Current through September 24, 2024
A. Basic
Requirements
1. The facility must, upon
written authorization by the resident, accept responsibility for holding,
safeguarding and accounting for the resident's personal funds. The facility may
make arrangements with a federally or state insured banking institution to
provide these services, but the responsibility for the quality and accuracy of
compliance with the requirements of this section remains with the facility. The
facility may not charge the resident for these services, but must include any
charges in the facility's basic daily rate.
2. Resident fund accounts are reviewed to
assist facilities in developing acceptable systems of accounting for resident
funds.
3. Penalties may be assessed
on any licensed nursing facility that fails to maintain an auditable system of
accounting for residents' funds or has had repeated instances of noncompliance
with the provisions of federal law and of the requirements contained in this
section.
B. Statement
Provided at Time of Admission - The facility must provide each resident and
responsible party with a written statement at the time of admission that states
the following:
1. All services provided by
the facility must be distinguished between the services included in the
facility's basic rate and those services not included in the facility's basic
rate. The statement must include both the services that may be charged to the
resident's personal funds and the amount of such charges.
2. There is no obligation for the resident to
deposit funds with the facility.
3.
The resident has the right to select how personal funds will be handled. The
following alternatives must be included:
a)
The resident's right to receive, retain and manage his/her personal funds or to
have this done by a legal guardian, if any,
b) The resident's right to apply to the
Social Security Administration to have a representative payee designated for
purposes of federal or state benefits to which he/she may be
entitled,
c) The resident's right
to designate, in writing, another person to act for the purpose of managing
his/her personal funds, and
d) The
resident's right to require the facility to hold, safeguard, and account for
such personal funds under a system established and maintained by the facility,
if requested by the resident.
4. Any charge for this service is included in
the facility's basic rate.
5. The
facility is permitted to accept a resident's funds to hold, safeguard, and
account for, only upon the written authorization of the resident or
representative, or if the facility is appointed as the resident's
representative payee.
6. The
facility is required to arrange for the management of the resident's personal
funds if the resident becomes incapable of managing his/her personal funds and
does not have a representative.
7.
The facility must maintain a complete copy of its resident trust fund policies
and procedures and must make them accessible and available for
review.
C. Individual
Records - The facility must maintain current, written, individual records of
all financial transactions involving the resident's personal funds which the
facility has been given for holding, safeguarding, and accounting. The facility
must act as fiduciary of the resident's funds and account for these funds in an
auditable manner. The facility must use Generally Accepted Accounting
Principles (GAAP) when maintaining these records. GAAP means that the facility,
for example, employs proper bookkeeping techniques by which it can determine,
upon request, all deposits and withdrawals for each resident, how much interest
these funds have earned for each resident, and the amount of individual
resident funds. Resident fund records must:
1.
Include the resident's name.
2.
Identify the resident's representative, if any.
3. Include the resident's admission
date.
4. Show the actual
transaction date and amount of each deposit and withdrawal.
5. Reflect the actual date of an adjusting or
correcting entry.
6. State the name
of the person who accepted the withdrawn funds.
7. Show the balance after each
transaction.
8. Provide the
appropriate signatures for all disbursements of funds, such as:
a) Resident's signature,
b) Resident's mark, or "x" with two
witnesses' signatures,
c) Power of
attorney's signature,
d) Resident's
responsible party when the amount disbursed is supported by appropriate
documentation, or
e) Two signatures
of facility personnel when the amount disbursed is supported by appropriate
documentation.
9.
Document transaction with receipts indicating the purpose for which any
withdrawn funds were spent. This restriction is applicable to all parties,
except the residents and their power of attorney, who have written
authorization to withdraw funds from a resident's trust fund account.
Applicable parties include, but are not limited to, responsible parties,
facility personnel, representative payees, etc. The facility must reimburse the
resident's account for any undocumented transactions.
10. For powers of attorney, the provider must
maintain a copy of the power of attorney in the resident's file, and before the
provider can allow withdrawals of funds based upon the power, the provider must
ensure that the power contains language sufficient to allow the holder to
withdraw funds and expend them.
11.
Reflect the resident's earned interest, if any.
12. Be reconcilable, at all times, with the
current bank statement and/or petty cash.
13. Not include as an outstanding item any
check written on a resident's account that has not been cashed within one year
of check date. Any check held as outstanding for 12 months or more should be
reissued to the appropriate party or voided and credited to the appropriate
resident's account. If the check was a refund for a discharged or deceased
resident, the funds may be sent to the State Treasurer as unclaimed funds. For
further information on Accounting Upon Death or Discharge of Resident refer to
the Title 23 Administrative Code Part 207, Chapter 3 Rule
3.7 M., and
14. Be kept for at least five years after the
resident's discharge or death.
D. Limitation on Charges to Resident Funds
1. Acceptable charges to resident funds
include, but are not limited to, the following general categories and examples,
if proper authorization and documentation, as specified in under the heading
"Individual Records" of this section is provided. The facility must notify the
resident and/or responsible party, in advance, that there will be a charge for
non-Medicaid covered items and services, such as:
a) Personal communication/entertainment items
and services, like a telephone, television, radio, and computer,
b) Personal comfort items, including tobacco,
novelties, and candy,
c) Items and
services in excess of those included in the Medicaid per diem rate, such as
grooming or cosmetic items which are requested by the resident. The resident
must be furnished in advance with an itemized statement of charges for these
items and services,
d) Personal
clothing,
e) Personal reading
material,
f) Gifts purchased on
behalf of the resident,
g) Flowers
and plants for the resident's room,
h) Entertainment and social events outside
the scope of that provided by the facility and included in the Medicaid per
diem rate,
i) Private sitters or
aides,
j) Private room provided
that a private room is not medically necessary, such as isolation for infection
control,
k) Specially prepared or
alternative food requested instead of or in addition to the food generally
prepared by the facility, and
l)
Authorized cost-sharing in Medicaid-covered services, including Medicaid Income
liability for room and board.
2. Unacceptable charges to resident funds
include the following categories and examples:
a) Any charge not authorized and
documented.
b) Nursing, dietary,
activities, room/bed maintenance, and personal hygiene services.
c) Medically necessary items and services are
reimbursed as part of the Medicaid per diem rate. However, any properly made
charge for equipment or services, such as geriatric or gerichairs, wheelchairs,
support shoes, gurneys, and counseling services, must be supported by a written
statement from the resident's physician that documents the item or service was
not of medical necessity. Failure to maintain the physician's denial of medical
necessity statement may result in the facility's reimbursement of charges to a
resident's account.
d)
Transportation.
e) Any item or
service requiring a waiver of the resident's personal needs allowance, such as
for repayment of a debt owed the facility. The personal needs
allowance may be used by a nursing facility for nursing facility costs only
upon the written authorization of the resident or the resident's responsible
party and with the understanding by the resident that this action is voluntary
and is not a requirement.
f) Loans
or collateral for loans to anyone, including the facility and other residents
in the trust fund. A resident's balance must be positive at all times, as a
resident with a negative balance is in effect borrowing money from the other
residents.
g) Transfers or gifts of
money not authorized by the resident, such as when the resident's responsible
party transfers funds without documentation that the funds were used for the
benefit of the resident.
h) Any
item or service as a condition of admission or continued stay.
E. Resident's Access to
Financial Records and Quarterly Statements - The facility must provide each
resident, responsible party, or legal representative of each resident,
reasonable access to the resident's financial records. In addition, the
facility must provide a written statement, at least quarterly, to each
resident, responsible party, or legal representative. The quarterly statement
must reflect any resident funds which the facility has deposited in an interest
bearing or a non-interest bearing account, as well as any resident funds held
by the facility in a petty cash account.
F. Commingling of Residents' Funds - The
facility must keep any funds received from a resident for holding, safeguarding
and accounting separate from the facility's funds and from the funds of any
person other than another resident in that facility. The facility may not open
any additional accounts within the trust fund account, such as donation
accounts, miscellaneous accounts, or the like. Only funds of the facility's
residents may be maintained as part of the resident trust fund
account.
G. Deposit of Resident
Funds into an Interest or Non-Interest Bearing Account
1. The facility must deposit any resident's
personal funds in excess of fifty dollars ($50.00) in an interest bearing
account(s) that is separate from any of the facility's operating accounts. The
facility must credit all interest earned on such separate account(s) in one of
the following ways, at the election of the facility:
a) Prorated to each resident's account on an
actual interest-earned basis; or
b)
Prorated to each resident's account on the basis of its end-of-quarter
balance.
2. The facility
must maintain a resident's personal funds that do not exceed fifty dollars
($50.00) in a non-interest bearing account, an interest-bearing account, or a
petty cash fund. However, if the facility maintains a resident's personal funds
of fifty dollars ($50.00) or less in a pooled account with all other residents'
funds, interest is accumulated based on the total amount of funds in the trust
fund account; therefore, all residents must be allocated interest
proportionately in that instance.
3. The facility may neither limit nor
restrict any resident with funds on deposit within the resident trust fund
account to a maximum of fifty dollars ($50.00). A facility may not establish
policy that conflicts with this absolute right of the residents for the
facility to hold, safeguard, manage, and account for all residents' funds
deposited with the facility.
H. Access to Funds
1. Funds held in the facility - The residents
must have access to funds daily during normal business hours and for some
reasonable time of at least two (2) hours on Saturdays and Sundays. The
facility must, upon request or upon the resident's transfer or discharge,
during normal business hours, return to the resident, the legal guardian or the
representative payee all funds remaining that the facility has received for
holding, safeguarding and accounting and that are maintained in a petty cash
fund.
2. Funds held outside the
facility - For a resident's personal funds that the facility has received and
that are deposited in an account outside the facility, the facility, upon
request, must, within five (5) business days, return to the resident, the legal
guardian, or the representative payee, all or any part of those
funds.
I. Accounting on
Change of Ownership
1. Duties of new owner -
Upon sale of the facility or other transfer of ownership, the facility must
provide the new owner with a written accounting of all resident funds being
transferred and obtain a written receipt for those funds from the new
owner.
2. Duties to resident - The
facility must give each resident or representative a written accounting of any
personal funds held by the facility before any transfer of ownership
occurs.
3. Rights of resident - In
the event of a disagreement with the accounting provided by the facility, the
resident retains all rights and remedies provided under state law.
4. Sponsor signatures for fiscal
responsibility - A nursing facility cannot require a family member or other
individual to sign a financial responsibility statement for a Medicaid
resident. In instances where Medicaid beneficiaries have no family member or
individual available for such signatures, it is clearly discriminatory for a
Medicaid provider to refuse admission to the resident.
J. Accounting Upon Death or Discharge of
Resident
1. The facility must, within thirty
(30) days of a resident's death or discharge, convey the resident's funds and a
final accounting of those funds to the individual or probate jurisdiction
administering the resident's estate. If the deceased resident's estate has no
executor or administrator, the facility must convey the resident's funds and
provide a final accounting to the:
a)
Resident's next of kin,
b)
Resident's representative, or
c)
Clerk of the probate court of the county in which the resident died.
2. Disposition of Funds for
Deceased Resident Who Dies Intestate Within a Long-Term Care Facility
a) Any Medicaid beneficiary receiving medical
assistance for services provided in a longterm care facility who dies intestate
and leaves no known heirs shall have deemed, through acceptance of such medical
assistance, the Division of Medicaid as the beneficiary of funds in his/her
possession at the time of death, in an amount not to exceed two hundred fifty
dollars ($250.00). The Division of Medicaid is the beneficiary of these funds
regardless of whether a claim is later made to the beneficiary's property in
accordance with Miss. Code Ann. §
43-13-120(3)
and (4).
b) The long-term care facility shall make a
report to the State Treasurer of all funds, including any accrued interest, in
the possession of the Medicaid beneficiary at the time of death. The report of
such funds shall be on a form prescribed or approved by the State Treasurer and
shall include the name of the deceased Medicaid beneficiary and his/her last
known address prior to entering the facility, the name and last known address
of each person who may possess an interest in such funds, and any other
information which the State Treasurer prescribes by regulation. This report
must be filed with the State Treasurer, with a copy to the Division of
Medicaid, prior to November 1 of the year in which the facility provided
services to the Medicaid beneficiary having funds to which this section
applies.
c) Within one hundred
twenty (120) days from November 1 of each year in which a report is made, the
State Treasurer shall cause notice to be published in the newspaper in
accordance with Miss. Code Ann. §
43-13-120(3).
The Division of Medicaid shall pay the cost of publishing the notice.
d) The long-term care facility that makes a
report of funds of a deceased Medicaid beneficiary shall pay over and deliver
such funds, including any accrued interest, to the State Treasurer not later
than ten (10) days after notice of such funds has been published by the State
Treasurer.
e) If within ninety (90)
days of the State Treasurer's publication no claims are made to the funds in
excess of the two hundred fifty dollars ($250.00) the Division of Medicaid has
already received pursuant to 2.a) above, the State Treasurer shall place those
funds in a special account in the State Treasury to the credit of the Division
of Medicaid.
3.
Disposition of Funds for Deceased Resident Who Dies Intestate in a State
Institution
a) Miss. Admin. Code Part 207,
Rule 2.11.J.2. shall not be applicable for residents of any state
institution.
b) The funds of any
resident in a state institution who dies intestate and without any known heirs
may be deposited in the facility's operational account, after a period of one
(1) year from the date of death.
K. Surety Bond
1. The facility must purchase a surety bond
or otherwise provide assurance as to the security of all personal funds of
residents deposited with the facility. A surety bond is an agreement between
the principal (the facility), the surety (the insurance company), and the
obligee (the residents of the trust fund), wherein the facility and the
insurance company agree to compensate the resident for any loss of residents'
funds that the facility holds, safeguards, manages and for which the facility
accounts. The purpose of the surety bond is to guarantee that the facility will
pay the resident for losses occurring for any failure by the facility to hold,
safeguard, manage, and account for the residents' funds; that is, losses
occurring as a result of acts or errors of negligence, incompetence or
dishonesty.
2. Unlike other types
of insurance, the surety bond protects the obligee (the residents of the trust
fund), not the principal, from loss. The surety bond differs from a fidelity
bond, also called employee dishonesty insurance or a crime bond, which covers
no acts or errors unless they involve dishonesty.
3. The surety bond is the commitment of the
facility to meet the standard of conduct. The facility assumes the
responsibility to compensate the obligee (the residents of the trust fund), for
the amount of the loss up to the entire amount of the surety bond. Therefore,
the surety bond coverage must be for an amount equal to or greater than the
highest daily balance for all resident funds held on deposit. A copy of the
surety bond and evidence of the payment of the premium for the appropriate bond
coverage amount must be kept at the facility and available for
inspection.
4. Reasonable
alternatives to a surety bond must:
a)
Designate the obligee, (the resident, individually, or in aggregate), who can
collect in case of a loss,
b)
Specify that the obligee may collect due to any failure by the facility,
whether by commission, bankruptcy, or omission, to hold, safeguard, manage, and
account for the residents' funds, and
c) Be managed by a third party unrelated in
any way to the facility or its management.
5. The facility cannot be named as an
obligee. Self-insurance is not an acceptable alternative to a surety bond.
Likewise, funds deposited in bank accounts protected by the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation (FDIC), or similar entity, are not acceptable
alternatives.
6. If a corporation
has a surety bond that covers all of its facilities, the corporation's surety
bond must be sufficient to ensure that all of the residents in the
corporation's facilities are covered against any losses due to acts or errors
by the corporation, its agents, or any of its facilities. The intent of focus
is to ensure that if a corporation were to go bankrupt or otherwise cease to
operate, the funds of the residents in the corporation's facilities would be
protected.
L. Resident
Incapable of Managing Funds
1. If a resident
is incapable of managing personal funds and has no representative, the facility
must refer the resident to the local office of the Social Security
Administration (SSA) and request that a representative payee be
appointed.
2. In the time period
between notification to the appropriate agencies, institution of formal
guardianship proceedings, and notification to the local SSA office and the
actual appointment of a guardian or representative payee, the facility must
serve as temporary representative payee for the resident.
3. In order to safeguard and maintain an
accurate accounting of the resident's account, funds received on behalf of the
resident must initially be deposited in the trust fund account before they can
be disbursed for any expenses. A resident's monthly income source, like a
Social Security check, cannot be commingled with facility funds prior to those
funds being transferred to the trust fund account.
M. Notice of Resource Limits, Medicaid or SSI
1. The facility must notify each resident
receiving medical assistance under Title XIX, Medicaid, when the amount in the
resident's account reaches two hundred dollars ($200) less than the SSI
resource limit and five hundred dollars ($500), less than the Medicaid resource
limit, to remain eligible for Medicaid long term care benefits. The notice must
include the fact that if the amount in the account, in addition to the value of
the resident's other nonexempt resources, reaches the applicable resource
limits, the resident may lose eligibility for Medicaid or SSI.
2. The facility must issue written
notification to the Medicaid regional office of any resident receiving medical
assistance under Title XIX when the resident's account balance reaches the
applicable resource limit.
N. Glossary and Explanation of Common Terms
Used in the Performance of Resident Trust Fund Reviews
1. Basic Rate - Also referred to as the
standard or per diem rate. This is the rate that Medicaid pays the facility per
Medicaid resident per day, as established periodically from cost reports and
assessment data. The basic rate is important in the discussion of resident
funds in that items and services included in the rate cannot be charged to a
resident; the resident must be informed, in writing at the time of admission,
of the items and services provided by the facility, as well as the items and
services not included in the basic rate, and the amount of such charges that
may be charged to the resident.
2.
Book Balance - The total balance of all resident trust funds and petty cash
held according to the accounting ledger.
3. Census - The total number of residents in
a facility.
4. Compliance - The
Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1987, Paragraph 17, 399, Section
1919(6)(A) requires a facility to establish and maintain a system that fully
and completely accounts for the resident's funds managed by the provider. A
facility that does this is issued an opinion by the Division of Medicaid that
"the facility generally complies with Section 1919(6)(A)." A facility may be
found to be in compliance and still have minor errors in its resident fund
system; however, for a facility that lacks an accounting system, lacks several
parts of an accounting system, or has a sufficient number of exceptions that
would indicate a breakdown of the system of accounting, an opinion may be
issued that "the facility does not comply with Section 1919(6)(A)."
5. DOM - Division of Medicaid.
6. Fiduciary - A fiduciary has rights and
powers normally belonging to another person that must be exercised with a high
standard of care for the benefit of the beneficiary. Regarding resident funds,
a party who is entrusted to conduct the financial affairs of another person is
acting in a fiduciary or trust capacity and has responsibility to use due care
and to act in the best interests of the party for whom he is acting in this
capacity. A party acting in a fiduciary capacity is also responsible to give an
accounting of all transactions made on behalf of the party for whom he is
acting in this capacity.
7. Fiscal
Agent - The agency, under contract with the Division of Medicaid, for the
purpose of disbursing funds to providers of services under the Medicaid
program. The fiscal agent collects eligibility and payment information from
agencies administering Medicaid and processes the information for payment to
providers.
8. GAAP - Generally
Accepted Accounting Principles. GAAP for resident trust funds means that the
facility employs proper bookkeeping techniques by which it can determine, upon
request, all deposits and withdrawals for each resident, how much interest
these funds have earned for each resident and the amount of each individual
resident's fund balance. Proper bookkeeping techniques may, include a computer
software package for the accounting of resident trust funds, an individual
ledger card, ledger sheet or equivalent established for each resident on which
only those transactions involving the resident's personal funds are recorded
and maintained.
9. Intestate -
Without a valid will at the time of death.
10. Legal Guardian - A legal guardian, or
conservator, is a person or persons appointed by the court of jurisdiction to
manage the resident's income and assets in the best interest of the resident.
The court may require a court order prior to disbursements of the resident's
funds, and/or a periodic accounting to the court to document income and
disbursements. A legal guardian or conservator must supply documentation to the
facility for disbursements from the resident fund, just as any other
responsible party for any other resident.
11. Medicaid Income - The Medicaid income is
the dollar amount shown on a resident's form DOM-317. It is the maximum
liability that the resident owes to the facility each month for room and
board.
12. Medically Necessary
Items and Services - Those items and services that are documented by the
attending physician or medical personnel delegated by the attending physician
as reasonable and necessary. If a resident's personal funds are expended for an
item or service covered in the facility's basic rate, evidence must be in the
resident's file to verify that the item or service is not medically necessary,
and therefore justifiable as an expenditure of the resident's personal
funds.
13. Obligee - The party to
whom the facility is legally or morally bound, i.e. "the residents of the trust
fund". The obligee is the beneficiary of funds collected in the event of the
failure of the facility to hold, safeguard, manage, and account for the
resident's funds.
14. Per Diem Rate
- Refer to "Basic Rate."
15.
Personal Needs Allowance (PNA) - The amount of funds a resident is allowed to
keep after room and board liability, supplemental health insurance premiums,
and allowable minimum monthly needs allowances are deducted from the resident's
gross income.
16. Plan of
Correction - An acceptable plan of correction must address each exception noted
in the findings letter and include the following:
a) Documentation that the exception has been
corrected,
b) The measures that
have been put in place to ensure that the exception will not be repeated,
and
c) The measures that have been
put in place to monitor the continued effectiveness of the changes.
17. Reconciliation - At all times,
the total of the residents' funds held, as noted from the bank's current
statement of the balance and any cash held at the facility, must equal the
total of the resident's funds as noted from the facility's accounting ledger
for all residents participating in the resident trust fund. Any difference
between the two (2) totals must be accounted for by documented outstanding
credits and debits, or documented reconciling items such as unposted current
interest, unposted petty cash vouchers, or corrections.
18. Representative Payee - A resident may
have someone designated to receive and manage their Social Security, Veterans
Administration, Railroad Board, or other federal or state benefits. That party
is the representative payee for the resident. A facility must be willing to be
designated as a temporary representative payee if no responsible party is
available to represent the resident.
19. Resident's Personal Funds - All of a
resident's money on deposit with the facility, including all of the resident's
funds, regardless of the source, that are placed in trust at the
facility.
20. Resource Limit - The
maximum amount of assets a resident may have in order to qualify for Medicaid
services. For trust fund review purposes, there are two (2) resource limits to
be considered, the Supplemental Security Income (SSI) resource limit and the
Medicaid resource limit.
21.
Responsible Party - For resident trust fund purposes, may be known as sponsor
or residents representative. A resident may serve as his own responsible party.
In other instances, the responsible party is the individual who signs
appropriate documentation, commonly known as a Trust Fund Authorization form,
to assist the resident in managing the personal funds of the resident that are
maintained within the resident trust fund account. Any withdrawal of funds by a
responsible party must be for the benefit of the resident, must be signed, and
must be supported by appropriate documentation (e.g., receipts or
invoice).
22. State Institution -
These are facilities owned and operated by the State, such as: Mississippi
State Hospital, Ellisville State School, East Mississippi State Hospital, North
Mississippi Regional Center, Hudspeth Regional Center, South Mississippi
Regional Center, University of Mississippi Medical Center, and the Boswell
Regional Center. This listing is not intended to be all inclusive.
23. Testate - Having a valid will at the time
of death.
24. Trial Balance - A
listing of all residents participating in the resident trust fund and the
balance of each resident's trust fund.
25. Written Authorization - Authorization to
establish a resident trust fund for a resident must be in the form of a written
statement signed by the resident or responsible party. In addition,
authorization to perform a specific transaction of funds for the resident must
be in writing and/or documented with a receipt of purchase.
42 U.S.C. §
1396r;
42 C.F.R. §§ 431.53,
447.15, 483.420; Miss. Code Ann. §§ 43-13120,
43-13-121.