Current through Register Vol. 48, No. 38, September 20, 2024
a) Hospital-based
organized clinics must:
1) Have an
administrative structure, staff program, physical setting, and equipment to
provide comprehensive medical care.
2) Agree to assume complete responsibility
for diagnosis and treatment of the patients accepted by the clinic, or provide,
at no additional cost to the Department, for the acquisition of these services
through contractual arrangements with external medical providers.
3) Meet one of the following requirements:
A) Be adjacent to or on the premises of a
hospital:
i) licensed under the Hospital
Licensing Act or the University of Illinois Hospital Act; or
ii) that meets all comparable conditions and
requirements of the Hospital Licensing Act in effect for the state in which it
is located.
B) Have
provider-based status under Medicare pursuant to
42
CFR 413.65.
C) Be clinically integrated as evidenced by
all of the following:
i) Professional staff
of the clinic have clinical privileges at the main hospital; the main hospital
maintains the same monitoring and oversight of the clinic as it does for any
other department of the hospital; medical staff committees or other
professional committees at the main hospital are responsible for medical
activities in the clinic, including quality assurance, utilization review, and
the coordination and integration of services, to the extent practicable,
between the clinic and the main hospital; medical records for patients treated
in the clinic are integrated into a unified retrieval system of the main
hospital, or cross reference that retrieval system; and inpatient and
outpatient services of the clinic and the main hospital are integrated, and
patients treated at the clinic who require further care have full access to all
services of the main hospital and are referred when appropriate to the
corresponding inpatient or outpatient department or service of the main
hospital.
ii) Fully integrated
within the financial system of the main hospital, as evidenced by shared income
and expenses between the main hospital and the clinic.
iii) Held out to the public and other payers
as part of the main hospital.
iv)
Operated under the ownership and control of the main hospital, as evidenced by
the following: the business enterprise that constitutes the clinic is 100
percent owned by the main hospital; the main hospital and the clinic have the
same governing body; the clinic is operated under the same organizational
documents (e.g., bylaws and operating decisions) as the main hospital; and the
main hospital has final responsibility for personnel policies (such as fringe
benefits or code of conduct), and final approval for medical staff appointments
in the clinic.
v) Located within a
35 mile radius of the main hospital campus as defined in
42
CFR 413.65.
4) Meet the applicable requirements of 89
Ill. Adm. Code
148.40(d).
b) Encounter Rate Clinics
1) Encounter rate clinics must:
A) have participated in the Medical
Assistance Program as an encounter rate clinic as of July 1, 1998; or
B) be a clinic operated by an Illinois county
with a population of over three million.
2) Individual practitioners associated with
these clinics may apply for participation in the Medical Assistance Program in
their individual capacities. In order to participate in the Maternal and Child
Health Program, as described in Subpart G, encounter rate clinics shall be
required to meet the additional participation requirements described in Section
140.924(a)(2).
c) Rural health clinics must be
certified by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services as meeting the
requirements for Medicare participation.
d) Federally Qualified Health Centers (FQHC):
1) Must meet one of the following criteria:
A) Receive a grant under Section 329, 330 or
340 of the Public Health Service Act ( 42 USC 329, 330 or 340).
B) Based on the recommendation of the Health
Resources and Services Administration within the U.S. Department of Health and
Human Services, be determined to meet the requirements for receiving a
grant.
2) Section
1902(a)(55) of the Social Security Act (
42 USC
1396 a(a)(55)), requires states to receive
and initially process Medicaid applications from low-income pregnant women and
children under 19 years of age at locations other than the local Department of
Human Services (DHS) office. These sites are referred to as outstations.
A) Outstations will be located at those FQHCs
that the Department determines serve heavy Medicaid populated areas. For areas
in which the Department determines that maintaining outstation workers is not
economical, the DHS Family Community Resource Center (FCRC) will continue to be
the application location.
B) The
FQHCs, which will provide outstation eligibility staff to accept and assist in
the initial processing of the Medicaid application for pregnant women and
children, will forward the completed application to the appropriate DHS FCRC.
Initial processing means accepting and completing the application, providing
information and referrals, obtaining required documentation to complete
processing of the application, assuring that the information contained on the
application form is complete and conducting any necessary interviews. Neither
the FQHCs nor the outstation workers will evaluate the information contained on
the application, nor make any determination of eligibility or ineligibility.
The DHS FCRC is responsible for these functions.
C) Costs allowable under the federal
outstation mandate for completing the Medicaid application will be itemized in
Section B of Schedule I of the FQHC Medicaid cost report and will be provided
annually in the FQHC cost reporting process. These allowable costs will be
collected, computed and calculated, and will result in the establishment of an
outstation administrative rate and a Medicaid rate. The allowable costs are:
i) Salary of outstation worker.
ii) Fringe benefits.
iii) Training.
iv) Travel.
v) Supplies.
D) FQHC outstation workers must receive
certification through Maternal and Child Health (MCH) process training by the
Department before they begin to perform eligibility processing functions.
Failure to become certified results in any MCH application completed by an
ineligible worker being non-allowed on the cost report.
E) FQHCs must have adequate staff trained
with proper backup to accommodate unforeseen problems. FQHCs must be able to
meet the demand of this initiative, either using staff at one location or
rotating staff as dictated by workload or staffing availability. The FQHC must
have staff available at each outstation location during regular office
operating hours.
F) Outstation
intake staff may perform other FQHC intake processing functions, but the time
spent on outstation activities must be documented and must be identifiable for
cost reporting and auditing purposes.
G) The FQHC must display a notice in a
prominent place at the outstation location advising potential applicants of the
times that outstation intake workers will be available. The notice must include
a telephone number that applicants may call for assistance.
H) The FQHC must comply with federal and
State laws and regulations governing the provision of adequate notice to
persons who are blind or deaf or who are unable to read or understand the
English language.
e) Individual practitioners associated with
such centers may apply for participation in the Medical Assistance Program in
their individual capacities.
f)
School Based/Linked Health Clinics (centers) must be certified by the
Department of Human Services (DHS) that they are meeting the minimum standards
established by DHS (77 Ill. Adm. Code 2200). Examples of certification
requirements include:
1) School based health
centers must be located in schools or on school grounds, serving at least the
students attending that school.
2)
School linked health centers are located off school grounds, but a formal
relationship must exist to serve students attending a particular school or
multiple schools within the district.
3) All medical services performed by
mid-level practitioners (i.e., medical services providers who are not
physicians), such as nurse practitioners, must be under the direction of a
physician.
4) The center must have
a medical director. The medical director of the center must be a qualified
physician, licensed in Illinois to practice medicine in all its branches. Each
center's medical director must develop standing orders and protocols for
services provided at the center. The medical director shall ensure compliance
with the policies and procedures pertaining to medical procedures and health
care services. The medical director shall supervise the medical protocols
involving direct care of students. The center must have consultant or back-up
physicians with hospital admitting privileges. The consultant provider of the
clinic for obstetrical care, as appropriate, must have delivery privileges. All
medical services must be delivered in accordance with the American College of
Obstetricians and Gynecologists, the American Academy of Pediatrics, the
American Academy of Family Practice Guidelines and the standards established by
outside regulatory agencies.
5) All
laboratory services must be in compliance with the Clinical Laboratory
Improvement Amendments (CLIA) of 1988 (
42 USC
263 a). DHS will provide ongoing monitoring
to assure that appropriate standards are followed.
6) The center shall be staffed by Illinois
licensed, registered, and/or certified health professionals who are trained and
experienced in community and school health, and who have knowledge of health
promotion and illness prevention strategies for children and adolescents. The
center must ensure that staff are assigned responsibilities consistent with
their education and experience, supervised, evaluated annually and trained in
the policies and procedures of the center.
7) The center must establish procedures for
the availability of primary care providers and for 24-hour per day, 12-month
per year access to routine, urgent and emergency care, telephone appointments
and advice. The center must have in place telephone answering methods that
notify students and parents/guardians where and how to access 24-hour back-up
services when the center is not open.
8) Services may be provided to eligible
students who have obtained written parental consent, or who are 18 years of
age, and/or who are otherwise able to give their own consent.
9) The center must coordinate care and the
exchange of information necessary for the provision of health care of the
student, between the center and a student's primary care practitioner, medical
specialist or managed care entity. Written policies must address obtaining
student and/or parental consent to share information regarding a student's
health care.
10) The center must
operate in accordance with a systematic process for referring students to
community-based health care providers when the center is not able to provide
the services required by the student. The center may provide medical care to a
Managed Care Entity (MCE) enrolled student. The center shall refer that MCE
enrolled student to the MCE primary care provider for continuing and definitive
care.
A) The center shall refer a student who
requires specialty medical and/or surgical services to his or her primary care
provider or MCE to obtain a referral for a specialist.
B) The center shall document in the student's
record that the referral was made, and document follow-up on the outcome of the
referral when relevant to the health care provided by the center.
11) The center must develop a
collaborative relationship with other health care providers, insurers, managed
care organizations, the school health program, students and parents or
guardians with the goal of assuring continuity of care, pertinent medical
record sharing and reducing duplication and fragmentation of
services.
12) Data Requirements
The center shall maintain a health record system that
provides for consistency, confidentiality, storage and security of records for
documenting significant student health information and the delivery of health
care services.
g) Hospital Outpatient Departments
Hospital outpatient departments may include facilities that
meet the requirements of subsection (a)(3) of this Section.
h) County-operated Outpatient Facilities
A county-operated outpatient facility is a non-hospital-based
clinic operated by and located in an Illinois county with a population
exceeding three million.
1) Critical
Clinic Providers. A critical clinic provider is a county-operated outpatient
facility that is within or adjacent to a large public hospital as defined in 89
Ill. Adm. Code
148.25(a)(1).
2) County Ambulatory Health Centers. A county
ambulatory health center is a county-operated outpatient facility that is not a
critical clinic provider.
3)
County-operated outpatient facilities shall submit outpatient cost reports to
the Department within 90 days after the close of the facility's fiscal
year.