Current through Register Vol. 46, No. 39, September 25, 2024
(a)
Purpose.
The consumer directed personal assistance program is
intended to permit chronically ill or physically disabled individuals receiving
home care services under the medical assistance program greater flexibility and
freedom of choice in obtaining such services.
(b)
Definitions. The following
definitions apply to this section:
(1)
Activity of daily living means those activities recognized as activities of
daily living by the evidence based validated assessment tool in accordance with
section 2-a of part MM of chapter 56 of the laws of 2020.
(2)
consumer means a medical
assistance recipient who a social services district or MMCO has determined
eligible to participate in the consumer directed personal assistance
program.
(3)
consumer
directed personal assistance means the provision of assistance with
personal care services, home health aide services and skilled nursing tasks by
a consumer directed personal assistant under the instruction, supervision and
direction of a consumer or the consumer's designated representative.
(4)
consumer directed personal
assistant means an adult who provides consumer directed personal
assistance to a consumer under the consumer's instruction, supervision and
direction or under the instruction, supervision and direction of the consumer's
designated representative. A person legally responsible for the consumer's care
and support, a consumer's spouse, or the consumer's designated representative
may not be the consumer directed personal assistant for that consumer; however,
a consumer directed personal assistant may include any other adult relative of
the consumer provided that the district or MMCO determines that the services
provided by such relative are consistent with the consumer's plan of care and
that the aggregate cost for such services does not exceed the aggregate costs
for equivalent services provided by a non-relative personal assistant.
(5) consumer directed personal
assistance program or consumer directed program or the program means the
program provided for under section 356-f of title 11 of article 5 of the Social
Services Law.
(6)
continuous consumer directed personal assistance means the
provision of uninterrupted care, by more than one consumer directed personal
assistant, for more than 16 hours in a calendar day for a consumer who, because
of the consumer's medical condition, needs assistance during such calendar day
with toileting, walking, transferring, turning and positioning, feeding, home
health aide services, or skilled nursing tasks, and needs assistance with such
frequency that a live-in 24-hour consumer directed personal assistant would be
unlikely to obtain, on a regular basis, five hours daily of uninterrupted sleep
during the aide's eight hour period of sleep.
(7)
designated
representative means an adult to whom a self-directing consumer has
delegated authority to instruct, supervise and direct the consumer directed
personal assistant and to perform the consumer's responsibilities specified in
subdivision (h) of this section and who is willing and able to perform these
responsibilities. With respect to a non self-directing consumer, a
designated representative means the consumer's parent, legal
guardian or, subject to the social services district's approval, a responsible
adult surrogate who is willing and able to perform such responsibilities on the
consumer's behalf. The designated representative may not be the consumer
directed personal assistant or a fiscal intermediary employee, representative
or affiliated person.
(8)
fiscal intermediary means an entity that has a contract with
the New York State Department of Health to provide wage and benefit processing
for consumer directed personal assistants and other fiscal intermediary
responsibilities specified in subdivision (j) of this section.
(9)
fiscal intermediary
administrative costs means the allowable costs incurred by a fiscal
intermediary for performance of fiscal intermediary services under section 365-f (4-a) of the Social
Services Law and fiscal intermediary responsibilities under subdivision (i) of
this section.
(10)
home
health aide services means services within the scope of practice of a
home health aide pursuant to article 36 of the Public Health Law including
simple health care tasks, personal hygiene services, housekeeping tasks
essential to the consumer's health and other related supportive services. Such
services may include, but are not necessarily limited to, the following:
preparation of meals in accordance with modified diets or complex modified
diets; administration of medications; provision of special skin care; use of
medical equipment, supplies and devices; change of dressing to stable surface
wounds; performance of simple measurements and tests to routinely monitor the
consumer's medical condition; performance of a maintenance exercise program;
and care of an ostomy after the ostomy has achieved its normal
function.
(11) live-in 24-hour
consumer directed personal assistance means the provision of care by one
consumer directed personal assistant for a consumer who, because of the
consumer's medical condition, needs assistance during a calendar day with
toileting, walking, transferring, turning and positioning, feeding, home health
aide services, or skilled nursing tasks and whose need for assistance is
sufficiently infrequent that a live-in 24-hour consumer directed personal
assistant would be likely to obtain, on a regular basis, five hours daily of
uninterrupted sleep during the aide's eight hour period of sleep.
(12) Medicaid Managed Care Organization or
MMCO means an entity, other than an entity approved to operate a Program of
All-inclusive Care for the Elderly (PACE) plan, that is approved to provide
medical assistance services, pursuant to a contract between the entity and the
Department of Health, and that is:
(i)
certified under article forty-four of the Public Health Law, or
(ii) licensed under article forty-three of
the Insurance Law.
(13)
Medical assistance or Medicaid means the program to provide services and
benefits under title 11 or article 5 of the Social Services Law.
(14) minimum needs requirements means, for
individuals with a diagnosis by a physician of dementia or Alzheimer's, being
assessed in accordance with subdivision (d) of this section as needing at least
supervision with more than one activity of daily living, and for all other
individuals, being assessed in accordance with subdivision (d) of this section
as needing at least limited assistance with physical maneuvering with more than
two activities of daily living.
(15)
personal care services
means the nutritional and environmental support functions, personal care
functions, or both such functions, that are specified in section
505.14(a)(5)
of this Part except that, for individuals whose needs are limited to
nutritional and environmental support functions, personal care services shall
not exceed eight hours per week.
(16) a self-directing
consumer means a consumer who is capable of making choices regarding
the consumer's activities of daily living and the type, quality and management
of his or her consumer directed personal assistance; understands the impact of
these choices; assumes responsibility for the results of these choices ; and is
capable of instructing, supervising, managing and directing consumer directed
personal assistants and performing all other consumer responsibilities
identified in this section.
(17)
skilled nursing tasks means those skilled nursing tasks that
are within the scope of practice of a registered professional nurse or a
licensed practical nurse and that a consumer directed personal assistant may
perform pursuant to section 6908 of
the Education Law.
(18)
stable medical condition means a condition that is not
expected to exhibit sudden deterioration or improvement and does not require
frequent medical or nursing evaluation or judgment to determine changes in the
consumer's plan of care.
(c)
Eligibility requirements.
To participate in the consumer directed personal
assistance program, an individual must meet the following eligibility
requirements:
(1) be eligible for
medical assistance;
(2) be eligible
for long term care and services provided by a certified home health agency, or
an AIDS home care program authorized pursuant to article 36 of the Public
Health Law; or for personal care services or private duty nursing services;
(3) have a stable medical
condition;
(4) be self-directing
or, if non self-directing, have a designated representative;
(5) need assistance with one or more personal
care services, home health aide services or skilled nursing tasks;
(6) be willing and able to fulfill the
consumer's responsibilities specified in subdivision (h) of this section or
have a designated representative who is willing and able to fulfill such
responsibilities;
(7) participate
as needed, or have a designated representative who so participates, in the
required assessment and reassessment processes specified in subdivisions (d)
and (f) of this section ; and
(8)
meet minimum needs requirements in accordance with state
statute.
(d)
Assessment process. The assessment process includes an independent
assessment, a medical examination and practitioner order, an evaluation of the
need and cost-effectiveness of services, the development of the plan of care,
and, when required under paragraph (5) of this subdivision, a referral to an
independent review panel. The independent assessment, medical exam and
independent review panel may utilize telehealth modalities for all or a portion
of such assessments provided that the individual is given an opportunity for an
inperson assessment and receives any necessary support during the telehealth
assessment, which may include the participation of an on-site representative or
support-staff. The initial assessment process shall include the following
procedures:
(1) Independent assessment. An
assessment shall be completed by an independent assessor employed or contracted
by an entity designated by the Department of Health to provide independent
assessment services on forms approved by the Department of Health in accordance
with the following:
(i) The independent
assessment must be performed by a nurse with the following minimum
qualifications:
(a) a license and current
registration to practice as a registered professional nurse in New York State;
and
(b) at least two years of
satisfactory recent experience in home health care.
(ii) The independent assessment shall include
the following:
(a) an assessment of the
functions and tasks required by the individual, including an assessment of
whether the individual meets minimum needs requirements;
(b) a discussion with the individual or, if
applicable, the individual's designated representative to determine the
individual's perception of his or her circumstances and preferences;
and
(c) an assessment of the
potential contribution of informal supports, such as family members or friends,
to the individual's care, which must consider:
(1) the number and kind of informal supports
available to the individual;
(2)
the ability and motivation of informal supports to assist in care;
(3) the extent of informal supports'
potential involvement;
(4) the
availability of informal supports for future assistance; and
(5) the acceptability to the individual of
the informal supports' involvement in his or her care;
(iii) The independent assessment
must assess the consumer where the consumer is located including the consumer's
home, a nursing facility, rehabilitation facility or hospital, provided that
the consumer's home or residence shall be evaluated as well if necessary to
support the proposed plan of care and authorization or to ensure a safe
discharge. This provision shall not be construed to prevent or limit the use of
telehealth in the assessment of a consumer .
(2) Independent medical exam and practitioner
order.
(i) Each individual seeking to
participate in the consumer directed program must have an examination by a
medical professional employed or contracted by an entity designated by the
Department of Health to provide independent practitioner services.
(ii) The medical professional who examines
the individual must be a physician licensed in accordance with article 131 of
the Education Law, a physician assistant or a specialist assistant registered
in accordance with article 131-B of the Education Law or a nurse practitioner
certified in accordance with article 139 of the Education Law.
(iii) The medical professional must be
independent with respect to the individual, meaning that medical professional
that conducts the exam must not have established a provider-patient
relationship with the individual prior to the clinical encounter from which the
practitioner order is completed.
(iv) The medical professional must examine
the individual and accurately describe the individual's medical condition and
regimens, including any medication regimens, and the individual's need for
assistance with personal care services, home health aide services and skilled
nursing tasks.
(v) The medical
professional must review the independent assessment and may review other
medical records and consult with the individual's providers and others involved
with the individual's care if available to and determined necessary by the
medical professional.
(vi) The
medical professional must complete a form required or approved by the
Department of Health (the "practitioner order form").
(vii) The medical professional must sign the
practitioner order form, certify that the information provided in the form
accurately describes the individual's medical condition and regimens at the
time of the medical examination, and indicate whether the individual is
selfdirecting, consistent with the definition of self-directing in this
section, and whether the individual is medically stable.
(viii) The practitioner's order form must be
completed and made available by the medical professional to the social services
district or any MMCOs as appropriate after the medical examination and
independent assessment .
(ix) The
practitioner order is subject to the provisions of Parts 515, 516, 517 and 518
of this Title . These Parts permit the Department of Health or other agencies
or organizations duly authorized or delegated by the Department of Health,
including but not limited to MMCOs or the Office of the Medicaid Inspector
General, to impose monetary penalties on, or sanction and recover overpayments
from, providers or prescribers of medical care, services or supplies when
medical care, services or supplies that are unnecessary, improper or exceed
individuals' documented needs are provided or ordered.
(3) Social services district or MMCO
responsibilities.
(i) Before developing a plan
of care or authorizing services, a social services district or MMCO shall
review the individual's most recent independent assessment and practitioner
order, and may directly evaluate the individual, to determine the following:
(a) whether services can be provided
according to the individual's plan of care, whether such services are medically
necessary and whether the social services district or MMCO reasonably expects
that such services can maintain the individual's health and safety in his or
her home, as determined in accordance with the regulations of the Department of
Health;
(b) the individual's
ability and willingness to fulfill the consumer's responsibilities specified in
subdivision (h) of this section and, if applicable, the ability and willingness
of the individual's designated representative to assume these
responsibilities;
(c) the
individual's preferences and social and cultural considerations for the receipt
of care;
(d) whether the functional
needs, living and working arrangements of an individual who receives services
solely for monitoring the individual's medical condition and wellbeing can be
monitored appropriately and more cost-effectively by personal emergency
response services provided in accordance with section
505.33
of this Part;
(e) whether the
individual can be served appropriately and more cost-effectively by other
long-term care services and supports, including, but not limited to the
assisted living program or the enriched housing program;
(f) whether services can be provided
appropriately and more cost-effectively in cooperation with an adult day health
or social adult day care program;
(g) whether the individual's needs can be met
through the use of telehealth services that can be demonstrated and documented
to reduce the amount of services needed and where such services are readily
available and can be reliably accessed;
(h) whether the individual can be served
appropriately and more cost-effectively by using adaptive or specialized
medical equipment or supplies covered by the medical assistance program
including, but not limited to, bedside commodes, urinals, walkers, wheelchairs
and insulin pens;
(i) whether the
consumer's needs can by met through the provision of formal services provided
or funded by an entity, agency or program other than the medical assistance
program; and
(j) whether the
consumer's needs can be met through the voluntary assistance available from
informal caregivers including, but not limited to, the consumer's family,
friends or other responsible adult, and whether such assistance is
available.
(ii) The
social services district or MMCO must first determine whether the individual,
because of the individuals' medical condition, would be otherwise eligible for
personal care services, including continuous personal care services or live-in
24-hour personal care services. For individuals who would be otherwise eligible
for personal care services, the district must then determine whether, and the
extent to which, the individual can be served through the provision of services
described in subparagraphs (i)(d) through (i)(j) of this paragraph.
(a) If a social services district or MMCO
determines that an individual can be served appropriately and more
cost-effectively through the provision of services described in subparagraphs
(i)(d) through (i)(g) of this paragraph, and the social services district or
MMCO determines that such services are available in the district to the
individual, the social services district or MMCO must consider the use of such
services as well the individuals identified preferences and social and cultural
considerations described in subparagraph (i)(c) of this paragraph in developing
the individual's plan of care.
(b)
If a social services district or MMCO determines that other formal services are
available or the individual's needs can be met using available adaptive or
specialized medical equipment or supplies or voluntary assistance from informal
caregivers, as described in subparagraphs (i)(h) through (i)(j) of this
paragraph, the social services district or MMCO must include these in the
individual's plan of care. To ensure availability of voluntary informal
supports, the social services district or MMCO must confirm the caregiver's
willingness to meet the identified needs in the plan of care for which they
will provide assistance.
(iii) For cases involving live-in 24-hour
consumer directed personal assistance, the social services district or MMCO
shall evaluate whether the consumer's home has sleeping accommodations for a
consumer directed personal assistant. When the consumer's home has no sleeping
accommodations for a consumer directed personal assistant, continuous consumer
directed personal assistance must be authorized for the consumer; however,
should the consumer's circumstances change and sleeping accommodations for a
consumer directed personal assistant become available in the consumer's home,
the district or MMCO must promptly review the case. If a reduction of the
consumer's continuous consumer directed personal assistance to live-in 24-hour
consumer directed personal assistance is appropriate, the district must send
the consumer a timely and adequate notice of the proposed reduction.
(iv) For cases involving continuous consumer
directed personal assistance and live-in 24-hour consumer directed personal
assistance cases, the social services district or MMCO shall assess and
document in the plan of care the following:
(a) whether the practitioner order indicated
a medical condition that causes the consumer to need frequent assistance during
a calendar day with toileting, walking, transferring, turning and positioning,
feeding, home health aide services, or skilled nursing tasks;
(b) the specific functions or tasks with
which the consumer requires frequent assistance during a calendar
day;
(c) the frequency at which the
consumer requires assistance with these functions or tasks during a calendar
day;
(d) whether the consumer
requires similar assistance with these functions or tasks during the consumer's
waking and sleeping hours and, if not, why not; and
(e) whether, were live-in 24-hour consumer
directed personal assistance to be authorized, the consumer directed personal
assistant would be likely to obtain, on a regular basis, five hours daily of
uninterrupted sleep during the aide's eight hour period of sleep.
(v) The social services district
or MMCO is responsible for developing a plan of care in collaboration with the
consumer or, if applicable, the consumer's designated representative that
reflects the assessments and practitioner order described in this subdivision.
In the plan of care, the social services district or MMCO must identify:
(a) the personal care services, home health
aide services and skilled nursing functions or tasks with which the consumer
needs assistance;
(b) the amount,
frequency and duration of services to be authorized to meet these
needs;
(c) how needs are met, if
not met through the authorization of services; and
(d) any other descriptions and documentation
provided for in this section.
(vi) Upon the development of a plan of care,
the social services district or MMCO shall refer high needs cases described in
paragraph (5) of this subdivision to the independent review panel; provided,
however, that an MMCO should not refer a case unless and until the individual
is enrolled or scheduled for enrollment in the MMCO. When a case is referred to
the independent review panel:
(a) the social
services district or MMCO shall provide the individual's plan of care and any
clinical records or other documentation used to develop the plan of care, such
as records from treating providers and the results of any review or evaluation
performed pursuant to this paragraph to the panel;
(b) the social services district or MMCO
shall cooperate with the panel as appropriate to ensure an expedient review of
each high needs case; and
(c) the
social services district or MMCO shall consider the panel's recommendation in
finalizing the plan of care and authorization. However, The social services
district or MMCO is not required to adopt the recommendation, either in full or
in part, and remains responsible for determining the amount and type of
services medically necessary.
(4) Coordinating the independent assessment,
practitioner order and LDSS or MMCO responsibilities.
(i) The social services district or MMCO must
coordinate with the entity or entities providing independent assessment and
practitioner services to minimize disruption to the consumer and in-home
visits.
(ii) The social services
district or MMCO must inform the entity or entities providing independent
assessment and practitioner services when a new assessment or practitioner
order is needed pursuant to subdivision (f)(1)(ii) and subdivision (f)(2) of
this section, in accordance with department guidance, using forms as may be
required by the department.
(a) When the
social services district or MMCO receives an initial or new request to
participate in the consumer directed personal assistance program, it shall
refer the individual to the entity providing independent assessment services
and provide assistance to the individual in making contact in accordance with
department guidance; provided however that the social services district or MMCO
may not pressure or induce the consumer to request an assessment
unwillingly.
(b) If needed, the
MMCO shall also refer the individual to the social services district to
determine the individual's eligibility for medical assistance, including
community-based long term care services.
(iii) The entity or entities providing
independent assessment or practitioner services may request that the social
services district or MMCO confirm or update a consumer's record in the
assessment database designated by the Department. The social service district
or MMCO shall respond within one business day and confirm or update the
relevant record within three business days after receipt of request.
(iv) Resolving mistakes and clinical
disagreements in the assessment process.
(a)
If the social services district or MMCO identifies a material mistake in the
independent assessment that can be confirmed by the submission of evidence, the
social services district or MMCO shall advise the independent assessor. A
mistake is an error of fact or observation that occurred when the assessment
was performed that is not subject to the independent assessor's clinical
judgment. A mistake is material when it would affect the amount, type, or
duration of services authorized. When identifying the mistake, the social
services district or MMCO must provide evidence of the mistake to the
independent assessor. The independent assessor shall promptly issue a corrected
assessment or schedule a new assessment in accordance with clause (c) of this
subparagraph as appropriate.
(b)
After reviewing the independent assessment, practitioner order and the result
of any social service district or MMCO assessment or evaluation, if the social
services district or MMCO has a material disagreement regarding the outcome of
the independent assessment, the social services district or MMCO may advise the
independent assessor. A disagreement occurs when the social services district
or MMCO disputes a finding or conclusion in the independent assessment that is
subject to the independent assessor's clinical judgment. A disagreement is
material when it would affect the amount, type, or duration of services
authorized. When submitting a disagreement to the independent assessor, the
social services district or MMCO must provide the clinical rationale that forms
the basis for the disagreement.
(c)
Upon submission of a material disagreement, an independent assessor shall
schedule and complete a new assessment within 10 days from the date it receives
notice from the social services district or MMCO. This shall not pend or
otherwise affect the timeframes within which the social services district or
MMCO is required to make a determination, provide notice, or authorize
services.
(v) Sanctions
for failure to cooperate and abuse of the resolution process.
(a) The Department of Health may impose
monetary penalties pursuant to Public Health Law section 12 for failure to
coordinate with the entity or entities providing independent assessment and
practitioner services in accordance with the provisions of clauses (a) through
(c) of this subparagraph or engaging in abusive behavior that affects the
coordination of the assessment process. In determining whether to impose a
monetary penalty and the amount imposed, the Department shall consider, where
applicable, the following:
(1) The frequency
and numerosity of violations, both in absolute terms and relative to other
MMCOs;
(2) The responsiveness of
the MMCO to requests for coordination;
(3) The history of coordination between the
MMCO and the entity or entities;
(4) The good faith demonstrated by the MMCO
in attempting to coordinate;
(5)
Whether the MMCO provides a justification for the violation and whether it has
merit, as determined by the Department;
(6) Whether the violation resulted or could
have resulted in injury or other harm to the consumer; and
(7) Other relevant facts or
circumstances.
(b) The
Department of Health may revoke, or impose other restrictions on a social
services district's or MMCO's privilege to request reassessments on the basis
of a material disagreement where the Department determines that the social
services district has abused this privilege, including the use of the mistake
process for issues subject to clinical judgment or improperly pressuring
consumers to request a new assessment. In determining whether a social services
district or MMCO has abused this privilege, the Department shall consider,
where applicable, the following:
(1) The
frequency and numerosity of disagreements, mistakes, and reassessment requests
submitted to the independent assessor, both in absolute terms and relative to
other social services districts and MMCOs;
(2) Whether the clinical rationale provided
for the disagreement has merit, as determined by the Department;
(3) Whether the disagreement, mistake, and
reassessment requests are made as a matter of course, instead of upon review of
the clinical record;
(4) The
outcome of the reassessment as compared to the assessment it replaces;
and
(5) Other facts or
circumstances that tend to provide evidence for or against abuse.
(c) Nothing in this section shall
be construed to limit the authority of the Department or other agencies to seek
other remedies, sanctions or penalties, including other monetary
penalties.
(5) Independent medical review of high needs
cases.
An independent medical review of a proposed plan of care
shall be obtained before a social services district or MMCO may authorize more
than 12 hours of personal care services or consumer directed personal
assistance, separately or in combination, per day on average ("high needs
cases"). The review shall result in a recommendation made to the social
services district or MMCO, as described in this paragraph.
(i) The independent medical review must be
performed by an independent panel of medical professionals, or other
clinicians, employed by or under contract with an entity designated by the
Department of Health (the "independent review panel").
(ii) The case review shall be coordinated by
a physician (the "lead physician") who shall be selected from the independent
review panel. The lead physician may not be the same person who performed the
initial medical examination or signed the individual's practitioner
order.
(iii) The lead physician
must review the independent assessment, practitioner order, any other
assessment or review conducted by the social services district or MMCO,
including any plan of care created.
(iv) The lead physician may evaluate the
individual, or review an evaluation performed by another medical professional
on the independent review panel. The medical professional may not have
performed the initial medical examination or signed the individual's
practitioner order.
(v) The lead
physician and panel members may consult with or interview other members of the
independent review panel, the ordering practitioner, the individual's treating
or primary care physician, and other individuals that the lead physician deems
important and who are available to assist with the panel's review.
(vi) The lead physician and panel members may
request such additional information or documentation, including medical
records, case notes, and any other material the lead physician deems important
to assist the panel's review and recommendation.
(vi) After review, the independent review
panel shall produce a report, signed by the lead physician, providing a
recommendation on the reasonableness and appropriateness of the proposed plan
of care to maintain the individual's health and safety in his or her own home,
in accordance with the standards and scope of services set forth in this
section. The report may suggest modifications to the plan of care, including
the level, frequency, and duration of services and whether additional,
alternative, or fewer services would facilitate the provision of medically
necessary care. The report may not, however, recommend a specific amount or
change in amount of services.
(e)
Authorization process.
(1)
(i) An
individual's eligibility for medical assistance and services, including the
individual's financial eligibility and eligibility for the consumer directed
program and services thereunder as provided for in this section, shall be
established prior to authorization for services. The entity designated by the
Department of Health to provide independent assessment services shall be
responsible for determining whether individuals meet minimum needs requirements
for services.
(ii) The
authorization must be completed by the social services district or MMCO prior
to the initiation of services. In the case of the social services district, the
authorization of services shall be prepared by staff of the social services
district and such responsibility may not be delegated to another person or
entity.
(iii) The authorization and
reauthorization of services, including the level, amount, frequency and
duration of services, by the social services district or MMCO must be based on
and reflect the outcome of the assessment process outlined in subdivision (d)
of this section except as otherwise provided in subdivision (f) of this
section.
(iv) When the social
services district or MMCO determines pursuant to the assessment process that
the individual is eligible to participate in the consumer directed personal
assistance program, the district or MMCO must authorize consumer directed
personal assistance according to the consumer's plan of care. The district or
MMCO must not authorize consumer directed personal assistance unless it
reasonably expects that such assistance can maintain the individual's health
and safety in the home or other setting in which consumer directed personal
assistance may be provided.
(v) The
social service district or MMCO shall not authorize services provided through
more than one fiscal intermediary per consumer.
(vi) Consumer directed personal assistance,
including continuous consumer directed personal assistance and live-in 24-hour
consumer directed personal assistance, shall not be authorized to the extent
that the social services district or MMCO determines that any of the services
or supports identified in clauses (h) through (i) of subdivision (d)(3)(j) of
this section are available and appropriate to meet the consumer's needs and are
cost-effective if provided instead of consumer directed personal
assistance.
(2) The
district or MMCO may authorize only the hours or frequency of services that the
consumer actually requires to maintain his or her health and safety in the
home.
(3) The duration of the
authorization period must be based upon the consumer's needs as reflected in
the required assessments and plan of care . In determining the authorization
period, the social services district must consider the consumer's prognosis and
potential for recovery and the expected duration and availability of any
informal supports or alternative services identified in the plan of
care.
(4) The social services
district or MMCO may not authorize more than 12 hours of personal care services
per day on average prior to considering the recommendation of the independent
review panel in accordance with procedures outlined in paragraphs (3) and (5)
of subdivision (d), unless such authorization is ordered pursuant to a fair
hearing decision or by another court of competent jurisdiction. Pending review
of the independent review panel's recommendation and if necessary to comply
with federal or state timeliness requirements, including immediate needs cases,
the social services district or MMCO may authorize and implement services based
on a temporary plan of care which provides for more than 12 hours of personal
care services per day on average.
(5) No authorization may exceed 12 months
from the date of the most recent independent assessment or practitioner order,
whichever is earlier.
(6) The
social services district or MMCO must provide the consumer with a copy of the
plan of care that specifies the consumer directed personal assistance that the
district or MMCO has authorized the consumer to receive and the number of hours
per day or week of such assistance.
(7) Nothing in this subdivision precludes the
provision of the consumer directed personal assistance program in combination
with other services when a combination of services can appropriately and
adequately meet the consumer's needs; provided, however, that no duplication of
Medicaid-funded services would result.
(f)
Reassessment and reauthorization
processes.
(1) Prior to the end of the
authorization period, the social services district or MMCO must determine the
consumer's continued eligibility for the consumer directed personal assistance
program in accordance with the assessment process set forth in subdivision (d)
of this section, except as otherwise provided for in this subdivision.
(i) The social services district or MMCO must
evaluate whether the consumer or, if applicable, the consumer's designated
representative satisfactorily fulfilled the consumer's responsibilities under
the consumer directed personal assistance program. The social services district
or MMCO must consider whether the consumer or, if applicable, the consumer's
designated representative has failed to satisfactorily fulfill the consumer's
responsibilities when determining whether the consumer should be reauthorized
for the consumer directed personal assistance program.
(ii) Neither an independent assessment nor a
practitioner order shall be required to reauthorize or continue an
authorization of services, except:
(a) prior
to or in conjunction with a discharge from an institutional or in-patient
setting, provided that this provision shall not be construed to prohibit a safe
discharge from occurring;
(b) as
provided in paragraph (2) of this subdivision;
(c) that an individual in receipt of services
may request a new independent assessment; and
(d) an individual in receipt of services must
receive an independent assessment and practitioner order at least annually to
maintain authorization.
(iii) When the social services district or
MMCO determines, pursuant to the reassessment process, that the consumer is
eligible to continue to participate in the consumer directed personal
assistance program, the district or MMCO must reauthorize consumer directed
personal assistance in accordance with the authorization process specified in
subdivision (e) of this section. When the district or MMCO determines that the
consumer is no longer eligible to continue to participate in the consumer
directed personal assistance program, the district or MMCO must send the
consumer, and such consumer's designated representative, if any, a timely and
adequate notice under Part 358 and Subpart 360-10 of this Title of the
district's or MMCO's intent to discontinue consumer directed personal
assistance on forms required by the department.
(2) The social services district or MMCO must
reassess the consumer when an unexpected change in the consumer's social
circumstances, mental status or medical condition occurs during the
authorization period that would affect the type, amount or frequency of
consumer directed personal assistance provided during such period. The district
or MMCO is responsible for making necessary changes in the authorization or
reauthorization on a timely basis in accordance with the following procedures:
(i) when the change in the consumer's service
needs results solely from an unexpected change in the consumer's social
circumstances including, but not limited to, loss or withdrawal of informal
supports or a designated representative, the social services district or MMCO
must review the independent assessment, document the consumer's changed social
circumstances and make changes in the authorization or reauthorization as
needed. A new practitioner order and independent assessment are not required;
or
(ii) when the change in the
consumer's service needs results from a change in the consumer's mental status
or medical condition, including loss of the consumer's ability to make
judgments or to instruct, supervise or direct the consumer directed personal
assistant, the social services district or MMCO must obtain a new independent
assessment and practitioner order.
(3) When there is any change in the
individual's service needs, a social services district or MMCO shall consider
such changes and document them in the plan of care, and shall consider and make
any necessary changes to the authorization.
(g)
Timeframes for the assessment and
authorization of services
(1) The
independent assessment and practitioner order processes shall be completed at
least annually and in sufficient time such that social services districts and
MMCOs may have an opportunity when needed to comply with all applicable federal
and state timeframes for notice and determination of services, including but
not limited to immediate needs.
(2)
A social services district must make a determination and provide notice with
reasonable promptness, not to exceed seven business days after receipt of both
the independent assessment and practitioner order, or the independent review
panel recommendation if applicable, except in unusual circumstances including,
but not limited to, the need to resolve any outstanding questions regarding the
amount or duration of services to be authorized, or as provided in subdivision
(l) of this section.
(3) An MMCO
must make a determination and provide notice to current enrollees within the
timeframes provided in the contract between the Department of Health and the
MMCO, or as otherwise required by Federal or state statute or
regulation.
(h)
Consumer and designated representative responsibilities.
(1) A consumer or, if applicable, the
consumer's designated representative has the following responsibilities under
the consumer directed personal assistance program:
(i) managing the plan of care including
recruiting and hiring a sufficient number of individuals who meet the
definition of consumer directed personal assistant, as set forth in subdivision
(b) of this section, to provide authorized services that are included on the
consumer's plan of care; training, supervising and scheduling each assistant;
terminating the assistant's employment; and assuring that each consumer
directed personal assistant competently and safely performs the personal care
services, home health aide services and skilled nursing tasks that are included
on the consumer's plan of care;
(ii) timely notifying the social services
district or MMCO of any changes in the consumer's medical condition or social
circumstances including, but not limited to, any hospitalization of the
consumer or change in the consumer's address, telephone number or
employment;
(iii) timely notifying
the fiscal intermediary of any changes in the employment status of each
consumer directed personal assistant;
(iv) attesting to the accuracy of each
consumer directed personal assistant's time sheets;
(v) transmitting the consumer directed
personal assistant's time sheets to the fiscal intermediary according to its
procedures;
(vi) timely
distributing each consumer directed personal assistant's paycheck, if
needed;
(vii) arranging and
scheduling substitute coverage when a consumer directed personal assistant is
temporarily unavailable for any reason; and
(viii) entering into a department approved
memorandum of understanding with the fiscal intermediary and with the social
services district or MMCO that describes the parties' responsibilities under
the consumer directed personal assistance program.
(2) the designated representative must make
themselves available to ensure that the consumer responsibilities are carried
out without delay. In addition, designated representatives for
nonself-directing consumers must make themselves available and be present for
any scheduled assessment or visit by the independent assessor, examining
medical professional, social services district staff or MMCO staff.
(3) A consumer, or if applicable the
consumer's designated representative, may not work with more than one fiscal
intermediary at a time. Where more than one fiscal intermediary is serving the
same consumer at a given time, the consumer is required to select a single
fiscal intermediary to work with in accordance with guidance provided by the
Department.
(i)
Social services district and MMCO responsibilities. Social
services districts or MMCOs have the following responsibilities with respect to
the consumer directed personal assistance program:
(1) complying with the assessment,
authorization, reassessment and reauthorization procedures specified in
subdivisions (d) through (f) of this section;
(2) receiving and promptly reviewing, the
fiscal intermediary's notification to the district or MMCO pursuant to
subparagraph (j)(1)(v) of this section of any circumstances that may affect the
consumer's or, if applicable, the consumer's designated representative's
ability to fulfill the consumer's responsibilities under the program and making
changes in the consumer's authorization or reauthorization as needed;
(3) discontinuing, after timely and adequate
notice in accordance with Part 358 and Subpart 360-10 of this Title, the
consumer's participation in the consumer directed personal assistance program
and making referrals to other services that the consumer may require when the
district or MMCO determines that the consumer or, if applicable, the consumer's
designated representative is no longer able to fulfill the consumer's
responsibilities under the program or no longer desires to continue in the
program;
(4) notifying consumers of
the district's or MMCO's decision to authorize, reauthorize, increase, reduce,
discontinue or deny services under the consumer directed personal assistance
program . The Department of Health may require the use of forms it develops or
approves when providing such notice ;
(i)
Social services districts or MMCOs that deny, reduce or discontinue services
based on medical necessity must identify and document in the notice and in the
consumer's plan of care the factors that demonstrate such services are not
medically necessary or are no longer medically necessary. Any such denial or
reduction in services must clearly indicate a clinical rationale that shows
review of the consumer's specific clinical data and medical condition; the
basis on which the consumer's needs do not meet specific benefit coverage
criteria, if applicable; and be sufficient to enable judgment for possible
appeal.
(ii) Appropriate reasons
and notice language to be used when denying consumer directed personal
assistance include but are not limited to the following:
(a) the consumer's health and safety cannot
be reasonably assured with the provision of consumer directed personal
assistance. The notice must identify the reason or reasons that the consumer's
health and safety cannot be reasonably assured with the provision of such
assistance;
(b) the consumer's medical
condition is not stable. The notice must identify the consumer's medical
condition that is not stable;
(c)
the consumer is not self-directing and has no designated representative to
assume those responsibilities;
(d)
the consumer refused to cooperate in the required assessment;
(e) the consumer's needs may be met, in whole
or part, by a technological development, which the notice must identify, that
renders certain services unnecessary or less timeconsuming, including the use
of telehealth services or assistive devices that can be demonstrated and
documented to reduce the amount of services that are medically necessary
;
(f) the consumer or, if
applicable, the consumer's designated representative is unable or unwilling to
fulfill the consumer's responsibilities under the program ;
(g) the consumer can be more appropriately
and cost-effectively served through other Medicaid programs or services, which
the notice must identify; and
(h)
the consumer's need(s) can be met either without services or with the current
level of services by fully utilizing any available informal supports, or other
supports and services, that are documented in the plan of care and identified
in the notice.
(iii) Appropriate reasons and notice language
to be used when reducing or discontinuing consumer directed personal assistance
include but are not limited to the following:
(a) the consumer's medical or mental
condition or economic or social circumstances have changed and the district
determines that the consumer directed personal assistance provided under the
last authorization or reauthorization are no longer appropriate or can be
provided in fewer hours. This includes but is not limited to cases in which:
the consumer's health and safety can no longer be reasonably assured with the
provision of consumer directed personal assistance; the consumer's medical
condition is no longer stable; the consumer is no longer self-directing and has
no designated representative to assume those responsibilities ; or voluntary
informal supports that are acceptable to the client have become available to
meet some or all of the client's needs . The notice must identify the specific
change in the consumer's medical or mental condition or economic or social
circumstances from the last authorization or reauthorization and state why the
assistance should be reduced or discontinued as a result of the change;
(b) a mistake occurred in the
previous authorization or reauthorization for consumer directed personal
assistance. The notice must identify the specific mistake that occurred in the
previous authorization or reauthorization and state why the prior assistance is
not needed as a result of the mistake;
(c) the consumer refused to cooperate in the
required reassessment;
(d) the
consumer's needs may be met, in whole or part, by a technological development,
which the notice must identify, that renders certain assistance unnecessary or
less timeconsuming, including the use of readily available telehealth services
or assistive devices that are accessible to the individual and that can be
demonstrated and documented to reduce the amount of services that are medically
necessary ;
(e) the consumer
resides in a facility or participates in another program or receives other
services, which the notice must identify, which are responsible for the
provision of needed assistance;
(f) the consumer or, if applicable, the
consumer's designated representative is no longer able or willing to fulfill
the consumer's responsibilities under the program or the consumer no longer
desires to continue in the program ;
(g) the consumer can be more appropriately
and cost-effectively served through other Medicaid programs or services, which
the notice must identify;
(h) an
assessment of the consumer's needs demonstrates that the immediately preceding
social services district or MMCO authorized more services than are medically
necessary following any applicable continuity of care period required by the
Department of Health.
(5) maintaining current case records on each
consumer and making such records available, upon request, to the department or
the department's designee;
(6)
entering into a Department of Health approved memorandum of understanding with
the consumer that describes the parties' responsibilities under the consumer
directed personal assistance program.
(j)
Fiscal intermediary
responsibilities.
(1) Fiscal
intermediaries have the following responsibilities with respect to the consumer
directed personal assistance program:
(i)
processing each consumer directed personal assistant's wages and benefits
including establishing the amount of each assistant's wages; processing all
income tax and other required wage withholdings; and complying with worker's
compensation, disability and unemployment insurance requirements;
(ii) ensuring that the health status of each
consumer directed personal assistant is assessed prior to service delivery
pursuant to 10 NYCRR section 766.11(c) and (d) or any successor
regulation;
(iii) maintaining
personnel records for each consumer directed personal assistant, including time
sheets and other documentation needed for wages and benefit processing and a
copy of the medical documentation required pursuant to 10 NYCRR section
766.11(c) and (d) or any successor regulation;
(iv) maintaining records for each consumer
including copies of the social services district's or MMCOs authorization or
reauthorization;
(v) monitoring the
consumer's or, if applicable, the consumer's designated representative's
continuing ability to fulfill the consumer's responsibilities under the program
and promptly notifying the social services district or MMCOs of any
circumstance that may affect the consumer's or, if applicable, the consumer's
designated representative's ability to fulfill such responsibilities;
(vi) complying with the
department's regulations at 18 NYCRR section
504.3, or
any successor regulation, that specify the responsibilities of providers
enrolled in the medical assistance program;
(vii) entering into a contract with the
Department of Health and entering into administrative agreements with MMCOs for
the provision of fiscal intermediary services; and
(viii) entering into a department approved
memorandum of understanding with the consumer that describes the parties'
responsibilities under the consumer directed personal assistance
program.
(2) Fiscal
intermediaries are not responsible for fulfilling responsibilities of the
consumer or, if applicable, the consumer's designated representative. Nothing
in this section shall diminish, however, the fiscal intermediary's failure to
exercise reasonable care in properly carrying out its responsibilities under
the program.
(k)
Payment.
(1) The department will
pay fiscal intermediaries that are enrolled as Medicaid providers and have
contracts with social services districts for the provision of consumer directed
personal assistance services at rates that the department establishes and that
the Director of the Division of the Budget approves.
(2) No payment to the fiscal intermediary
will be made for authorized services unless the fiscal intermediary's claim is
supported by documentation of the time spent in provision of services for each
consumer.
(3) As authorized by
paragraph (1) of this subdivision, and notwithstanding any portion of section
505.14 of
this Part, the rates of reimbursement for fiscal intermediary administrative
costs shall solely be made on a per consumer per month basis, with three tiers
of payments. Each tier shall represent a range of authorization levels based on
the number of direct care hours of consumer directed personal assistance
services authorized for that consumer in a particular month and the different
levels in fiscal intermediary administrative costs associated with each tier of
authorization. The tiers of payment for fiscal intermediary administrative
costs shall be as follows:
Tier
|
Direct Care Hours Authorized Per Month
|
Monthly Rate per Consumer
|
Tier 1
|
1 - 159
|
$145
|
Tier 2
|
160 - 479
|
$384
|
Tier 3
|
480+
|
$1,036
|
(4) Nothing in paragraph (3) of this
subdivision shall impact wages or wage related requirements for consumer
directed personal assistants nor impact the ability of Medicaid managed care
organizations to reimburse fiscal intermediaries for fiscal intermediary
administrative costs pursuant to their provider contracts.
(l)
Immediate need.
The process for determining whether an individual may
obtain consumer directed personal assistance on an immediate need basis shall
be the same as such process used for the determination of whether an individual
may obtain personal care services on an immediate need basis, as described in
subdivision (b)(6) and (7) of section
505.14 of
this part, provided that in determining eligibility for services the social
services district and MMCO shall consider the eligibility and authorization
requirements in this section.
(m) Prior to October 1, 2022, and
notwithstanding provisions of this section to the contrary, where the
Department of Health has not contracted with or designated an entity or
entities to provide independent assessment and practitioner services, or where
there is limited access to timely assessments and medical exams in accordance
with this subdivision, as determined by and the Department of Health, then, in
accordance with written direction from the Department of Health, assessments
may be performed by the social services district or MMCO in accordance with the
provisions of this section in effect as of January 1, 2021. The Department may
limit such directive to a particular geographic region or regions based on the
need for timely assessment and medical exams and may require that social
service districts and MMCOs first attempt assessment and authorization pursuant
to the provisions of this section currently in effect. Notwithstanding the
forgoing, upon becoming effective, the provisions of paragraph (4) of
subdivision (i) shall remain in effect, and may not be pended pursuant to this
paragraph.