home and community-based services (HCBS) under their
State Medicaid plans. This option allows States to receive Federal
financial participation (FFP) for services that were previously only
eligible for FFP under waivers or demonstration projects, such as those
authorized under sections 1915(c) and 1115 of the Act. Section 1915(i)
of the Act was later amended by sections 2402(b) through (g) of the
Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act of 2010 (Pub. L. 111-148,
enacted March 23, 2010) (Affordable Care Act) to provide additional
options for States to design and implement HCBS under the Medicaid
State Plan.
In the April 4, 2008 Federal Register (73 FR 18676), we published a
proposed rule to amend Medicaid regulations to implement HCBS under
section 1915(i) of the Act. This rule was never finalized, and with the
passage of the Affordable Care Act some of the proposed regulations
would no longer be in compliance with the statute, as several new
provisions were added to the statute. Therefore, we concluded that a
new proposed rule and a new period of public comment were necessary.
This proposed rule retains a large portion of the policies contained
within the April 4, 2008 proposed rule. However, we have updated some
of our proposals to reflect the statutory changes that were made by the
Affordable Care Act.
B. Overview of the State Plan Home and Community-Based Services (HCBS)
Benefit To Provide HCBS for the Elderly and Individuals With
Disabilities
The following overview describes the provisions of section 1915(i)
of the Act as established by the DRA and amended by the Affordable Care
Act.
In the following discussion and the proposed regulation, we refer
to particular home and community-based service(s) offered under section
1915(i) of the Act as ``State plan HCBS'' or simply ``HCBS''.\3\ We
refer to the ``State plan HCBS benefit'' when describing the collective
requirements of section 1915(i) of the Act that apply to States
electing to provide one, or several, of the authorized HCBS. We choose
to use the term ``benefit'' rather than ``program'' to describe section
1915(i) of the Act to avoid possible confusion with section 1915(c)
HCBS waiver programs. The State plan HCBS benefit shares many features
with section 1915(c) waiver programs, but it is a State plan benefit,
although one with very unique features not common to traditional State
plan services.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ Note that the abbreviation HCBS does not distinguish between
singular and plural. Where this could be confusing, we spell out
home and community-based service(s).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Under section 1915(i) of the Act, States can provide HCBS to
individuals who require less than institutional level of care (LOC) and
who would, therefore, not be eligible for HCBS under section 1915(c)
waivers, in addition to serving individuals who have needs that would
meet entry requirements for an institution. As it is a State plan
benefit, section 1915(i) of the Act also does not require cost
neutrality compared to institutional services. Section 1915(i) of the
Act differs from section 1915(c) waivers in other ways. As with other
State plan services, the benefits must be provided Statewide, and
States must not limit the number of eligible people served.
1. Services
Section 1915(i)(1) of the Act grants States the option to provide,
under the State plan, the services and supports listed in section
1915(c)(4)(B) of the Act governing HCBS waivers. The services
specifically listed in section 1915(c)(4)(B) of the Act are as follows:
Case management.
Homemaker/home health aide.
Personal care.
Adult day health.
Habilitation.
Respite care.
Other services requested by the State as the Secretary may
approve.
[[Page 26366]]
In addition, the following services may be provided for individuals
with chronic mental illness:
Day treatment.
Other partial hospitalization services.
Psychosocial rehabilitation services.
Clinic services (whether or not furnished in a facility).
The HCBS may not include payment for room and board (see additional
discussion in section II.E.3. of this proposed rule).
Section 1915(c)(4)(B) of the Act also permits States to request,
and the Secretary to approve, coverage of other services not
specifically designated in the list of specific services in the
subparagraph. This authority was not included under section 1915(i)
when it was created in the DRA. However, section 2402(c) of the
Affordable Care Act amended section 1915(i)(1) of the Act to permit
States to request, and the Secretary to approve, coverage for such
other services in a 1915(i) benefit.
We interpret the statute as authorizing States to cover in their
1915(i) benefit both the services specifically identified in section
1915(c)(4)(B) of the Act, and any other services States request to
include and which the Secretary approves. Therefore, we would expect
States to define State plan HCBS with sufficient specificity so that we
can determine whether the nature and scope of the service clearly
relates to those listed in section 1915(c)(4)(B) of the Act. These
services are described in Sec. 440.180 of this proposed rule. However,
we would not require the same standard for ``other services'' under
section 1915(i) State plan HCBS that we would apply under section
1915(c) of the Act. Since section 1915(i) of the Act does not require
an individual to meet the criteria for institutional LOC, there is no
authority to apply the standard that the ``other services'' defined and
provided through State plan HCBS be necessary to prevent
institutionalization. We note that for all services, including those in
the ``other services'' category, States must include a specific and
complete description of the scope of the service, and not include open-
ended statements.
We propose to review and approve these ``other services'' not
specifically listed in section 1915(c)(4)(A) of the Act based upon the
applicability to and consistency with the support needs as indicated in
the needs-based criteria that a State defines for the HCBS benefit, and
with assurance that the service will not duplicate other services
available to individuals through the State's Medicaid State plan.
Additionally, these services must be offered in a manner that would
comply with section 1902(a)(23) of the Act regarding free choice of
providers, and that permits individuals to receive services in the most
integrated setting possible and consistent with the best interests of
the beneficiaries and the requirements of the Americans with
Disabilities Act (ADA). Section 1915(i) does not incorporate waiver
authority or other exceptions from these legal requirements. Therefore,
the services offered cannot have the impact of limiting the pool of
qualified providers from which individuals would receive services, or
have the impact of requiring/only allowing individuals to receive
services from the same entity from which they purchase or who provide
their housing. For example, we would not allow States to establish
residential HCBS in provider-owned and/or operated settings only, when
they do not have comparable HCBS available to individuals residing in
their own homes.
2. Eligibility
Eligibility for this option is based upon several different factors
that are either specified by the statute or that a State may define.
These include financial eligibility, the establishment of needs-based
criteria, and the State option to target the benefit and to offer
benefits differing in type, amount, duration or scope to specific
populations. Due to the complex interaction between these provisions,
the following section is divided into subsections that address
eligibility for the benefits. These include:
Eligibility Overview.
Income Eligibility.
Needs-Based Criteria Overview.
Option to Disregard Comparability.
Establishing Needs-Based Criteria.
a. Section 1915(i) of the Act: Eligibility Overview
Section 1915(i) of the Act explicitly provides that State plan HCBS
may be provided without determining that, but for the provision of
these services, individuals would require the LOC provided in a
hospital, a nursing facility (NF), or an intermediate care facility for
the mentally retarded \4\ (ICF/MR) as is required in section 1915(c)
HCBS waivers. While HCBS services provided through section 1915(c)
waivers must be ``cost-neutral'' as compared to institutional services,
no cost neutrality requirement applies to the section 1915(i) State
plan HCBS benefit. States are not required to produce comparative cost
estimates of institutional care and the State plan HCBS benefit. This
significant distinction allows States to offer HCBS to individuals
whose needs are substantial, but not severe enough to qualify them for
institutional or waiver services, and to individuals for whom there is
not an offset for cost savings in NFs, ICFs/MR, or hospitals.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ Although we recognize that the language used here is
outdated, and that ``intellectual disability'' is the appropriate
way to discuss this type of disability, the Social Security Act
still refers to these types of facilities in this manner.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
One particular result of this distinction is that, through the
section 1915(i) benefit, States have the ability to provide a full
array of HCBS to adults with mental health and substance use disorders.
The benefit also creates an opportunity to provide HCBS to other
individuals with significant needs who do not qualify for an
institutional LOC, such as some individuals with Autism Spectrum
Disorder, diabetes, acquired immune deficiency syndrome, or Alzheimer's
disease. In many cases, without the provision of HCBS, these conditions
may deteriorate to the point where the individuals become eligible for
more costly facility-based care.
State plan HCBS are intended to enable individuals to receive
needed services in their own homes, or in alternative living
arrangements in what is collectively termed the ``community'' in this
context. (See additional discussion in section II.E.2. of this proposed
rule regarding institutions not considered to be in the community, and
in which State plan HCBS will not be available.)
b. Income Eligibility
Section 1915(i)(1) of the Act requires that in order to receive
State plan HCBS, individuals must be eligible for Medicaid under an
eligibility group covered under the State's Medicaid plan. In
determining whether either of the relevant income requirements
(discussed) is met, the regular rules for determining income
eligibility for the individual's eligibility group apply, including any
less restrictive income rules used by the State for that group under
section 1902(r)(2) of the Act. Section 1915(i)(3) of the Act permits
States to not apply the requirements of section 1902(a)(10)(C)(i)(III)
of the Act relating to income and resource rules in the community for
the medically needy. Under this authority States are permitted to use
institutional eligibility rules in determining eligibility for the
medically needy. The nonapplication requirements are described in
section II.B.14 of the preamble. This eligibility criterion was not
changed by the Affordable Care Act.
[[Page 26367]]
Section 2402(b) of the Affordable Care Act added a new option at
section 1915(i)(6) of the Act, to allow States to provide section
1915(i) services to certain individuals who meet the needs-based
criteria, who would be eligible for HCBS under section 1915(c), (d) or
(e) waivers or a section 1115 waiver approved for the State, and who
have income up to 300 percent of the Supplemental Security Income
Federal Benefit Rate (SSI/FBR).
Section 2402(d) of the Affordable Care Act also amended section
1902(a)(10)(A)(ii) of the Act by adding a new optional categorically
needy eligibility group specified at section 1902(a)(10)(A)(ii)(XXII)
of the Act to provide full Medicaid benefits to certain individuals who
will be receiving section 1915(i) services. This eligibility group has
two parts, and States can cover individuals under either or both parts
of the group. Under this group, States can elect to cover individuals
who are not otherwise eligible for Medicaid who meet the needs-based
criteria of the section 1915(i) benefit, have income up to 150 percent
of the Federal poverty line (FPL) with no resource test and who will
receive section 1915(i) services, or individuals with income up to 300
percent of the SSI/FBR, who would be eligible under an existing section
1915(c), (d) or (e) \5\ waiver or section 1115 waiver approved for the
State and who will receive section 1915(i) services. These individuals
do not have to be receiving services under an existing section 1915(c),
(d) or (e) waiver or section 1115 waiver; the individual just has to be
determined eligible for the waiver.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ 1915(d) and (e) waivers are State options to provide HCBS to
the elderly and to individuals with disabilities, respectively.
Currently, no State elects to provide services under either of these
authorities.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
c. Needs-Based Criteria Overview
In contrast to the institutional LOC requirement for eligibility in
HCBS waivers, section 1915(i)(1)(A) of the Act requires States to
impose needs-based criteria for eligibility for the State plan HCBS
benefit. Institutional level of care criteria must be more stringent
than the needs-based criteria for the State plan HCBS benefit.
Additionally, the State may establish needs-based criteria for each
specific State plan home and community-based service that an individual
would receive.
Thus, under section 1915(i) of the Act, States determine
eligibility for State plan HCBS based on the following:
Individuals eligible for medical assistance under the
State plan whose income is below 150 percent of FPL, as determined by
the State under the methodology applicable to the group, including any
less restrictive income rules in place through section 1902(r)(2) of
the Act.
At the State option, individuals eligible under the new
optional categorical needy group 1902(a)(10)(A)(ii)(XXII) of the Act.
This includes:
++ Individuals with income below 300 percent of the SSI/FBR who are
eligible for HCBS through a waiver approved for the State under
sections 1115, 1915(c), 1915(d), or 1915(e) of the Act and will receive
section 1915(i) services.
++ Individuals who are not otherwise eligible for medical
assistance who have income below 150 percent and who will receive
section 1915(i) services. There will be no resource test for this
group.
The individual resides in the home or community.
The individual meets the needs-based criteria established
by the State.
The individual meets any targeting criteria in accordance
with CMS requirements that the State elects to establish.
For more information about the optional eligibility category for
individuals who receive services through the State plan HCBS benefit,
please see section II.B.18. of this proposed rule.
The needs-based criteria for coverage of individual services
provided within a State's section 1915(i) benefit are subject to the
same requirements as the needs-based eligibility criteria for the
benefit, and may not limit or target any service based on age, nature
or type of disability, disease, condition, or residential setting, but
could include risk factors or take into account service history.
However, section 1915(i)(7) of the Act provides States with the option
to target eligibility for the benefit to specific populations.
d. Option To Disregard Comparability
Effective October 1, 2010, section 2402(f) of the Affordable Care
Act, amended section 1915(i)(3) of the Act to permit States to elect
not to comply with the requirement of section 1902(a)(10)(B) of the Act
relating to comparability of services. A waiver of comparability is a
key feature of section 1915(c) HCBS waivers, permitting a State to
target the HCBS benefit to certain populations by defining which groups
will be eligible for waiver services, and by having separate waivers
for different groups. With this change, States may exercise the
authority to target the section 1915(i) benefit similarly, but are not
required to do so. A State must establish needs-based criteria for
eligibility for and receipt of State plan HCBS regardless of whether it
elects the option to not comply with the comparability requirement. For
additional information regarding the option for targeting in the
benefit, please see the discussion at (section II.B.19 of the proposed
rule).
e. Establishing Needs-Based Criteria
The heading of section 1915(i) of the Act describes the State plan
HCBS benefit as ``for Elderly and Disabled Individuals.'' However,
section 1915(i) of the Act does not include definitions of the terms
``elderly'' or ``disabled'' in setting forth eligibility criteria, and
instead requires eligibility to be based on need and on eligibility for
medical assistance under a State plan group. Thus, we believe that the
use of these terms in the statute is descriptive. Individuals who are
eligible for medical assistance under a group covered in the State's
plan and who meet the needs-based eligibility criteria for State plan
HCBS will be likely to have needs stemming either from a disability or
from being elderly. We note that section 1902(b)(1) of the Act
prohibits the Secretary from approving any plan for medical assistance
that imposes an age requirement of more than 65 years as a condition of
eligibility.
The statute does not define ``needs-based.'' We are proposing to
define the nature of needs-based criteria to distinguish them from
targeting criteria, which are permitted under the statute as a State
option and are distinct from the needs-based criteria. We propose to
provide States with the flexibility to define the specific needs-based
criteria they will establish.
We believe that the statute distinguishes needs-based criteria from
other possible descriptors of an individual's medical condition or
diagnosis. We interpret needs-based criteria as describing the
individual's particular need for support, regardless of the conditions
and diagnoses that may cause the need. However, as discussed in section
II.B.19. of this proposed rule, States may also disregard comparability
requirements contained in section 1902(a)(10)(B) of the Act, and thus,
target the section 1915(i) benefit (or multiple benefits) to
individuals with specific diagnoses and conditions. We interpret the
statute to mean that, when a State elects to disregard comparability in
order to target the benefit to individuals with specific diagnoses,
those individuals must meet both the targeting criteria, as well as the
State's needs-based criteria.
[[Page 26368]]
Section 1915(i)(1)(B) of the Act additionally requires that the
needs-based criteria for determining whether an individual requires the
LOC provided in a hospital, NF, or ICF/MR or under a waiver of the
State plan be more stringent than the needs-based eligibility criteria
for the State plan HCBS benefit. Institutional/waiver LOC criteria in
some States do not include needs-based criteria. Since the two must be
comparable, we interpret this to mean that States without a needs-based
component to their institutional LOC evaluation must establish needs-
based criteria for those services, as well as for the State plan HCBS
benefit. We also believe that States electing to implement a section
1915(i) benefit must include a needs-based evaluation component of the
institutional/waiver LOC determination process so that stringency of
those criteria can be compared to stringency of eligibility criteria
for the State plan HCBS benefit.
``Stringency'' is not defined in the statute. The requirement is
simply that there be a differential between the threshold of need for
the State plan HCBS benefit as compared to the threshold of need for
institutional services. The required difference in criteria will be
relative, specific to each State's unique institutional levels of care,
and can be constructed in several ways. Because we have received many
questions on the stringency requirements of the statute we will
illustrate some of the possible options. We want to be clear, however,
that the requirement of section 1915(i) of the Act is simply that the
needs-based criteria for institutions and for the State plan HCBS
benefit be set so that the latter are lower at the time the benefit is
implemented. There is no requirement that institutional criteria be
higher, lower, or unchanged from their level prior to implementing the
State plan HCBS benefit. The only test is that the result of all the
needs-based criteria must be that some individuals will be served under
the State plan HCBS benefit who are not eligible to be served by
Medicaid institutional services. If institutional LOC criteria are
changed in implementing the benefit, States may provide protections for
individuals who lose eligibility due to the application of those new
criteria (see section II.B.16. of this proposed rule).
There are issues for States to consider other than section 1915(i)
of the Act that will influence decisions on levels of care and needs-
based criteria, that are far beyond the scope of this document, for
example, statutory requirements for maintenance of effort (MOE) in
effect at the time of this proposed rule, requirements of the Americans
with Disabilities Act and the Olmstead decision, and funding
constraints \6\. In this proposed rule, we focus on the choices a State
may make in setting up a State plan HCBS benefit in ways that are
consistent with requirements of section 1915(i) of the Act. As an
illustration, this proposed regulation would permit a State to define
the needs-based criteria for a new HCBS benefit at a lower level than
the State's existing institutional levels of care, and leave the
institutional criteria unchanged (if they already include needs-based
criteria). This would satisfy the requirement that the institutional
criteria be more stringent than the State plan HCBS benefit, meet a
goal to service individuals who have not previously had access to HCBS
because they have not yet reached the level of need for admission to an
institution, without making any change to existing services. This
proposed regulation would also permit States to take other approaches.
A State could raise one or more institutional levels of care, and
provide HCBS under the State plan benefit for some or all of the
individuals who would have not yet reached the level of need for
admission to an institution. The State could choose (or not) to also
include in the benefit individuals below the former institutional level
of care. This scenario would also satisfy the stringency requirement,
but would be more complex and would require analysis of some of the
other relevant issues mentioned above.
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\6\ Under section 2001(b) of the Affordable Care Act, States are
not permitted to establish eligibility standards, methodologies, or
procedures that are more restrictive than those in place on the date
of the Affordable Care Act's enactment (March 23, 2010). For adults,
this requirement lasts until the Secretary determines that a health
insurance exchange is fully operational in the State; for children
under the age of 19, the requirement lasts until September 30, 2019.
Because the application of LOC requirements for institutions and
HCBS waivers may have an impact on Medicaid eligibility for some
individuals, we encourage States interested in using the State plan
HCBS to contact CMS for technical assistance in meeting these
statutory requirements.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We note that section 1915(i) of the Act does not modify the
statutory coverage provisions governing institutional benefits. States
must be cautious not to establish more stringent needs-based criteria
for hospitals, NFs or ICFs/MR that would reduce access to services
mandated elsewhere in title XIX, since those other provisions of the
statute were not amended. For example, the NF benefit is defined in
section 1919(a)(1) of the Act as an institution that is primarily
engaged in providing to residents skilled nursing care, rehabilitation
services, and ``[o]n a regular basis, health-related care and services
to individuals who because of their mental or physical condition
require care and services (above the level of room and board) which can
be made available to them only through institutional facilities.'' To
the extent an individual has a medical need for such health-related
care and services which are only available in an institutional setting
because that needed home or community-based health-related care and
services are not available, the NF institutional benefit must remain
available to all Medicaid eligible individuals described in section
1919(a)(1)(C) of the Act.
We interpret the reference to hospitals in section 1915(i)(1)(B) of
the Act to mean facilities certified by Medicaid as hospitals that are
providing long-term care services. General acute care Medicaid hospital
services are not subject to LOC determinations by the State.
We interpret the reference in section 1915(i)(1)(B) of the Act
``under any waiver of such plan'' to apply to section 1915(c), 1915(d)
and 1915(e) waivers, as well as those section 1115 waivers that include
HCBS, as specified in section 1915(i)(6)(a) of the Act. Sections
1915(c), (d) and (e) \7\ of the Act will have more stringent minimum
criteria than the State plan HCBS benefit, as the waivers are required
to use LOC assessments equivalent to one or more of the institutional
levels of care. If a State has an approved section 1115 demonstration
with multiple levels of care for institutional and/or HCBS, we
interpret this requirement to apply to the least stringent
institutional LOC criteria within that demonstration that would likely
be the comparison for purposes of section 1915(i) of the Act.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\7\ Although the statute references waivers under Section
1915(d) and (e), no State currently operates a waiver under either
authority. In the event that a State elects to include a (d) or (e)
waiver, these requirements would apply.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In summary, the needs-based eligibility criteria for the State plan
HCBS benefit must have the effect of allowing some individuals who do
not meet the needs-based criteria for institutionalized care to access
HCBS through the section 1915(i) benefit, but may also allow access to
individuals who meet the institutional needs-based eligibility
criteria. States may also enroll individuals in both a section 1915(i)
benefit, and a section 1915(c) waiver, as discussed earlier in this
rule.
3. Number Served
Section 1915(i)(1)(C) of the Act, as amended by section 2402(e) of
the
[[Page 26369]]
Affordable Care Act, does not permit States to limit the number of
eligible individuals receiving services and to establish waiting lists.
Instead, the benefit requires a State to provide to the Secretary a
projection of the number of individuals expected to receive services.
If this projection is exceeded, section 1915(i)(1)(D)(ii) of the Act
permits the State to constrict its needs-based eligibility thresholds
for State plan HCBS (see the discussion on Adjustment Authority in
I.B.5. of this proposed rule).
Section 1915(i)(1)(C) of the Act requires that the State submit
projections, in the form and manner, and upon the frequency as the
Secretary specifies, of the number of individuals to be provided HCBS.
We propose to follow the practice used in HCBS waivers to calculate the
number served as unduplicated persons receiving services during a 12-
month period. We further propose to specify that, during the
application process, States would project the total number of
individuals to be served by the benefit during the initial year. We
further propose to specify that States with an approved State plan HCBS
benefit annually submit both the projected number of individuals to be
served and the actual number of individuals served in the previous
year. We refer to individuals served under the benefit and included in
the annual number served as having been enrolled in the benefit. The
statute refers to ``enrollment'' in section 1915(i)(1)(D)(ii) of the
Act concerning ``Adjustment Authority.'' Because there are a number of
steps involved in an individual initiating service under the State plan
HCBS benefit, ``enrollment'' is a useful term to indicate individuals
for whom those steps have been completed, services have been authorized
or provided, and who will be accounted for in the annual number served
under the benefit. If the State exceeds its enrollment estimate, the
State would report the number of individuals actually served in the
required annual report to the Secretary, and revise the estimate for
succeeding years.
4. Independent Evaluation
Section 1915(i)(1)(D) of the Act sets forth a requirement for an
individual evaluation of need for each person seeking coverage of the
State plan HCBS benefit. The statute here uses the term ``assessment,''
while sections 1915(i)(1)(E) and (H) of the Act refer to the initial
eligibility determination as the ``independent evaluation.'' We would
use the latter term for consistency. ``Independent evaluation,'' as
understood in light of section 1915(i)(1)(H) of the Act, means free
from conflict of interest on the part of the evaluator. The independent
evaluation is separate from, but related to, the independent assessment
(as discussed below).
The independent evaluation applies the needs-based HCBS eligibility
criteria (established by the State according to section 1915(i)(1)(A)
of the Act), to an applicant for the State plan HCBS benefit. Section
1915(i)(1)(D) of the Act establishes that determining whether an
individual meets the needs-based eligibility criteria specified in
sections 1915(i)(1)(A) and (B) of the Act requires an individualized
and independent evaluation of each person's support needs and
capabilities. We interpret ``needs and capabilities'' to mean a
balanced approach that considers both needs and strengths. However, the
words ``capability'' and ``ability'' are historically connected with a
deficit-oriented approach to assessment, which is the opposite of the
statute's person-centered approach. Therefore, we would refer to needs
and strengths in this discussion and in the regulation.
Section 1915(i)(1)(D) of the Act indicates that the independent
evaluation ``may take into account'' the inability of the individual to
perform two or more activities of daily living (ADLs), (which the
statute defines by reference to section 7702B(c)(2)(B) of the Internal
Revenue Code of 1986), or the need for significant assistance to
perform these activities. The State may also assess other risk factors
it determines to be appropriate in determining eligibility for, and
receipt of, HCBS. The statute does not limit the factors a State may
take into account in the evaluation. For example, difficulty with
instrumental activities of daily living (IADLs) or the need for cueing
in order to perform a task could be considered. A State could choose to
use a person-centered functional assessment tool or strategy to fulfill
this requirement.
5. Adjustment Authority
Section 1915(i)(1)(D)(ii) of the Act permits the State to adjust
the needs-based criteria described in section 1915(i)(1)(B) of the Act
in the event that enrollment exceeds the annual maximum number of
individuals that the State has projected it would serve within
parameters as noted above. The purpose of an adjustment would be to
revise the State's needs-based criteria to reduce the number of
individuals who would be eligible for the HCBS benefit. To preserve the
requirement of section 1915(i)(1)(B) of the Act that more stringent
needs-based criteria be in place for institutionalized care, the
adjusted eligibility criteria must still be less stringent than those
applicable to institutional levels of care in the State plan
institutional benefit, and thus, in any HCBS waivers that require
participants to meet an institutional LOC. If the State chooses to make
this adjustment, it must provide at least 60 days written notice to the
Secretary and to the public, stating the revisions it proposes.
While the adjustment authority is granted to States without having
to obtain prior approval from the Secretary, we believe that the
statute requires the State to amend the State plan to reflect the
adjusted criteria. We believe that the State's adjustment authority
does not prevent the Secretary from disapproving a State plan amendment
(SPA) that fails to comply with the statute and regulations. This
provision of the law must be interpreted in light of existing Medicaid
requirements not waived by section 1915(i) of the Act. We have,
therefore, incorporated within the proposed regulation those relevant
requirements in addition to the statutory provisions within section
1915(i)(1)(D)(ii) of the Act. Section 441.559(c) provides the greatest
degree of authority for adjustment possible within the constraints of
other requirements. The Secretary will evaluate the State's adjusted
criteria for compliance with the provisions of this subparagraph and
all requirements of subpart K. A State may implement the adjusted
criteria as early as 60 days after notifying all required parties.
Section 430.16 provides the Secretary 90 days to approve or disapprove
a State plan amendment, or request additional information. If the State
implements the modified criteria prior to the Secretary's final
determination with respect to the State plan amendment, the State would
be at risk for any actions it takes that are later disapproved.
After needs-based criteria are adjusted under this authority, the
statute requires that individuals served under the previous State plan
HCBS needs-based criteria would continue to receive HCBS. As amended by
section 2402(e) of the Affordable Care Act, section
1915(i)(1)(D)(ii)(II) of the Act provides that an individual who is
receiving HCBS before the effective date for modified needs-based
criteria, (based on the most recent version of the criteria in effect
before the modification), must be deemed by the State to continue to be
eligible for State plan HCBS until the individual no longer meets the
needs-based criteria, and targeting criteria if
[[Page 26370]]
applicable, under which they were originally provided the benefit. Any
changes to the institutional LOC criteria under this section are
subject to the same requirements as described in 1915(i)(5) (see
section II.B.16. of this proposed rule).
However, we would remind States of the maintenance of efforts
requirements discussed in section II.B.2. of this proposed rule.
We note that the required processes for individual notification and
appeals, contained within part 431, subpart E, remain in effect
whenever a State modifies its needs-based criteria. Furthermore,
section 1915(i)(5) of the Act provides protections for individuals who
are receiving services in waivers or institutional settings prior to
the modification of the LOC requirements, as discussed below.
It is important to note that the adjustment authority is a State
option; there is nothing in the law that requires a State to constrict
its needs-based criteria if enrollment exceeds projections.
6. Independent Assessment
Section 1915(i)(1)(E) of the Act describes the relationship of
several required functions. Section 1915(i)(1)(E)(i) of the Act refers
to the independent evaluation of eligibility in section 1915(i)(1)(A)
and (B) of the Act, emphasizing the independence requirement. Section
1915(i)(1)(E)(ii) of the Act introduces the requirement of an
independent assessment following the independent evaluation. Thus,
there are two steps to the process: the eligibility determination,
which requires the application of the needs-based criteria and any
additional targeting criteria the State elects to require; and the
assessment for individuals who were determined to be eligible under the
first step, to determine specific needed services and supports. The
assessment also applies the needs-based criteria for each service (if
the State has adopted such criteria). Like the eligibility evaluation,
the independent assessment is based on the individual's needs and
strengths. The Act requires that both physical and mental needs and
strengths are assessed. These requirements describe a person-centered
assessment including behavioral health, which will take into account
the individual's total support needs as well as the need for the HCBS
to be offered. Section 1915(i)(1)(E)(ii) of the Act requires that
States use the assessment to: Determine the necessary level of services
and supports to be provided; prevent the provision of unnecessary or
inappropriate care; and establish a written individualized service
plan.
To achieve the three purposes of the assessment listed above, the
assessor must be independent; that is, free from conflict of interest
with regard to providers, to the individual and related parties, and to
budgetary concerns. Therefore, we are proposing specific requirements
for independence of the assessor in accordance with section
1915(i)(1)(H)(ii) of the Act, and we would apply these also to the
evaluator and the person involved with developing the person-centered
service plan, where the effects of conflict of interest would be
equally deleterious. These considerations of independence inform the
discussion below under section 1915(i)(1)(H)(ii) of the Act regarding
conflict of interest standards.
Section 1915(i)(1)(F) of the Act provides detailed requirements for
the independent assessment:
A face-to-face evaluation of the individual by an assessor
trained in the assessment and evaluation of persons whose physical or
behavioral health conditions trigger a potential need for HCBS. To
fulfill this statutory requirement, we would propose that the State
must develop standards and determine the qualifications necessary for
agencies and individuals who will perform independent assessments and
be involved with developing the plans of care. Additionally, we
recognize that many States are developing infrastructure and policies
to support the use of telemedicine and other ways to provide distance-
care to individuals in order to increase access to services in rural
areas or other locations with a shortage of providers. To support these
activities, we propose that the ``face-to-face'' assessment can include
any session(s) performed through telemedicine or other information
technology medium if the following conditions apply:
++ The health care professional(s) performing the assessment meet
the provider qualifications defined by the State, including any
additional qualifications or training requirements for the operation of
required information technology;
++ The individual receives appropriate support during the
assessment, including the use of any necessary on-site support-staff;
and
++ The individual is provided the opportunity to request an in-
person assessment in lieu of one performed via telemedicine.
An objective evaluation of the individual's inability to
perform two or more ADLs, or the need for significant assistance to
perform the activities is required. We do not interpret ``objective''
to refer to the independence required of the assessor as discussed
above, but to refer to an additional requirement for reliance on some
level of valid measurement appropriate to the ADLs in order to ensure
that the assessments were applied uniformly across individuals in the
section 1915(i) benefit. For example, an occupational therapy (OT) or
physical therapy (PT) evaluation or a trauma screening could be
required, the results of which would be utilized by the assessor. We
note that the trained assessor is not necessarily responsible for
performing the objective evaluation, but should make sure that the
objective evaluation is performed by qualified individuals. We do not
propose methods to achieve this requirement, as the nature of the HCBS
to be provided and the needs-based criteria for the State plan HCBS
benefit will determine the appropriate means of evaluating ADLs.
Section 1915(i)(1)(F) of the Act defines ADLs in terms of section
7702B(c)(2)(B) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, which includes the
following: bathing, dressing, toileting, transferring, eating, and
continence. This section of the Internal Revenue Code does not define
the terms ``inability'' or ``significant assistance.'' While States
have some flexibility to define these factors, we interpret
``inability'' to mean need for total support to perform an ADL, and
``significant assistance'' to mean assistance from another individual
or from assistive technology necessary for the successful performance
of the task.
An objective evaluation of inability to perform two or more ADLs is
a required element of the assessment but only a suggested element of
the eligibility evaluation. We conclude that partial or complete
inability to perform two or more ADLs is not a statutory prerequisite
to receive State plan HCBS, but is a required element of the assessment
in order to inform the development of the service plan required by
section 1915(i)(1)(G) of the Act. Because States may define very
diverse needs-based criteria and HCBS service definitions, we do not
believe it is possible to be more specific in regulation about the
criteria for assessment. However, we would note that a functional
assessment tool could be used to measure objectively an individual's
needs to establish eligibility as well as to develop an appropriate
service plan.
We note that we are currently engaged in an initiative to develop
universal core elements to be included in an assessment, through work
being done
[[Page 26371]]
under the Balancing Incentives Payment Program, created under section
10202 of the Affordable Care Act. For consistency across Medicaid
programs, we therefore, intend to move toward States including any
finalized universal core elements developed from this work in carrying
out independent assessments under 1915(i), as well as under 1915(k)
Community First Choice, and in performing other HCBS assessments as
determined by CMS.
Consultation with any responsible persons appropriate to
the individual and the needed supports, including family, spouse,
guardian, or healthcare and support providers. We do not believe the
examples listed in the statute to be prescriptive or limiting. The
assessor must give the individual and, if applicable, the individual's
authorized representative, the opportunity to identify appropriate
persons who should be consulted during this process. The role of the
assessor is to facilitate free communication from persons relevant to
the support needs of the individual, while protecting privacy, and
promoting the wishes and best interests of the individual. In necessary
circumstances, the consultations are not required to be performed in
person or at the same time and place as the face-to-face evaluation, so
long as any ancillary contacts are with persons the individual has
identified, are divulged and discussed with the individual/
representative, and documented. For example, telephone communications
with parties not available for an in-person meeting would be permitted.
An examination of the individual's relevant history,
medical records, and care and support needs.
Knowledge of best practices and research on effective
strategies that result in improved health and quality of life outcomes,
and knowledge of the adult and child public service systems. At section
1915(i)(1)(F)(v) of the Act, the statute requires that the examination
of the individual's history, medical records, and care and support
needs be guided by this knowledge, and we would propose that this
evidence-based approach should apply to the entire process for
assessment and service plan development in a comprehensive, coordinated
manner. Since the individualized service plan must be based upon the
independent assessment, these requirements for the assessment should be
used to inform and strengthen the service plan and, subsequently, the
services provided to the individual.
If the State offers the option of self-direction and the
individual so elects, the assessment should include gathering the
information required to establish self-direction of services. We do not
propose to require States to conduct a separate or additional
assessment process for self-direction.
As long as States comply with all provisions related to conducting
the independent eligibility evaluation, independent assessment, and
developing the person-centered service plan, States have flexibility in
determining whether they will require that the functions be performed
as one activity by a single agency or individual, or whether they wish
to separate those functions and have different entities involved.
7. Person-Centered Service Plan
Section 1915(i)(1)(G) of the Act requires that the State plan HCBS
benefit be furnished under an individualized care plan based on the
assessment. The terms ``care plan'' and ``service plan'' are used
interchangeably in practice. We will adopt the term ``service plan'' in
this regulation for two reasons. First, to be consistent with the
terminology in use with other HCBS, including Sec. 1915(c) HCBS
waivers, we wish to avoid the misunderstanding that the plan is a
different type of requirement in the State plan HCBS benefit than in
other HCBS authorities. We note the reference to ``service plan'' for
self-directed HCBS at 1915(i)(1)(G)(iii)(II)(bb). Second, some
individuals and advocates have commented that ``care plan'' has a
medical or dependent connotation, inconsistent with a person-centered
approach. Since we see no technical difference between the two terms,
we propose to adopt ``service plan''.
Underpinning all aspects of successful HCBS is the importance of a
complete and inclusive person-centered planning process that addresses
health and long-term services and support needs in a manner that
reflects individual preferences. The person-centered approach is a
process, directed by the individual with long-term support needs, and
may also include a representative whom the individual has freely
chosen.
To fully meet individual needs and ensure meaningful access to
their surrounding community, systems that deliver HCBS must be based
upon a strong foundation of person-centered planning and approaches to
service delivery. Thus, we propose to require such a process be used in
the development of the individualized service plan for all individuals
to be served by section 1915(i) benefit. This can be achieved when
States affirmatively and creatively support individuals in the planning
process. We would propose certain requirements for developing the
service plan, but note that the degree to which the process achieves
the goal of person-centeredness can only be known with appropriate
quality monitoring by the State, which should include substantial
feedback provided by individuals who received or are receiving
services.
The person-centered service plan must identify the strengths,
preferences, needs (clinical and support), and desired outcomes of the
individual. The person-centered planning process is conducted in a
manner that reflects what is important for the individual to meet
identified clinical and support needs determined through a person-
centered functional needs assessment process and what is important to
the individual to ensure delivery of services in a manner that reflects
personal preferences and choices.
In addition to being driven by the individual receiving services,
the person-centered planning process would--
Include people chosen by the individual;
Provide necessary support to ensure that the individual
has a meaningful role in directing the process to the maximum extent
possible, and is enabled to make informed choices and decisions;
Is timely and occurs at times and locations of convenience
to the individual;
Reflects cultural considerations of the individual;
Include strategies for solving conflict or disagreement
within the process, including clear conflict of interest guidelines for
all planning participants;
Offers choices to the individual regarding the services
and supports they receive and from whom.
Includes a method for the individual to request updates to
the plan.
Records the alternative home and community-based settings
that were considered by the individual.
The plan resulting from this process should reflect that the
setting in which the individual resides is chosen by the individual.
The plan should reflect the individual's strengths and preferences, as
well as clinical and support needs (as identified through an assessment
of functional need). The plan should include individually identified
goals, which may include goals and preferences related to
relationships, community participation, employment, income and savings,
health care and
[[Page 26372]]
wellness, education, and others (we note that not all goals will have
comparable services covered under Medicaid). The plan should reflect
the services and supports (paid and unpaid) that will assist the
individual to achieve identified goals, and who provides them. The plan
should reflect risk factors and measures in place to minimize them,
including individualized back-up plans. The plan must be signed by all
individuals and providers responsible for its implementation, and
should reflect the approach in place to ensure that it is implemented
as intended. A copy of the plan must be provided to individuals and
others involved in the plan.
Consistent with these person-centered principles and the
requirements for community integration under the Americans with
Disabilities Act, we are proposing that the service plan should be
constructed in a manner that promotes service delivery and independent
living in the most integrated setting possible. Therefore, we propose
that the plan must not only address medical and support needs, but
should also reflect other individual goals related to community living
to the extent that services covered under the State Medicaid plan would
be available to support such goals. Although these goals may include
activities that may not themselves be funded through medical
assistance, the coordination of Medicaid services with other activities
in which the individual would be engaged as part of community living is
an essential part of ensuring community integration. These activities
might include employment, education, recreation or social activities,
and/or other activities that occur regularly for individuals living in
the community.
Subject to any additional needs-based criteria established for
individual services, the State must make the services available to all
eligible individuals who are assessed to need them. We conclude that
the statute permits determining the level of services required by an
individual only according to assessment of the individual's needs, not
based on available funds. Just as significantly, individuals who
qualify for HCBS may not be compelled to receive them. Individuals may
also exercise their freedom to choose among qualified providers in the
planning process.
The State Medicaid agency may delegate other agents to develop the
service plan, but remains responsible for ensuring compliance with all
requirements for each service plan developed. While the agency may
delegate the authority for plan development and approval, the Medicaid
agency is ultimately responsible for ensuring that the plans are
completed according to the requirements of this regulation. This can be
done through the establishment of appropriate controls, including
monitoring and a quality improvement process.
Section 1915(i)(1)(G)(ii)(I)(aa) of the Act requires that the
service plan is developed in consultation with the individual. The
requirements for who is consulted in developing the service plan
parallel those describing who may be consulted during the assessment
process as determined by the State. As with the assessment, providers
or others who may be responsible for providing services identified in
the plan may be involved in the process. For example, providers may
contribute to these processes by providing portions of an assessment
and recommending a service plan, so long as the entity that retains
final responsibility for the assessment or service plan meets all of
the requirements of this final rule, including meeting the conflict of
interest standards (See section II.B.10. for further discussion of
conflict of interest).
Section 1915(i)(1)(G)(ii)(I)(bb) of the Act requires that the
development of the service plan take into account the extent of family
or other supports, which we refer to as ``natural supports,'' for the
individual, and section 1915(i)(1)(G)(ii)(II) of the Act requires that
such plan identify needed services. We interpret these provisions to
indicate that to the extent available, natural supports should be
explicitly included in the service plan. This means that individuals
with equivalent needs for support but differing levels of family or
other natural supports may be authorized for different levels of HCBS.
In the context of person-centered planning and consultation with
natural supports, we conclude that the statute requires that the
service plan should neither duplicate, nor compel, natural supports.
Section 1915(i)(1)(G)(ii)(III) of the Act provides that plans of
care will be reviewed at least annually and upon significant change in
the individual's circumstances. We interpret this provision to indicate
that diagnostic or functional changes are not required in order to
adjust a service plan. Changes in external factors such as gain or loss
of other supports may trigger a review. Additionally, an individual may
request a review of the plan at any time. We would require revision of
the service plan if the review indicates that revision is appropriate.
By ``annually,'' we mean not less often than every 12 months. Finally,
we would relate this requirement to the independent assessment, since
the development or revision of the service plan is based on the
assessment. Therefore, we would propose that the independent assessment
(See section II.B.6.) is required at least annually, and when needed
upon a change in circumstances, in order to comply with the requirement
to review plans of care with that frequency.
8. Self-Direction
Section 1915(i)(1)(G)(iii)(I) and (II) provides that States may
offer enrolled individuals the option to self-direct some or all of the
State Plan HCBS that they require. Many States have incorporated
elements of self-direction into section 1915(c) waiver programs as well
as section 1115 demonstration programs. Self-directed State plan HCBS
allow States another avenue by which they may afford individuals
maximum choice and control over the delivery of services, while
comporting with all other applicable provisions of Medicaid law. We
have urged all States to afford waiver participants the opportunity to
direct some or all of their waiver services, without regard to their
support needs. With the release of an updated, revised section 1915(c)
waiver application in 2008, we refined the criteria and guidance to
States surrounding self-direction (also referred to as participant-
direction), and established a process by which States are encouraged,
to whatever degree feasible, to include self-direction as a component
of their overall HCBS waiver programs. While section 1915(i) of the Act
does not require that States follow the guidelines for section 1915(c)
waivers in implementing self-direction in the HCBS State plan benefit,
we anticipate that States will make use of their experience with
section 1915(c) waivers to offer a similar pattern of self-directed
opportunities with meaningful supports and effective protections.
Individuals who choose to self-direct will be subject to the same
requirements as other enrollees in the State plan HCBS benefit.
Section 1915(i)(1)(G)(iii)(II) of the Act defines self-direction,
and requires that there be an assessment and service plan. We do not
interpret these requirements to indicate assessments and plans in
addition to those generally required in sections 1915(i)(1)(F) and (G)
of the Act. Accordingly, we would propose that the requirements for a
self-directed service plan under section 1915(i)(1)(G)(iii)(III) of the
Act be incorporated as components of the assessment and
[[Page 26373]]
service plan required for all enrollees in the State plan HCBS benefit.
Section 1915(i)(1)(G)(iii)(III) of the Act contains specific
requirements for the self-directed service plan, for which we describe
proposed regulations in section III. The proposed regulations are
consistent with our requirements for self-direction under section
1915(c) HCBS waivers. Section 1915(i)(1)(G)(iii)(III)(dd) of the Act
requires that the service plan be developed with a person-centered
process, which, as noted above, we would propose to require of all
service plans for the State plan HCBS benefit.
Section 1915(i)(1)(G)(iii)(IV) of the Act describes certain aspects
of a self-directed budget, which we have termed ``budget authority.''
Section 1915(i)(1) (G)(iii)(III)(bb) of the Act provides for self-
directed selecting, managing, and/or dismissing of providers of the
State plan HCBS, which we term ``employer authority.'' We interpret
selecting to include the authority to hire a provider, as well as to
direct an agency to hire a specific provider. Currently, section
1915(c) HCBS waivers include varying degrees of self-direction. The
proposed rule explains both budget authority and employer authority in
a manner consistent with section 1915(c) HCBS waiver policy.
Individuals require information and assistance to support them in
successfully directing their services. Therefore, we would require
States to design and provide functions in support of self-direction
that are individualized according to the support needs of each
enrollee. These functions should include, at a minimum, information and
assistance consistent with sound principles and practice of self-
direction, and financial management supports to serve as fiscal/
employer agents or co-employers. The availability of an independent
advocate to assist the individual with the access to and oversight of
their waiver services, including self-direction, is also an important
component of a strong self-directed system. We note that the adequacy
of supports for successful self-direction will be important elements of
the State's quality assurance strategy, which is required by section
1915(i)(1)(H) of the Act.
9. Quality Assurance
Section 1915(i)(1)(H)(i) of the Act requires the State to ensure
that the State plan HCBS benefit meets Federal and State guidelines for
quality assurance, which we interpret as assurances of quality
improvement. Consistent with current trends in health care, the
language of quality assurance has evolved to mean quality improvement,
a systems approach designed to continuously improve services and
support and prevent or minimize problems prior to occurrences.
Guidelines for quality improvement have been made available through CMS
policies governing section 1915(c) HCBS waivers available at
www.hcbswaivers.net and published manuscripts available at
www.nationalqualityenterprise.com.
Consistent with recent legislation with considerable focus on
evidence-based quality and measurement, we would require States to have
a quality improvement strategy, and to measure and maintain evidence of
quality improvement including system performance, individual quality of
care, and individual experience of care indicators approved and/or
prescribed by the Secretary. These measures must take into account the
relevant, targeted assurances, and include measures established through
the DRA, CHIPRA, Affordable Care Act, and/or any other relevant health
care indicators or quality measures developed by HHS, as applicable to
the population(s) served by the section 1915(i) benefit. We would
require States to make this information on their identified measures
available to CMS upon request. In the event that a State elects to
target the section 1915(i) benefit to specific populations, the State
must submit evidence of quality improvement no later than 180 days
before the end of each 5-year approval period. (See the discussion at
I.B.19 of this proposed rule for more information regarding targeting
and approval periods).
10. Conflict of Interest
Section 1915(i)(1)(H)(ii) of the Act provides that the State will
establish conflict of interest standards for the independent evaluation
and independent assessment. For reasons described above under
independent assessment, we believe that the same independence is
necessary for those involved with developing the person-centered
service plan. In this discussion, we will refer to persons or entities
responsible for the independent evaluation, independent assessment, and
the service plan as ``agents'' to distinguish them from ``providers''
of home and community-based services.
Conflicts can arise from incentives for either over- or under-
utilization of services; subtle problems such as interest in retaining
the individual as a client rather than promoting independence; or
issues that focus on the convenience of the agent or service provider
rather than being person-centered. Many of these conflicts of interest
may not be conscious decisions on the part of individuals or entities
responsible for the provisions of service.
To mitigate any explicit or implicit conflicts of interest, the
independent agent must not be influenced by variations in available
funding, either locally or from the State. The service plan must offer
each individual all of the HCBS that are covered by the State that the
individual qualifies for, and that are demonstrated to be necessary
through the evaluation and assessment process. The service plan must be
based only on medical necessity (for example, needs-based criteria),
not on available funding. When local entities directly expend funds or
direct allocated resources for services, in accordance with section
1902(a)(2) of the Act, the State must have a mechanism to ensure that
availability of local funds does not affect access to services, such as
using State resources to compensate for variability in local funding.
In this proposed regulation, we would require States to define
conflict of interest standards to include criteria that reflect State
and Federal experience with the issue in administering HCBS waivers,
and that reflect the principles of section 1877 of the Act. Section
1877 of the Act prohibits certain types of referrals for services when
there is a financial relationship between the referring entity and the
provider of services.
We are aware that in certain areas there may only be one provider
available to serve as both the agent performing independent assessments
and developing plans of care, and the provider of one or more of the
HCBS. To address this potential problem we would propose to permit
providers in some cases to serve as both agent and provider of
services, but with guarantees of independence of function within the
provider entity. In certain circumstances, we may require that States
develop ``firewall'' policies, for example, separating staff that
perform assessments and develop plans of care from those that provide
any of the services in the plan; and meaningful and accessible
procedures for individuals and representatives to appeal to the State.
We would not permit States to circumvent these requirements by adopting
State or local policies that suppress enrollment of any qualified and
willing provider. We do not believe that under any circumstances
determination of eligibility for the State plan HCBS benefit should be
performed by parties with an interest in providers of HCBS.
[[Page 26374]]
We understand that the development of appropriate plans of care
often requires the inclusion of individuals with expertise in the
provision of long-term services and supports or the delivery of acute
care medical services. As discussed previously, this rule is not
intended to prevent providers from participating in these functions,
but to ensure that an independent agent retains the final
responsibility for the evaluation, assessment, and service plan
functions.
11. Eligibility Redeterminations; Appeals
Section 1915(i)(1)(I) of the Act requires the State to conduct
redeterminations of eligibility at least annually. We interpret
``annually'' to mean not less than every 12 months. The State must
conduct redeterminations and appeals in the same manner as required
under the State plan. States must grant fair hearings consistent with
the requirements of part 431, subpart E.
12. Option for Presumptive Eligibility for Assessment
Section 1915(i)(1)(J) of the Act gives States the option of
providing for a period of presumptive eligibility, not to exceed 60
days, for individuals the State has reason to believe may be eligible
for the State plan HCBS benefit.
We interpret this provision as follows:
``Presumptive'' we interpret to indicate that FFP will be
available for evaluation even when an individual is subsequently found
not to be eligible for the State plan HCBS benefit.
``Eligibility'' does not connote eligibility for Medicaid
generally, as this provision ``shall be limited to medical assistance
for carrying out the independent evaluation and assessment'' under
section 1915(i)(1)(E) of the Act. For clarity, we would refer to this
limited option as ``presumptive payment''. Individuals not eligible for
Medicaid may not receive State plan HCBS.
``Evaluation and assessment'' under section 1915(i)(1)(E)
of the Act, is described as evaluation for eligibility for the benefit
and assessment to determine necessary services. We believe the
statutory phrase ``and if the individual is so eligible, the specific
HCBS that the individual will receive'' is further describing the
assessment under section 1915(i)(1)(E) of the Act for which presumptive
payment is available, and that this phrase is not offering presumptive
payment for the actual services. The phrase ``if the individual is so
eligible'' indicates that payment is available once the individual is
determined eligible, and not prior to that point.
In section 1915(i)(1)(J) of the Act, we interpret the term
``medical assistance for carrying out the independent evaluation and
assessment under subparagraph E'' to mean expenditures for both costs
of evaluative services that are described in section 1905(a), such as
physician or other practitioner services, as well as administrative
costs to determine eligibility for the State plan HCBS benefit. We
interpret section 1915(i)(1)(J) of the Act to offer the State an option
for a period of presumptive payment, not to exceed 60 days, for
individuals the State has reason to believe may be eligible for the
State plan HCBS benefit. FFP would be available for both medical
services and administrative costs incurred for evaluation and
assessment activities. During the period of presumptive payment, the
individual would not receive State plan HCBS, and would not be
considered to be enrolled in Medicaid or eligible for the HCBS benefit
for purposes of computing the number of individuals being served under
the benefit.
We invite comments that offer other interpretations of this
presumptive payment option and that comport with existing Federal
requirements.
13. Individual's Representative
When an individual is not capable of giving consent, or requires
assistance in making decisions regarding his or her care, the
individual may be assisted or represented by another person. Section
1915(i)(2) of the Act defines the term ``individual's representative''
by listing certain examples, but also provides that ``* * * any other
individual who is authorized to represent the individual'' may be
included. We believe that ``authorized'' refers to State rules
concerning guardians, legal representatives, power of attorney, or
persons of other status recognized under State law or under the
policies of the State Medicaid program.
States should ensure that the representatives conform to good
practice concerning free choice of the individual, and assess for abuse
or excessive control. States should also ensure that the person-
centered planning process continues to be focused on the individual
with HCBS support needs and his or her preferences and goals, and
supports are provided so the individual can meaningfully participate
and direct the process to the maximum extent possible. We are proposing
to provide that the State may not refuse to recognize an authorized
representative that the individual chooses, unless the State discovers
and can document evidence that the representative is not acting in the
best interest of the individual or cannot perform the required
functions.
14. Nonapplication
As amended by the Affordable Care Act, section 1915(i)(3) of the
Act allows States to be exempted from the requirements of two sections
of the Medicaid statute: section 1902(a)(10)(B) of the Act, regarding
comparability; and section 1902(a)(10)(C)(i)(III) of the Act, regarding
income and resource rules for the medically needy in the community. The
statute uses the terms ``nonapplication'' and ``may chose not to comply
with'' rather than ``waive''. We would use this terminology to maintain
clarity between HCBS waiver programs under section 1915(c) of the Act
and State plan HCBS under section 1915(i) of the Act. However, it is
important to reiterate that the choice not to apply these requirements
applies only with regard to the provision of State plan HCBS.
Nonapplication of the requirement of comparability allows States to
furnish the State plan HCBS benefit to specific targeted populations,
similar to section 1915(c) waivers. Regardless of whether a State
chooses to apply comparability requirements, it must define needs-based
criteria to establish eligibility for the section 1915(i) benefit. If a
State chooses not to apply comparability and to target the benefit,
individuals must meet both the targeting criteria and the needs-based
criteria in order to receive services through the section 1915(i)
benefit. See the discussion in I.B.19 of this proposed rule for more
detail regarding the option not to apply Medicaid comparability
requirements and to target the benefit to a specific population or
populations.
The nonapplication of the requirements of section
1902(a)(10)(C)(i)(III) of the Act enables States to provide medical
assistance to medically needy individuals in the community by electing
to treat the individuals as if they are living in an institution for
purposes of determining income and resources. This would result in the
State not deeming/counting income and resources from an ineligible
spouse to an applicant or from a parent to a child with a disability.
However, nonapplication of the income and resource rules applicable in
the community applies only to the medically needy and only for the
purposes of providing HCBS in accordance with the State plan amendment
implementing section
[[Page 26375]]
1915(i) of the Act. Based on this language, we are interpreting the
statute to mean that individuals made eligible on the basis of
nonapplication of section 1902(a)(10)(C)(i)(III) of the Act may only be
eligible for section 1915(i) services. In other words, for medically
needy applicants, the State can elect not to deem income from an
ineligible spouse, or from a parent to a child. If the State elects not
to apply the requirements of section 1902(a)(10)(C)(i)(III) of the Act
for the medically needy, it would determine Medicaid eligibility for
section 1915(i) eligible medically needy individuals using
institutional rules rather than community rules. Once the individual
has been determined to be eligible as medically needy using
institutional rules, and has been determined to meet the 150 percent of
the FPL limit, the individual would only be eligible for State plan
HCBS under section 1915(i) of the Act. The individual would not be
eligible for any other Medicaid State plan services. However,
individuals who are eligible for Medicaid as medically needy under
income and resource rules applicable in the community, and whose income
does not exceed the 150 percent of the FPL limit, would be eligible for
State plan HCBS as well as all Medicaid State plan services.
15. No Effect on Waiver Authority
Section 1915(i)(4) of the Act emphasizes that State election to
provide the State plan HCBS benefit does not in any way affect the
State's ability to offer programs through a section 1915(b) or (c)
waiver, or under section 1115 of the Act. We further note that States
may consider including 1915(i) services as a part of capitation under
section 1915(b) waivers or other authorities for managed care
arrangements. A State could use joint authority of 1915(b) and 1915(i)
to provide HCBS to individuals eligible for the 1915(i) benefit.
16. Continuation of Federal Financial Participation (FFP) for
Institutional Level of Care for Individuals Receiving Services as of
the Effective Date of the State Plan HCBS Amendment
If the State modifies institutional LOC requirements so that they
will be more stringent than the needs-based criteria for the State plan
HCBS benefit, section 1915(i)(5) of the Act permits States the option
to continue receiving FFP for individuals who are receiving
institutional services in NFs, ICFs/MR, and applicable hospitals or who
are receiving services under a section 1915 waiver or through an 1115
HCBS demonstration project that is in effect at the time of the
modification. We interpret the reference to section 1915 waivers to
include waivers under sections 1915(c), 1915(d) or 1915(e) of the Act,
which are the section 1915 waivers explicitly identified in section
1915(i)(6)(A) of the Act. Individuals receiving institutional care or
HCBS under these authorities at the time that the institutional LOC is
modified would not have to satisfy the more stringent criteria in order
to continue receiving that care.
FFP under the unmodified criteria would continue to be available
until such time as the individual is discharged from the institution,
waiver program, or demonstration, or no longer requires this LOC.
Moving between a waiver and an institution at the same LOC, or vice
versa, by definition is not a change in LOC. Therefore, individuals who
transition between waivers and institutions (for example, transitioning
from an institution to waiver through the Money Follows the person
program) would retain eligibility for institutional care and HCBS until
they no longer meet the less stringent LOC requirements or until they
lose eligibility for Medicaid or for institutional or waiver services
due to a reason other than the application of the modified LOC
criteria. An example of this would be if the individual aged out of a
waiver, or if an increase in income or resources caused the individual
to lose Medicaid eligibility.
In section 1915(i)(5) of the Act, the statute indicates that FFP
remains available for individuals who meet the previous institutional
criteria. We note that this does not create a requirement for States to
continue to serve these individuals; rather, it creates an option for
States to continue to receive FFP in order to provide care for
individuals who would otherwise lose eligibility due to the
implementation of the new criteria.
Due to the current requirements on maintaining eligibility
standards, methodologies and procedures, we encourage States to consult
with CMS before instituting any changes to LOC requirements.
17. State Option To Provide HCBS to Individuals Eligible for Services
Under a Waiver
Section 2402(b) of the Affordable Care Act added section 1915(i)(6)
to the Act, specifying that States may elect to provide HCBS to an
individual who is eligible for an approved waiver under sections
1915(c), (d), (e), or 1115 of the Act. Section 1915(i)(6)(A) specifies
that individuals who are eligible for a waiver may receive State plan
HCBS under the authority of section 1915(i) if they satisfy the needs-
based criteria under such section and if their income is less than 300
percent of the supplemental security income (SSI) Federal benefit rate
(FBR), as established by section 1611(b)(1) of the Act.
We interpret this statute as creating an option for States to
increase the income limit for the State plan HCBS benefit, but only for
individuals who are eligible for HCBS through an approved waiver within
the State. We interpret ``eligible'' to mean that the individual meets
all of the criteria required for entrance into a HCBS waiver that is
approved within the State, regardless of whether the individual is
actually enrolled and receiving services through that waiver. As
discussed below, if a State elects this option, the State must cover
the new optional categorically needy eligibility group specified at
section 1902(a)(10)(A)(ii)(XXII) of the Act, and individuals who are
eligible for a waiver with income above 150 percent of the FPL, but
below 300 percent of the SSI benefit rate, may receive State plan HCBS.
When establishing whether an individual's income is below 300
percent of SSI, under section 1915(i)(6)(B), the State should use the
same rules that are applied for the special income level group
specified at section 1902(a)(10)(A)(ii)(V) of the Act. Regardless of
whether a State elects the option established by this section, the
State could provide HCBS through both the section 1915(i) benefit, as
well as through a HCBS waiver to any individual who meets the financial
and needs-based criteria for both programs (that is, if an individual
meets the waiver LOC criteria, and the needs-based criteria for the
State plan HCBS benefit, and has income below 150 percent of the FPL,
the individual could receive services under both authorities, provided
that the services are not duplicative, whether or not the State elects
to include the higher income level in their section 1915(i) benefit).
When a State elects to include this option, section 1915(i)(6)(C)
of the Act allows services to differ in type, amount, duration, or
scope from services provided to individuals who are eligible for the
section 1915(i) benefit without also being eligible for a waiver. A
State may choose to provide additional 1915(i) State plan HCBS to
individuals who are eligible for HCBS under an approved waiver. If a
State does so, it may also elect to establish additional needs-based
criteria for those services. The establishment of additional criteria
would be under the State authority to establish needs-based
[[Page 26376]]
criteria for any service in the 1915(i) benefit (see the discussion in
I.B.2 of this proposed rule for more discussion).
Any additional service(s) provided through this subsection must be
allowable under section 1915(c)(4)(B) and may not include room and
board. A State may also include ``other'' services, as defined by the
State and approved by the Secretary, within the package of section
1915(i) services that are limited to individuals who are eligible for a
waiver. However, because individuals eligible for a waiver must also
satisfy the needs-based criteria established for the section 1915(i)
benefit to receive State plan HCBS, a State may not restrict access to
benefits that are available to other individuals who receive the State
Plan HCBS, except through a targeting criteria, or through the
establishment of a needs-based criteria that applies uniformly to all
individuals.
18. Establishment of Optional Eligibility Group To Provide Full
Medicaid Benefits to Individuals Receiving State Plan HCBS
Section 2402(d) of the Affordable Care Act creates a new optional
categorically needy eligibility group, specified at section
1902(a)(10)(A)(ii)(XXII) of the Act, for individuals ``who are eligible
for HCBS under the needs-based criteria established under (1)(A) of
1915(i), or who are eligible for home and community-based services
under paragraph (6) of such section, and who will receive home and
community-based services pursuant to a State plan amendment under such
subsection.''
Under this group States can elect to cover individuals who are not
otherwise eligible for Medicaid. For example, an individual age 65 or
older, who has chronic needs but not at an institutional level of care
and has too much income and/or resources to qualify for Medical
Assistance under a State's Medicaid plan, could be eligible for section
1915(i) services if he/she meets the needs-based criteria for the
section 1915(i) benefit, has income up to 150 percent of the FPL and
will receive section 1915(i) services. Under this group, States may
also elect to cover individuals with income up to 300 percent of the
SSI/FBR who would be eligible under an existing section 1915(c), (d),
(e) waiver or section 1115 waiver and who will receive section 1915(i)
services. These individuals do not have to be receiving services under
an existing section 1915(c), (d), (e) waiver or section 1115 waiver;
the individual only has to be eligible for the waiver. Individuals
eligible for Medicaid under this group would be eligible for full
Medicaid benefits. The State must also elect the option under section
1915(i)(6) of the Act if the State intends to cover individuals with
income up to 300 percent of the SSI/FBR.
19. State Option To Offer HCBS to Specific, Targeted Populations
The Affordable Care Act added section 1915(i)(7) to the Act, which
allows States to target the section 1915(i) benefit to specific
populations. In addition, as of October 1, 2010, States may design
section 1915(i) benefits without regard to the comparability
requirements contained in section 1902(a)(10)(B) of the Act. As a
result, the State may ``target'' services, that is, either provide the
1915(i) benefit only to individuals in certain Medicaid eligibility
groups, or provide different services within the 1915(i) benefit to
different groups. Due to the ability to define targeted populations, a
State may now propose more than one set of section 1915(i) benefits,
with each benefit package targeted toward a specific population. A
State may also propose one set of section 1915(i) benefits that targets
multiple populations, and may offer different services to each of the
defined target groups within the benefit. Additionally, a State may
propose a section 1915(i) benefit that does not choose nonapplication
of comparability and instead uses only the needs-based criteria to
establish eligibility for the benefit. States may find this to be a
less administratively burdensome approach, as there is no renewal
requirement or limit to the approval period if the State does not
target the HCBS benefit (see below for a discussion on limits to the
approval period).
We propose to require that a State that elects to target the
benefit to specific groups of individuals must submit objective
targeting criteria in the SPA implementing the HCBS benefit, subject to
approval by CMS. These targeting criteria may define a target
population or multiple target populations within parameters of
diagnosis, disability, Medicaid eligibility groups, and/or age. Within
these parameters, targeting criteria may be similar to those available
through section 1915(c) waivers, as defined in Sec. 441.301, but we
note that based on experience, these target groups may not aptly
capture the universe of individuals who could benefit from section
1915(i) of the Act. Therefore, a State may also establish broader
criteria that encompass more than one of the three groups defined in
Sec. 441.301, or that target enrollees based on separate criteria.
However, we note that the section 1915(i) benefit is described in the
statute as ``HCBS for Elderly and Disabled Individuals.'' Therefore, we
would expect any targeting criteria to apply to eligibility groups
serving those individuals. We would also expect targeting criteria to
align with the needs-based criteria established for the benefit.
For example, a State could target the benefit package to any
children under the age of 21 with an intellectual disability, a
developmental disability, autism, or a behavioral health condition. A
State could also target the benefit using traditional section 1915(c)
groups. An example of this would be to target the benefit to
individuals age 65 and up. Further, this targeting option does not
permit States to target the benefit in a manner that would not comply
with section 1902(a)(23) of the Act regarding free choice of providers,
or that forestalls the opportunity for individuals to receive services
in the most integrated setting possible. Therefore, targeting criteria
cannot have the impact of limiting the pool of qualified providers from
which an individual would receive services, or have the impact of
requiring an individual to receive services from the same entity from
which they purchase their housing. For example, we would not allow
States to establish targeting criteria that would restrict eligibility
to only individuals who reside in provider-owned and/or operated
settings.
If a State elects to target the benefit to a specific population or
populations, it must still establish needs-based criteria that
individuals must meet in order to be eligible for section 1915(i)
services and the State may also establish needs-based criteria for
individual services within the benefit. The needs-based criteria may
include specific needs that are applicable to the targeting criteria,
but may also include general needs that apply across all of the
populations included in the benefit.
20. Five-Year Approval for Targeted Section 1915(i) HCBS Benefits and
Renewal Requirements
Under sections 1915(i)(7)(B)(i) and (C) of the Act, if a State
chooses to target State plan HCBS, the SPA approval will last for a 5-
year period with the option for 5-year renewal periods. There is no
statutory limit on the number of renewal periods available under this
section. At the end of the initial 5-year period, and any subsequent
renewals, CMS will review the State's approved SPA and evaluate State
performance based upon the requirements contained within that SPA and
the State plan HCBS quality outcomes.
[[Page 26377]]
We propose that a State must provide a written request for renewal
at least 180 days prior to the end of the approval period. The request
must be accompanied by a description of any proposed changes to the
benefit, if applicable. Prior to renewal, CMS will request evidence of
implementation of the State's quality improvement strategy in order to
verify compliance with State plan HCBS requirements. Results of the
quality monitoring process will be used to identify and make
recommendations on areas of a State's section 1915(i) benefit that
require modification prior to renewal. In accordance with section
1915(i)(7)(C) of the Act, we will approve renewals based upon adherence
to Federal requirements, including adherence to the State's phase-in
plan, as approved by CMS.
21. Phase-In of Services and Eligibility
Section 1915(i)(7)(B)(ii) allows States to phase-in the enrollment
of individuals and/or the provision of services if the State elects to
target the benefit to specific populations. The statute indicates that
the State must enroll all eligible individuals and provide all of the
services it has elected to include in the benefit by the end of the
initial 5-year approval. Although the option to phase-in services and/
or eligibility may seem contradictory with the requirements that the
benefit be statewide and not limit enrollment, we interpret this
section to provide States with the flexibility to prioritize enrollment
to individuals with the highest need and/or to develop adequate
infrastructure to ensure quality of care, and the health and safety of
participants, prior to the provision of services. We do not interpret
this option as providing States the authority to limit statewideness or
to set a numerical limit on enrollment.
As an example, a State could elect to begin the provision of
services to individuals with higher needs prior to the enrollment of
all eligible individuals, based upon the assessment for eligibility to
the benefit. In this instance, the needs-based criteria would allow
States to identify individuals at greatest risk for health and safety,
and to prioritize services to those individuals. Services would then be
phased-in to individuals who qualify for the benefit but who have less
assessed need.
States are permitted to modify the available services in a section
1915(i) benefit through a SPA at any time. Therefore, we do not believe
that this option permits a State to include a service within the
benefit without providing it to at least some enrolled individuals.
However, at the option of a State, a phase-in plan might temporarily
limit the provision of the entire benefit package, or of some specific
services, based upon infrastructure considerations, such as the need to
enroll an adequate number of qualified providers.
We propose that a State that elects to target the State plan HCBS
benefit and to phase-in enrollment and/or services must submit a phase-
in plan for approval by CMS that describes, at a minimum:
The criteria used to phase-in enrollment or service
delivery;
The rationale for phasing-in services and/or eligibility;
and
Timelines and benchmarks to ensure that the benefit is
available Statewide to all eligible individuals within the initial 5-
year approval.
If a State elects and CMS approves a phase-in of services and/or
eligibility in the section 1915(i) SPA, the statute indicates that the
State must enroll all eligible individuals and provide all of the
services it has elected to include in the benefit by the end of the
initial 5-year approval. Therefore, if a State does not meet its phase-
in plan by the end of the initial 5-year approval of the section
1915(i) benefit, the State will not be able to renew the benefit.
States are also prohibited from having a phase-in period longer
than 5 years, and from receiving approval for a new section 1915(i)
submission of a similar design with a phase-in period when a similar
benefit with phase-in is discontinued before full implementation.
We are soliciting comments on alternative strategies and approaches
for evaluating and approving the option to phase-in eligibility and
enrollment.
C. Effective Date
The effective date on which States may provide HCBS through the
State plan, as set forth by the DRA, is January 1, 2007. The effective
date of the amendments to the section 1915(i) benefit, as established
by the Affordable Care Act, is October 1, 2010.
D. The State Plan HCBS Benefit in the Context of the Medicaid Program
as a Whole
The section 1915(i) State plan HCBS benefit is subject to
provisions of the Medicaid program as a whole. Therefore, it is useful
to note certain requirements of the Medicaid program that have an
impact on the administration of the State plan HCBS benefit and that
are not explicitly referenced in the regulation.
To be eligible for the State plan HCBS benefit, an individual must
be included in an eligibility group that is contained in the State
plan, including if the State elects, the new eligibility group defined
at section 1902(a)(10)(A)(ii)(XXII) of the Act. Each individual must
meet all financial and non-financial criteria set forth in the plan for
the applicable eligibility group.
Children included in eligibility groups under the State plan may
meet the needs-based criteria and qualify for benefits under the State
plan HCBS benefit. States may also choose to target the benefit in a
manner that either excludes children, or limits the benefit solely to
children. HCBS benefits that are not otherwise available through
1905(a) State plan services under the Medicaid Early and Periodic
Screening, Diagnostic, and Treatment (EPSDT) benefit may be furnished
to Medicaid eligible children who meet the State plan HCBS needs-based
eligibility criteria, and who meet the State's medical necessity
criteria for the receipt of services. In addition to meeting EPSDT
requirements through the provision of 1905(a) services, a State may
also meet a particular child's needs under EPSDT through services that
are also available through the 1915(i) benefit. However, all Medicaid-
eligible children must have full access to services required under
EPSDT, and the provision of 1915(i) State plan HCBS should in no way
hinder their access to such services.
We further note that the mandate under EPSDT applies only to
services authorized by section 1905(a) of the Act. Therefore, HCBS
under section 1915(i) of the Act are not required under the EPSDT
program. Children who are eligible for the State plan HCBS benefit are
eligible to receive medically necessary State plan HCBS, but the State
is not required to provide 1915(i) State plan HCBS as part of its EPSDT
program. Clinic services (whether or not furnished in a facility) for
individuals with chronic mental illness are listed in section
1915(c)(4)(B) of the Act and therefore may be covered in the State plan
HCBS benefit. If a State chooses to offer these services, they will be
subject to the clinic upper payment limit (UPL) at Sec. 447.321. We
also note that these services are defined differently than other clinic
services offered under the State Plan in that they include services
whether or not they are offered in a facility.
States may also elect to include 1915(i) benefits as part of a
managed care contract. In the event that State plan HCBS are included
in a managed care contract, they must meet all
[[Page 26378]]
applicable requirements contained in Sec. 438, including actuarial
soundness of rates, cost effectiveness of services, and CMS contract
review and approval.
Additionally, since this benefit is established through a State
plan amendment process, section 5006(e) of the American Recovery and
Reinvestment Act of 2009 (Pub. L. 111-5, enacted on February 17, 2009)
requires the State to seek advice from Indian health programs and Urban
Indian Organizations on the establishment of or modification to any
State plan HCBS benefits.
FFP for the 1915(i) benefit is also subject to deferrals,
withholding and disallowances in accordance with the requirements of
subpart C of 42 CFR part 440. In the event that CMS determines a State
to be out of compliance with the requirements of the HCBS benefit,
standard Medicaid compliance actions will apply.
E. Other Background
1. Serving All Eligible Individuals While Targeting Limited Resources
As noted above, section 1915(i) of the Act applies the general
Medicaid requirements regarding statewideness and, like other State
plan options, does not allow States to limit enrollment. Nevertheless,
the law offers significant discretion for defining the population
served. Specifically, States may limit utilization of the State plan
HCBS benefit through application of the following provisions of section
1915(i) of the Act:
The requirement to set eligibility standards built on
needs-based criteria. States choose the needs-based criteria used to
establish the thresholds of program eligibility. States must set a
lower threshold of need, but may also optionally define an upper
threshold of need beyond which individuals may not be served under this
provision.
The option to target the benefit to specific populations.
States may combine needs-based criteria with targeting criteria in
order to create a very specific benefit that applies to defined groups
of individuals.
The option to establish needs-based criteria to determine
eligibility for each State plan HCBS. These criteria may vary from
service to service, and should assist States in identifying the
individuals who could benefit from receipt of a particular State plan
HCBS.
The choice to offer a limited number of services under the
State plan HCBS benefit. The scope of services that the State chooses
to offer may include any, but need not include all, of the services
permitted under section 1915(c)(4)(B) of the Act.
The option to limit the amount or duration of each
service, in accordance with all Medicaid rules and requirements.
Since all State plan HCBS must be provided under a written service
plan, States have the opportunity to review an individual's service
plan to ensure that HCBS continue to be responsive to the needs of the
individual.
Additionally, as a reminder, general Medicaid requirements also
apply to the State plan HCBS benefit. All Medicaid services are to be
provided only to those who need them according to medical necessity and
needs-based criteria, as defined by the State. Prior authorization is
available to the State.
2. HCBS Provided in the Community, Not in Institutions
Section 1915(i) provides States the option to provide home and
community-based services, but does not define ``home and community-
based.'' Along with our overarching interest in making improvements to
Medicaid HCBS, we seek to ensure that Medicaid is supporting needed
strategies for States in their efforts to meet their obligations under
the ADA and the Supreme Court decision in Olmstead v. L.C., 527 U.S.
581 (1999). In the Olmstead decision, the Court affirmed a State's
obligations to serve individuals in the most integrated setting
appropriate to their needs. A State's obligations under the ADA and
section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act are not defined by, or limited
to, the scope of requirements of the Medicaid program. However, the
Medicaid program can provide an opportunity to obtain partial Federal
funding that supports compliance with the ADA, section 504 of the
Rehabilitation Act, and Olmstead through the provision of Medicaid
services to Medicaid-eligible individuals.
In the April 4, 2008 Federal Register (73 FR 18676), we proposed to
define home and community settings for this new benefit. Then in the
June 22, 2009 Federal Register (74 FR 29453), we published an advance
notice of proposed rulemaking (ANPRM) that solicited comments on
potential rulemaking for a number of areas within the section 1915(c)
HCBS waiver program. Specifically, we requested public input on
strategies to define home and community-based settings where waiver
participants may receive services. Although the ANPRM is specific to
section 1915(c) waivers, the services delivered and the settings they
are available in are parallel to the section 1915(i) benefit. We
recognize a need for a consistent definition of this term across
Medicaid HCBS.
In response to the 1915(c) ANPRM, we received comments that
supported the underlying goals to promote independence, community
inclusion, and the goals of the Olmstead decision. However, many
commenters also expressed concern about definitions of home and
community-based settings that limited participant choice, and that
excluded settings that may, in fact, promote independence and
integration. Since that time, we have facilitated and participated in
multiple stakeholder discussions related to this issue, and we also
included proposed language for settings in which HCBS could be provided
to elicit further comments on this issue in the section 1915(k)
proposed rule published on February 25, 2011 and in the 1915(c)
proposed rule published on April 15, 2011. We find the public comment
process to be valuable in our attempt to develop the best policy on
this issue for Medicaid beneficiaries. Therefore, with this rule, we
again invite public comments on proposed language to establish the
qualities for home and community-based settings under both sections
1915(i) State plan HCBS and the 1915(k) Community First Choice State
plan option. It is our goal to align the final language pertaining to
this topic across the sections 1915(k), 1915(i), and 1915(c) Medicaid
HCBS authorities.
We have included proposed language for settings in which section
1915(i) services and supports could be provided to elicit additional
comments on this issue. While it is not practical to create one
singular definition that encompasses all settings that are home and
community-based, with this rule we propose quality principles essential
in determining whether a setting is community-based. We expect States
electing to provide HCBS benefits under section 1915(i) to include a
definition of home and community-based setting that incorporates these
principles and will review all SPAs to determine whether they propose
settings that are home or community-based. We will permit States with
approved section 1915(i) SPAs a reasonable transition period, a minimum
of one year, to come into compliance with the HCBS setting requirements
as promulgated in our final rule.
Recognizing the imperative to provide clear guidance to States and
in consideration of recent proposals from States that have clearly
exceeded reasonable standards for HCBS, we are proposing to clarify now
that home and community-based settings must exhibit
[[Page 26379]]
the following qualities, and such other qualities as the Secretary
determines to be appropriate, based on the needs of the individual as
indicated in their person-centered service plan, in order to be
eligible sites for delivery of home and community-based services:
The setting is integrated in, and facilitates the
individual's full access to, the greater community, including
opportunities to seek employment and work in competitive integrated
settings, engage in community life, control personal resources, and
receive services in the community, like individuals without
disabilities;
The setting is selected by the individual among all
available alternatives and identified in the person-centered service
plan;
An individual's essential personal rights of privacy,
dignity and respect, and freedom from coercion and restraint are
protected;
Individual initiative, autonomy, and independence in
making major life choices, including but not limited to, daily
activities, physical environment, and with whom to interact are
optimized and not regimented; and
Individual choice regarding services and supports, and who
provides them, is facilitated.
In a provider-owned or controlled residential setting, the
following additional conditions must be met. Any modifications of the
conditions (for example to address the safety needs of an individual
with dementia) must be supported by a specific assessed need and
documented in the person-centered service plan:
++ The unit or room is a specific physical place that can be owned,
rented, or occupied under a legally enforceable agreement by the
individual receiving services, and the individual has, at a minimum,
the same responsibilities and protections from eviction that the
tenants have under the landlord/tenant laws of the State, county, city,
or other designated entity. We are soliciting comments as to whether
there are other protections, not addressed by landlord tenant law, that
should be included;
++ Each individual has privacy in their sleeping or living unit:
--Units have lockable entrance doors, with appropriate staff having
keys to doors;
--Individuals share units only at the individual's choice; and
--Individuals have the freedom to furnish and decorate their sleeping
or living units;
++ Individuals have the freedom and support to control their own
schedules and activities, and have access to food at any time;
++ Individuals are able to have visitors of their choosing at any
time; and
++ The setting is physically accessible to the individual.
In addition to the aforementioned criteria there are two criteria
that we have not included in the proposed regulation, but wish to
solicit comment regarding whether they should be added. The first is
related to the proposed requirement that in a provider-owned or
controlled residential setting, any modification of the conditions must
be supported by specific assessed needs and documented in the person
centered service plan. This requirement is meant to address two issues:
Individuals receiving HCBS must not have their
independence or freedoms abridged by providers for convenience, or
well-meaning but unnecessarily restrictive methods for providing
person-centered services and supports; and
Individuals with cognitive disabilities and other
impairments may require modifications of the aforementioned conditions
for their safety and welfare.
This provision is meant to establish that service planning is the
process in which these decisions are made, rather than ad hoc on a
daily basis. While the proposed text establishes the requirement that
any modification to the conditions are supported by a specific assessed
need and documented in the person-centered service plan, we are also
considering including language to explicitly set forth these
activities. We are considering requiring the following points to be
identified: identify a specific and individualized assessed safety
need; document less intrusive methods that have been tried but did not
work; include a clear description of the condition that is directly
proportionate to the specific assessed safety need; include regular
collection and review of data to measure the ongoing effectiveness of
the modification; and establishing time limits for periodic reviews to
determine if the modification can be lifted. We solicit comment on
these points and any other potential requirements regarding
modifications of the conditions set forth in this proposed rule. We
also wish to solicit comment on a second criterion that would include a
requirement that receipt of any particular service or support cannot be
a condition for living in the unit. In discussing this specific
criterion, we discovered that it could be read one of two ways. One
interpretation is that this language does not require an individual
residing in a provider owned or operated setting to receive HCBS from
the setting provider. Rather the individual could choose another
qualified individual to provide HCBS. The other interpretation is that
this language would prevent the owner of the setting from evicting an
individual because the individual refused to accept a particular
service. This interpretation could have an effect on residential
settings, such as housing programs to address homelessness. Some of
these settings include a structure in which individuals are required to
participate in treatment (substance use, for example) as a condition of
residing there. We acknowledge the complexities that arise, when trying
to support an individual's right to choose while recognizing that there
are programs and services that have been developed as a result of
identified service needs. As indicated earlier, we are specifically
soliciting comments on whether these two criteria should be included as
regulatory requirements.
We note that home and community-based settings do not include
nursing facilities, institutions for mental diseases, intermediate care
facilities for mentally retarded, hospitals, or any other locations
that have the qualities of an institutional setting as determined by
the Secretary. In considering whether a setting has the qualities of an
institutional setting, we will exercise a rebuttable presumption that a
setting is not a home and community-based setting, and will engage in
heightened scrutiny, for any setting that is located in a building that
is also a publicly or privately operated facility that provides
inpatient institutional treatment, or in a building on the grounds of,
or immediately adjacent to, a public institution, or disability-
specific housing complex. We expect to issue further guidance regarding
such settings. Other characteristics that could cause CMS to consider a
setting as ``institutional'' or having the qualities of an institution
would include, but not be limited to, settings which are isolated from
the larger community, do not allow individuals to choose whether or
with whom they share a room, limit individuals' freedom of choice on
daily living experiences such as meals, visitors, and activities, or
limit individuals' opportunities to pursue community activities.
We have included these provisions to move toward a stronger
articulation of the qualities that make a setting a home or truly
integrated in the greater community for individuals living with
[[Page 26380]]
disabilities. We believe that these principles of home and community-
based settings will support the use of the Medicaid program to maximize
the opportunities for individuals to access the benefits of home and
community living.
We specifically invite comments on whether there are settings in
addition to those currently enumerated in statute, that are, by their
nature, location or administration inherently non-community based, and
therefore, should be expressly excluded from HCBS. We also invite
comments on the community-based qualities we have proposed in this rule
to ascertain whether additional or different characteristics should be
included.
In considering comments received pertaining to this provision of
the rule, we will also include consideration of all comments received
pertaining to the aligned home and community-based setting requirements
being proposed in this rule for the section 1915(k) Community First
Choice State Plan Option. In recognizing the need for a consistent
definition of this term across Medicaid HCBS, it is our goal to align
the final language pertaining to this topic across the regulations for
sections 1915(i), 1915(k), and 1915(c) Medicaid HCBS authorities.
We note that this proposal in no way preempts broad Medicaid
requirements, such as an individual's right to obtain services from any
willing and qualified provider of a service.
We further note that States are not prohibited from funding
institutional care under Medicaid. The exclusion of these settings from
HCBS waivers and from the State plan HCBS benefit does not limit the
availability of institutional and facility-based care for those
individuals who require long-term services and supports, and who freely
choose to receive services in those settings. However, we believe that
these types of services should not be funded through authorities that
are intended to promote community-based alternatives to institutional
care. Furthermore, we believe that the fundamental requirement that the
needs-based criteria for section 1915(i) be less stringent than that
for institutional care creates a mandate to ensure that services are
provided in settings that are not institutional in nature.
While HCBS are not available while an individual resides in an
institution, HCBS should be available to assist individuals to leave an
institution. Recognizing that individuals leaving institutions require
assistance to establish themselves in the community, we would allow
States to include in a section 1915(i) benefit, as an ``other''
service, certain transition services to be offered to individuals to
assist them in their return to the community. We propose that community
transition services could be commenced prior to discharge and could be
used to assist individuals during the period of transition from an
institutional residence. Additionally, services could be provided to
assist individuals transitioning to independent living in the
community, as described in a letter to the State Medicaid Directors on
May 9, 2002 (SMDL 02-008). We further recognize that, for
short hospital stays, an individual may benefit from ongoing support
through the HCBS State Plan for physical needs over and above such
services available in a hospital, to ensure smooth transition from
clinical setting to home, and to preserve a sense of continuity and
normalcy (a notion particularly important for individuals with
intellectual disabilities, cognitive disabilities associated with
aging, and behavioral health support needs). Importantly, these
services must be exclusively for the benefit of the individual, not the
hospital, and must not substitute for services that the hospital is
obligated to provide through its conditions of participation or through
its obligations under the ADA.
3. Home and Community-Based Services Do Not Include Room and Board
Payments for room and board are expressly prohibited by section
1915(i)(1) of the Act. Except for respite care furnished in a setting
approved by the State that is not the individual's residence, no
service or combination of services may be used to furnish room and
board through the State plan HCBS benefit.
When an individual must be absent from his or her residence in
order to receive a service authorized by the individualized service
plan, it may be impractical to obtain a meal outside the venue in which
the service is provided. Therefore, in some instances and when it does
not constitute a full nutritional regimen, the provision of food may be
included as an incidental part of service delivery. When meals are
furnished as an integral component of the service, we are proposing to
permit the State to consider the cost of food in the rate it pays for
the State plan HCBS, as the cost is then considered part of the service
itself. We would not consider the meal to be an integral part of the
State plan HCBS when two rates are charged to the public, one that
includes a meal and one that does not include a meal.
4. Timing of Amendments
We seek to clarify expectations regarding timing of amendments when
States propose modifications to the 1915(i) benefit. For the purposes
of the 1915(i) benefit, we propose that amendments which result in a
reduction of eligibility or services to 1915(i) participants must be
submitted with a prospective, rather than retroactive, effective date.
F. Section 2601 of the Affordable Care Act: 5-Year Period for
Demonstration Projects
This proposed rule includes changes to Sec. 430.25 to implement
section 2601 of the Affordable Care Act.
Section 2601 of the Affordable Care Act adds a new paragraph (2) to
section 1915(h) to permit the Secretary, at her discretion, to approve
a waiver that provides medical assistance for individuals dually
eligible for Medicare and Medicaid (``dual eligibles'') for an initial
period of up to 5 years and renewed for up to 5 years, at the State's
request. The statute defines a dual eligible as: ``An individual who is
entitled to, or enrolled for, benefits under part A of title XVIII, or
enrolled for benefits under part B of title XVIII, and is eligible for
medical assistance under the State plan under this title or under a
waiver of such plan.'' This new authority enhances existing tools
available to improve and coordinate care and services for this
particularly vulnerable group of beneficiaries. This change provides an
important tool for States to design programs to better coordinate
services for dual eligible individuals.
While section 2601 of the Affordable Care Act does not provide a
new type of waiver, it does provide an important opportunity for States
to simplify the operation of existing waivers that serve dually
eligible individuals, especially important when States combine waiver
authorities that have different approval periods.
A growing number of States provide care to dual eligible
individuals in a managed care service system. To be successful, these
systems often include community and institutional long-term services
and supports, utilize or partner with Medicare managed care plans or
fee-for-service providers to improve care continuity and individual
outcomes, and minimize disincentives to community-based or preventive
care.
The Medicaid tools available to establish such an arrangement vary,
but many States seek to use a 1915(b) Managed Care waiver concurrently
with a 1915(c) Home and Community-Based
[[Page 26381]]
Services waiver. Some States interested in offering home and community-
based supports to dual eligibles in a managed care delivery system
raised concerns with the 2-year approval period for the 1915(b) managed
care waivers and the 3- and 5-year approval periods for the 1915(c)
HCBS waiver program. These different approval periods present
administrative challenges for States that pose hurdles to operational
success.
Section 2601 of the Affordable Care Act provides a solution for
these situations, and others where States may wish to minimize
administrative and renewal requirements in order to better focus on
program implementation and quality oversight. Section 2601 of the
Affordable Care Act includes an opportunity for extended approval
periods for sections 1915(b), 1915(c), 1915(d) and 1115 of the Act.
For a State to apply for the extended approval periods, the
demonstration or waiver program must provide services for individuals
who are dually-eligible for Medicare and Medicaid. The approval of such
periods is at the Secretary's discretion, and determinations will be
made regarding applications for 5-year waivers in a manner consistent
with the interests of beneficiaries and the objectives of the Medicaid
program.
We are proposing that if a demonstration or waiver program does not
serve or excludes dually eligible individuals, the 5-year approval
period will not be available, and existing approval period requirements
will apply. In addition, we are proposing to that in order for
coverage-related waivers to be approved for 5 years periods, they must
meet all necessary programmatic, financial, and quality requirements.
The statute provides that the State's request for extension of the
waiver for additional 5-year periods will be approved unless the
Secretary determines that one or more conditions of the waiver have not
been met, that the waiver would no longer be cost neutral (for 1915(c)
waivers), cost-effective (for 1915(b) waivers) or budget neutral (for
1115 demonstrations), that it would not be efficient to extend the
waiver, or that it would no longer be consistent with the purposes of
the Medicaid program. We are proposing to require that quality
oversight mechanisms must be in place and that the State must
demonstrate compliance with applicable program requirements, as well as
the terms and conditions of the waiver as specified by the Secretary.
G. Prohibition Against Reassignment of Provider Claims
1. Prohibition on Payment Reassignment
Section 1902(a)(32) of the Act provides generally that ``no payment
under the plan for care and services provided to an individual shall be
made to anyone other than such individual or the person or institution
providing such care or service, under an assignment or power of
attorney or otherwise.''
The legislative history for this provision indicates that a primary
purpose of the provision was to curb perceived abuses that stemmed from
``factoring'' of accounts receivable by physicians and individual
practitioners. Factoring is when an individual or an organization, such
as a collection agency or service bureau, purchases accounts receivable
from a practitioner for a percentage of their face value.
Section 1902(a)(32) of the Act contains several specific exceptions
to the general principle of direct payment to individual practitioners.
There are exceptions for payments for practitioner services where
payment is made to the employer of the practitioner, and the
practitioner is required as a condition of employment to turn over fees
to the employer; payments for practitioner services furnished in a
facility when there is a contractual arrangement under which the
facility bills on behalf of the practitioner; reassignments to a
governmental agency, through a court order, or to a billing agent;
payments to a practitioner whose patients were temporarily served by
another identified practitioner; or payments for a childhood vaccine
administered before October 1, 1994.
Similar provisions were enacted in title XVIII of the Act governing
the Medicare program, at sections 1815(c) and 1842(b)(6) of the Act.
Medicare payment assignment regulations are codified at 42 CFR part
424, subpart F (Limitations on Assignment and Reassignment of Claims).
Because CMS is not proposing to amend or revise the regulations
governing assignment of Medicare payments in this notice, we do not
further discuss the Medicare rules. However, we are specifically
soliciting public comment on the issue of consistency with Medicare
payment policies, as discussed below.
2. Current Medicaid Payment Assignment Regulations
Medicaid regulations at Sec. 447.10 implement the requirements of
section 1902(a)(32) of the Act by providing that State plans can allow
payments to be made only to certain individuals or entities.
Specifically, payment may only be made to the individual practitioner
that provided the service or the recipient, if he or she is a non-cash
recipient eligible to receive payment under Sec. 447.25, or under one
of the limited exemptions. In addition, the regulations specifically
state that ``[P]ayment for any service furnished to a recipient by a
provider may not be made to or through a factor, either directly or by
power of attorney.''
3. Medicaid Payment Reassignment
The regulations at Sec. 447.10 contain several enumerated
exceptions to the general direct payment principle that implement and
interpret the statutory exceptions. There is an exception for payment
in accordance with a reassignment to a government agency, or by a court
order. There is another exception for payment to a business agent, such
as a billing service or accounting firm, that furnishes statements and
receives payments in the name of the individual practitioner, if the
business agent's compensation for this service is related to the cost
of processing the billing, and not dependent on the collection of the
payment.
There are also three exceptions for payments to individual
practitioners that reflect statutory exceptions discussed above.
4. Individual Practitioner Workforce Stability and Development Concerns
Since the direct payment principle was originally enacted in 1972
and expanded in 1977, the definition of medical assistance under
section 1905(a) of the Act has been changed to permit States to offer
coverage of categories of practitioner services, such as personal care
services, that may be viewed as unique to the Medicaid program. For
these practitioners, the Medicaid program may be the primary, or only,
source of payment. Some States have sought methods to improve and
stabilize the workforce by offering health and welfare benefits to such
practitioners, and by requiring that such practitioners pursue periodic
training.
Several States have requested that we consider adopting additional
exceptions to the direct payment principle to permit withholding from
the payment due to the individual practitioner for amounts paid by the
State directly to third parties for health and welfare benefits,
training costs, and other benefits customary for employees. These
amounts would not be retained by the State, but would be paid to third
parties on behalf of the practitioner for the stated purpose.
[[Page 26382]]
While section 1902(a)(32) of the Act does not expressly provide for
additional exceptions to the direct payment principle, we believe the
circumstances at issue were not contemplated under section 1902(a)(32)
of the Act and, therefore, that the direct payment principle should not
apply. In light of the statutory silence in addressing this
circumstance, we are proposing that the direct payment principle should
not apply because we think its application would contravene the
fundamental purpose of the provision. As noted above, the apparent
purpose of the direct payment principle was to prohibit factoring
arrangements. Therefore, we are proposing an additional exception to
describe payments that we do not see as within the intended scope of
the statutory direct payment requirement. Under this exception, a State
could claim as a provider payment amounts that are not directly paid to
the provider, but are withheld and paid on behalf of the provider, such
as health and welfare benefit contributions, training costs, or other
benefits customary for employees.
H. Definition of Home and Community-Based Settings for the 1915(k)
Community First Choice State Plan Option
Section 1915(k)(1)(A)(ii) of the Act provides that home and
community-based attendant services and supports must be provided in a
home and community-based setting. The statute specifies that home and
community-based settings do not include a nursing facility, institution
for mental diseases, or an intermediate care facility for the mentally
retarded. Through the application process of sections 1915(c) waivers,
1915(i) HCBS State plan amendments and section 1905(a) State plan
amendments, we are aware of settings other than those specified in
section 1915(k)(1)(A)(ii) of the Act that exhibit qualities of an
institutional setting.
Over the past several years, we have sought input on how to define
the characteristics of what makes a setting ``home and community-
based.'' In the section 1915(i) proposed rule published on April 4,
2008 (73 FR 18676), we proposed to define home and community settings
for this benefit. In the advanced notice of proposed rulemaking
published on June 22, 2009 (74 FR 29453), we solicited comments on
potential rulemaking for a number of areas within the section 1915(c)
waiver program. Specifically, we sought public input on strategies to
define home and community-based settings where waiver participants may
receive services. Since that time, we have facilitated and participated
in multiple stakeholder discussions related to this issue. In the
proposed rule for section 1915(k) Community First Choice (CFC) State
plan option published on February 25, 2011 (76 FR 10736), we included
the proposed language for settings in which CFC services and supports
could be provided to elicit additional comments on this issue. In an
effort to maintain consistency with this policy we also proposed
similar language in the section 1915(c) proposed rule that published on
April 15, 2011. We received many thoughtful comments on the proposed
setting provisions published in the CFC proposed rule published on
February 25, 2011. The comments received indicated to us that the
proposed setting provisions caused more confusion and disagreement than
clarity. In consideration of these comments, we decided to revise the
setting provision and publish as a new proposed rule to allow for
additional public comment before finalizing. We find the public comment
process to be valuable in our attempt to develop the best policy on
this issue for Medicaid beneficiaries.
Our policy regarding appropriate settings for the delivery of HCBS,
as evidenced by our review of section 1915(c) waiver requests, has
included a general prohibition on allowing HCBS in settings that are
located on or adjacent to the campus of a public institution. We
included this prohibition in the CFC proposed rule published on
February 25, 2011. In response to the proposed rule, many commenters
indicated strong support for this policy being incorporated into the
final regulation, along with the proposal that buildings that included
the delivery of inpatient services would not constitute acceptable
settings for delivery of HCBS. Another commenter indicated that CMS
should go a step further and in addition to excluding settings that are
co-located with current institutions, also exclude settings on the
grounds of former institutions to be clear that reorganizing and
reclassifying an institution would not meet the criteria of a
community-based setting. Many commenters believe that it is not
possible for such a setting to ever be home and community-based. Others
stated that all the characteristics of the setting should be given
weight, and that we should not establish requirements based solely on
the setting locations or types (for example, size or the presence of
institutional services offered within the same building), which would
automatically disqualify a setting from being appropriate for delivery
of HCBS.
In particular, we heard concerns that a general prohibition on
setting locations or types could significantly restrict access to
services in settings that promote aging in place for elderly
individuals, disrupt effective treatment and support opportunities for
individuals with significant brain injury, and potentially restrict
access to services in rural areas. Commenters also expressed concerns
that by focusing our policy on setting locations or physical
characteristics, we were inappropriately implying that smaller or more
scattered settings were automatically appropriate, regardless of the
quality of care or degree to which individuals receiving services in
those settings were actually able to participate in community life, be
assured of health and safety, or able to control their own daily
activities. Many commenters stated that listing the excluded settings
created unintended consequences, and could exclude living arrangements
for individuals receiving attendant services and supports that we did
not intend to prohibit, as well as permit others that are not
integrated and person-centered.
In response to public comment, we have developed proposed
regulatory language to focus primarily on those qualities we deem
essential in determining whether a setting of care is community-based.
We believe the most effective and consistent way to assure that
individuals with disabilities, regardless of age or type of disability,
are offered home and community-based services in the most integrated
setting appropriate to their needs and preferences, is to focus on the
quality and characteristics of ``home'' and ``community'' that assure
independence and integration from the individuals' perspective. We
agree with the many commenters who suggested this type of approach is
most consistent with a person-centered system for delivering care and
services.
Some commenters stated that if an individual or his or her family
``chooses'' a residence, it is therefore a ``home and community-based''
setting. We disagree, as individuals can and do choose to receive
services in institutional settings. In addition, this reasoning is
especially suspect in situations where an individual may not be given
the option of receiving services in a variety of settings outside of an
institution (for example, in their own home or apartment or, depending
on the service, in a competitive employment situation), but rather is
offered services only in a provider-owned or operated congregate
setting.
We received a range of responses as to whether disability-specific
congregate
[[Page 26383]]
settings are appropriate settings for delivery of HCBS. Some
individuals and organizations are articulate about their right to live
with anyone of their choosing, including those with disabilities.
Others maintain that the only way to end unwanted segregation and
forced ``choices'' is to forbid all segregation by disability, and that
integration by definition means interaction with non-disabled
individuals. All agree that unwilling segregation is a violation of
civil rights. The Department of Justice has initiated a number of
actions finding that States are violating the ADA by failing to provide
more integrated alternatives to individuals in congregate settings
whose residents are primarily or exclusively individuals with
disabilities. States' obligations under the ADA and Section 504 of the
Rehabilitation Act are independent of, and are not limited by, their
obligations under Medicaid, including the requirements of CFC, section
1915(c) of the Act, or section 1915(i) of the Act. States should
carefully evaluate their strategies for offering services in community-
based settings and consider whether individuals have meaningful options
beyond a segregated option.
In addition, some commenters stated that community can be defined
in many ways, and therefore that home and community-based care could
include integration into a community of peers; that is, in a
disability-specific congregate or campus setting that includes a rich
array of supports and activities within the setting of care. We
acknowledge the importance of peer relationships but we do not agree
that a community of one's peers is the same as ``community based'' in
terms of settings in which HCBS is delivered. An important purpose of
home and community-based services is to assist individuals to be able
to live fully integrated in the greater, non-disabled community.
To provide greater clarity, we are proposing language to establish
that home and community-based settings must exhibit specific qualities
to be eligible sites for delivery of home and community-based services.
We have included these provisions to move toward a stronger
articulation of the qualities that make a setting a home or truly
integrated in the broader community for individuals living with
disabilities. These are the qualities most often articulated by persons
with disabilities as key determinants of independence and community
integration. We believe that these principles of home and community-
based settings will support the use of the Medicaid program to maximize
the opportunities for individuals to access the benefits of home and
community living. We expect States electing to provide benefits under
section 1915(k) to include a definition of home and community-based
setting that incorporates these principles and will review all SPAs to
determine whether they propose settings that are home or community-
based. We will permit States with approved section 1915(k) SPAs a
reasonable transition period, a minimum of one year, to come into
compliance with the HCBS setting requirements as promulgated in our
final rule. Under the regulation, settings must exhibit the following
qualities, and such other qualities as the Secretary determines to be
appropriate, based on the needs of the individual as indicated in their
person-centered service plan, in order to be eligible sites for
delivery of home and community-based services:
The setting is integrated in, and facilitates the
individual's full access to, the greater community including
opportunities to seek employment and work in competitive integrated
settings, engage in community life, control personal resources, and
receive services in the community, like individuals without
disabilities;
The setting is selected by the individual among all
available alternatives and is identified in the person-centered service
plan;
An individual's essential personal rights of privacy,
dignity and respect, and freedom from coercion and restraint are
protected;
Individual initiative, autonomy, and independence in
making life choices, including but not limited to, daily activities,
physical environment, and with whom to interact are optimized and not
regimented; and
Individual choice regarding services and supports, and who
provides them, is facilitated.
In a provider-owned or controlled residential setting, the
following additional conditions must be met. Any modification of the
conditions, for example to address the safety needs of an individual
with dementia, must be supported by specific assessed needs and
documented in the person centered service plan:
The unit or room is a specific physical place that can be
owned, rented or occupied under another legally enforceable agreement
by the individual receiving services, and the individual has, at a
minimum, the same responsibilities and protections from eviction that
the tenants have under the landlord tenant laws of the State, county,
city, or other designated entity. We are soliciting comments as to
whether there are other protections, not addressed by landlord tenant
laws that should be included.
++ Each individual has privacy in their sleeping or living unit:
- - Units have lockable entrance doors, with appropriate staff
having keys to doors;
- - Individuals share units only at the individual's choice; and
- - Individuals have the freedom to furnish and decorate their
sleeping or living units;
++ Individuals have the freedom and support to control their own
schedules and activities, and have access to food at any time;
++ Individuals are able to have visitors of their choosing at any
time; and
++ The setting is physically accessible to the individual.
In addition to the aforementioned criteria there are two criteria
that we have not included in the proposed regulation, but wish to
solicit comment regarding whether they should be added. The first is
related to the proposed requirement that in a provider-owned or
controlled residential setting, any modification of the conditions must
be supported by specific assessed needs and documented in the person
centered service plan. This requirement is meant to address two issues:
(1) Individuals receiving HCBS must not have their independence or
freedoms abridged by providers for convenience, or well-meaning but
unnecessarily restrictive methods for providing services and supports;
and
(2) Individuals with cognitive disabilities and other impairments
may require modifications of the aforementioned conditions for their
safety and welfare.
This provision is meant to establish that service planning is the
process in which these decisions are made, rather than ad hoc on a
daily basis. While the proposed text establishes the requirement that
any modification to the conditions are supported by a specific assessed
need and documented in the person-centered service plan, we are also
considering including language to explicitly set forth these
activities. We are considering requiring the following points to be
identified: Identify a specific and individualized assessed safety
need; document less intrusive methods of meeting that have been tried
but did not work; include a clear description of the condition that is
directly proportionate to the specific assessed safety need; include
regular collection and review of data to measure
[[Page 26384]]
the ongoing effectiveness of the modification; and establishing time
limits for periodic reviews to determine if the modification can be
lifted. We solicit comment on these points and any other potential
requirements regarding modifications of the conditions set forth in
this proposed rule. We also wish to solicit comment on a second
criterion that would include a requirement that receipt of any
particular service or support cannot be a condition for living in the
unit. In discussing this specific criterion, we discovered that it
could be read one of two ways. One interpretation is that this language
does not require an individual residing in a provider owned or operated
setting to receive HCBS from the setting provider. Rather the
individual could choose another qualified individual to provide HCBS.
The other interpretation is that this language would prevent the owner
of the setting from evicting an individual because the individual
refused to accept a particular service. This interpretation could have
an effect on residential settings, such as housing programs to address
homelessness. Some of these settings include a structure in which
individuals are required to participate in treatment (substance use,
for example) as a condition of residing there. We acknowledge the
complexities that arise, when trying to support an individual's right
to choose while recognizing that there are programs and services that
have been developed as a result of identified service needs. As
indicated earlier, we are specifically soliciting comments on whether
these two criteria should be included as regulatory requirements.
Additionally, in an effort to be consistent with other authorities
providing home and community-based services, we propose to exclude
hospitals as a community setting for the provision of Community First
Choice Option. We believe this exclusion aligns with section
1915(k)(1)(A)(ii) of the Act requiring that services are provided in a
home and community-based setting and section 1915(k)(3)(B) of the Act
requiring services are provided in the most integrated setting
appropriate to the individual's needs. We would like to clarify that
the hospital prohibition applies to hospitals certified for the
provision of long-term care services. We recognize that individuals
with disabilities utilize personal attendant services and supports for
various activities of daily living and instrumental activities of daily
living. As a result, we understand that individuals will likely have a
continued need for assistance while experiencing a short-term stay in
general acute hospital settings. Therefore, while services provided in
a general acute care hospital are not CFC services, individuals who
have an assessed need for assistance with IADLs may continue to receive
such services while an inpatient in an acute hospital setting. We would
like to invite comment on this approach.
Lastly, we are proposing to include the list of the three
prohibited institutional settings specified in statute, as settings in
which CFC services and supports may not be provided, along with a
general prohibition on any other locations that have qualities of an
institutional setting, as determined by the Secretary.
In considering whether a setting has the qualities of an
institutional setting for implementation of CFC, we will exercise a
rebuttable presumption, as we will for the 1915(i) State plan HCBS
benefit, that a setting is not a home and community-based setting, and
will engage in heightened scrutiny, for any setting that is located in
a building that is also a publicly or privately operated facility that
provides inpatient institutional treatment, or in a building on the
grounds of, or immediately adjacent to, a public institution, or
disability-specific housing complex. We expect to issue further
guidance regarding such settings. Other characteristics that could
cause us to consider a setting as ``institutional'' or having the
qualities of an institution would include, but not be limited to,
settings which are isolated from the broader community, do not allow
individuals to choose whether or with whom they share a room, limit
individuals' freedom of choice on daily living experiences such as
meals, visitors, and activities, or limit individuals' opportunities to
pursue community activities.
Specifically, as with the 1915(i) proposed rule, we would invite
comments on the specific qualities we have proposed. In addition, we
are soliciting comments as to whether there are settings in addition to
those currently enumerated in statute, that are, by their nature,
location or administration inherently non-community based, regardless
of the nature of an individual's disability or age, and therefore,
should be expressly excluded from HCBS. Issuing the revised setting
provisions as a proposed notice will allow us to consider additional
perspectives from the public on the modifications. In considering
comments received pertaining to the setting provision of the section
1915(k) rule, we will also include full consideration of all comments
received regarding the aligned home and community-based setting
requirements being proposed in this rule and section 1915(i). In
recognizing the need for a consistent definition of this term across
Medicaid HCBS, it is our goal to align the final language pertaining to
this topic across the regulations pertaining to sections 1915(i),
1915(k), and 1915(c) Medicaid HCBS authorities.
Along with our overarching interest in making improvements to
Medicaid HCBS, we seek to ensure that Medicaid is supporting needed
strategies for States in their efforts to meet their obligations under
the ADA and the Supreme Court decision in Olmstead v. L.C., 527 U.S.
581 (1999). In the Olmstead decision, the Court affirmed a State's
obligations to serve individuals in the most integrated setting
appropriate to their needs. A State's obligations under the ADA and
section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act are not defined by, or limited
to, the scope or requirements of the Medicaid program. However, the
Medicaid program can provide an important opportunity to obtain Federal
funding that supports compliance with the ADA, section 504 of the
Rehabilitation Act, and Olmstead through the provision of Medicaid
services to Medicaid-eligible individuals. Additionally, we expect
States through the requirement at Sec. 441.677(b) to have a
comprehensive quality assurance system, to develop individual outcome
measures that would support the State's compliance with providing CFC
services in accordance with the individual's person-centered plan and
in a setting that meets the home and community-based setting criteria
set forth in this regulation.
III. Provisions of the Proposed Rule
To incorporate the policies and implement the statutory provisions
described above, we are proposing the following revisions:
A. State Organization and General Administration (Part 431)
In Sec. 431.54, we are proposing to add paragraphs (a)(3) and (h)
to include State plan HCBS as exceptions to comparability and community
income and resource rules.
B. Eligibility in the States, District of Columbia, the Northern
Mariana Islands, and American Samoa (Part 435) and Eligibility in Guam,
Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands (Part 436)
In Sec. 435.219 and Sec. 436.219, we are proposing to add a
provision to implement the optional categorical
[[Page 26385]]
eligibility group created by section 1902(a)(10)(A)(ii)(XXII) of the
Act for individuals, ``who are eligible for home and community-based
services under the needs-based criteria established under (1)(A) of
1915(i), or who are eligible for home and community-based services
under paragraph (6) of such section, and who will receive home and
community-based services pursuant to a State plan amendment under such
subsection.'' By using the word ``or'' we interpret that the statute
creates two distinct eligibility groups under section
1902(a)(10)(A)(ii)(XXII) of the Act with two sets of requirements, as
follows:
(1) Those who are eligible for HCBS under the needs-based criteria
established under section 1915(i)(1)(A) of the Act; or
(2) Those who are eligible for HCBS under paragraph (6) of such
section, and who will receive HCBS pursuant to a State plan amendment
under such subsection.
We believe that we have the following flexibility in defining
eligibility for the first subset of this group of individuals:
The first subset is made up of individuals who are not
otherwise eligible for Medicaid. We believe that this interpretation is
consistent with Congressional intent because this policy allows
individuals who would not otherwise be eligible for Medicaid because
they are not in a category (for example, certain adults prior to
January 1, 2014) to become Medicaid eligible and receive section
1915(i) services. The early option established by section 1902(k)(2) of
the Act covers individuals who are not otherwise categorically eligible
for Medicaid. The new group defined in section 1902(a)(10)(A)(i)(VIII)
of the Act, which goes into effect in 2014, also will cover individuals
not eligible under the existing categorical groups listed in section
1902(a)(10) of the Act.
Even though the description of the eligibility group in
the statute at section 1902(a)(10)(A)(ii)(XXII) of the Act does not
explicitly include an income cap we believe that a standard of 150
percent of the FPL, which is the same as the current income cap for
individuals eligible under the State plan receiving section 1915(i)
services, is reasonable. The needs-based criteria are described in
section 1915(i)(1)(A) of the Act, which provides additional conditions
for the provision of State plan HCBS under section 1915(i)(1) to
individuals who are eligible under the State Medicaid plan and whose
income does not exceed 150 percent of the FPL. In addition, the
amendments to section 1915(i) of the Act in section 2402(b) of the
Affordable Care Act which establish a new option to cover individuals
eligible for HCBS under a waiver, gives States this option ``in
addition to continuing to provide such services'' to individuals
satisfying the needs-based criteria. Prior to the effective date of the
new eligibility group under section 1902(a)(10)(A)(ii)(XXII) of the
Act, States could only provide HCBS under section 1915(i) to those
eligible under an existing State plan group whose income did not exceed
150 percent of the FPL and who met the needs-based criteria.
Section 1902 of the Act requires States to use methods of
determining income that are reasonable, consistent with the objectives
of the Medicaid program, simple to administer, and in the best
interests of the beneficiary. For purposes of determining income for
this group, we believe the SSI program's rules (which are currently
used in Medicaid for determining income eligibility for individuals
aged 65 or older and people with disabilities) meet these criteria.
Like the individuals covered under the SSI-related Medicaid eligibility
category, many individuals eligible under this group will have
disabilities or chronic illnesses. The SSI program provides for a
number of income disregards specifically applicable to persons with
disabilities that are not available under other program methodologies.
States may also elect to use less restrictive income methodologies than
are used under SSI. Any less restrictive methodology should apply to
all members of the group.
While the rules of the SSI program are an example of a
methodology that we believe meets the requirements for determining
income eligibility for this group, this does not preclude States from
describing other methodologies in their SPAs that they believe also
meet those requirements. We encourage States considering the use of
other methodologies to discuss them with CMS before actually submitting
a SPA.
The statute does not refer to any resource test for this
group and we are proposing that States may not apply a resource test in
determining eligibility for this subset of the new group. We believe
that not applying a resource test for this subset would be consistent
with the absence of a resource test for the eligibility group described
under section 1902(a)(10)(A)(i)(VIII) of the Act and the option for
States to cover such individuals prior to January 1, 2014.
The section 1915(i) statute does require that these
individuals must receive section 1915(i) services in order to be
eligible for Medicaid.
Once eligible for Medicaid in this group, the individual
will be eligible for all Medicaid services, not just section 1915(i)
services.
The second subset of this group consists of individuals eligible
for home and community-based services under an existing State waiver or
demonstration. In determining eligibility for individuals with income
that does not exceed 300 percent of the SSI/FBR, individuals must be
eligible for an existing section 1915(c), (d), or (e) waiver or a
waiver under section 1115, even though they do not have to receive
services under these authorities. For individuals with income that does
not exceed 300 percent of the SSI/FBR, we believe that there is little
flexibility under the statue in determining eligibility for this
subset, therefore--
The individual must be eligible for a section 1915(c)
waiver;
The State must follow eligibility and post eligibility
rules of an approved section 1915(c) waiver. More information regarding
HCBS waiver eligibility and post eligibility rules is available in the
HCBS waiver Technical Guide, online at www.hcbswaivers.net;
Income and resource rules of the special income level
group apply;
Section 1902(r)(2) of the Act income disregards do not
apply because income eligibility under the special income level group
is determined using a gross income test that caps income at 300 percent
of the SSI/FBR;
Section 1902(r)(2) of the Act resource disregards apply;
The individual must receive section 1915(i) services as a
condition of Medicaid eligibility;
If the State elects to cover individuals with income up to
300 percent of the SSI/FBR, it must elect the option under section
1915(i)(6) under the State plan; and
The individual will be eligible for all Medicaid services,
not just section 1915(i) services.
Additionally, when electing this new eligibility group States will
have multiple options. States can cover--
(1) Individuals who meet the needs-based criteria established under
section 1915(i)(1)(A) of the Act with income up to 150 percent of the
FPL and individuals who meet the needs-based criteria established under
1915(i)(1)(A) eligible for HCBS under a waiver with income up to 300
percent of the SSI/FBR; or
(2) The subset of individuals who meet the needs-based criteria
established under section 1915(i)(1)(A) of the Act with income up to
150 percent of the FPL; or
(3) The subset of individuals who meet the needs-based criteria
established under section 1915(i)(1)(A)
[[Page 26386]]
of the Act eligible for HCBS under a waiver with income up to 300
percent of the SSI/FBR.
In order for States to elect any of the options listed above with
respect to the new eligibility group, they must continue to cover
individuals described in 1915(i)(1).
This is not the first time that an eligibility group has been
treated in this manner; the aged or disabled poverty level group
described at section 1902(m)(1) of the Act permits States to cover aged
and disabled individuals, the aged only, or disabled only individuals.
We invite comment on the eligibility provisions of Sec. 435.219
and Sec. 436.219 of the regulation.
C. Services: General Provisions (Part 440)
In Sec. 440.1, we are proposing to add a reference to a new
statutory basis to read ``1915(i) HCBS furnished under a State plan to
elderly and disabled individuals under the provisions of part 441,
subpart L.''
In Sec. 440.180, we are proposing to revise the heading ``Home or
community-based services'' to read ``Home and community-based waiver
services'' to standardize the term ``home and community-based
services'' and clarify that this section concerns only HCBS provided
through 1915(c) waivers.
In part 440 subpart A, we are proposing to add Sec. 440.182,
``State plan home and community-based services'', which would define a
new optional Medicaid service for which FFP is available to States, as
specified in part 441, subpart K.
In Sec. 440.182(a), we propose that the services authorized in
section 1915(i) of the Act, and meeting the requirements outlined in
proposed subpart K, be known as ``State plan home and community-based
services.'' When referring to the specific service(s) offered under the
State plan HCBS benefit listed in Sec. 440.180(b), we use the term
``State plan HCBS.'' When referring to overall State activities under
section 1915(i) of the Act as described in subpart K, we use the term
``benefit'', or ``State plan HCBS benefit''.
In Sec. 440.182(b) and Sec. 440.182(c)(1), we propose that the
optional State plan HCBS benefit may consist of any or all of the HCBS
listed in section 1915(c)(4) for waiver programs, as specified in
regulation at Sec. 440.180. Because section 1915(i) of the Act defines
services by reference to section 1915(c) of the Act, we believe that
the regulatory requirements should be parallel, except for the
``other'' services which the Secretary has the authority to approve for
an HCBS waiver. In HCBS waivers, other services must be cost-effective
and must be necessary to prevent institutionalization. However, the
State plan HCBS does not require cost-neutrality and some individuals
will be eligible for section 1915(i) of the Act without meeting an
institutional LOC. Therefore, we list the permitted services for the
State plan HCBS benefit in Sec. 440.182 identically to the services
specified in Sec. 440.180 for HCBS waivers, except for ``other''
services. We require ``other'' services to be appropriate for
individuals who meet the needs-based criteria that the State defines
for the benefit. We further specify that the conditions set forth in
Sec. 440.180(b) for services to individuals with chronic mental
illness, and in Sec. 440.180(c) for expanded habilitation services,
apply to State plan HCBS services.
In particular, due to concern over duplication of habilitation
services and the State-defined ``other services,'' we propose to
require at Sec. 441.662(a)(7) and Sec. 441.662(a)(8) (regarding
requirements for independent assessment), explanations of the manner in
which non-duplication of services will be documented in the assessment
of each individual receiving habilitation services or Secretary
approved other services. Additionally, since some individuals may be
simultaneously receiving services through a HCBS waiver and the section
1915(i) benefit, we require in Sec. 441.662(a)(9) documentation that
the services provided through 1915(c) and 1915(i) authorities may not
be duplicative for the same individual. This would also include
coordination of assessments, service plan development, and case-
management to ensure that individuals receiving services under both
authorities are not subject to multiple assessments and service plans.
Section 1915(i) of the Act prohibits reimbursement for room and
board. At Sec. 440.182(c), we propose to state that, except for
respite care furnished in a setting approved by the State that is not
the individual's residence, no service or combination of services may
be used to furnish room and board through the State plan HCBS benefit.
When meals are furnished as an integral component of the service, we
are proposing to permit the State to consider the cost of food in the
rate it pays for the State plan HCBS, as the cost is then considered
part of the service itself. We would not consider the meal to be an
integral part of the State plan HCBS when two rates are charged to the
public, one that includes a meal and one that does not include a meal.
Finally, we propose that a State may claim FFP for a portion of the
rent and food expenses that may be reasonably attributed as a service
cost to compensate an unrelated caregiver providing State plan HCBS,
who is residing in the same household with the recipient. We propose,
as is permitted in HCBS waivers under section 1915(c)(1) and Sec.
441.310(a)(2)(ii), that FFP is available only for the reasonable
additional rent and food costs of the caregiver residing in the
recipient's home, not to support the cost of a caregiver's household in
which the recipient resides. We would therefore provide that FFP not be
available for caregiver rent and food costs when the residence is owned
or leased by the caregiver.
D. Services: Requirements and Limits Applicable to Specific Services
(Part 441)
In April 4, 2008, we issued a proposed rule in the Federal Register
titled ``Medicaid Program; Home and Community-Based State Plan
Services.'' In that proposed ruled, we specified that we would set
forth our proposals in 42 CFR part 441 initially proposed in new
subpart K titled ``State Plan Home and Community-Based Services for
Elderly and Disabled Individuals,'' consisting of Sec. 441.650 through
Sec. 441.677, which describes requirements for providing the State
plan HCBS benefit. This construction parallels that for HCBS waivers,
which are the subject of subpart G of part 441. Subsequently, we
published a proposed rule (76 FR 10736) on February 25, 2011 in the
Federal Register titled ``Medicaid Program; Community First Choice
Option,'' which also proposed the addition of subpart K to part 441.
Therefore, we are proposing to specify that the proposed provisions for
the ``State Plan Home and Community-Based Services for Elderly and
Disabled Individuals'' in subpart K under Sec. 441.550 through Sec.
441.577 be redesignated as subpart L (Sec. 441.650 through Sec.
441.677).
In this new subpart, it is necessary in several paragraphs to
indicate that certain provisions apply to an individual or an
individual's representative. To reduce redundancy, we indicate in those
paragraphs that ``individual'' means the eligible individual and, if
applicable, the individual's representative, to the extent of the
representative's authority recognized by the State. ``Individual and
representative'' more accurately convey the person-centered process
than ``individual or representative''. This provision clarifies that
there is no
[[Page 26387]]
implication that individuals will or will not have representatives.
E. Basis and Purpose (Sec. 441.650)
We set forth in Sec. 441.650 language to implement the provisions
of section 1915(i) of the Act permitting States to offer HCBS to
qualified elderly and disabled individuals under the State plan. Those
services are listed in Sec. 440.182, and are described by the State,
including any limitations of the services. This optional benefit is
known as the State plan HCBS benefit. This subpart describes what a
State Medicaid plan must provide, and defines State responsibilities.
F. State Plan Requirements (Sec. 441.653)
In Sec. 441.653, we propose that a State plan that includes HCBS
for elderly and disabled individuals must meet the requirements of this
subpart. We would require that the State plan amendment in which the
State establishes the State plan HCBS benefit satisfy the requirements
set forth in this proposed regulation.
G. Eligibility for Home and Community-Based Services Under Section
1915(i)(1) of the Act (Sec. 441.656)
We propose in Sec. 441.656(a)(1) to require that if the State
Medicaid agency elects to provide the 1915(i) HCBS benefit, it must
provide services to categorically needy individuals who are eligible
for Medicaid under an eligibility group that is covered under its State
Medicaid plan and who have income that does not exceed 150 percent of
the FPL. The State may also elect to provide the section 1915(i) HCBS
benefit to medically needy individuals.
To implement the intent of the Congress that the benefit be ``home
and community-based,'' we would require in Sec. 441.656(a) that the
individual reside in the home or community, not in an institution,
according to quality principles for community-based settings prescribed
by the Secretary. As discussed in section II.E.2. of this proposed
rule, there are a variety of living arrangements that promote
independence and community integration, as well as arrangements that do
not.
We would require in Sec. 441.656(b) that the individual must meet
the needs-based eligibility criteria as set forth in Sec. 441.659. We
propose in Sec. 441.656(c) that individuals are not eligible for the
State plan HCBS benefit until they have met all eligibility
requirements, including the need for at least one service provided
under the State plan as part of the HCBS benefit at a frequency
identified by the State. Finally, we require that, in the event that a
State elects not to apply comparability requirements to the benefit, an
individual must meet the State-defined and CMS approved targeting
criteria in order to establish eligibility.
We propose in Sec. 435.219(b) and Sec. 436.219(b) that States may
elect under section 1915(i)(6) of the Act the option to provide home
and community-based State plan services to individuals eligible under a
section 1915(c), (d), (e) or section 1115 waiver who have income up to
300 percent of the SSI/FBR.
We also propose in Sec. 441.656(e)(1) that States may elect to
follow institutional income and resource eligibility rules for the
medically needy living in the community. Nonapplication of the
requirements of section 1902(a)(10)(C)(i)(III) of the Act allows States
to treat medically needy individuals as if they are living in an
institution by not deeming income and resources from an ineligible
family member. We use the term ``not to apply'' instead of ``waive''
since this is an election made by the State and does not require a
waiver by the Secretary. We further propose that States may elect not
to apply section 1902(a)(10)(B) of the Act, concerning comparability of
services in Medicaid, which permits the State plan HCBS benefit to be
targeted towards specific populations. In this section, we indicate
that a State may elect to establish targeting criteria for the section
1915(i) benefit and for any specific services within that benefit,
subject to CMS approval, based on factors such as age, diagnosis, and/
or disability. These criteria provide States with the option to provide
State plan HCBS services to specific populations, including specific
Medicaid eligibility groups, but allows flexibility to combine multiple
target groups within one benefit and to provide different services to
each group. Targeting criteria cannot have the impact of limiting the
pool of qualified providers from which an individual would receive
services, or have the impact of requiring an individual to receive
services from the same entity from which they purchase their housing.
H. Needs-Based Criteria and Evaluation (Sec. 441.659)
The statute uses a number of terms at times interchangeably. In
general, in Sec. 441.659 we adopt the wording used most frequently in
the law, and specify a term for each requirement. For example,
regarding the terms ``assessment'' and ``evaluation,'' we would adopt
the language in section 1915(i)(1)(H)(ii) of the Act, which refers to
the ``independent evaluation'' and the ``independent assessment.''
1. Needs-Based Eligibility Criteria
In Sec. 441.659(a), we propose that States establish needs-based
criteria for determining an individual's eligibility under the State
plan for HCBS, and may establish needs-based criteria for each specific
service. We do not define support needs, as we believe that States
should have the flexibility to match eligibility criteria to the nature
of the services they would provide under the HCBS benefit. By statute,
the needs-based criteria would consist of needs for specified types of
support, such as assistance with ADLs, IADLs, or other risk factors
defined by the State. We propose to require that State-defined risk
factors affecting eligibility may be included as needs-based
eligibility criteria in the State plan amendment. While we do not
propose requirements for State-defined risk factors, we believe that as
needs-based criteria, risk factors should be related to support needs,
such as lack of availability of family members or other unpaid
caregivers willing and able to provide necessary care.
We distinguish support needs from other types of characteristics.
We propose that a distinguishing characteristic of needs-based criteria
is that they can only be ascertained for a given person through an
individual evaluation. This differentiates a targeting criterion such
as a diagnosis, which many individuals may identically share, from a
support need, which will vary widely among those individuals with the
same diagnosis.
We note that the regulation requires only that the needs-based
criteria for the State plan HCBS benefit establish the lowest threshold
of need to enroll in the benefit. There is an upper limit of need to be
eligible for the HCBS benefit only if the State so specifies in the
needs-based eligibility criteria. The more stringent institutional
criteria required in Sec. 441.559(b) of this section do not constitute
an upper limit of need to be eligible for the State plan HCBS benefit.
The institutional criteria are only a lowest threshold of need to
receive institutional services. We also note that section 1915(i)(1) of
the Act clarifies that State plan HCBS are not required to be direct
alternatives to institutional care. The statute specifically provides
that the State plan HCBS benefit does not need to meet the section
1915(c) requirement that, but for the services provided under the HCBS
waiver, the individual would require institutional care.
[[Page 26388]]
2. More Stringent Institutional and Waiver Needs-Based Criteria
In Sec. 441.659(b), we propose that the State plan HCBS benefit is
available to a State only if individuals may demonstrate a lower level
of need to obtain State plan HCBS than is required to obtain
institutional or waiver services. States that have functional LOC
criteria for institutions (that meet the requirements in Sec.
441.659(a)(1)), may have no need to modify their existing institutional
criteria so long as the needs-based eligibility criteria established
for State plan HCBS are less stringent. States without need-based
institutional LOC criteria must add need-based requirements to their
LOC assessments in order to establish the State plan HCBS benefit.
We propose in Sec. 441.659(b) to define by reference to statute
and regulation the institutions for which section 1915(i) of the Act
requires more stringent eligibility criteria. NF and ICF/MR are so
cited. We interpret the reference in section 1915(i)(1)(B) of the Act
to hospitals to mean facilities certified by Medicaid as hospitals that
are providing long-term care services or services related to the HCBS
to be provided under the benefit. The proposed regulation requires that
States have or establish for such hospitals (if any), needs-based
criteria for admission that are more stringent than those for
eligibility in the State plan HCBS benefit. We further propose, when
the State covers more than one service in the State plan HCBS benefit,
to require that any needs-based criteria for individual HCBS may not
have the effect of limiting who can benefit from the State plan HCBS in
an unreasonable way, as determined by the Secretary.
In Sec. 441.659(b), we further propose to require that the more
stringent needs-based criteria for institutions and waivers be part of
the State's LOC processes, to ensure that the criteria are uniformly
utilized. We would require that these more-stringent needs-based
criteria be submitted for comparison with the State plan amendment that
establishes the State plan HCBS benefit. We note that needs-based
criteria, as defined in Sec. 441.659(a) require an evaluation to
determine the individual's support needs. Therefore, the assessment
process for institutional levels of care that include needs-based
criteria must include an individual evaluation of support needs. We
also propose to require that the State's more stringent institutional
and waiver needs-based criteria be in effect by the effective date of
the State plan HCBS benefit.\8\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\8\ Although not included in the regulation, we would caution
states against raising the LOC due to the maintenance of eligibility
requirements included in the Affordable Care Act.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Finally, in Sec. 441.659(b)(2), we propose that if a State
modifies its institutional level of criteria in order to satisfy the
requirement that the levels of care be more stringent than the needs-
based eligibility criteria for the State plan HCBS benefit, the States
may continue to receive FFP when serving individuals who were eligible
under the previous criteria. Exemption from the more stringent criteria
is indefinite, but ends when the individual is discharged from the
facility or waiver, the individual becomes ineligible for Medicaid due
to factors unrelated to the LOC determination, or the individual no
longer meets the criteria for the applicable LOC. We note that in long-
term care facilities a transfer is not a discharge and would not cause
the individual to lose this exemption. Similarly, if an individual
transitions from an institution to a waiver it would not result in a
separate LOC, and would not cause the individual to lose this
exemption. States would determine the effect of any subsequent changes
to general LOC requirements (unrelated to the more stringent criteria)
upon individuals with this exemption. Additionally, nothing in this
subsection would prevent the State from determining whether the person
remains eligible for Medicaid based on other factors, such as income or
residency.
3. Adjustment Authority
In Sec. 441.659(c), we propose to permit States under certain
conditions to adjust, without prior approval from the Secretary, the
needs-based eligibility criteria and service criteria (if any)
established under Sec. 441.659(a), in the event that the State
experiences enrollment in excess of the number projected to be served
by the HCBS benefit. We propose a retroactive effective date, as
approved by the Secretary, for the State plan amendment modifying the
needs-based criteria under Sec. 441.659(c)(1). We set forth the
following conditions required by the statute.
The State must provide for at least 60 days notice to the
Secretary, the public, and we would propose to require, each enrollee.
Since the effect of adjusted criteria would be to reduce the scope of
services, eligibility for services, or eligibility for the entire State
plan HCBS benefit, the adjusted criteria established under this
subsection would not apply to individuals already enrolled in the State
plan HCBS. If the State also adjusts institutional levels of care, the
adjusted institutional levels of care may not be less stringent than
the institutional LOC prior to the effective date of the State plan
HCBS benefit.
Additionally, in Sec. 441.659(b), we indicate that any changes to
the institutional LOC criteria under the State adjustment authority
contained in Sec. 441.659(c) are subject to the same requirements as
an adjustment to the institutional LOC criteria under Sec. 441.659(b).
In Sec. 441.659(c), we further propose to explicitly require that
the adjusted needs-based eligibility criteria for the State plan HCBS
benefit must be less stringent than needs-based institutional LOC
criteria in effect at the time of the adjustment.
We propose that the notice to the Secretary be submitted as a State
plan amendment. In order to implement the adjustment authority without
prior approval of the Secretary, the Secretary would approve a State
plan amendment adjusting the needs-based HCBS benefit eligibility
criteria with a retroactive effective date, as early as 60 days after
the State notified each enrollee, the Secretary, and the public, (or
whichever is later). Under the provision of section 1915(i)(1)(D)(ii)
of the Act, the Secretary will evaluate the State's adjusted criteria
for compliance with the provisions of this paragraph and subpart L. We
also note that while the State may under this provision implement the
adjusted criteria as early as 60 days after notification and before the
State plan amendment is retroactively approved, the State is at risk
for any actions it takes that are later disapproved.
Finally, we would require that the State notify affected
individuals of their right to a fair hearing in accordance with 42 CFR
part 431, subpart E.
4. Independent Evaluation and Determination of Eligibility
In Sec. 441.659(d), we propose that eligibility for the State plan
HCBS benefit be determined by an independent evaluation of each
individual, applying the general eligibility requirements in Sec.
441.656 of this subpart, and the needs-based criteria that the State
has established under Sec. 441.659(a). Independence of the review
requires meeting the conflict of interest standards set forth in Sec.
441.568, where provider qualifications for evaluators are specified.
The evaluation must assess an individual's support needs and
strengths. We interpret this provision of
[[Page 26389]]
the statute to indicate that the evaluation process draws conclusions
about supports that the individual requires because of age or
disability, and supports that the individual does not require because
of abilities to perform those functions independently. The evaluation
compares those conclusions with the needs-based eligibility criteria
for the State plan HCBS benefit to determine eligibility for the
benefit. Section 1915(i)(1)(D)(i) of the Act provides that the State
may take into account the need for significant assistance to perform
ADLs, indicating that the statute does not require that eligibility be
dependent upon assistance for ADLs.
We note that appraisal of whether an individual has need for, and
meets additional needs-based criteria (if any) for specific HCBS
offered under the benefit, is part of the independent assessment and
service plan development process. However, this assessment affects
eligibility for the benefit in that we propose at Sec.
441.656(a)(ii)(5) that individuals are considered enrolled in the State
plan HCBS benefit only if they are assessed to require at least one
home and community-based service offered under the State plan benefit
in addition to meeting the eligibility and needs-based criteria for the
benefit.
The evaluation process designed by the State would reflect the
nature of the State plan HCBS benefit designed by the State. However,
in order to meet the forgoing requirements, all independent evaluations
require specific information about each individual's support needs,
sufficient to draw the appropriate conclusions. In some cases this
information may be well documented and current in the individual's
existing records. In other cases, we would require that the evaluator
obtain this information by whatever means are appropriate to secure a
valid appraisal of the individual's current needs. This requirement
could include professional assessment of certain functional abilities.
State evaluation procedures that rely solely on review of medical
records would not meet these requirements.
5. Periodic Redetermination
In Sec. 441.659(e), we propose that individuals receiving the
State plan HCBS benefit must be reevaluated at a frequency defined by
the State, but not less than every 12 months, to determine whether the
individuals continue to meet eligibility requirements. The independent
reevaluations must meet the requirements for initial independent
evaluations specified in Sec. 441.659(d).
I. Independent Assessment (Sec. 441.662)
In Sec. 441.662, we propose requirements for independent
assessment of need of each individual who has been determined by the
independent evaluation to be eligible for the State plan HCBS benefit.
The purpose of the assessment is to obtain, in combination with the
findings of the independent eligibility evaluation, all the information
necessary to establish a service plan. The assessment is based on the
needs of the individual, which we believe precludes assessment
protocols that primarily determine diagnoses, or only assess function.
Assessment protocols must not assign supports automatically by
functional limitation. The independent assessment must determine the
specific supports needed to address the individual's unique
circumstances and needs, including other services available through
Medicaid and other State and Federal programs.
The assessment also applies the State's needs-based criteria (if
any) for each service. We propose that an individual be considered
enrolled in the State plan HCBS benefit only if the assessment finds
that the individual needs and meets the needs-based criteria (if any)
for at least one State plan HCBS. This proposed requirement is to
provide States with a mechanism to prevent the situation of an
individual being eligible for the State plan HCBS benefit but not able
to receive any of the services it offers; or for establishing Medicaid
eligibility through the benefit without actually receiving State plan
HCBS services. Such a circumstance could, among other problems, be of
no utility to the individual, and may make it difficult for the State
to meet an assessed need. Furthermore, the eligibility group defined in
section 1902(a)(10)(a)(ii)(XXII) of the Act requires an individual to
receive State plan HCBS in order to establish Medicaid eligibility
through that category.
We propose to require in Sec. 441.662(a)(1) that the assessment
include a face-to-face meeting with the individual (``individual''
meaning in this context, if applicable, the individual and the
individual's authorized representative). We further propose that a
``face-to-face'' meeting could be performed through telemedicine or
other information technology medium, if the health care professional
performing the assessment meets provider qualifications that includes
additional training requirements for the operation of the information
technology, the individual receives support during the assessment
including the use of any necessary on-site staff, and the individual
provides informed consent. In Sec. 441.662(a)(1)(i), we propose to
require that the assessment is performed by an agent that is
independent and qualified as defined in Sec. 441.668. The assessment
is to be guided by best practice and research on effective strategies
that result in improved health and quality of life outcomes. We further
propose that the assessment includes consultation, as appropriate, with
other responsible parties. The assessment must include an examination
of the individual's relevant history, medical records, and care and
support needs, including the findings from the independent eligibility
evaluation.
If self-direction of services is offered by the State and elected
by the individual, the independent assessment must include a self-
direction appraisal as described in Sec. 441.674.
For individuals receiving habilitation services, we propose to
require documentation that no services are provided under Medicaid that
would otherwise be available to the individual, specifically including
but not limited to services available to the individual through a
program funded under section 110 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973. We
believe that these documentation requirements would provide a clear
method for States to comply with Federal requirements, focus only on
the individuals for whom these circumstances could apply, and would not
add significantly to the burden of the assessment. We further propose
that the assessment must ensure that services received through
Secretary-approved ``other'' services are not duplicative of any other
services provided through the Medicaid State-plan or through another
State or Federal program. We note that extended State plan services
would not be considered duplicative, since those services are not
available to individuals through the State plan. We further note that
payments must also be in accordance with section1903(c) of the Act.
Finally, we require that the assessment must ensure that any individual
simultaneously enrolled in State plan HCBS and receiving HCBS through a
waiver does not receive duplicative services. We would include case
management, assessment, and service plan development in the services
that may not be duplicative. This does not necessarily mean that an
individual cannot have more than one case manager, but instead is meant
to ensure
[[Page 26390]]
that services are coordinated across multiple programs, and that
individuals are not required to develop multiple service plans.
Finally, in Sec. 441.662(b), we propose to require that the
independent assessment of need is conducted at least every 12 months
and as needed when the individual's needs and circumstances change
significantly, in order to revise the service plan.
J. Service Plan (Sec. 441.665)
In Sec. 441.665 we propose to require that based on the
independent assessment specified in Sec. 441.662, the State develops
(or approves, if the plan is developed by others) a service plan
through a person-centered planning process.
We propose that the service plan must be developed jointly with the
individual. While we propose several specific requirements for the
process of developing a service plan, we note that the intent of these
requirements is to ensure a process with shared authority between the
individual and the agency or agent. To achieve this intent, States must
affirmatively and creatively work to establish such shared authority.
The assessment must include consultation with appropriate persons.
While we include examples, we do not propose any required or excluded
category of persons to consult. When the service plan is finalized
between the parties, a written copy is provided to the individual.
Also, in Sec. 441.665(a), we propose certain content to be
required in the service plan. The person-centered service plan must
identify the specific State plan HCBS to be provided to the individual,
that take into account the individual's strengths, preferences, needs
(clinical and support), and desired outcomes. We are proposing that the
service plan should be constructed in a manner that promotes service
delivery and independent living in the most integrated setting
possible. Therefore, we propose that the plan must not only address
medical and support needs, but should also reflect other individual
goals related to community living to the extent that services covered
under the State Medicaid plan would be available to support such goals.
In the planning process, the degree of assistance with ADLs available
to the individual outside of the State plan HCBS benefit may be taken
into account in planning the scope and frequency of HCBS to be
provided. Thus, the service plan provides for all needed services to
the individual while preventing provision of duplicative or unnecessary
services.
We propose a single service plan for both self-directed and non
self-directed services. When individuals self-direct some or all of
their HCBS, the service plan includes the information required in Sec.
441.674.
We further propose to require that the service plan be reviewed and
revised at least every 12 months, and as needed when the individual's
circumstances or needs change significantly.
Finally, we propose that the individual must share the authority
for developing and implementing the service plan. This shared authority
increases the individual's self-efficacy and involvement in the
activities and outcomes contained within the service plan.
K. Provider Qualifications (Sec. 441.668)
In Sec. 441.668, we propose to require that the State provide
assurance that necessary safeguards have been taken to protect the
health and welfare of the enrollees in State plan HCBS by provision of
adequate standards for all types of providers of HCBS. States must
define qualifications for providers of HCBS services, and for those
persons who conduct independent evaluation of eligibility for State
plan HCBS, independent assessment of need, and are involved with
developing the service plan.
We propose at Sec. 441.668(b) and (c) to require minimum
qualifications for individuals and agencies who conduct independent
evaluation of eligibility for State plan HCBS, independent assessment
of need, and are involved with developing the service plan. We will
refer to these individuals and entities involved with determining
access to care as ``agents'' to distinguish this role from providers of
services. We believe that these qualifications are important safeguards
for individuals enrolled in the State plan HCBS benefit and propose
that they be required whether activities of the agents are provided as
an administrative activity or whether some of the activities are
provided as a Medicaid service. At a minimum, these qualifications
include conflict of interest standards, and for providers of assessment
and service plan development, these qualifications must include
training in assessment of individuals whose physical or mental
condition may trigger a need for HCBS and supports, and an ongoing
knowledge of current best practices to improve health and quality of
life outcomes.
The minimum conflict of interest standards we propose to require
ensure that the agent is not a relative of the individual or
responsible for the individual's finances or health-related decisions.
The standards also require that the agent must not hold financial
interest in any of the entities that provide care. Relatives and
decision makers are required to be permitted in the assessment and
planning process, as appropriate, but we do not see any necessity or
value in family members being responsible for evaluation, assessment,
or planning. Our experience with HCBS in waivers indicates that
assessment and service plan development should not be performed by
providers of the services prescribed. However, we recognize that in
some circumstances there are acceptable reasons for a single provider
of service that performs all of those functions. In this case, the
Secretary would require the State Plan to include provisions assuring
separation of functions within the provider entity.
L. Definition of Individual's Representative (Sec. 441.671)
In Sec. 441.671, we propose to define the term ``individual's
representative'' to encompass any party that is authorized to represent
the individual for the purpose of making personal or health care
decisions, either under State law or under the policies of the State
Medicaid agency. We do not propose to regulate the relationship between
an individual enrolled in the State plan HCBS benefit and his or her
authorized representative, but note that States should have policies to
assess for abuse or excessive control and ensure that representatives
conform to applicable State requirements. We note that States must not
refuse to allow a freely-chosen person to serve as a representative
unless the State has tangible evidence that the representative is not
acting in the best interest of the individual, or that the
representative is incapable of performing the required functions.
M. Self-Directed Services (Sec. 441.674)
We propose in Sec. 441.674 to permit States to offer an election
for self-directing HCBS. We propose regulations containing the specific
requirements for self-direction found in section 1915(i)(1)(G)(iii) of
the Act. In Sec. 441.674(a), we define ``self-direction.'' Provisions
related to self-direction apply to an individual or an individual's
representative. In Sec. 441.674(b), we propose that when an individual
chooses self-direction, the independent assessment and person-centered
planning required under Sec. 441.662 and Sec. 441.665 would include
examination of the support needs of the individual to self-direct the
purchase of, or control the receipt of, such services.
[[Page 26391]]
The evaluation should not reject election to self-direct based solely
on the individual's disability or a manifestation of his or her
disability. We therefore propose to require that the evaluation for
self-direction result in a determination of ability to self-direct both
with and without specified supports.
These regulations are consistent with our policy for self-direction
under section 1915(c) HCBS waivers. We propose to require in Sec.
441.674(b) that the service plan indicate the HCBS to be self-directed
and the methods by which the individual will plan, direct, or control
the services; the role of family or others who will participate in the
HCBS; and risk management techniques. Our experience with HCBS waivers
indicates that contingency plans are an important protection for the
individual, in the absence of an agency that would otherwise be
responsible for absent workers or other common problems. Contingency
plans are most effective when designed for the unique circumstances of
each self-directing individual. We propose that the service plan
describe the process for facilitating voluntary and involuntary
transition from self-direction. When the service plan is finalized
between the parties, a written copy is provided to the individual, as
required in the proposed plan on care requirements at Sec. 441.665(a).
In Sec. 441.674(c) and (d), we define self-direction of services
in terms of employer authority and budget authority, as we have with
self-directed HCBS in Medicaid section 1915(c) waivers. In Sec.
441.674(c), employer authority is defined as the ability to select,
manage, or dismiss providers of the State plan HCBS. We propose that
the service plan must specify the authority to be assumed by the
individual and the individual's representative, any parties responsible
for functions outside the assumed authority, and the financial
management supports to be provided as required in Sec. 441.674(e).
In Sec. 441.674(d), we propose to define budget authority as an
individualized budget which identifies the dollar value of the services
and supports under the control and direction of the individual. We
propose that the service plan must specify the method for calculating
the dollar values in the budget, a process for adjusting the budget to
reflect changes in assessment and service plan, a procedure to evaluate
expenditures under the budget, and the financial management supports,
as required in Sec. 441.674(e), to be provided. We clarify here that
while budget authority grants control of expenditures to the
individual, it does not include performing the transactions or
conveying cash to the individual or representative.
In Sec. 441.674(e), we propose to define functions in support of
self-direction that the State must offer, based on our experience with
self-directed HCBS in section 1915(c) waivers and section 1115
demonstrations. These provisions are required in order to equip
individuals for success in managing their services, and to comply with
Federal, State, and local requirements, particularly the many tax,
labor, and insurance issues that arise when the self-directing
individual is the employer of record. Supports for self-direction
should provide the technical expertise and business functions that will
free individuals to exercise choice and control over their experience
of the HCBS provided to them.
N. State Plan HCBS Administration: State Responsibilities and Quality
Improvement (Sec. 441.677)
1. State Responsibilities
We would require in Sec. 441.677(a)(1)(i) that the State annually
provide CMS with the projected number of individuals to be enrolled in
the benefit, and the actual number of unduplicated individuals enrolled
in the State plan HCBS benefit in the previous year.
Section 1915(i) of the Act authorizes a State to elect not to apply
comparability requirements, thus permitting States to target the entire
1915(i) benefit, specific services within the benefit, or both. We
clarify in Sec. 441.677(a)(1)(ii) that the State may not limit
enrollee access to services in the benefit for any reason other than
assessed need or targeting criteria. This includes the requirement that
services be provided to all individuals who are assessed to meet the
targeting criteria and needs-based criteria, regardless of income. This
is an important distinction between the limits States place on the
services to be offered when they design the benefit, as opposed to
limiting access to the services that are in the benefit for particular
enrolled individuals. As discussed in section II.E.1 of this proposed
rule, States have a number of permitted methods to control utilization.
We propose that once an individual is found eligible and enrolled in
the benefit, access to offered services can only be limited by medical
necessity. Medical necessity in the State plan HCBS benefit is
determined by the needs-based criteria, as evaluated by the independent
assessment and person centered service plan. By not limiting access, we
mean that an enrollee must receive any or all of the HCBS offered by
the benefit, in scope and frequency up to any limits on those services
defined in the State plan, to the degree the enrollee is determined to
need them. Enrollees should receive no more, and no fewer, HCBS than
they are determined to require. We note that one function of the
service plan as proposed at Sec. 441.665(a)(3) is to prevent the
provision of unnecessary, duplicative, or inappropriate care.
2. Administration
We propose in Sec. 441.677(a)(2)(i) an option for presumptive
payment. In accordance with section 1915(i) of the Act, the State may
provide for a period of presumptive payment, not to exceed 60 days, for
evaluation of eligibility for the State plan HCBS benefit and
assessment of need for HCBS. This period of presumptive payment would
be available for individuals who have been determined to be Medicaid
eligible, and whom the State has reason to believe may be eligible for
the State plan HCBS benefit. We propose that FFP would be available for
evaluation and assessment as administration of the approved State plan
prior to an individual's determination of eligibility for and receipt
of other 1915(i) services. If the individual is found not eligible for
the State plan HCBS benefit, the State may claim the evaluation and
assessment as administration, even though the individual would not be
considered to have participated in the benefit for purposes of
determining the annual number of individuals served by the benefit. FFP
would not be available during this presumptive period for receipt of
State plan HCBS.
In Sec. 441.677(a)(2)(ii), we indicate that a State may elect to
phase-in the provision of services or the enrollment of individuals if
the State also elects not to apply comparability requirements and to
target the benefit to specific populations. However, there is no
authority to limit the numerical enrollment in the benefit or to create
waiting lists. Therefore, we propose that any phase-in of services may
not be based on a numerical cap on enrollees. Instead, a State may
choose to phase-in the benefit or the provision of specific services
based on the assessed need of individuals, the availability of
infrastructure to provide services, or both. Infrastructure is defined
as the availability of qualified providers or of physical structures
and information technology necessary to provide any service or set of
services.
A State that elects to phase-in the benefit must submit a plan,
subject to
[[Page 26392]]
CMS approval, that details the criteria used for phasing in the
benefit. In the event that a State elects to phase-in the benefit based
on needs, all individuals who meet the criteria described in the phase-
in plan must receive services. If a State elects to phase-in services
based upon infrastructure, the plan must describe the capacity limits,
strategies to increase capacity, and must assure that services will be
provided to all individuals who are able to acquire a willing and
qualified provider. Any phase-in plan must provide assurance that the
benefit, and all included services, will be available statewide to all
eligible individuals within the first 5-year approval period.
In Sec. 441.677(a)(2)(iii), we propose that a State plan amendment
submitted to establish the State plan HCBS benefit must include a
reimbursement methodology for each covered service. In some States,
reimbursement methods for self-directed services may differ from the
same service provided without self-direction. In such cases, the
reimbursement methodology for the self-directed services must also be
described.
In Sec. 441.677(a)(2)(iv), we propose that the State Medicaid
agency describe the line of authority for operating the State plan HCBS
benefit. The State plan HCBS benefit requires several functions to be
performed in addition to the service(s) provided, such as eligibility
evaluation, assessment, and developing a service plan. To the extent
that the State Medicaid agency delegates these functions to other
entities, we propose that the agency describe the methods by which it
will retain oversight and responsibility for those activities, and for
the operation and quality improvement of the benefit as a whole.
In Sec. 441.677(a)(2)(v), we include a provision regarding the
effective dates of amendments with substantive changes. Substantive
changes may include, but are not limited to changes in eligible
populations, constriction of service amount, duration or scope, or
other modifications as determined by the Secretary. We would add
regulatory language reflective of our guidance that 1915(i) amendments
with changes that CMS determines to be substantive may only take effect
on or after the date when the amendment is approved by CMS, and must be
accompanied by information on how the State has assured smooth
transitions and minimal adverse impact on individuals impacted by the
change.
In Sec. 441.677(a)(2)(vi), we indicate that State plan amendments
including targeting criteria are subject to a 5-year approval period
and that successive approval periods are subject to CMS approval,
contingent upon State adherence to Federal requirements. In order to
renew State plan HCBS for an additional 5-year period, the State must
provide a written request for renewal to CMS at least 180 days prior to
the end of each approval period.
3. Quality Improvement Strategy
We propose in Sec. 441.677(b) the guidelines for quality assurance
required in the statute at section 1915(i)(1)(H)(i) of the Act. We
propose to require a State, for quality assurance purposes, to maintain
a quality improvement strategy for its State plan HCBS benefit. The
State's quality improvement strategy should reflect the nature and
scope of the benefit the State will provide.
We propose that the State plan HCBS benefit include a quality
improvement strategy consisting of a continuous quality improvement
process, and outcome measures for program performance, quality of care,
and individual experience, as approved and prescribed by the Secretary,
and applicable to the nature of the benefit.
In Sec. 441.677(b), we propose to require States to have program
performance measures, appropriate to the scope of the benefit, designed
to evaluate the State's overall system for providing HCBS. ``Program
performance'' measures can be described as process and infrastructure
measures, such as whether plans of care are developed in a timely and
appropriate manner, or whether all providers meet the required
qualifications to provide services under the benefit. In Sec.
441.677(b)(1), we also propose to require States to have quality of
care measures as approved or prescribed by the Secretary. Quality of
care measures may focus on program standards, systems performance, and
individual outcomes.
P. Section 2601 of the Affordable Care Act: 5-Year Period for
Demonstration Projects: Waiver Requirements (Sec. 430.25)
Section 2601 of the Affordable Care Act provides the opportunity
for the Secretary to approve certain waivers for periods of up to 5
years. The proposed regulation includes an addition at Sec.
430.25(h)(2)(i) and Sec. 430.25(h)(2)(ii) to indicate the availability
of extended approval periods for initial section 1915(c) waivers which
are currently approved for 3-year periods (the renewals are already 5-
year intervals), and for initial and renewal section 1915(b) waivers,
which are currently approved for 2-year periods. In all cases, the
extended approval period is only available for waivers that provide
medical assistance to dual eligible individuals, and that meet all
applicable statutory, regulatory, quality and programmatic
requirements. The current Sec. 430.25(h)(2)(ii) also includes
reference to section 1916 of the Act, which remains unchanged by the
Affordable Care Act. As such, we have created a new Sec.
430.25(h)(2)(iii) to retain the original regulatory text specific to
section 1916 of the Act.
Q. Prohibition Against Reassignment of Provider Claims (Sec. 447.10)
Under title XIX of the Act, State Medicaid programs generally can
only pay for Medicaid-covered practitioner services through direct
payments to the treating practitioners. States can develop payment
rates that include considerations for costs related to health and
welfare benefits, training, and other costs. Consistent with the
statutory provision at section 1902(a)(32) of the Act, and reflected in
current regulations at Sec. 447.10, the entire rate must be paid to
the individual practitioner who provided the service, unless certain
statutory exceptions apply.
With respect to classes of practitioners for whom the State's
Medicaid program is the only or primary payer, the ability of the State
to ensure a stable and qualified workforce may be adversely affected by
the inability to withhold funds and make payments on behalf of the
individual practitioner for health and welfare benefit contributions,
training costs, and other benefits customary for employees. Withholding
funds for these purposes is an efficient and effective method for
ensuring that the workforce has provision for basic needs and is
adequately trained for their functions. Direct payment of funds to
third parties on behalf of the practitioner may simplify program
operations for the State and be viewed as advantageous by the
practitioner. In addition, direct payment of funds to third parties on
behalf of the practitioners may ensure that beneficiaries have greater
access to such practitioners and higher quality services.
The statutory direct payment provision was intended to address the
issue of factoring, and there is no indication that its purpose was to
restrict State flexibility in investing in its workforce or quality
improvement programs. In particular, we do not believe that the
statutory direct payment provision addresses the unique circumstances
that arise when the Medicaid program is the primary source of
reimbursement for a class of practitioners.
[[Page 26393]]
We propose to interpret the scope of the direct payment provision
to not include the circumstance when the Medicaid program operates as a
primary payer for a class of practitioners, and assumes the ordinary
responsibilities required in that circumstance to assure workforce
stability and quality. This exception from the scope of the direct
payment provision would be limited to situations in which payment is
made under a State law that authorizes payments on behalf of an
individual practitioner to a third party for health and welfare benefit
costs, training costs, or other benefits customary for employees. The
legislative history of section 1902(a)(32) of the Act indicates that
such a situation is not within the scope of ``assignments'' or ``powers
of attorney'' that were considered at the time, or even of the same
nature. Instead, such payments are more of an ordinary arrangement to
further workforce stability and quality.
The proposed change would permit each State the option to elect
such payment arrangements to the extent that the State determines that
they would further State objectives; however, States would not be
required to elect the payment arrangements. States will need to review
their individual circumstances and workforce needs to determine if the
measures would help ensure a stable, high-performing workforce for the
benefit of the entire Medicaid population seeking the services.
Within broad Federal Medicaid law and regulation, CMS has long
sought to ensure maximum State flexibility to design State-specific
payment methodologies that help ensure a strong, committed, and well-
trained work force. Currently, certain categories of Medicaid covered
services, for which Medicaid is a primary payer, such as home health
and personal care services, suffer from especially high rates of
turnover and low levels of participation. This proposed rule would
provide to States additional tools to help foster a stable and high-
performing workforce. Medicaid programs would be able, as authorized
under State law, to deduct from the practitioner's reimbursement and
remit to third parties amounts for health and welfare benefit
contributions, training costs, and other benefits customary for
employees.
We believe that permitting such payment arrangements would enhance
the ability of the practitioners to perform their functions as health
care professionals. The Medicaid program, at both the State and Federal
levels, has a strong interest in ensuring the development and
maintenance of a committed, well-trained workforce.
We propose to provide States this flexibility by enumerating an
additional exception to the payment limitations for individual
practitioners at Sec. 447.10(g). Specifically, the proposed rule would
add a new provision at Sec. 447.10(g)(4) to define permissible
payments in the case of individual practitioners for whom the Medicaid
program is the primary source of revenue to include payment authorized
by State law to be made to a third party on behalf of the individual
practitioner for health and welfare benefit contributions, training
costs, and other benefits customary for employees.
To the extent that State laws require practitioners to participate
in such a payment arrangement, a State could elect in its Medicaid
State plan that the payment arrangement would be automatic. If,
however, State law does not require participation by individual
practitioners in such payment arrangements, but authorizes voluntary
participation, the State would only be allowed to deduct amounts from
the payment rate and forward them to a third party with the express
permission of each individual practitioner. In that instance, the
individual practitioner would need to authorize the payment arrangement
on a voluntary basis, prior to any deduction from the provider payment.
In either case, the amounts remitted to a third party would be on
behalf of the individual practitioner.
As proposed, a State would not be able to claim as a separate
expenditure under its approved Medicaid State plan amounts that are
withheld from payments to individual practitioners for these cost
categories (health and welfare benefit contributions, training, and
similar benefits customary for employees). Under the proposed rule,
should a State wish to recognize such costs, they would need to be
included as part of the rate paid for the service in order to eligible
for Federal matching funds. No Federal matching funds would available
for such amounts apart from the Federal match available for rate paid
by the State for the medical assistance service. These costs could not
be claimed by the Medicaid agency separately as an administrative
expense. As a result, the proposed rule would have little to no impact
on Federal Medicaid funding levels.
We are specifically soliciting public comments on the extent to
which the proposed payment arrangements would benefit States and
practitioners, as well as any adverse impacts it may have that have not
been anticipated. Additionally, we are seeking comments on other
exceptions to the general prohibition on assignment of practitioner
claims that might similarly simplify and streamline States' operations
of their Medicaid plans and payment processes. Finally, we are
specifically requesting comments on the intersection between Medicaid
and Medicare regulations governing assignment of payments and any
potential contradictions therein.
R. Section 2401 of the Affordable Care Act: Community First Choice
State Plan Option: Home and Community-Based Setting Requirements (Sec.
441.530)
Section 1915(k)(1)(A)(ii) of the Act provides that a home and
community-based setting does not include a nursing facility,
institution for mental diseases, or an intermediate care facility for
the mentally retarded. We propose at Sec. 441.530 to adopt this
statutory language in our regulations. Additionally, to provide greater
clarity, we are proposing language to establish that home and
community-based settings must exhibit specific qualities to be eligible
sites for delivery of home and community-based services.
IV. Response to Comments
Because of the large number of public comments we normally receive
on Federal Register documents, we are not able to acknowledge or
respond to them individually. We will consider all comments we receive
by the date and time specified in the DATES section of this preamble,
and, when we proceed with a subsequent document, we will respond to the
comments in the preamble to that document.
V. Collection of Information Requirements
Under the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995, we are required to
provide 60-day notice in the Federal Register and solicit public
comment before a collection of information requirement is submitted to
the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) for review and approval. In
order to fairly evaluate whether an information collection should be
approved by OMB, section 3506(c)(2)(A) of the Paperwork Reduction Act
of 1995 requires that we solicit comment on the following issues:
The need for the information collection and its usefulness
in carrying out the proper functions of our agency.
The accuracy of our estimate of the information collection
burden.
The quality, utility, and clarity of the information to be
collected.
Recommendations to minimize the information collection
burden on the affected public, including automated collection
techniques.
We are soliciting public comment on each of these issues for the
following
[[Page 26394]]
sections of this document that contain information collection
requirements:
A. ICRs Regarding Individuals Receiving State Plan Home and Community-
Based Services (Sec. 435.219(b) and Sec. 436.219(b))
To cover the categorically needy eligibility group, the State would
be required to submit a SPA and may elect to cover individuals who meet
certain requirements in Sec. 435.219(a) or Sec. 436.219(a). The
burden associated with this requirement is the time and effort put
forth by the State to complete, review, process and transmit/submit the
pre-print which describes the eligibility criteria for the group. We
estimate it would take each State 30 hours to meet this one-time
requirement. We estimate that on an annual basis, 3 States will submit
a SPA to meet these requirements; therefore, the total annual burden
hours for this requirement is 90 hours. We believe that a State
employee, with pay equivalent to GS-13 step one ($34.34 per hour) would
be responsible for this requirement. Thus, the cost for each State is
anticipated to be $1,030; this equates to an annual cost of $3,091.
B. ICRs Regarding Eligibility for State Plan HCBS (Sec. 441.656)
If a State elects to target the benefit to specific populations,
Sec. 441.656(b)(2) requires submission of targeting criteria to CMS.
The burden associated with this requirement is the time and effort put
forth by the State to establish such criteria. We estimate it would
take 1 State 10 hours to meet this one-time requirement. We estimate
that on an annual basis, 3 States will submit a SPA to offer the State
plan HCBS benefit that targets specific populations, and be affected by
this requirement; therefore, the total annual burden hours for this
requirement is 30 hours. We believe that a State employee, with pay
equivalent to GS-13 step one ($34.34 per hour) would be responsible for
this requirement. Thus, the cost for each State is anticipated to be
$343; this equates to an annual cost of $1,030.
C. ICRs Regarding Needs-Based Criteria and Evaluation (Sec. 441.659)
Section 441.659(a) requires a State to establish needs-based
criteria for determining an individual's eligibility under the State
plan for the HCBS benefit, and may establish needs-based criteria for
each specific service. The burden associated with this requirement is
the time and effort put forth by the State to establish such criteria.
We estimate it would take 1 State 24 hours to meet this requirement. We
estimate that on an annual basis, 3 States will submit a SPA to offer
the State plan HCBS benefit, and be affected by this one-time
requirement; therefore, the total annual burden hours for this
requirement is 72 hours. We believe that a State employee, with pay
equivalent to GS-13 step one ($34.34 per hour) would be responsible for
this requirement. Thus, the cost for each responding State is
anticipated to be $824; this equates to an annual cost of $2,472.
Section 441.659(b) reads that if a State defines needs-based
criteria for individual State plan home and community-based services,
the needs-based institutional eligibility criteria must be more
stringent than the combined effect of needs-based State plan HCBS
benefit eligibility criteria and individual service criteria. Section
441.659(b)(1)(ii) requires the State to submit the more stringent
criteria to CMS for inspection with the State plan amendment that
establishes the State Plan HCBS benefit.
The burden associated with this requirement is the time and effort
for the State to define the more stringent criteria and submit it to
CMS along with the State plan amendment that establishes the HCBS
benefit. We anticipate 3 States would be affected by this requirement
on an annual basis and it would require 1 hour to prepare and submit
this information. The one-time burden associated with this requirement
is 3 hours. We believe that a State employee, with pay equivalent to
GS-13 step one ($34.34 per hour) would be responsible for this
requirement. Thus, the cost for each State is anticipated to be $34;
this equates to an annual cost of $102. This would be a one time burden
for each responding State.
Section 441.659(c) reads that a State may modify the needs-based
criteria established under paragraph (a) of this section, without prior
approval from the Secretary, if the number of individuals enrolled in
the State plan HCBS benefit exceeds the projected number submitted
annually to CMS.
Section 441.659(c)(1) requires the State to provide at least 60
days notice of the proposed modification to the Secretary, the public,
and each individual enrolled in the State plan HCBS benefit. The State
notice to the Secretary will be considered an amendment to the State
plan.
Section 441.659(c)(2) requires the State notice to the Secretary be
submitted as an amendment to the State plan.
The burden associated with the requirements found under Sec.
441.659(c) is the time and effort put forth by the State to modify the
needs-based criteria and provide notification of the proposed
modification to the Secretary. We estimate it would take 1 State 24
hours to make the modifications and provide notification. This would be
a one-time burden.
The total annual burden of these requirements (Sec. 441.659(c),
Sec. 441.659(c)(1), and Sec. 441.659(c)(2)) would vary according to
the number of States who choose to modify their needs-based criteria.
We do not expect any States to make this modification in the next 3
years, thus there is no anticipated burden.
Section 441.659(d) states that eligibility for the State plan HCBS
benefit is determined, for individuals who meet the requirements of
Sec. 441.656(a)(1) through (5), through an independent evaluation of
each individual that meets the specified requirements. Section
441.659(d)(5) requires the evaluator to obtain information from
existing records, and when documentation is not current and accurate,
obtain any additional information necessary to draw a valid conclusion
about the individual's support needs. Section 441.659(e) requires at
least annual reevaluations.
The burden associated with this requirement is the time and effort
put forth by the evaluator to obtain information to support their
conclusion. We estimate it would take one evaluator 2 hours per
participant to obtain information as necessary. The total annual burden
of this requirement would vary according to the number of participants
in each State who may require and be eligible for home and community-
based services under the State plan. The individuals performing this
assessment would vary based upon State benefit design, but will likely
include individuals such as registered nurses, qualified mental
retardation professionals, qualified mental health professionals, case
managers, or other professional staff with experience providing
services to individuals with disabilities or the elderly. While there
is burden associated with this requirement, we believe the burden is
exempt as defined in 5 CFR 1320.3(b)(2) because the time, effort, and
financial resources necessary to comply with this requirement would be
incurred by persons in the normal course of their activities.
D. ICRs Regarding Independent Assessments (Sec. 441.662)
Section 441.662 requires the State to provide for an independent
assessment of need in order to establish a service plan. At a minimum,
the plan must meet the requirements as discussed under Sec. 441.665.
[[Page 26395]]
While the burden associated with the requirements under Sec.
441.662 is subject to the PRA, we believe the burden is exempt as
defined in 5 CFR 1320.3(b)(2) because the time, effort, and financial
resources necessary to comply with this requirement would be incurred
by persons in the normal course of their activities.
E. ICRs Regarding State Plan HCBS Administration: State
Responsibilities and Quality Improvement (Sec. 441.677)
Section 441.677(a)(1)(i) reads that a State will annually provide
CMS with the projected number of individuals to be enrolled in the
benefit, and the actual number of unduplicated individuals enrolled in
State plan HCBS in the previous year.
The burden associated with this requirement is the time and effort
put forth by the State to annually project the number of individuals
who will enroll in State plan HCBS. We estimate it will take one State
2 hours to meet this requirement. The total annual burden of these
requirements would vary according to the number of States offering the
State plan HCBS benefit. The maximum total annual burden is 112 hours
(56 States x 2 hours = 112 hours). We believe that a State employee,
with pay equivalent to GS-13 step one ($34.34 per hour) would be
responsible for this requirement. Thus, the anticipated for each State
is anticipated to be $69; this equates to a maximum annual cost of
$3,864 if all 56 States elect to provide this benefit. There are
currently six States with approved State plan HCBS benefits. Thus, we
anticipate based on current benefits that the total annual aggregated
burden will be $414.
Section 441.677(a)(2)(iii) reads that the SPA to provide State plan
HCBS must contain a description of the reimbursement methodology for
each covered service.
The burden associated with this requirement is the time and effort
put forth by the State to describe the reimbursement methodology for
each State plan HCBS. We estimate that it will take one State an
average of 2 hours to determine the reimbursement methodology for one
covered HCBS. This would be a one-time burden. The total annual burden
for this requirement would vary according to the number of services
that the State chooses to include in the State plan HCBS benefit. We
believe that a State employee, with pay equivalent to GS-13 step one
($34.34 per hour) would be responsible for this requirement. Thus, the
cost to each State for each covered service is anticipated to be $69;
this would vary based upon the number of services covered. This would
be an annual burden for each responding State. Since we have estimated
that 3 States will annually describe the reimbursement methodology, the
total annual aggregated burden associated with this requirement is
estimated to be $207.
Section 441.677(a)(2)(iv) reads that the SPA to provide State plan
HCBS must contain a description of the State Medicaid agency line of
authority for operating the State plan HCBS benefit, including
distribution of functions to other entities.
The burden associated with this requirement is the time and effort
put forth by the State to describe the State Medicaid agency line of
authority. We estimate it will take one State 2 hours to meet this
requirement. Since we have estimated that 3 States will annually
request State plan HCBS, the total annual burden associated with this
requirement is estimated to be 6 hours. This would be a one-time burden
for each responding State. We believe that a State employee, with pay
equivalent to GS-13 step one ($34.34 per hour) would be responsible for
this requirement. Thus, the cost for each State is anticipated to be
$69.
Section 441.677(a)(2)(vi) limits the approval period for States
that target the benefit to specific populations. If a State elects to
target the benefit, this section requires a renewal application every 5
years in order to continue operation of the benefit. Actual time to
meet this requirement will vary depending on the scope of the program
and any changes the State includes. However, we estimate that it will
take one State an average of 40 hours to meet this requirement. This
includes reviewing the previous submission, making any necessary
changes to the State plan document(s), and communicating with CMS
regarding the renewal. This burden would occur once every five years
and would be recurring. We estimate that, beginning in 2016, 3 States
will annually request renewal and the total burden will be 120 hours.
We believe that a State employee, with pay equivalent to GS-13 step one
($34.34 per hour) would be responsible for this requirement. Thus, the
cost for each State is anticipated to be $1,374; this equates to an
annual cost of $4,122. This would be a burden for each State that
targets its benefit once every 5 years; however, this burden will not
take effect until 2016.
Section 441.677(b) requires States to develop and implement a
quality improvement strategy that includes methods for ongoing
measurement of program performance, quality of care, and mechanisms for
remediation and improvement proportionate to the scope of services in
the State plan HCBS benefit and the number of individuals to be served,
and make this information available to CMS upon the frequency
determined by the Secretary or upon request.
The burden associated with this requirement is the time and effort
put forth by the State to develop and implement a quality improvement
strategy, and to make this information available to CMS upon the
frequency determined by the Secretary or upon request. We estimate it
will take one State 45 hours for the development of the strategy, and
for making information available to CMS. The total annual burden of
these requirements would vary according to the number of States
offering the State plan HCBS benefit. The maximum total annual burden
is estimated to be 2,520 hours (56 States x 45 hours = 2,520 hours). We
estimate that the burden associated with implementation of the quality
improvement strategy will greatly vary, as the necessary time and
effort to perform these activities is dependent upon the scope of the
benefit and the number of persons receiving State plan HCBS. We believe
that a State employee, with pay equivalent to GS-13 step one ($34.34
per hour) would be responsible for this requirement. Thus, the cost for
each State is anticipated to be $1,545; this equates to a maximum
annual cost of $86,537. Currently, there are six States with approved
benefits, thus we anticipate an annual burden based on current States
of $9,270.
Table 1--Annual Recordkeeping and Reporting Requirements
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Hourly
Burden per Total labor cost Total labor Total
Regulation section(s) OMB Respondents Responses response annual of cost of capital/ Total cost
Control No. (hours) burden reporting reporting maintenance ($)
(hours) ($) ($) costs ($)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
435.219(b) and 436.219(b).......... 0938-1148 3 3 30 90 34.34 1,030 0 1,030
[[Page 26396]]
441.656(b)(2)...................... 0938-1148 3 3 10 30 34.34 1,030 0 1,030
441.659(a)......................... 0938-1148 3 3 24 72 34.34 2,472 0 2,472
441.659(b)......................... 0938-1148 3 3 1 3 34.34 103 0 103
441.677(a)(1)(i)................... 0938-1148 6 6 2 12 34.34 414 0 414
441.677(a)(2)(iii)................. 0938-1148 3 3 2 6 34.34 207 0 207
441.677(a)(2)(iv).................. 0938-1148 3 3 2 6 34.34 207 0 207
441.677(b)......................... 0938-1148 6 6 45 270 34.34 9,270 0 9,270
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total.......................... ........... ........... ........... ........... 489 ........... 14,733 0 14,733
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
We have submitted a copy of this proposed rule to OMB for its
review of the information collection requirements described above.
These requirements are not effective until they have been approved by
OMB.
If you have comments on these information collection and record
keeping requirements, please do either of the following:
1. Submit your comments electronically as specified in the
ADDRESSES section of this proposed rule; or
2. Submit your comments to the Office of Information and Regulatory
Affairs, Office of Management and Budget, Attention: CMS Desk Officer,
CMS-2249-P2. Fax: (202) 395-5806; or Email: OIRA
submission@omb.eop.gov.
VI. Regulatory Impact Analysis
A. Introduction
We have examined the impacts of this rule as required by Executive
Order 12866 on Regulatory Planning and Review (September 30, 1993) and
Executive 13563 on Improving Regulation and Regulatory Review (January
18, 2011). Executive Orders 12866 and 13563 direct agencies to assess
all costs and benefits of available regulatory alternatives and, if
regulation is necessary, to select regulatory approaches that maximize
net benefits (including potential economic, environmental, public
health and safety effects, distributive impacts, and equity). Executive
Order 13563 emphasizes the importance of quantifying both costs and
benefits, of reducing costs, of harmonizing rules, and of promoting
flexibility. A regulatory impact analysis (RIA) must be prepared for
major rules with economically significant effects ($100 million or more
in any one year). This proposed rule has been designated an
``economically significant'' rule under section 3(f)(1) of Executive
Order 12866. Accordingly, the rule has been reviewed by the Office of
Management and Budget.
B. Statement of Need
The State plan HCBS benefit is authorized under section 1915(i) of
the Act. Section 1915(i) was created by the Deficit Reduction Act of
2005 and was amended by the Affordable Care Act of 2010. The resulting
statute provides States with authority to establish State plan HCBS
benefits in their Medicaid program.
These regulations are necessary in order to include the State plan
HCBS within the Code of Federal Regulations. Additionally, these
regulations provide States with direction and clarity regarding the
framework under which the programs can be established.
C. Overall Impacts
We estimate that, as a result of this proposed rule, the Medicaid
cost impact for fiscal year (FY) 2012 would be $80 million for the
Federal share and $60 million for the State share. The estimates are
adjusted for a phase-in period during which States gradually elect to
offer the State plan HCBS benefit.
D. Detailed Impacts
1. State Plan HCBS
State Medicaid programs will make use of the optional flexibility
afforded by the State plan HCBS benefit to provide needed long-term
care HCBS to eligible individuals the State has not had means to serve
previously, or to provide services to these individuals more
efficiently and effectively. The State plan HCBS benefit will afford
States a new means to comply with requirements of the Olmstead
decision, to serve individuals in the most integrated setting.
The cost of these services will be dependent upon the number of
States electing to offer the benefit, the scope of the benefits States
design, and the degree to which the benefits replace existing Medicaid
services. States have more control over expenditures for this benefit
than over other State plan services. For States that choose to offer
these services, States may specify limits to the scope of HCBS, target
the benefit to specific populations, and have the option to tighten
needs-based criteria requirements if costs escalate too rapidly.
If States elect to include the new optional group, eligibility
could be expanded because the group may include individuals who would
not otherwise be eligible for Medicaid. However, costs of the State
plan HCBS benefit may be offset by lowered potential Federal and State
costs of more expensive institutional care. Additionally, the
requirement for a written individualized service plan, and the
provision of needed HCBS in accordance with the individualized service
plan, may discourage inappropriate utilization of costly services such
as emergency room care for routine procedures, which may be beneficial
to Medicare and Medicaid when individuals are eligible for both
programs. If a State targets this benefit, only individuals who meet
the targeting criteria would receive 1915(i) services and be eligible
for the group, thus limiting Medicaid expansion.
After considering these factors, we assumed that, if all States
adopted this measure, program expenditures would increase by 1 percent
of current HCBS expenditure projections. We further assumed that
ultimately, States representing 50 percent of the eligible population
would elect to offer this benefit, and that this ultimate level would
be reached in FY 2014, with a phase-in period until then. Based on
these assumptions, the Federal and State cost estimates are shown in
Table 2.
[[Page 26397]]
Table 2--Medicaid Cost Estimates Resulting From Changes to the State
Plan
[HCBS Benefit (FYs 2012-2016, in $millions]
------------------------------------------------------------------------
FY12 FY13 FY14 FY15 FY16
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Federal Share................... $80 $120 $170 $190 $215
State Share..................... 60 90 125 145 160
------------------------------------------------------------------------
The effect on Medicaid beneficiaries who receive the State plan
HCBS benefit will be substantial and beneficial in States where
optional 1915(i) State plan HCBS are included, as it will provide
eligible individuals with the opportunity to receive needed long-term
care services and supports in their homes and communities.
The State plan HCBS benefit will afford business opportunities for
providers of the HCBS. We do not anticipate any effects on other
providers. Section 1915(i) of the Act delinks the HCBS from
institutional LOC, and requires that eligibility criteria for the
benefit include a threshold of need less than that for institutional
LOC, so that it is unlikely that large numbers of participants in the
State plan HCBS benefit will be discharged from the facilities of
Medicaid institutional providers. There may be some redistribution of
services among providers of existing non-institutional Medicaid
services into State plan HCBS, but providers who meet qualifications
for the State plan HCBS benefit have the option to enroll as providers
of HCBS.
This rule has no direct effect on the Medicare program; however, an
indirect and beneficial effect may occur if individuals eligible for
both Medicare and Medicaid are enrolled in a State plan HCBS program.
E. Alternatives Considered
This proposed rule incorporates provisions of new section 1915(i)
of the Act into Federal regulations, providing for Medicaid coverage of
a new optional State plan benefit to furnish home and community-based
State plan services. The statute provides States with an option under
which to draw Federal matching funds; it does not impose any
requirements or costs on existing State programs, on providers, or upon
beneficiaries. States retain their existing authority to offer HCBS
through the existing authority granted under section 1915(c) waivers
and under section 1115 waivers. States can also continue to offer, and
individuals can choose to receive, some but not all components of HCBS
allowable under section 1915(i) through existing State plan services
such as personal care or targeted case management services. Therefore,
this rule is entirely optional for States. We solicit comment on the
analysis within the ``Alternatives Considered'' section.
Alternatives to this proposed rule include:
(1) Not Publishing a Rule: Section 1915(i) of the Act was effective
January 1, 2007. States may propose SPAs to establish the State plan
HCBS benefit with or without this proposed rule. We considered whether
this statute could be self-implementing and require no regulation.
Section 1915(i) of the Act is complex; many States have contacted us
for technical assistance in the absence of published guidance, and some
have indicated they are waiting to submit a State plan amendment until
there is a rule. We further considered whether a State Medicaid
Director letter would provide sufficient guidance regarding CMS review
criteria for approval of an SPA. We conclude that section 1915(i) of
the Act establishes significant new features in the Medicaid program,
and that it was important to provide States and the public the
published invitation for comment provided by this proposed rule.
Finally, State legislation and judicial decisions are not alternatives
to a Federal rule in this case since section 1915(i) of the Act
provides Federal benefits.
(2) Modification of Existing Rules: We considered modifying
existing regulations at 42 CFR part 440.180, part 441 subpart G, Home
and Community-Based Services: Waiver Requirements, which implement the
section 1915(c) HCBS waivers, to include the authority to offer the
State plan HCBS benefit. This would have the advantage of not
duplicating certain requirements common to both types of HCBS. However,
we believe that any such efficiency would be outweighed by the
substantial discussion that would be required of the differences
between the Secretary's discretion to approve waivers under section
1915(c) of the Act, and authority to offer HCBS under the State plan at
section 1915(i) of the Act. While Congress clearly considered the
experience to date with HCBS under waivers when constructing section
1915(i) of the Act, it did not choose to modify section 1915(c) of the
Act, but chose instead to create a new authority at section 1915(i) of
the Act.
F. Accounting Statement
As required by OMB Circular A-4 (available at https://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/circulars_a004_a-4), in the Table 3, we have
prepared an accounting statement showing the classification of the
transfers associated with the provisions of this proposed rule. This
table provides our best estimate of the proposed increase in aggregate
Medicaid outlays resulting from offering States the option to provide
the State plan HCBS benefit established in section 1915(i) of the Act
and proposed by CMS-2249-P (Medicaid program; Home and Community-Based
State Plan Services).
Table 3--Accounting Statement: Classification of Estimated Transfers, From FYs 2012 to 2016
[In $millions]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Category TRANSFERS
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Annualized Monetized 3% Units Discount Rate.................. 7% Units Discount Rate.
Transfers. $153.0.................................. $150.4.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
From Whom To Whom?.......... Federal Government to Providers
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 26398]]
Category TRANSFERS
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Other Annualized Monetized 3% Units Discount Rate.................. 7% Units Discount Rate.
Transfers. $114.5.................................. $112.5.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
From Whom To Whom?.......... State Governments to Providers
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
G. Conclusion
We anticipate that States will make widely varying use of the
section 1915(i) State plan HCBS benefit to provide needed long-term
care services for Medicaid beneficiaries. These services will be
provided in the home or alternative living arrangements in the
community, which is of benefit to the beneficiary and is less costly
than institutional care. Requirements for independent evaluation and
assessment, individualized care planning, and requirements for a
quality improvement program will promote efficient and effective use of
Medicaid expenditures for these services.
VII. Regulatory Flexibility Act Analysis
The Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA) (September 19, 1980, Pub. L.
96-354), as modified by the Small Business Regulatory Enforcement
Fairness Act of 1996 (SBREFA) (Pub. L. 104-121), requires agencies to
determine whether proposed or final rules would have a significant
economic impact on a substantial number of small entities and, if so,
to prepare a Regulatory Flexibility Analysis and to identify in the
notice of proposed rulemaking or final rulemaking any regulatory
options that could mitigate the impact of the proposed regulation on
small businesses. For purposes of the RFA, small entities include
businesses that are small as determined by size standards issued by the
Small Business Administration, nonprofit organizations, and small
governmental jurisdictions). Individuals and States are not included in
the definition of a small business entity.
For purposes of the RFA, we assume that approximately 75 percent of
Medicaid providers are considered small businesses according to the
Small Business Administration's size standards (with total revenues of
$35 million or less in any one year), and 80 percent are nonprofit
organizations. Medicaid providers are required, as a matter of course,
to follow the guidelines and procedures as specified in State and
Federal laws and regulations. Furthermore, this rule imposes no
requirements or costs on providers or suppliers for their existing
activities. The rule implements a new optional State plan benefit
established in section 1915(i) of the Act. Small entities that meet
provider qualifications and choose to provide HCBS under the State plan
will have a business opportunity under this proposed rule. The
Secretary has determined that this proposed rule will not have a
significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities.
In addition, section 1102(b) of the Social Security Act requires us
to prepare a regulatory impact analysis if a rule may have a
significant impact on the operations of a substantial number of small
rural hospitals. This analysis must conform to the provisions of
section 603 of the RFA. For purposes of section 1102(b) of the Act, we
define a small rural hospital as a hospital that is located outside of
a metropolitan statistical area and has fewer than 100 beds. This
proposed rule does not offer a change in the administration of the
provisions related to small rural hospitals. Therefore, the Secretary
has determined that this proposed rule will not have a significant
impact on the operations of a substantial number of small rural
hospitals.
VIII. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act Analysis
Section 202 of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (March 22,
1995, Pub. L. 104-4) requires that agencies assess anticipated costs
and benefits before issuing any rule whose mandates require spending in
any one year of $100 million in 1995 dollars, updated annually for
inflation. In 2012, that threshold is approximately $139 million. This
proposed rule does not mandate any spending by State, local, or tribal
governments, in the aggregate, or by the private sector, of $139
million.
IX. Federalism Analysis
Executive Order 13132 on Federalism (August 4, 1999) establishes
certain requirements that an agency must meet when it promulgates a
proposed rule (and subsequent final rule) that imposes substantial
direct requirement costs on State and local governments, preempts State
law, or otherwise has Federalism implications. Since this regulation
does not impose any costs on State or local governments, the
requirements of E.O. 13132 are not applicable.
List of Subjects
42 CFR Part 430
Administrative practice and procedure, Grant programs--health,
Medicaid, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
42 CFR Part 431
Grant programs--health, Health facilities, Medicaid, Privacy,
Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
42 CFR Part 435
Aid to Families with Dependent Children, Grant programs--health,
Medicaid, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, Supplemental
Security Income, Wages.
42 CFR Part 436
Aid to Families with Dependent Children, Grant programs--health,
Guam, Medicaid Puerto Rico, Supplemental Security Income (SSI), Virgin
Islands.
42 CFR Part 440
Grant programs--health, Medicaid.
42 CFR Part 441
Aged, Family planning, Grant programs--health, Infants and
children, Medicaid, Penalties, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
42 CFR Part 447
Accounting, Administrative practice and procedure, Drugs, Grant
programs--health, Health facilities, Health professions, Medicaid,
Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, Rural areas.
For the reasons set forth in the preamble, the Centers for Medicare
& Medicaid Services proposes to amend 42 CFR chapter IV as set forth
below:
PART 430--GRANTS TO STATES FOR MEDICAL ASSISTANCE PROGRAMS
1. The authority citation for part 430 continues to read as
follows:
Authority: Sec. 1102 of the Social Security Act (42 U.S.C.
1302).
[[Page 26399]]
Subpart B--State Plans
2. Section 430.25 is amended by--
A. Revising paragraphs (h)(2)(i) and (ii).
B. Adding paragraph (h)(2)(iii).
The revisions and addition read as follows:
Sec. 430.25 Waivers of State plan requirements.
* * * * *
(h) * * *
(2) Duration of waivers. (i) Home and community-based services
under section 1915(c) of the Act. The initial waiver is for a period of
3 years and may be renewed thereafter for periods of 5 years. For
waivers that include individuals who are dually eligible for Medicare
and Medicaid, 5-year initial approval periods may be granted at the
discretion of the Secretary for waivers meeting all necessary
programmatic, financial and quality requirements.
(ii) Waivers under section 1915(b) of the Act. The initial waiver
is for a period of 2 years and may be renewed for additional periods of
up to 2 years as determined by the Administrator. For waivers that
include individuals who are dually eligible for Medicare and Medicaid,
5-year initial and renewal approval periods may be granted at the
discretion of the Secretary for waivers meeting all necessary
programmatic, financial and quality requirements.
(iii) Waivers under section 1916 of the Act. The initial waiver is
for a period of 2 years and may be renewed for additional periods of up
to 2 years as determined by the Administrator.
* * * * *
PART 431--STATE ORGANIZATION AND GENERAL ADMINISTRATION
3. The authority citation for part 431 continues to read as
follows:
Authority: Sec. 1102 of the Social Security Act (42 U.S.C.
1302).
Subpart B--General Administrative Requirements
4. Section 431.54 is amended by adding paragraphs (a)(3) and (h) to
read as follows:
Sec. 431.54 Exceptions to certain State plan requirements.
(a) * * *
(3) Section 1915(i) of the Act provides that a State may provide,
as medical assistance, home and community-based services under an
approved State plan amendment that meets certain requirements, without
regard to the requirements of sections 1902(a)(10)(B) and
1902(a)(10)(C)(i)(III) of the Act, with respect to such services.
* * * * *
(h) State plan home and community-based services. The requirements
of Sec. 440.240 of this chapter related to comparability of services
do not apply with respect to State plan home and community-based
services defined in Sec. 440.182 of this chapter.
PART 435--ELIGIBILITY IN THE STATES, DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA, THE
NORTHERN MARIANA ISLANDS, AND AMERICAN SAMOA
5. The authority citation for part 435 continues to read as
follows:
Authority: Sec. 1102 of the Social Security Act (42 U.S.C.
1302).
Subpart C--Options for Coverage
6. Section 435.219 is added to subpart C to read as follows:
Sec. 435.219 Individuals receiving State plan home and community-
based services.
If the agency provides home and community-based services to
individuals described in section 1915(i)(1), the agency, under its
State plan, may, in addition, provide Medicaid to any group or groups
of individuals in the community who are described in one or both of the
paragraphs under paragraphs (a) or (b) of this section.
(a) Individuals who--
(1) Are not otherwise eligible for Medicaid;
(2) Have income that does not exceed 150 percent of the Federal
poverty line (FPL);
(3) Meet the needs-based criteria under Sec. 441.659 of this
chapter; and
(4) Will receive State plan home and community-based services as
defined in Sec. 440.182 of this chapter.
(b) Individuals who--
(1) Would be determined eligible by the agency under an existing
waiver or demonstration project under sections 1915(c), 1915(d),
1915(e) or 1115 of the Act, but are not required to receive services
under such waivers or demonstration projects;
(2) Have income that does not exceed 300 percent of the
Supplemental Security Income Federal Benefit Rate (SSI/FBR); and
(3) Will receive State plan home and community-based services as
defined in Sec. 440.182 of this chapter.
(c) For purposes of determining eligibility under paragraph (a) of
this section, the agency may not take into account an individual's
resources and must use income standards that are reasonable, consistent
with the objectives of the Medicaid program, simple to administer, and
in the best interests of the beneficiary. Income methodologies may
include use of existing income methodologies, such as the SSI program
rules. However, subject to the Secretary's approval, the agency may use
other income methodologies that meet the requirements of this paragraph
(c).
PART 436--ELIGIBILITY IN GUAM, PUERTO RICO AND THE VIRGIN ISLANDS
7. The authority citation for part 436 continues to read as
follows:
Authority: Sec. 1102 of the Social Security Act (42 U.S.C.
1302).
Subpart C--Options for Coverage
8. Section 436.219 is added to subpart C to read as follows:
Sec. 436.219 Individuals receiving State plan home and community-
based services.
If the agency provides home and community-based services to
individuals described in section 1915(i)(1) of the Act, the agency,
under its State plan, may, in addition, provide Medicaid to any group
or groups of individuals in the community who are described in one or
both of paragraphs (a) or (b) of this section.
(a) Individuals who--
(1) Are not otherwise eligible for Medicaid;
(2) Have income that does not exceed 150 percent of the Federal
poverty line (FPL);
(3) Meet the needs-based criteria under Sec. 441.659 of this
chapter; and
(4) Will receive State plan home and community-based services as
defined in Sec. 440.182 of this chapter.
(b) Individuals who--
(1)Would be determined eligible by the agency under an existing
waiver or demonstration project under sections 1915(c), 1915(d),
1915(e) or 1115 of the Act, but are not required to receive services
under such waivers or demonstration projects;
(2) Have income that does not exceed 300 percent of the
Supplemental Security Income Federal Benefit Rate (SSI/FBR); and
(3) Will receive State plan home and community-based services as
defined in Sec. 440.182 of this chapter.
(c) For purposes of determining eligibility under paragraph (a) of
this section, the agency may not take into account an individual's
resources and must use income standards that are reasonable, consistent
with the objectives of the Medicaid program, simple to administer, and
in the best
[[Page 26400]]
interests of the beneficiary. Income methodologies may include use of
existing income methodologies, such as the rules of the OAA, AB, APTD
or AABD programs. However, subject to the Secretary's approval, the
agency may use other income methodologies that meet the requirements of
this paragraph (c).
PART 440--SERVICES: GENERAL PROVISIONS
9. The authority citation for part 440 continues to read as
follows:
Authority: Sec. 1102 of the Social Security Act (42 U.S.C.
1302).
Subpart A--Definitions
10. Section 440.1 is amended by adding the new statutory basis in
alphanumerical order to read as follows:
Sec. 440.1 Basis and purpose.
* * * * *
1915(i) Home and community-based services furnished under a State
plan to elderly and disabled individuals.
11. Section 440.180 is amended by revising the heading to read as
follows:
Sec. 440.180 Home and community-based waiver services.
* * * * *
12. Section 440.182 is added to subpart A to read as follows:
Sec. 440.182 State plan home and community-based services.
(a) Definition. State plan home and community-based services (HCBS)
benefit means the services listed in paragraph (c) of this section when
provided under the State's plan (rather than through an HCBS waiver
program) for individuals described in paragraph (b) of this section.
(b) State plan HCBS coverage. State plan HCBS can be made available
to individuals who--
(1) Are eligible under the State plan and have income, calculated
using the otherwise applicable rules, including any less restrictive
income disregards used by the State for that group under section
1902(r)(2) of the Act, that does not exceed 150 percent of the Federal
Poverty Line (FPL); and
(2) In addition to the individuals described in paragraph (b)(1) of
this section, to individuals based on the State's election of the
eligibility groups described in Sec. 435.219(b) or Sec. 436.219(b) of
this chapter.
(c) Services. The State plan HCBS benefit consists of one or more
of the following services:
(1) Case management services.
(2) Homemaker services.
(3) Home health aide services.
(4) Personal care services.
(5) Adult day health services.
(6) Habilitation services, which include expanded habilitation
services as specified in Sec. 440.180(c) of this subpart.
(7) Respite care services.
(8) Subject to the conditions in Sec. 440.180 of this subpart, for
individuals with chronic mental illness:
(i) Day treatment or other partial hospitalization services;
(ii) Psychosocial rehabilitation services;
(iii) Clinic services (whether or not furnished in a facility).
(9) Other services requested by the agency and approved by the
Secretary as consistent with the purpose of the benefit.
(d) Exclusion. FFP is not available for the cost of room and board
in State plan HCBS. The following HCBS costs are not considered room or
board for purposes of this exclusion:
(1) The cost of temporary food and shelter provided as an integral
part of respite care services in a facility approved by the State.
(2) Meals provided as an integral component of a program of adult
day health services or another service and consistent with standard
procedures in the State for such a program.
(3) A portion of the rent and food costs that may be reasonably
attributed to an unrelated caregiver providing State plan HCBS who is
residing in the same household with the recipient, but not if the
recipient is living in the home of the caregiver or in a residence that
is owned or leased by the caregiver.
PART 441--SERVICES: REQUIREMENTS AND LIMITS APPLICABLE TO SPECIFIC
SERVICES
13. The authority citation for part 441 continues to read as
follows:
Authority: Sec. 1102 of the Social Security Act (42 U.S.C.
1302).
14. Section 441.530 is added to read as follows:
Sec. 441.530 Home and Community-Based Setting.
(a) States must make available attendant services and supports in a
home and community-based setting consistent with both paragraphs (a)(1)
and (2) of this section.
(1) Home and community-based settings shall have all of the
following qualities, and such other qualities as the Secretary
determines to be appropriate, based on the needs of the individual as
indicated in their person-centered service plan:
(i) The setting is integrated in, and facilitates the individual's
full access to, the greater community, including opportunities to seek
employment and work in competitive integrated settings, engage in
community life, control personal resources, and receive services in the
community, in the same manner as individuals without disabilities.
(ii) The setting is selected by the individual from among all
available alternatives and is identified in the person-centered service
plan.
(iii) An individual's essential personal rights of privacy, dignity
and respect, and freedom from coercion and restraint are protected.
(iv) Individual initiative, autonomy, and independence in making
life choices, including but not limited to, daily activities, physical
environment, and with whom to interact are optimized and not
regimented.
(v) Individual choice regarding services and supports, and who
provides them, is facilitated.
(vi) In a provider-owned or controlled residential setting, the
following additional conditions must be met. Any modification of the
conditions, for example, to address the safety needs of an individual
with dementia, must be supported by a specific assessed need and
documented in the person-centered service plan:
(A) The unit or room is a specific physical place that can be
owned, rented or occupied under another legally enforceable agreement
by the individual receiving services, and the individual has, at a
minimum, the same responsibilities and protections from eviction that
tenants have under the landlord tenant law of the State, county, city
or other designated entity;
(B) Each individual has privacy in their sleeping or living unit:
(1) Units have lockable entrance doors, with appropriate staff
having keys to doors;
(2) Individuals share units only at the individual's choice; and
(3) Individuals have the freedom to furnish and decorate their
sleeping or living units.
(C) Individuals have the freedom and support to control their own
schedules and activities, and have access to food at any time;
(D) Individuals are able to have visitors of their choosing at any
time; and
(E) The setting is physically accessible to the individual.
(2) Home and community-based settings do not include the following:
(i) A nursing facility;
(ii) An institution for mental diseases;
(iii) An intermediate care facility for the mentally retarded;
[[Page 26401]]
(iv) A hospital providing long-term care services; or
(v) Any other locations that have qualities of an institutional
setting, as determined by the Secretary. The Secretary will apply a
rebuttable presumption that a setting is not a home and community-based
setting, and engage in heightened scrutiny, for any setting that is
located in a building that is also a publicly or privately operated
facility that provides inpatient institutional treatment, or in a
building on the grounds of, or immediately adjacent to, a public
institution, or disability-specific housing complex.
15. A new subpart L, consisting of Sec. Sec. 441.650 through
441.677, is added to read as follows:
Subpart K--State Plan Home and Community-Based Services for Elderly
and Disabled Individuals
Sec.
441.650 Basis and purpose.
441.653 State plan requirements.
441.656 State plan home and community-based services under the Act.
441.659 Needs-based criteria and evaluation.
441.662 Independent assessment.
441.665 Person-centered service plan.
441.668 Provider qualifications.
441.671 Definition of individual's representative.
441.674 Self-directed services.
441.677 State plan HCBS administration: State responsibilities and
quality improvement.
Subpart L State Plan Home and Community-Based Services for the
Elderly and Individuals With Disabilities
Sec. 441.650 Basis and purpose.
Section 1915(i) of the Act permits States to offer one or more home
and community-based services (HCBS) under their State Medicaid plans to
qualified individuals with disabilities or individuals who are elderly.
Those services are listed in Sec. 440.182 of this chapter, and are
described by the State, including any limitations of the services. This
optional benefit is known as the State plan HCBS benefit. This subpart
describes what a State Medicaid plan must provide when the State elects
to include the optional benefit, and defines State responsibilities.
Sec. 441.653 State plan requirements.
A State plan that provides 1915(i) State plan home and community-
based services must meet the requirements of this subpart.
Sec. 441.656 State plan home and community-based services under the
Act.
(a) Home and Community-Based Setting. Under section 1915(i)(1) of
the Act, States must make State plan HCBS available in a home and
community-based setting consistent with both paragraphs (a)(1) and (2)
of this section.
(1) Home and community-based settings shall have all of the
following qualities, and such other qualities as the Secretary
determines to be appropriate, based on the needs of the individual as
indicated in their person-centered service plan:
(i) The setting is integrated in, and facilitates the individual's
full access to, the greater community including opportunities to seek
employment and work in competitive integrated settings, engage in
community life, control personal resources, and receive services in the
community, in the same manner as individuals without disabilities.
(ii) The setting is selected by the individual from among all
available alternatives and is identified in the person-centered service
plan.
(iii) An individual's essential personal rights of privacy, dignity
and respect, and freedom from coercion and restraint are protected.
(iv) Individual initiative, autonomy, and independence in making
life choices, including but not limited to, daily activities, physical
environment, and with whom to interact are optimized and not
regimented.
(v) Individual choice regarding services and supports, and who
provides them, is facilitated.
(vi) In a provider-owned or controlled residential setting, the
following additional conditions must be met. Any modification of the
conditions, for example, to address the safety needs of an individual
with dementia, must be supported by a specific assessed need and
documented in the person-centered service plan:
(A) The unit or room is a specific physical place that can be
owned, rented, or occupied under a legally enforceable agreement by the
individual receiving services, and the individual has, at a minimum,
the same responsibilities and protections from eviction that tenants
have under the landlord/tenant law of the State, county, city, or other
designated entity;
(B) Each individual has privacy in their sleeping or living unit:
(1) Units have lockable entrance doors, with appropriate staff
having keys to doors;
(2) Individuals share units only at the individual's choice; and
(3) Individuals have the freedom to furnish and decorate their
sleeping or living units.
(C) Individuals have the freedom and support to control their own
schedules and activities, and have access to food at any time;
(D) Individuals are able to have visitors of their choosing at any
time; and
(E) The setting is physically accessible to the individual.
(2) Home and community-based settings do not include the following:
(i) A nursing facility;
(ii) An institution for mental diseases;
(iii) An intermediate care facility for the mentally retarded;
(iv) A hospital; or
(v) Any other locations that have qualities of an institutional
setting, as determined by the Secretary. The Secretary will apply a
rebuttable presumption that a setting is not a home and community-based
setting, and engage in heightened scrutiny, for any setting that is
located in a building that is also a publicly or privately operated
facility that provides inpatient institutional treatment, or in a
building on the grounds of, or immediately adjacent to, a public
institution, or disability-specific housing complex.
(b) Needs-Based Eligibility Requirement. Meet needs-based criteria
for eligibility for the State plan HCBS benefit, as required in Sec.
441.659(a).
(c) Minimum State plan HCBS Requirement. Be assessed to require at
least one section 1915(i) home and community-based service at a
frequency determined by the State, as required in Sec. 441.662(a)(5).
(d) Target Population. Meet any applicable targeting criteria
defined by the State under the authority of paragraph (b)(2) of this
section.
(e) Nonapplication. The State may elect in the State plan amendment
approved under this subpart not to apply the following requirements
when determining eligibility:
(1) Section 1902(a)(10)(C)(i)(III) of the Act, pertaining to income
and resource eligibility rules for the medically needy living in the
community, but only for the purposes of providing State plan HCBS.
(2) Section 1902(a)(10)(B) of the Act, pertaining to comparability
of Medicaid services, but only for the purposes of providing section
1915(i) State plan HCBS. In the event that a State elects not to apply
comparability requirements:
(i) The State must describe the group(s) receiving State plan HCBS,
subject to the Secretary's approval. Targeting criteria cannot have the
[[Page 26402]]
impact of limiting the pool of qualified providers from which an
individual would receive services, or have the impact of requiring an
individual to receive services from the same entity from which they
purchase their housing. These groups must be defined on the basis of
any combination of--
(A) Age;
(B) Diagnosis;
(C) Disability; or
(D) Medicaid Eligibility Group.
(ii)The State may elect in the State plan amendment to limit the
availability of specific services defined under the authority of Sec.
440.182(b) or to vary the amount, duration, or scope of those services,
to one or more of the group(s) described in this paragraph.
Sec. 441.659 Needs-based criteria and evaluation.
(a) Needs-based criteria. The State must establish needs-based
criteria for determining an individual's eligibility under the State
plan for the HCBS benefit, and may establish needs-based criteria for
each specific service. Needs-based criteria are factors used to
determine an individual's requirements for support, and may include
risk factors. The criteria are not characteristics that describe the
individual or the individual's condition. A diagnosis is not a
sufficient factor on which to base a determination of need. A criterion
can be considered needs-based if it is a factor that can only be
ascertained for a given person through an individualized evaluation of
need.
(b) More stringent institutional and waiver needs-based criteria.
The State plan HCBS benefit is available only if the State has in
effect needs-based criteria (as defined in paragraph (a) of this
section), for receipt of services in nursing facilities as defined in
section 1919(a) of the Act, intermediate care facilities for the
mentally retarded as defined in Sec. 440.150 of this chapter, and
hospitals as defined in Sec. 440.10 of this chapter for which the
State has established long-term level of care (LOC) criteria, or
waivers offering HCBS, and these needs-based criteria are more
stringent than the needs-based criteria for the State plan HCBS
benefit. If the State defines needs-based criteria for individual State
plan home and community-based services, it may not have the effect of
limiting who can benefit from the State plan HCBS in an unreasonable
way, as determined by the Secretary.
(1) These more stringent criteria must meet the following
requirements:
(i) Be included in the LOC determination process for each
institutional service and waiver.
(ii) Be submitted for inspection by CMS with the State plan
amendment that establishes the State Plan HCBS benefit.
(iii) Be in effect on or before the effective date of the State
plan HCBS benefit.
(2) In the event that the State modifies institutional LOC criteria
to meet the requirements under paragraph (b) or (c)(7) of this section
that such criteria be more stringent than the State plan HCBS needs-
based eligibility criteria, States may continue to receive FFP for
individuals receiving institutional services or waiver HCBS under the
LOC criteria previously in effect.
(c) Adjustment authority. The State may modify the needs-based
criteria established under paragraph (a) of this section, without prior
approval from the Secretary, if the number of individuals enrolled in
the State plan HCBS benefit exceeds the projected number submitted
annually to CMS. The Secretary will approve a retroactive effective
date for the State plan amendment modifying the criteria, as early as
the day following the notification period required under paragraph
(c)(1) of this section, if all of the following conditions are met:
(1) The State provides at least 60 days notice of the proposed
modification to the Secretary, the public, and each individual enrolled
in the State plan HCBS benefit.
(2) The State notice to the Secretary is submitted as an amendment
to the State plan.
(3) The adjusted needs-based eligibility criteria for the State
plan HCBS benefit are less stringent than needs-based institutional and
waiver LOC criteria in effect after the adjustment.
(4) Individuals who were found eligible for the State plan HCBS
benefit before modification of the needs-based criteria under this
adjustment authority must remain eligible for the HCBS benefit until
such time as:
(i) The individual no longer meets the needs-based criteria used
for the initial determination of eligibility; or
(ii) The individual is no longer eligible for or enrolled in
Medicaid or the HCBS benefit.
(5) Any changes in service due to the modification of needs-based
criteria under this adjustment authority are treated as actions as
defined in Sec. 431.201 and are subject to the requirements of Part
431 Subpart E of this chapter.
(6) In the event that the State also needs to modify institutional
LOC criteria to meet the requirements under paragraph (b) of this
section that such criteria be more stringent than the State plan HCBS
needs-based eligibility criteria, the State may adjust the modified
institutional LOC criteria under this adjustment authority. The
adjusted institutional LOC criteria must be at least as stringent as
those in effect before they were modified to meet the requirements in
paragraph (b) of this section.
(d) Independent evaluation and determination of eligibility.
Eligibility for the State plan HCBS benefit must be determined through
an independent evaluation of each individual according to the
requirements of Sec. 441.656(a)(1) through (5) of this subpart. The
independent evaluation complies with the following requirements:
(1) Is performed by an agent that is independent and qualified as
defined in Sec. 441.668 of this subpart.
(2) Applies the needs-based eligibility criteria that the State has
established under paragraph (a) of this section, and the general
eligibility requirements under Sec. 441.656(a)(1) through (3) and
(b)(2) of this subpart.
(3) Includes consultation with the individual, and if applicable,
the individual's authorized representative.
(4) Assesses the individual's support needs.
(5) Uses only current and accurate information from existing
records, and obtains any additional information necessary to draw valid
conclusions about the individual's support needs.
(6) Evaluations finding that an individual is not eligible for the
State plan HCBS benefit are treated as actions defined in Sec. 431.201
of this chapter and are subject to the requirements of part 431 subpart
E of this chapter.
(e) Periodic redetermination. Independent reevaluations of each
individual receiving the State plan HCBS benefit must be performed at
least every 12 months, to determine whether the individual continues to
meet eligibility requirements. Redeterminations must meet the
requirements of paragraph (d) of this section.
Sec. 441.662 Independent assessment.
(a) Requirements. For each individual determined to be eligible for
the State plan HCBS benefit, the State must provide for an independent
assessment of needs, which may include the results of a standardized
functional needs assessment, in order to establish a service plan. In
applying the requirements of section 1915(i)(1)(F) of the Act, the
State must:
(1) Perform a face-to-face assessment of the individual by an agent
that is independent and qualified as defined in Sec. 441.668 of this
subpart and with a
[[Page 26403]]
person-centered process guided by best practice and research on
effective strategies that result in improved health and quality of life
outcomes.
(i) For the purposes of this section, a face-to-face assessment may
include assessments performed by telemedicine, or other information
technology medium, if the following conditions are met:
(A) The health care professional(s) performing the assessment meets
the provider qualifications defined by the State, including any
additional qualifications or training requirements for the operation of
required information technology.
(B) The individual receives appropriate support during the
assessment, including the use of any necessary on-site support-staff.
(C) The individual provides informed consent for this type of
assessment.
(ii) [Reserved]
(2) Conduct the assessment in consultation with the individual, and
if applicable, the individual's authorized representative, and include
the opportunity for the individual to identify other persons to be
consulted, such as, but not limited to, the individual's spouse,
family, guardian, and treating and consulting health and support
professionals responsible for the individual's care.
(3) Examine the individual's relevant history including the
findings from the independent evaluation of eligibility, medical
records, an objective evaluation of functional ability, and any other
records or information needed to develop the service plan as required
in Sec. 441.665 of this subpart.
(4) Include in the assessment the individual's physical and
behavioral health care and support needs, strengths and preferences,
available service and housing options, and when unpaid caregivers will
be relied upon to implement the service plan, a caregiver assessment.
(5) Apply the State's needs-based criteria for each service (if
any) that the individual may require. Individuals are considered
enrolled in the State plan HCBS benefit only if they meet the
eligibility and needs-based criteria for the benefit, and are also
assessed to require and receive at least one home and community-based
service offered under the State plan for medical assistance.
(6) Include in the assessment, if the State offers individuals the
option to self-direct a State plan home and community-based service or
services, any information needed for the self-directed portion of the
service plan, as required in Sec. 441.674(b) of this subpart,
including the ability of the individual (with and without supports) to
exercise budget or employer authority.
(7) Include in the assessment, for individuals receiving
habilitation services, documentation that no Medicaid services are
provided which would otherwise be available to the individual,
specifically including but not limited to services available to the
individual through a program funded under section 110 of the
Rehabilitation Act of 1973, or the Individuals with Disabilities
Education Improvement Act of 2004.
(8) Include in the assessment and subsequent service plan, for
individuals receiving Secretary approved services under the authority
of Sec. 440.182 of this chapter, documentation that no State plan HCBS
services are provided which would otherwise be available to the
individual through other Medicaid services or other Federally funded
programs.
(9) Include in the assessment and subsequent service plan, for
individuals receiving HCBS through a waiver approved under Sec.
441.300 of this subpart, documentation that HCBS provided through the
State plan and waiver are not duplicative.
(10) Coordinate the assessment and subsequent service plan with any
other assessment or service plan required for services through a waiver
authorized under section 1115 or section 1915 of the Social Security
Act.
(b) Reassessments. The independent assessment of need must be
conducted at least every 12 months and as needed when the individual's
support needs or circumstances change significantly, in order to revise
the service plan.
Sec. 441.665 Person-centered service plan.
(a) Person-centered planning process. Based on the independent
assessment required in Sec. 441.662 of this subpart, the State must
develop (or approve, if the plan is developed by others) a written
service plan jointly with the individual (including, for purposes of
this paragraph, the individual and the individual's authorized
representative if applicable). The person-centered planning process is
driven by the individual. The process:
(1) Includes people chosen by the individual.
(2) Provides necessary information and support to ensure that the
individual directs the process to the maximum extent possible, and is
enabled to make informed choices and decisions.
(3) Is timely and occurs at times and locations of convenience to
the individual.
(4) Reflects cultural considerations of the individual.
(5) Includes strategies for solving conflict or disagreement within
the process, including clear conflict-of-interest guidelines for all
planning participants.
(6) Offers choices to the individual regarding the services and
supports they receive and from whom.
(7) Includes a method for the individual to request updates to the
plan.
(8) Records the alternative home and community-based settings that
were considered by the individual.
(b) The person-centered service plan. The person-centered service
plan must reflect the services and supports that are important for the
individual to meet the needs identified through an assessment of
functional need, as well as what is important to the individual with
regard to preferences for the delivery of such services and supports.
Commensurate with the level of need of the individual, and the scope of
services and supports available under the State plan HCBS benefit, the
plan must:
(1) Reflect that the setting in which the individual resides is
chosen by the individual.
(2) Reflect the individual's strengths and preferences.
(3) Reflect clinical and support needs as identified through an
assessment of functional need.
(4) Include individually identified goals and desired outcomes.
(5) Reflect the services and supports (paid and unpaid) that will
assist the individual to achieve identified goals, and the providers of
those services and supports, including natural supports. Natural
supports cannot supplant needed paid services unless the natural
supports are unpaid supports that are provided voluntarily to the
individual in lieu of State plan HCBS.
(6) Reflect risk factors and measures in place to minimize them,
including Individualized backup plans.
(7) Be understandable to the individual receiving services and
supports, and the individuals important in supporting him or her.
(8) Identify the individual and/or entity responsible for
monitoring the plan.
(9) Be finalized and agreed to in writing by the individual and
signed by all individuals and providers responsible for its
implementation.
(10) Be distributed to the individual and other people involved in
the plan.
(11) Include those services, the purchase or control of which the
individual elects to self-direct, meeting the requirements of Sec.
441.574(b) through (d) of this subpart.
[[Page 26404]]
(12) Prevent the provision of unnecessary or inappropriate care.
(13) Other requirements as determined by the Secretary.
(c) Reviewing the person-centered service plan. The person-centered
service plan must be reviewed, and revised upon reassessment of
functional need as required in Sec. 441.662 of this subpart, at least
every 12 months, when the individual's circumstances or needs change
significantly, and at the request of the individual.
Sec. 441.668 Provider qualifications.
(a) Requirements. The State must provide assurances that necessary
safeguards have been taken to protect the health and welfare of
enrollees in State plan HCBS, and must define in writing standards for
providers (both agencies and individuals) of HCBS services and for
agents conducting individualized independent evaluation, independent
assessment, and service plan development.
(b) Conflict of interest standards. The State must define conflict
of interest standards that ensure the independence of individual and
agency agents who conduct (whether as a service or an administrative
activity) the independent evaluation of eligibility for State plan
HCBS, who are responsible for the independent assessment of need for
HCBS, or who are responsible for the development of the service plan.
The conflict of interest standards apply to all individuals and
entities, public or private. At a minimum, these agents must not be any
of the following:
(1) Related by blood or marriage to the individual, or to any paid
caregiver of the individual.
(2) Financially responsible for the individual.
(3) Empowered to make financial or health-related decisions on
behalf of the individual.
(4) Holding financial interest, as defined in Sec. 411.354 of this
chapter, in any entity that is paid to provide care for the individual.
(5) Providers of State plan HCBS for the individual, or those who
have an interest in or are employed by a provider of State plan HCBS
for the individual, except when the State demonstrates that the only
willing and qualified agent to perform independent assessments and
develop plans of care in a geographic area also provides HCBS, and the
State devises conflict of interest protections including separation of
agent and provider functions within provider entities, which are
described in the State plan for medical assistance and approved by the
Secretary, and individuals are provided with a clear and accessible
alternative dispute resolution process.
(c) Training. Qualifications for agents performing independent
assessments and plans of care must include training in assessment of
individuals whose physical or mental conditions trigger a potential
need for home and community-based services and supports, and current
knowledge of best practices to improve health and quality of life
outcomes.
Sec. 441.671 Definition of individual's representative.
In this subpart, the term individual's representative means, with
respect to an individual being evaluated for, assessed regarding, or
receiving State plan HCBS, the following:
(a) The individual's legal guardian or other person who is
authorized under State law to represent the individual for the purpose
of making decisions related to the person's care or well-being.
(b) Any other person who is authorized by policy of the State
Medicaid Agency to represent the individual including but not limited
to a parent, a family member, or an advocate for the individual.
(c) When the State authorizes representatives in accordance with
paragraph (b) of this section, the State must have policies describing
the process for authorization; the extent of decision-making
authorized; and safeguards to ensure that the representative functions
in the best interests of the participant. States may not refuse the
authorized representative that the individual chooses, unless in the
process of applying the requirements for authorization, the State
discovers and can document evidence that the representative is not
acting in the best interest of the individual or cannot perform the
required functions.
Sec. 441.674 Self-directed services.
(a) State option. The State may choose to offer an election for
self-directing HCBS. The term ``self-directed'' means, with respect to
State plan HCBS listed in Sec. 440.182 of this chapter, services that
are planned and purchased under the direction and control of the
individual, including the amount, duration, scope, provider, and
location of the HCBS. For purposes of this paragraph, individual means
the individual and, if applicable, the individual's representative as
defined in Sec. 441.671 of this subpart.
(b) Service plan requirement. Based on the independent assessment
required in Sec. 441.662 of this subpart, the State develops a service
plan jointly with the individual as required in Sec. 441.665 of this
subpart. If the individual chooses to direct some or all HCBS, the
service plan must meet the following additional requirements:
(1) Specify the State plan HCBS that the individual will be
responsible for directing.
(2) Identify the methods by which the individual will plan, direct
or control services, including whether the individual will exercise
authority over the employment of service providers and/or authority
over expenditures from the individualized budget.
(3) Include appropriate risk management techniques that explicitly
recognize the roles and sharing of responsibilities in obtaining
services in a self-directed manner and assure the appropriateness of
this plan based upon the resources and support needs of the individual.
(4) Describe the process for facilitating voluntary and involuntary
transition from self-direction including any circumstances under which
transition out of self-direction is involuntary.
(c) Employer authority. If the service plan includes authority to
select, manage, or dismiss providers of the State plan HCBS, the plan
must meet the following requirements:
(1) Specify the authority to be assumed by the individual, any
limits to the authority, and specify parties responsible for functions
outside the authority to be assumed.
(2) Specify the financial management supports, as required in
paragraph (e) of this section, to be provided.
(d) Budget authority. If the service plan includes an
individualized budget (which identifies the dollar value of the
services and supports under the control and direction of the
individual), the plan must meet the following requirements:
(1) Describe the method for calculating the dollar values in the
budget, based on reliable costs and service utilization.
(2) Define a process for making adjustments in dollar values to
reflect changes in an individual's assessment and service plan.
(3) Provide a procedure to evaluate expenditures under the budget.
(4) Specify the financial management supports, as required in
paragraph (e) of this section, to be provided.
(5) Not result in payment for medical assistance to the individual.
(e) Functions in support of self-direction. When the State elects
to offer self-directed State plan HCBS, it must offer the following
individualized supports to individuals receiving the services and their
representatives:
[[Page 26405]]
(1) Information and assistance consistent with sound principles and
practice of self-direction.
(2) Financial management supports to meet the following
requirements:
(i) Manage Federal, State, and local employment tax, labor,
worker's compensation, insurance, and other requirements that apply
when the individual functions as the employer of service providers.
(ii) Function as employer of record when the individual elects to
exercise supervisory responsibility without employment responsibility.
(iii) Make financial transactions on behalf of the individual when
the individual has personal budget authority.
(iv) Maintain separate accounts for each individual's budget and
provide periodic reports of expenditures against budget in a manner
understandable to the individual.
Sec. 441.677 State plan HCBS administration: State responsibilities
and quality improvement.
(a) State plan HCBS administration. (1) State responsibilities. The
State must carry out the following responsibilities in administration
of its State plan HCBS:
(i) Number served. The State will annually provide CMS with the
projected number of individuals to be enrolled in the benefit and the
actual number of unduplicated individuals enrolled in State plan HCBS
in the previous year.
(ii) Access to services. The State must grant access to all State
plan HCBS assessed to be needed in accordance with a service plan
consistent with Sec. 441.665 of this subpart, to individuals who have
been determined to be eligible for the State plan HCBS benefit, subject
to the following requirements:
(A) A State must determine that provided services meet medical
necessity criteria;
(B) A State may limit access to services through targeting criteria
established by Sec. 441.656(b)(2) of this subpart; and
(C) A State may not limit access to services based upon the income
of individuals, the cost of services, or the individual's location in
the State.
(iii) Appeals. A State must provide individuals with the right to
appeal terminations, suspensions, or reductions of Medicaid eligibility
or covered services as described in part 431, subpart E.
(2) Administration. (i) Option for presumptive payment. (A) The
State may provide for a period of presumptive payment, not to exceed 60
days, for Medicaid eligible individuals the State has reason to believe
may be eligible for the State plan HCBS benefit. FFP is available for
both services that meet the definition of medical assistance and
necessary administrative expenditures for evaluation of eligibility for
the State plan HCBS benefit under Sec. 441.659(d) of this subpart and
assessment of need for specific HCBS under Sec. 441.662(a) of this
subpart, prior to an individual's receipt of State plan HCBS services
or determination of ineligibility for the benefit.
(B) If an individual the State has reason to believe may be
eligible for the State plan HCBS benefit and is evaluated and assessed
under the presumptive payment option and found not to be eligible for
the benefit, FFP is available for services that meet the definition of
medical assistance and necessary administrative expenditures. The
individual so determined will not be considered to have enrolled in the
State plan HCBS benefit for purposes of determining the annual number
of participants in the benefit.
(ii) Option for Phase-in of Services and Eligibility. (A) In the
event that a State elects to establish targeting criteria through Sec.
441.656(b)(2) of this subpart, the State may limit the enrollment of
individuals or the provision services to enrolled individuals based
upon criteria described in a phase-in plan, subject to CMS approval. A
State which elects to target the State plan HCBS benefit and to phase-
in enrollment and/or services must submit a phase-in plan for approval
by CMS that describes, at a minimum:
(1) The criteria used to limit enrollment or service delivery;
(2) The rationale for phasing-in services and/or eligibility; and
(3) Timelines and benchmarks to ensure that the benefit is
available statewide to all eligible individuals within the initial 5-
year approval.
(B) If a State elects to phase-in the enrollment of individuals
based on highest need, the phase-in plan must use the needs-based
criteria described in Sec. 441.659(a) of this subpart to establish
priority for enrollment. Such criteria must be based upon the assessed
need of individuals, with higher-need individuals receiving services
prior to individuals with lower assessed need.
(C) If a State elects to phase-in the provision of any services,
the phase-in plan must include a description of the services that will
not be available to all eligible individuals, the rationale for
limiting the provision of services, and assurance that all individuals
with access to a willing and qualified provider may receive services.
(D) The plan may not include a cap on the number of enrollees.
(E) The plan must include a timeline to assure that all eligible
individuals receive all included services prior to the end of the first
5-year approval period, described in paragraph (a)(2)(vi) of this
section.
(iii) Reimbursement methodology. The State plan amendment to
provide State plan HCBS must contain a description of the reimbursement
methodology for each covered service. To the extent that the
reimbursement methodologies for any self-directed services differ from
those descriptions, the method for setting reimbursement methodology
for the self-directed services must also be described.
(iv) Operation. The State plan amendment to provide State plan HCBS
must contain a description of the State Medicaid agency line of
authority for operating the State plan HCBS benefit, including
distribution of functions to other entities.
(v) Modifications. The agency may request that modifications to the
benefit be made effective retroactive to the first day of a fiscal year
quarter, or another date after the first day of a fiscal year quarter,
in which the amendment is submitted, unless the amendment involves
substantive change. Substantive changes may include, but are not
limited to, the following:
(A) Revisions to services available under the benefit including
elimination or reduction in services, and changes in the scope, amount
and duration of the services.
(B) Changes in the qualifications of service providers, rate
methodology, or the eligible population.
(1) Request for Amendments. A request for an amendment that
involves a substantive change as determined by CMS--
(i) May only take effect on or after the date when the amendment is
approved by CMS; and
(ii) Must be accompanied by information on how the State will
ensure for transitions with minimal adverse impact on individuals
impacted by the change.
(2) [Reserved]
(vi) Periods of approval. (A) If a State elects to establish
targeting criteria through Sec. 441.656(b)(2) of this subpart, the
approval of the State Plan Amendment will be in effect for a period of
5 years from the effective date of the amendment. To renew State plan
HCBS for an additional 5-year period, the State must provide a written
request for renewal to CMS at least 180 days prior to the end of the
approval period. CMS approval of a renewal request is
[[Page 26406]]
contingent upon State adherence to Federal requirements.
(B) If a State does not elect to establish targeting criteria
through Sec. 441.656(b)(2) of this subpart, the limitations on length
of approval does not apply.
(b) Quality improvement strategy: Program performance and quality
of care. States must develop and implement an HCBS quality improvement
strategy that includes a continuous improvement process and measures of
program performance and experience of care. The strategy must be
proportionate to the scope of services in the State plan HCBS benefit
and the number of individuals to be served. The State will make this
information available to CMS at a frequency determined by the Secretary
or upon request.
(1) Quality Improvement Strategy. The quality improvement strategy
must include all of the following:
(i) Incorporate a continuous quality improvement process that
includes monitoring, remediation, and quality improvement.
(ii) Be evidence-based, and include measures as determined by the
Secretary.
(iii) Provide evidence of program performance and the establishment
of sufficient infrastructure to effectively implement the program.
(iv) Measure individual outcomes associated with the receipt of
HCBS, related to the implementation of goals included in the individual
service plan.
(2) [Reserved]
PART 447--PAYMENTS FOR SERVICES
16. The authority citation for part 447 continues to read as
follows:
Authority: Sec. 1102 of the Social Security Act (42 U.S.C.
1302).
17. Section 447.10 is amended by adding paragraph (g)(4) to read as
follows:
Sec. 447.10 Prohibition Against Reassignment of Provider Claims
(g) * * *
(4) In the case of a class of practitioners for which the Medicaid
program is the primary source of revenue, payment may be made to a
third party on behalf of the individual practitioner for benefits such
as health insurance, skills training and other benefits customary for
employees.
* * * * *
Authority
(Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance Program No. 93.778, Medical
Assistance Program)
Dated: April 24, 2012.
Marilyn Tavenner,
Acting Administrator, Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services.
Approved: April 24, 2012.
Kathleen Sebelius,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2012-10385 Filed 4-26-12; 4:15 pm]
BILLING CODE 4120-01-P