Current through all regulations passed and filed through September 16, 2024
(A) Medicaid will not pay for services
provided under the conditions set out in paragraph (C) of this rule, even
when an
individual has been found eligible for a medical assistance category and is
enrolled in medicaid.
(B)
Definitions.
(1) "Inmate" means an individual
who is serving time for a criminal offense or who is confined in a state or
federal prison, jail, detention facility, or other penal facility.
(2) "Inmate of a public institution" means
an
individual who is living in a public institution as defined in rule
5160:1-1-01 of the
Administrative Code.
(a) An individual who is
residing in a public institution awaiting criminal proceedings, penal
dispositions, or other detainment determinations is considered an inmate. The
duration of time that an individual is residing in the public institution
awaiting these arrangements does not determine inmate status.
(b) An individual is not considered an inmate
when:
(i)
Residing in a public educational
or vocational training institution for purposes of securing education or
vocational training; or
(ii)
Residing in a public institution for a temporary
period pending other living arrangements appropriate to his or her needs;
or
(iii)
Residing in a detention center, jail, or county penal
facility after his or her case has been adjudicated and other living
arrangements are being decided; or
(iv)
On parole or probation and living in
the community;
or
(v)
Serving the remainder of the criminal sentence in a
halfway house licensed as such by the Ohio department of rehabilitation and
correction (DRC), in accordance with section
2967.14 of the Revised Code,
which allows for freedom of movement and association as determined by the Ohio
department of medicaid (ODM) or its designee.
(3) "Inpatient" means a patient
who has been admitted to a medical institution as an inpatient on
recommendation of a physician or dentist and who:
(a) Receives room, board, and medical
services in the institution for a twenty-four hour period or longer;
or
(b) Is expected by the
institution to receive room, board, and medical services in the institution for
a twenty-four-hour period or longer even though it later develops that the
patient dies, is discharged, or is transferred to another facility and does not
actually stay in the institution for twenty-four hours.
(4) "Intermediate care facility for
individuals with intellectual disabilities" (ICF-IID) is defined in Chapter
5160-3 of the Administrative Code.
(5) "Medical institution" means an
institution that:
(a) Is organized to provide
medical care, including nursing and convalescent care; and
(b) Has the necessary professional personnel,
equipment, and facilities to manage the medical, nursing, and other health
needs of patients on a continuing basis in accordance with accepted standards;
and
(c) Is authorized under state
law to provide medical care; and
(d) Is staffed by professional personnel who
are responsible to the institution for professional medical and nursing
services. The services must include:
(i)
Adequate and continual medical care and supervision by a physician;
and
(ii) Registered nurse or
licensed practical nurse supervision and services and nurses' aid services,
sufficient to meet nursing care needs; and
(iii) A physician's guidance regarding the
professional aspects of operating the institution.
(6) "Outpatient" means a patient
of an organized medical facility or distinct part of that facility who is
expected by the facility to receive, and who does receive, professional
services for less than a twenty-four-hour period regardless of the hour of
admission, whether or not a bed is used, and whether or not the patient remains
in the facility past midnight.
(7)
"Patient" means an individual who is receiving needed professional services
that are directed by a licensed practitioner of the healing arts toward
maintenance, improvement, or protection of health, or lessening of illness,
disability, or pain.
(C)
As required by 42 C.F.R.
435.1009 (as in effect October 1,
2023),
medicaid will not pay for services provided to:
(1) An individual who is an inmate of a
public institution, except as outlined in paragraph (D)
of this rule; or
(2) An
individual who is a patient in an institution for mental diseases (IMD), as
defined in rule
5160:1-1-01 of the
Administrative Code, who is age twenty-two or older, but under age sixty-five,
except:
(a) As permitted in
42 C.F.R.
438.6(e) (as in effect
October 1, 2023); or
(b) As permitted under a demonstration waiver
approved by the centers for medicare and medicaid services (CMS) under section
1115 of the Social Security Act (as in effect October 1,
2023).
(D) An exception to the prohibition against
medicaid payment for services is permitted during the part of the month in
which an individual is not an inmate of a public institution.
(1) An individual is not an inmate of a
public institution during such time as the individual is admitted as an
inpatient in a hospital, nursing facility, juvenile psychiatric facility, or
ICF-IID.
(2) There is no time limit
on medicaid payment for services as long as the individual continues to be
eligible for medicaid and is receiving services as an inpatient in the medical
facility.
(3) An inmate is not
considered a patient in a medical institution when:
(a) Services are provided on an outpatient
basis at a hospital, nursing facility, juvenile psychiatric facility, ICF-IID,
clinic, or physician office; or
(b)
Medical care is provided to an inmate in a prison hospital or
dispensary.
(E)
An individual on conditional release or convalescent leave from an IMD is not
considered to be a patient in that institution.
(1) An individual on conditional release is
an individual who is on definite leave from the institution, but who is not
discharged.
(2) An individual who
is released from the institution on the condition that
the
individual receives outpatient treatment or on other comparable
conditions is on conditional release.
(3) An individual who is sent home or to
another setting for a trial visit is on convalescent leave.
(F) In accordance with the
Substance Use-Disorder Prevention that Promotes Opioid Recovery and Treatment
(SUPPORT) for Patients and Communities Act (Pub. L. No. 115-271), medical
assistance for the following individuals will be suspended, not discontinued,
when the individual becomes an inmate of a public institution on or after
October 24, 2019. Prior to the individual's release from the public institution
a redetermination of eligibility will be processed without a new application
from the individual.
(1) Individuals under the
age of twenty-one; or
(2) Former
foster care children up to the age of twenty-six as described in
42 C.F.R.
435.150(b) (as in effect
October 1, 2023).