Quantcast
breaking news

Medicaid Patient Shift Squeezes Home Care Providers

By: Becca Aaronson, The Texas Tribune
Updated: October 5, 2012
The abrupt exodus of thousands of South Texas Medicaid patients from one managed care health plan is putting financial strain on home health providers already struggling to stay in business after the state's transition to Medicaid managed care.

In July, Molina Healthcare announced it was cutting its reimbursement rates and internal administrative costs by 10 percent. John Molina, chief financial officer of the company, said that after its Medicaid health plan expanded to South Texas, the firm was losing $14 million a month in Texas.

Molina said he realized the rate cuts were painful to providers, but the move was made in order to "stay in business and not impact patient care."

"The minute that a handful of attendants in one area got word that their pay was being decreased because Molina cut reimbursement rates, the word spread," said Vanessa Sandoval, a registered nurse and administrator at Texas Visiting Nurse Service. Because the relationship between Medicaid clients and home attendants is so close, patients switched health plans rather than lose their attendants, Sandoval said.

Since Molina announced the rate cut, 11,400 patients have switched from Molina to one of four other health plans offered in South Texas, according to the Texas Health and Human Services Commission.

"That's caused issues for the other plans that have seen an influx of patients they weren't expecting," Stephanie Goodman, a spokeswoman for the health department, wrote in an e-mail to the Tribune. Patient care has not been interrupted, but there have been delays in getting authorizations for home health services while "the plans catch up on the paperwork for all the members who left Molina," she said.

State officials and health plans have assured providers they will be retroactively reimbursed for continuing services, but home care agencies fear that without prior authorization, there is no guarantee of payment.

In August, Sandoval's agency did not have authorization for 70 percent of its Medicaid clients and had to take out a multimillion-dollar credit line to ensure it could pay employees. "We were risking a lot of money" by continuing to care for patients without authorization, she said.

Sandoval said the agency could not discontinue care for patients like Antonio Fuentes, a 28-year-old who has cerebral palsy and cannot speak, because his mother works during the day and cannot stay home to care for him. Yet, for three months the agency did not know whether it would receive payment for care provided to Fuentes.

There is also concern among home care providers that health plans are authorizing less time with patients, which could increase the number of minor injuries. "We have someone that burned herself trying to cook because the attendant used to be there to help with a certain meal at a certain time of the day," Sandoval said.

In 2011, state officials projected that Texas would save $300 million in the first biennium by expanding Medicaid managed care to South Texas. Lawmakers backed the expansion, arguing that contracting companies to provide Medicaid benefits at lower rates would make the program more efficient.

Texas paid $614 million for home health services for Medicaid clients in 2011, according to a state audit published in September. The auditors found nearly a quarter of the case files tested did not contain a statement from a health practitioner that home care was medically necessary and that South Texas had significantly higher expenditures for home care than any other region in 2011.

Both Molina and home care advocates said they were working with the state to address the efficiency problems found in the state's audit.

"We are sincere in wanting to find a long-term, viable resolution to this," Molina said. "The most important thing is we don't want to be adversaries with the providers."

Texas Tribune donors or members may be quoted or mentioned in our stories, or may be the subject of them. For a complete list of contributors, click here.

This article originally appeared in The Texas Tribune at http://www.texastribune.org/texas-health-resources/medicaid/patient-exodus-molinas-medicaid-plan-strains-provi/.

Comments

Readers Feel...

hello
Related Content

A new steak house is in Midland and open for business....

The next time you buy something you could be handing your credit card information over to a stranger. Jenne Anderson Reports....

Very warm temperatures Wednesday and Thursday....

The Board approved a proposition to build modular homes for incoming teachers and those in need...

A murder trial against an Odessa man began Tuesday. ...

An accident along FM 1788 Tuesday evening claimed the life of a North Texas man....

In an ongoing effort to protect Texans from the costly destruction caused by feral hogs, Agriculture Commissioner Todd Staples today announced the Texas Department of Agriculture is accepting to...

While Gov. Rick Perry and the Legislature had balanced high and low marks, President Obama and Congress had more low grades than high ones....

Chance for thunderstorms again this afternoon....

Despite concerns raised by both Republicans and Democrats, senators on Tuesday tentatively passed a resolution that aims to solve the state's transportation funding woes by diverting future from...

 
 
Do you think enough is being done to protect people from identity theft?
 



 
 
 
©1998 - 2013 Permianbasin360.com
Nexstar Broadcasting, Inc.
All Rights Reserved