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It is not too soon for advocates to start
paying attention to changes in Medicare and Medicaid law that will
affect their low income Medicare beneficiary clients starting
January 1, 2010. The changes were included in the Medicare
Improvements for Patients and Providers Act of 2008 (MIPPA), Pub.
Law 110-275, which was enacted over Presidential veto in July 2008.
The changes affect the Part D Low Income
Subsidy (LIS), the Medicare Savings Programs (MSPs) that excuse
certain beneficiaries from some or all of Medicare's premiums and
cost-sharing, and Specialized Medicare Advantage plans for Special
Needs Individuals (SNPs). This Alert will describe the various
provisions of the law and steps currently being taken to implement
them. Unless stated otherwise, all provisions discussed here are
effective January 1, 2010.
Provisions Relating to the Low Income
Subsidy
Exemptions from Income and Resources in
Determining Eligibility for Low Income Subsidy. This
provision streamlines income and eligibility determinations for LIS
by eliminating consideration, as income, of non-financial support
provided to an applicant (generally referred to as "in-kind support
and maintenance" or "ISM") and consideration, as a resource, of the
cash surrender value of a life insurance policy. The provision is
effective for applications filed on or after January 1, 2010. The
provision does not apply to Medicare Savings Programs but under
pre-existing law, states have the flexibility to eliminate these and
other elements of the eligibility determination process.
Because the provision is not effective until
2010, the Social Security Administration (SSA) will process all
applications in 2009 using the existing eligibility rules and will
not release application forms that reflect the new rules until
mid-to-late December (or January 1, 2010 for the on-line
application). All individuals who have ever been found ineligible
for the low income subsidy will be contacted early in the 2010 with
information about the new rules and an invitation to reapply. SSA
suggests that advocates screen their clients carefully to determine
whether they should apply for LIS in 2009 or wait until 2010.
Because the new application forms are not yet available, it is not
possible at this time to complete an application and hold it until
January 1, 2010.
Protection from Paying the Part D Late
Enrollment Penalty. This provision of the law
codifies current CMS policy of excusing those who receive the low
income subsidy from paying any late enrollment penalty.
Eliminating Barriers to Enrollment.
This section of MIPPA comprises several elements intended to
improve enrollment in both the Part D Low Income Subsidy (LIS)
program, administered by the Social Security Administration, and the
Medicare Savings Programs, administered by the States. The portion
relating to MSPs will be discussed below. The LIS portions,
discussed here, became effective October 1, 2008.
With respect to LIS, the Commissioner of Social Security is
directed, for each person who applies for LIS, requests an LIS
application or is otherwise identified as potentially LIS eligible,
to provide information on both LIS and MSP, provide an LIS
application, provide information about where the individual can get
assistance, including information about State Health Insurance
Counseling and Assistance Programs (SHIPs), and make such
information and the application available at local Social Security
offices.
In addition, the Commissioner must provide training about both LIS
and MSP to those SSA employees who will receive LIS applications and
must instruct them to help applicants complete the applications.
Provisions Relating to Medicare Savings
Programs
Application of the Full Low Income Subsidy
Asset Test to Three Medicare Savings Programs.[1]
The three Medicare Savings Programs (MSPs) that confer deemed
LIS-status - Qualified Medicare Beneficiary (QMB), Specified Low
Income Medicare Beneficiary (SLMB) and Qualified Individual (QI) -
will use the Low Income Subsidy asset test of $6,000/individual and
$9,000/couple, indexed each year according to the Consumer Price
Index. (The indexed amount for 2009 is $6,600/individual and
$9,910/couple; the amounts for 2010 have not yet been announced.)
This provision increases the federal level asset test for these MSPs
and indexes the amount, both for the first time in the programs'
histories. MIPPA makes no change in states' ability to eliminate or
further increase the asset level for MSPs; the provision merely sets
the floor.
Eliminating Application of Estate
Recovery. This provision amends Medicaid law to prohibit
states from recovering, from the estate of a deceased Medicaid
recipient, the value of Medicare premiums and cost-sharing paid
under all Medicare Savings Programs. Advocates have reported for
years that the threat of estate recovery is a barrier to applying
for MSP for some individuals. As advocates may be aware, states are
not currently required to recover MSP costs from estates but they
are permitted to do so. Many states do not. Advocates may want to
review the application form used for MSP to ensure that references
to estate recovery have been removed. In states that use the full
Medicaid application for MSP, advocates may want to negotiate with
the state to amend the application to clarify the limits of estate
recovery.
Translation of the Model MSP Form.
This provision requires the Secretary to provide for translation of
the model MSP application form, available on the CMS website, into
at least the 10 languages spoken most often by applicants for
Medicare. States are permitted, but not required, to use the model
application for Medicare Savings Programs; it is intended as a
simpler alternative to a full Medicaid application. Advocates are
reminded that states that use this or their own simpler alternative
to a full Medicaid application are, nonetheless, still required to
consider an applicant for all Medicaid programs for which she or he
might be eligible.[2]
A link to the application is available at
http://www.cms.hhs.gov/DualEligible/03_ModelApplicationforMedicareSavingsPrograms.asp
but currently the application appears only in English
Eliminating Barriers to Enrollment
through Data Sharing. The Commissioner of Social Security
must, with the consent of an LIS applicant, transmit data received
and processed from the application to the applicant's state for its
consideration of the applicant's eligibility for a Medicare Savings
Program. The State must act on the data and must consider the date
of the application for LIS as the effective date of the MSP
application for benefit purposes. As required by pre-existing
Medicaid law, the state must process the application within 45 days
of receipt of the LIS data from SSA.
Advocates are urged to contact their states to
discuss how the state intends to proceed when it receives the SSA-transmitted
data. Some states will send a formal application to the individual
in the mail and close the case if the person has not responded
within a certain time frame. Because the LIS data have been
verified by SSA prior to their transmission and because, for
Medicaid purposes, CMS treats them as verified, a state could, if
its MSP eligibility rules were identical to or more liberal than
those for LIS, accept the LIS data as a complete application. CMS
has advised the states orally that they do not need a "wet"
signature (i.e., an application signed in person) for a valid MSP
application.[3]
At least three states, Alabama, New York and Maine, plan to treat
the LIS data as a complete or near complete MSP application.
CMS will advise the states in writing about
MIPPA matters through a Dear State Medicaid Director letter, which
has not yet been sent and is not currently available for public
viewing. Among other issues addressed in the letter is the states'
ongoing ability, through a provision of the Medicaid law, to change
their eligibility rules to conform to (or be more liberal than)
those of LIS. Such changes could be advantageous to low-income
beneficiaries in most states as they would expand MSP eligibility.
Moreover, such changes could ease the administrative cost and
challenge of the state's responsibility to act on the SSA-transmitted
data. In the past, the biggest discrepancy between MSP and LIS has
been the level of protected assets; since those levels are required,
by MIPPA, to be aligned, most states would have relatively minor
adjustments to make.[4]
CMS has no plans to monitor states'
implementation of the MIPPA changes. Advocacy organizations that
received money authorized in MIPPA to help low-income beneficiaries
are pressing the agency to work with them to ensure as smooth a
transition as possible to the new systems and rules.
Provisions Relating to Medicare Advantage
Special Needs Plans for Special Needs Individuals
Continued Authority for Special Needs Plans
for Specialized Needs Individuals and Specific Requirements.[5]
Authority for the existence of Special Needs Plans (SNPs) is
extended through the end of 2010 and the moratorium on the
Secretary's authority to designate new plans, currently in effect,
is extended through 2010.
Each type of SNP – Institutional, Dual Eligible and Disabling
Chronic Condition – must, effective January 1, 2010, enroll only
individuals who meet the statutory definition of special needs
individual for its SNP type.
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Dual SNPs must provide each prospective enrollee,
prior to enrollment, with a comprehensive written statement of
benefits and cost-sharing protections under the relevant State
Medicaid plan and an explanation of which such benefits and
cost-sharing protections are available under the plan. This
provision, presumably, would allow a prospective dual enrollee
to determine if she will receive any value from a dual SNP that
is not already available to her under her State Medicaid
program. One challenge for those helping individuals make
choices is to determine whether the plan has accurately
presented State Medicaid coverage, which is not an easy
undertaking.
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Dual SNPs must also have a contract with the State
Medicaid agency to provide, or arrange for the provision of,
benefits to which the individual is entitled under Medicaid.
Such benefits may, but apparently are not required to, include
long-term care services. Those plans that do not have such a
contract in effect by January 1, 2010 may continue to operate
but cannot expand their service areas. States are not required
to enter into contracts with SNPs.[6]
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Severe or Disabling Chronic Condition SNPs. The
definition for persons eligible for the services of such SNPs is
amended to include having "one or more [co-morbid] and medically
complex chronic conditions that are substantially disabling or
life threatening, have a high risk of hospitalization or other
significant adverse health outcomes, and require specialized
delivery systems across domains of care" The Secretary of HHS is
directed to convene a panel including the Director of the Agency
for Healthcare Research and Quality to determine conditions that
meet this new definition.
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All SNPs, regardless of type, must meet new
requirements for care management. They must have in place an
evidence-based model of care with appropriate networks of
providers and specialists; conduct an initial assessment and
annual reassessment of each individual's physical, psychosocial
and functional needs; develop a care plan, in consultation with
the individual, as feasible, that identifies goals and
objectives and specific services and benefits to be provided;
and uses an interdisciplinary team in the management of care.
The Secretary of HHS is directed to review each plan's care
management compliance as part of a periodic audit.
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All SNPs, regardless of type, must meet new data
collection and reporting requirements relating to their
compliance with the new plan requirements introduced by this
law. Such data "may be based on claims data" and must be
reported at the plan, rather than sponsor, level.
Nothing in the MIPPA provisions affects
benefits to which dual eligible individuals are entitled through
their State Medicaid programs.
Limitation on Out-of-Pocket Costs for
Dual Eligibles and Qualified Medicare Beneficiaries Enrolled in
Medicare Advantage Special Needs Plans. MIPPA prohibits
Dual Eligible SNPs (Dual-SNP) from imposing cost-sharing
requirements on dual eligibles or Qualified Medicare Beneficiaries
that would exceed the amounts permitted under the State Medicaid
plan if the individual were not enrolled in the Dual-SNP. This
prohibition is, however, redundant of and actually narrower than
protections in pre-existing Medicare and Medicaid law.[7]
Existing protections, moreover, apply not just to enrollees of
Dual-SNPs, but to all dual eligibles, whether in traditional
Medicare or any kind of Medicare Advantage plan (regardless of
whether it is a SNP).[8]
CMS acknowledges the broader reach of current law in its Medicare
Advantage regulations concerning MA plans' contracts with their
provider networks.[9]
Conclusion
The MIPPA provisions are advantageous to
low-income Medicare beneficiaries but the transition from 2009
eligibility rules to 2010 eligibility rules will be challenging for
advocates advising beneficiaries during the last few months of
2009. Moreover, advocates will want to be engaged with and
monitoring their state's implementation of significant new
requirements relating to MSPs – new asset limits, elimination of
estate recovery for MSPs and receipt of and action on SSA LIS data
by the state Medicaid agency. Finally, advocates may want to
determine how many SNPs operating in their state have contracts with
the state Medicaid agency and what the nature of those contracts
is. The Center for Medicare Advocacy is interested in knowing what
is happening in states related to these issues.
[1]
The fourth MSP, Qualified Disabled Working Individual
program, has no connection to Part D and is not affected by
the MIPPA provision.
[3]
Oral presentation by CMS officials Brenda Sheppard and Roy
Trudel at Social Security Administration’s quarterly meeting
with Advocates, Washington, D.C. (Tuesday, September 1,
2009.)
[4]
The Center for Medicare Advocacy examined the differences
between state MSP rules and LIS rules in a study published
in 2006. Although the information might not be 100%
accurate three years later, it may be a useful starting
place for advocates wishing to persuade their states to
align more closely their MSP eligibility requirements with
those of LIS. Patricia B. Nemore, Jacqueline A. Bender and
Wey-Wey Kwok, “Toward Making Medicare Work for Low-Income
Beneficiaries: A Baseline Comparison of the Part D
Low-Income Subsidy and Medicare Savings Programs Eligibility
and Enrollment Rules,” prepared for the Kaiser Family
Foundation, May 2006, found at
http://www.kff.org/medicare/upload/7519.pdf (site
visited Sept. 28, 2009)
[5]
Regulations implementing the MIPPA provisions relating to
SNPs were published at 74 FR 1493 et seq. (Jan. 12, 2009).
Medicare Advantage regulations, generally, are found in 42
C.F.R. § 422.
[6]
Related regulations are at 42 C.F.R. § 422.107
[7]
See, e.g., 42 U.S.C. § 1396a(n) and 42 C.F.R. § 447.15
[9]
42 C.F.R. § 422.504(g)(1)(iii).
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