A. The Medicare Catastrophic Coverage Act of
1988 (MCAA) repealed the transfer of resources penalty for
non-institutionalized individuals.
1. New
transfer of resources policy created under the MCAA applies only to
institutionalized individuals as defined below, who transfer resources on or
after July 1, 1988 through August 10, 1993.
2. Transfers that occur after August 10,
1993, are evaluated under OBRA-93 transfer policy.
B. Under this rule, an institutionalized
individual is defined as an individual who is:
1. A nursing facility inpatient,
2. An inpatient at a medical institution
receiving a nursing facility level of care, or
3. A recipient of home and community-based
waiver services.
a) ICF-MR residents are not
included in this definition.
b) The
transfer penalty resulting in ineligibility, as defined below, applies to
nursing facility services and medical institution services where the level of
care provided is equivalent to nursing facility care.
c) An institutionalized individual remains
eligible for all other Medicaid services while a transfer penalty is in effect,
provided eligibility is met on all other factors.
C. An institutionalized
individual, who, at any time during the 30-month period immediately before the
individual's application for medical assistance, disposed of resources for less
than fair market value shall be ineligible for nursing facility services
beginning with the month in which resources were transferred.
1. An institutionalized individual is also
prohibited from transferring resources during the period of
institutionalization, unless an exception applies.
2. Effective October 1, 1989, the transfer
penalty also applies to a community spouse who transfers resources within the
30-month period preceding application and/or during the time his-her spouse
remains institutionalized.
a) A transfer of
resources by a community spouse to another individual will result in a transfer
penalty applying to the institutionalized spouse.
D. The following describes the
period of ineligibility and application of the transfer penalty:
1. The transfer penalty is equal to 30
months, or
a) The 30-month period is
calculated using the month of a transfer as the first month continuing through
the 30th consecutive month, provided the transfer
occurred on or after July 1, 1988.
b) The 30-month period of ineligibility is
imposed unless the uncompensated value/private-pay calculation results in a
period of ineligibility less than 30 months.
2. The transfer penalty is the number of
months required to deplete the uncompensated value (UV) based on the total UV
of the transferred resources divided by the average monthly cost of nursing
facility services to a private pay patient if less than 30 months.
a) The private pay calculation is based on a
statewide average private pay cost of $1,456.00 per month.
b) In calculating the period of
ineligibility, divide the UV by $1,456.00 to determine the number of month that
an individual will be ineligible for nursing home services.
c) All calculations are rounded down to the
nearest whole dollar.
1) Example: If the total
UV is $20,000, then $20,000 divided by $1,456 = 13.73. Rounding down, the
period of ineligibility would be 13 months, which is less than the 30-month
penalty.
3.
In determining the penalty period, the month of the transfer is always "month
one" of the period of ineligibility. As a result, the penalty period may be
expired or near expiration as of the month of the application.
a) Example: A transfer with UV of $5,000
occurs 7/5/88. Using the private pay calculation, the period of ineligibility
for nursing facility services is 3 months, July through September. If the
application is filed on or after October 1, 1988, the penalty period will have
expired, although eligibility for all other Medicaid services is possible in
the retroactive period. If the UV does not result in ineligibility for at least
one month, the transfer will not count.
b) Example: If the transfer is for $1,000,
which is less than the average private pay rate, no penalty applies for the
month of the transfer. Each transfer is evaluated based on the month the
transfer occurred. If more than one transfer occurs in the same month, the UV
is combined and the penalty period calculated on total UV for a particular
month. If transfers crossover into different months, each transfer is evaluated
separately and UV is not combined. The possible results would be overlapping
penalty periods.
4. The
transfer penalty will not apply to the transfer of home property by an
institutionalized individual to the following family members:
a) The individual's spouse or child under age
21 or a disabled or blind adult child; or
b) A sibling who is part owner of the home
who lived in the home for one (1) year before the individual entered the
nursing facility; or
c) A child who
lived in the home for up to two (2) years before the individual entered a
nursing facility and provided care to the individual which permitted the
individual to remain at home.
5. The transfer penalty will not apply to the
transfer of any type of resource in the following situations:
a) Resources are transferred to or from the
individual's spouse.
1) Effective October 1,
1989, a transfer of assets from a community spouse to another individual will
result in a penalty charged to the institutionalized spouse.
b) Resources are transferred to
the institutionalized individual's child who is disabled or blind.
c) Satisfactory evidence is required to show
that the individual intended to dispose of the resource(s) either at fair
market value or for other valuable consideration, or, that resource(s) were
transferred exclusively for a purpose other than to qualify for
Medicaid.
d) Denial of eligibility
would result in undue hardship.
e)
The resource was excluded under ongoing policy at the time for the
transfer.
f) The resource was
transferred by an individual other than the institutionalized
applicant/recipient and that person had no legal authorization to act in the
applicant's or recipient's behalf at the time of the transfer.
E. Notification of
Transfer Penalty and Rebuttal.
1. The client
will be notified of countable transfers and the penalty period.
2. The client or representative is allowed 10
days to present evidence to show that the transfer should not count.
a) Evidence should include a written rebuttal
plus any pertinent documentary evidence.
b) If no rebuttal is offered, the penalty
will be applied and the appropriate adverse action notice issued to deny or
terminate payment of nursing home services only.
c) The individual remains eligible for all
other Medicaid services if the transfer penalty is the only factor of
ineligibility.
d) If the individual
is ineligible on other factors as well as the transfer, the application or case
must be denied or terminated.
3. Factors which may indicate that a transfer
was made for some purpose other than establishing Medicaid eligibility are
listed below. The presence of one or more of the following factors may result
in an acceptable rebuttal:
a) The occurrence
after a transfer of resources of one or more of the following:
1) Traumatic onset (e.g., traffic accident of
disability or blindness;
2)
Diagnosis of previously undetected disabling condition;
3) Unexpected loss of other resources which
would have precluded Medicaid eligibility;
4) Unexpected loss of income (including
deemed income) which would have precluded Medicaid eligibility.
5) In general, if the client was healthy
and/or financially secure at the time of the transfer, with no expectation of
future Medicaid need, then an acceptable rebuttal may be established.
6) Total countable resources that would have
been below the resource limit at all times from the month of transfer through
the present month even if the transferred resource had been retained;
7) Court-ordered transfer;
8) Resource(s) sold at less than current
market value in order to obtain cash quickly to meet expenses or repay a legal
debt.
F. The transfer penalty can be waived if a
period of ineligibility would result in undue hardship for the
institutionalized individual.
1. Undue
hardship exists if a Medicaid denial of nursing home care would result in the
individual's inability to obtain medical care.
2. Each case situation must be reviewed
individually to determine if undue hardship exists but the provision is geared
toward financially and medically needy individuals with no possible means of
recovering their transferred resource(s).
G. If a transferred resource is returned to
or if compensation is received by the institutionalized individual, the UV is
no longer an issue or is reduced as of the date of return.
1. The resource of compensation is evaluated
according to normal resource rules in the month of the return.
2. Any portion of a transferred resource that
is not returned continues to count as UV which means the penalty period must be
re-evaluated.
3. A penalty period
must be recalculated from the month a portion of the resource is returned or
additional compensation is received.
a)
Example: A transfer of $10,000 occurred in 10/88 resulting in a 6-month penalty
period, or October 1988 March 1989. In January 1989, $5,000 is returned to the
institutionalized client. The penalty period is then recalculated using UV of
$5,000 transferred in 10/88 which results in a revised period of ineligibility
of 3 months or October 1988 December 1988. If the full resource is returned,
normal resource rules apply the month of the transfer.
H. The transfer penalty can be
imposed during months that an individual receives SSA or is SSI-eligible in a
nursing home.
1. Example, an ABD application
is filed in December 1988 and a transfer is discovered during the application
process. The applicant had entered the nursing home in October 1988 as an SSI
eligible and SSI eligibility continued until 12/31/88. The transfer results in
a 4-month penalty period. The penalty can be imposed for October 1988 January
1989 even though SSI eligibility existed October 1988 December 1988.
a) This would mean no vendor payment would be
authorized for the 4-month penalty period; and
b) As a result, notices regarding ABD
eligibility based on SSI will be postponed until eligibility for ABD is
determined which excludes any transfers for the SSI months.
Social Security Act
§1917(c); Medicare Catastrophic Coverage Act (MCCA) of 1988 ( P.L. 100-360
); Omnibus Reconciliation Act of 1993 (OBRA-93) §13611 (Rev. 1993); Miss.
Code Ann. § 43-13-121.1 (Rev. 2005).