Chris Traylor, as Executive Commissioner of the Texas Health and Human Services Commission And the Texas Health and Human Services Commission v. Diana D., as Next Friend of KD, a Child Karen G., as Next Friend of TG and ZM, Children Guadalupe P., as Next Friend of LP, a Child Sally L., as Next Friend of CH, a Child Dena D., as Next Friend of BD, a Child OCI Acquisition, LLC

ACCEPTED 03-15-00657-CV 7810967 THIRD COURT OF APPEALS AUSTIN, TEXAS 11/12/2015 11:26:21 PM JEFFREY D. KYLE CLERK No. 03-15-00657-CV In the Court of Appeals FILED IN 3rd COURT OF APPEALS for the Third Judicial District AUSTIN, TEXAS 11/12/2015 11:26:21 PM at Austin, Texas JEFFREY D. KYLE Clerk Chris Traylor, as Executive Commissioner of the Texas Health and Human Services Commission, et al. Appellants, v. Diana D., as Next Friend of KD, a Child, et al. Appellees. On Appeal from the 200th Judicial District Court of Travis County, Texas Appellants’ Brief Ken Paxton Scott A. Keller Attorney General of Texas Solicitor General Charles E. Roy Kristofer S. Monson First Assistant Attorney General Assistant Solicitor General State Bar No. 24037129 Office of the Attorney General P.O. Box 12548 (MC 059) Austin, Texas 78711-2548 Tel.: (512) 936-1820 kristofer.monson@texasattorneygeneral.gov Counsel for Appellants Oral Argument Requested Identity of Parties and Counsel Appellants: Chris Traylor, as Executive Commissioner of the Texas Health and Human Services Commission, et al. Lead Appellate Counsel: Kristofer S. Monson Office of the Attorney Assistant Solicitor General General State Bar No. 24037129 P.O. Box 12548 (MC 059) Austin, Texas 78711-2548 [Tel.] (512) 936-1820 kristofer.monson@texasattorneygeneral.gov Appellee: Diana D., as Next Friend of KD, A Child, et al. Lead Appellate Counsel: Daniel R. Richards Richards Rodriguez & Skeith State Bar No. 00791520 816 Congress Avenue Benjamin H. Hathaway Suite 1200 State Bar No. 09224500 Austin, Texas 78701 [Tel.] (512) 476-0005 drichards@rrsfirm.com bhathaway@rrsfirm.com Table of Contents Identity of Parties and Counsel ............................................................................... i Table of Contents .................................................................................................. ii Index of Authorities ...............................................................................................vi Statement of the Case .......................................................................................... xvi Issues Presented ................................................................................................. xvii Statement of Facts ................................................................................................. 2 Summary of Argument.......................................................................................... 14 Standards of Review ............................................................................................. 17 Argument.............................................................................................................. 18 I. The Live Petition Does Not Attempt to Tie the Causes of Action it Pleads to the Remedies it Seeks. ................................ 18 II. Plaintiffs’ Lawsuit Has No Arguable Basis in Law.................... 20 A. Plaintiffs Fail to Address the Distinction Between Review and Adjustment. ................................................................ 20 B. Plaintiffs Fundamentally Misunderstand Rider 50. ............... 22 1. The rider’s plain text is not optional. ......................... 23 2. The post-enactment legislative history proffered by plaintiffs cannot change statutory text. ....................... 26 C. There is No Basis in Texas Law For Obtaining Judicial Review of Medicaid Rates that Are Not Required to be Adopted Through Contested-Case Proceedings. .................. 27 ii 1. Plaintiffs’ approach of using § 2001.038 to attack Medicaid rates has been rejected by the Texas Supreme Court......................................................... 28 2. The ultra vires cause of action cannot be used to retroactively undo rules that became effective on October 1, but for the district court’s improper counter-supersedeas order. ....................................... 29 III. That Texas Law Does Not Provide a Judicial Review Mechanism Under Which Texas Courts Set Medicaid Rates Makes Sense, Because Such a System Would Be Preempted by Federal Law.......................................................................... 30 A. The Medicaid Act Makes Rates Subject to the Exclusive Jurisdiction of the Secretary, Subject Only to Potential Federal-Court Proceedings. ................................................ 31 B. The Medicaid Act Preempts Texas Remedies Related to Medicaid Rates By Creating Exclusive Jurisdiction in the Secretary. .......................................................................... 32 C. Both the Texas and Federal Constitutions Prohibit Judicial Orders that Interfere with the Relationship Between the State and Federal Governments. ......................................... 34 IV. Plaintiffs Lack a Vested Property Right in Medicaid Rates. ..... 36 A. Neither the Providers Nor the Beneficiaries Have a Vested Property Right, and Cannot Raise Either A Due-Course or Inherent-Judicial-Review Claim. ......................................... 36 1. The provider plaintiffs lack a vested property right...... 37 2. The beneficiary plaintiffs lack a vested property right—in fact, they will suffer no cognizable change in their legal status by a change in the rates. ................ 38 B. The Court Should Follow Justice Scalia’s Lead in Armstrong and Hold that Providers and Beneficiaries Lack iii Constitutional Standing to Bring Suit Under the Ratemaking Criteria of the Medicaid Act. ............................ 39 V. Even if plaintiffs have constitutional standing, they cannot successfully invoke § 2001.038 or the Ultra Vires Cause of Action. ...................................................................................... 40 A. Section 2001.038 and the Ultra Vires Cause of Action Cannot Be Used to Obtain Judicial Review........................... 40 1. The ultra vires cause of action does not apply retroactively because it is not a form of judicial review...................................................................... 40 2. Section 2001.038 does not create judicial power to review substantive agency actions, only agency rules. ....................................................................... 41 3. Plaintiffs’ lawsuit is barred because it seeks to use these causes of action retroactively and specifies no remedy appropriate to the causes of action pleaded. ............................................................................... 43 B. Plaintiffs’ § 2001.038 Claims Are Barred. ............................ 44 1. Plaintiffs lack a right or privilege. ............................... 45 2. Plaintiffs have not “identified” an administrative rule.......................................................................... 47 a. Plaintiffs cannot reverse engineer a rule challenge from a rate challenge. ........................ 47 b. Plaintiffs ignore the application of § 355.201(d). .................................................. 48 C. Plaintiffs’ Ultra Vires Claims Would Fail Even if they Had Been Properly Pleaded. ...................................................... 49 iv 1. Plaintiffs’ position regarding § 355.8021 would fail to trigger an ultra vires claim in any event. .................. 50 2. Plaintiffs’ remaining claims likewise cannot describe an ultra vires act. .......................................... 53 VI. Because there is no potential for recovery, the Court Should vacate the Temporary Injunction. ................................................. 55 Prayer ................................................................................................................... 57 Certificate of Service............................................................................................. 58 Certificate of Compliance ..................................................................................... 58 v INDEX OF AUTHORITIES Cases Adams v. Calvert, 396 S.W.2d 948 (Tex. 1965) ........................................................................ 35 Armstrong v. Exceptional Child Ctr., Inc., 135 S.Ct. 1378 (2015)...............................................................2, 31, 32, 35, 39 Butnaru v. Ford Motor Co., 84 S.W.3d 198 (Tex. 2002) ................................................................... 55, 56 Charlie Thomas Ford v. A.C. Collins Ford, 912 S.W.2d 271 (Tex. App.—Austin 1995, writ dism’d) ............................ 42 City of Amarillo v. Hancock, 150 Tex. 231, 239 S.W.2d 788 (1951) ..................................................... 36, 42 City of Austin v. Cannizzo, 153 Tex. 324, 267 S.W.2d 808 (1954) .......................................................... 25 City of Austin v. Chandler, 428 S.W.3d 398 (Tex. App.—Austin 2014, no pet.) .................................... 33 City of El Paso v. Heinrich, 284 S.W.3d 366 (Tex. 2009) ....................................................................... 41 City of Houston v. Williams, 216 S.W.3d 827 (Tex. 2007) (per curiam) .................................................. 40 Colorado Health Care Ass’n v. Colorado Dep’t of Soc. Servs., 842 F.2d 1158 (10th Cir. 1988) ......................................................................3 Combs v. City of Webster, 311 S.W.3d 85 (Tex. App.—Austin 2009, pet. denied).......................... 36, 47 Creedmoor-Maha Water Supply Corp. v. Tex. Comm’n on Envt’l Quality, 307 S.W.3d 505 (Tex. App.—Austin 2010, no pet.) ...............................29-30 vi Cullen Center Bank & Trust Co. v. Tex. Commerce Bank, 841 S.W.2d 116 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 1992, writ denied)........................................................................................................ 25 Dallas Cnty. Mental Health & Mental Retardation v. Bossley, 968 S.W.2d 339 (Tex. 1998) ...................................................................17, 18 Douglas v. Indep. Living Ctr. of S. Calif., Inc., 132 S.Ct. 1204 (2012) ....................................................................................3 El Paso Cnty. Hosp. Dist. v. Tex. Health & Human Servs. Comm’n, 400 S.W.3d 72 (Tex. 2013) ............................................................. 28, 44, 48 El Paso Hospital District v. Tex. Health & Human Services Commission, 247 S.W.3d 709 (Tex. 2008) ................................................................. 28, 44 Eldercare Props., Inc. v. Dep’t of Human Servs., 63 S.W.3d 551 (Tex. App.—Austin 2001, pet. denied) ................................ 37 Entergy Gulf States, Inc. v. Pub. Util. Comm’n, 173 S.W.3d 199 (Tex. App.—Austin 2005, pet. denied) .............................. 32 Entergy Gulf States, Inc. v. Summers, 282 S.W.3d 433 (Tex. 2009) .......................................................................26 Equal Access for El Paso, Inc. v. Hawkins, 509 F.3d 697 (5th Cir. 2007) ........................................................................ 4 Ex Parte Mitchell, 783 S.W.2d 703 (Tex. App.—El Paso 1989, no writ) ................................... 25 Finance Commission of Texas v. Norwood, 418 S.W.3d 566 (Tex. 2013) ........................................................................ 45 Garcia v. Kubosh, 377 S.W.3d 89 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2012, no pet.) ................. 44 vii Gattis v. Duty, 349 S.W.3d 193 (Tex. App.—Austin 2011, no pet.) ..................................... 17 Gen. Servs. Comm’n v. Little-Tex Insulation Co., 39 S.W.3d 591 (Tex. 2001) ......................................................................... 40 Gerst v. Nixon, 411 S.W.2d 350 (Tex. 1966) ........................................................................ 34 Gulf Land Co. v. Atl. Ref. Co., 134 Tex. 59, 131 S.W.2d 73 (1939) ......................................................... 33, 41 Harris County v. Sykes, 136 S.W.3d 635 (Tex. 2004) ........................................................................ 18 Heckman v. Williamson Cnty., 369 S.W.3d 137 (Tex. 2011) ................................................................... 38, 39 Houston Mun. Emps. Pension Sys. v. Ferrell, 248 S.W.3d 151 (Tex. 2007) .................................................................. 33, 42 In re Doe, 19 S.W.3d 346 (Tex.2000) .................................................................... 26, 27 In re Entergy Corp., 142 S.W.3d 316 (Tex. 2004) ........................................................................ 33 In re Sw. Bell Tel. Co., L.P., 226 S.W.3d 400 (Tex. 2007) ....................................................................... 18 Jessen Assocs., Inc. v. Bullock, 531 S.W.2d 593 (Tex. 1975) ......................................................................... 34 Lopez v. Pub. Util. Comm’n, 816 S.W.2d 776 (Tex. App.—Austin 1991, writ denied) ............................. 42 Mills v. Warner Lambert Co., 157 S.W.3d 424 (Tex. 2005) ........................................................................ 32 viii N. Alamo Water Supply Corp. v. Tex. Dep’t of Health, 839 S.W.2d 455 (Tex. App.—Austin 1992, writ denied) .............................30 Nat’l Fed’n of Indep. Bus. v. Sebelius, 132 S.Ct. 2566 (2012) .................................................................................. 31 Ojo v. Farmers Group, 356 S.W.3d 421 (Tex. 2011) ........................................................................ 27 Pers. Care Prods. v. Hawkins, 635 F.3d 155 (5th Cir. 2011)......................................................................... 37 Pharm. Research & Mfrs. of Am. v. Walsh, 538 U.S. 644 (2003) (plurality op. ......................................... 31, 32, 34, 35, 36 Prairie View A&M Univ. v. Chatha, 381 S.W.3d 500 (Tex. 2012) ....................................................................... 42 R.R. Comm’n v. Tex. Citizens for a Safe Future and Clean Water, 336 S.W.3d 619, 624-25 (Tex. 2011) ............................................................ 51 Richardson v. First Nat’l Life Ins. Co., 419 S.W.2d 836 (Tex. 1967) ........................................................................ 17 S.C. San Antonio, Inc. v. Tex. Dep’t of Human Servs., 891 S.W.2d 773 (Tex. App.—Austin 1995, writ denied) .............................. 37 Spring Branch Indep. Sch. Dist. v. Stamos, 695 S.W.2d 556 (Tex. 1985) ........................................................................ 36 SSC Mo. City Operating Co., LP v. Tex. Dep’t of Aging & Disability Servs., No. 03-09-00299-CV, 2009 WL 4725286 (Tex. App.—Austin 2009, pet. denied) (mem. op.) ..................................................................... 37 State Bar of Tex. v. Gomez, 891 S.W.2d 243 (Tex. 1994) ........................................................................ 18 State v. Holland, 221 S.W.3d 639, 644 (Tex. 2007) ................................................................ 19 ix Sw. Pharmacy Solutions, Inc. v. Tex. Health & Human Servs. Comm’n, 408 S.W.3d 549 (Tex. App.—Austin 2013, pet. denied) ........................19, 37 Tex. A&M Univ. Sys. v. Koseoglu, 233 S.W.3d 835 (Tex. 2007) ........................................................................ 17 Tex. Ass’n of Bus. v. Tex. Air Control Bd., 852 S.W.2d 440 (Tex. 1993) ............................................................ 17, 18, 38 Tex. Comm’n of Licensing & Regulation v. Model Search Am., Inc., 953 S.W.2d 289 (Tex. App.—Austin 1997, no writ) ....................................30 Tex. Comm’n on Envtl. Quality v. Slay, 351 S.W.2d 532 (Tex. App.—Austin 2011, pet. denied) .............................. 45 Tex. Dep’t of Parks & Wildlife v. Miranda, 133 S.W.3d 217 (Tex. 2004) ...................................................................17, 18 Tex. Dep’t of Protective & Regulatory Servs. v. Mega Child Care, Inc., 145 S.W.3d 170 (Tex. 2004) .................................................................. 29, 41 Tex. Dep’t of Pub. Safety v. Salazar, 304 S.W.3d 896 (Tex. App.—Austin 2009, no pet.) ................................... 45 Tex. Dep’t of State Health Servs. v. Balquinta, 429 S.W.3d 726 (Tex. App.—Austin 2014, pet. dism’d)....................... 44, 45 Tex. Health & Human Servs. Comm’n v. Advocates for Patient Access, Inc., 399 S.W.3d 615 (Tex. App.—Austin 2013, no pet.)..................................... 56 Tex. Health & Human Servs. Comm’n v. El Paso Cnty. Hosp. Dist., 351 S.W.3d 460 (Tex. App.—Austin 2011) ........................................... 28, 44 Tex. Parks & Wildlife Dep’t v. Sawyer Trust, 354 S.W.3d 384 (Tex. 2011) ....................................................................... 40 Thomas v. Groebl, 147 Tex. 70, 212 S.W.2d 625, 630 (1948) ................................................... 24 x U.S. v. L.A. Tucker Truck Lines, Inc., 344 U.S. 33 (1952) ..................................................................................... 44 Walling v. Metcalfe, 863 S.W.2d 56 (Tex. 1993) (per curiam) ..................................................... 17 Water Dev’pt Bd. v. Hearts Bluff Game Ranch, Inc., 313 S.W.3d 479 (Tex. App.—Austin 2010), aff’d 381 S.W.3d 468 (Tex. 2012) ............................................................................................ 19-20 Wichita Falls State Hosp. v. Taylor, 106 S.W.3d 692 (Tex. 2003) ........................................................... 42, 45, 46 Constitutional Provisions, Statutes & Rules TEX. CONST. art. I, § 28 ........................................................................................ 33 TEX. CONST. art. II, § 1 ......................................................................................... 33 TEX. CONST. art. IV, § 10 ..................................................................................... 35 U.S. Const. art. VI, cl. 2 ........................................................................................ 32 1 TEX. ADMIN. CODE § 353.411(a)(5)............................................................... 13, 54 1 TEX. ADMIN. CODE ch. 355 subch. B .................................................................... 6 1 TEX. ADMIN. CODE § 355.201 ...............................................................................5 1 TEX. ADMIN. CODE § 355.201(c) ..................................................................... 8, 10 1 TEX. ADMIN. CODE § 355.201(c)(4) ............................................................ 3, 8, 53 1 TEX. ADMIN. CODE § 355.201(d) .............................................................. 9, 21, 22 1 TEX. ADMIN. CODE § 355.201(d)(1)(A) ......................................... 9, 10, 12, 21, 48 1 TEX. ADMIN. CODE § 355.201(d)(1) (D) ................................... 9, 10, 12, 21, 48 1 TEX. ADMIN. CODE § 355.201(e) ........................................................... 7, 9, 10, 13 xi 1 TEX. ADMIN. CODE § 355.201(f) ................................................................ 7, 10, 13 1 TEX. ADMIN. CODE § 355.8021 ....................................................................... 8, 13 1 TEX. ADMIN. CODE § 355.8021(a)(2) ........................................................8, 22 1 TEX. ADMIN. CODE §355.8021(a)(2)(A) ........................................ 8, 21, 22, 50 1 TEX. ADMIN. CODE §355.8021(a)(2)(B) .............................................. 8, 21, 22 1 TEX. ADMIN. CODE 355.8021(B)........................................................................49 1 TEX. ADMIN. CODE § 355.8063(k)(1)(A) (2010), repealed by 35 TEX. REG. 6511, 6513 (2010) ............................................................................... 28 1 TEX. ADMIN. CODE § 355.8085 ..................................................................... 13 1 TEX. ADMIN. CODE § 355.8085(g)(3) ................................................................... 8 1 TEX. ADMIN. CODE § 355.8441.................................................................. 8, 13 1 TEX. ADMIN. CODE § 355.8441(3)(B) .................................................................. 8 1 TEX. ADMIN. CODE § 355.8441(5)(B) ............................................................. 8 1 TEX. ADMIN. CODE § 355.8441(6)(B) ............................................................. 8 1 TEX. ADMIN. CODE § 355.8441(7)(B) ............................................................. 8 42 U.S.C. § 1396a(a) .............................................................................................. 2 42 U.S.C. § 1396a(a)(3) ..........................................................................................3 42 U.S.C. § 1396a(a)(5) ..........................................................................................5 42 U.S.C. § 1396a(a)(30)(A) ....................................................................... 3, 54, 26 42 U.S.C. § 1396b ............................................................................................31, 53 42 U.S.C. § 1396b(a) ...............................................................................................3 xii 42 U.S.C. § 1396b(m)(1)(A)(i) .............................................................................. 55 42 U.S.C. § 1396c ...............................................................................................2, 4 5 U.S.C. § 702 ...................................................................................................... 41 TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE § 37.011 ................................................................ 33 TEX. GOV’T CODE § 2001.022 ......................................................................... 53 TEX. GOV’T CODE § 2001.022(a) ............................................................... 13, 46 TEX. GOV’T CODE § 2001.023(a) .......................................................... 13, 46, 53 TEX. GOV’T CODE § 2001.024 ................................................................... 13, 54 TEX. GOV’T CODE § 2001.038 ......................................................................... 41 TEX. GOV’T CODE § 2001.038(a) .............................................................. 16, 42, 43 TEX. GOV’T CODE § 2001.171 ......................................................................... 42 TEX. GOV’T CODE § 2001.174 .................................................................... 41, 42 TEX. GOV’T CODE § 2006.002 ....................................................................13, 53 TEX. GOV’T CODE § 2006.002(c) ....................................................................46 TEX. GOV’T CODE § 311.016 ................................................................................ 24 TEX. GOV’T CODE § 311.034 ................................................................................ 42 TEX. GOV’T CODE ch. 531 .......................................................................................5 TEX. GOV’T CODE ch. 531 subch. B .........................................................................5 TEX. GOV’T CODE § 531.021(b-1)............................................................................5 TEX. GOV’T CODE § 531.021(d) .......................................................................... 8, 9 TEX. GOV’T CODE § 531.021(e) ........................................................................ 9 xiii TEX. GOV’T CODE § 531.02113.......................................................................... 5, 13 TEX. GOV’T CODE § 531.02113(1) ......................................................................... 53 TEX. GOV’T CODE § 531.0212(b)(2) ...................................................................... 38 TEX. GOV’T CODE § 533.005(a)(21) ...................................................................... 13 TEX. GOV’T CODE § 533.005(a)(21)(c) ................................................................. 54 TEX. HUM. RES. CODE ch. 32 ..................................................................................5 TEX. HUM. RES. CODE § 32.002 ........................................................................5 TEX. HUM. RES. CODE § 32.021 .................................................................. 5, 35 TEX. HUM. RES. CODE § 32.021(a) ..........................................................................5 TEX. HUM. RES. CODE § 32.028 ................................................................... 3, 31, 53 TEX. HUM. RES. CODE § 32.028(a)...................................................................... 5, 6 TEX. HUM. RES. CODE § 32.0281.......................................................................5 TEX. HUM. RES. CODE § 32.0281(b)(1)............................................................. 6 TEX. HUM. RES. CODE § 32.0281(d)....................................................................... 6 TEX. HUM. RES. CODE § 32.0281(e) ............................................................ 6, 29 TEX. HUM. RES. CODE § 32.0282 ................................................................ 6, 10, 52 TEX. HUM. RES. CODE § 32.0282(a) .......................................................................7 TEX. R. CIV. P. 683 ................................................................................................ 56 Rule 24........................................................................................................... 22, 52 xiv Other Authorities 2016-17 Gen. Appropriations Act, 84th Leg., R.S., ch. 1281, art. II, 2015 TEX. SESS. LAW SERV. 4343, 4547 (Health & Human Servs. Comm’n), Rider 50..................................... 11 A DICTIONARY OF MODERN LEGAL USAGE (2d ed. 1995) ................................ 24, 46 AMER. HERITAGE DICTIONARY 691 (4th ed. 1994) ................................................ 21 AMER. HERITAGE DICTIONARY 1612 (4th ed. 1994) ............................................. 24 BLACK’S LAW DICTIONARY 1436 (9th ed. 2009) ....................................................46 Gen. Appropriations Act, 2012-13 Biennium, 82d Leg., R.S., ch. 1355, art. II, § 16, 2011 TEX. GEN. LAWS 4025, 4241 (Special Provisions Re: All Health & Human Servs. Agencies, Provider Rates) ............................... 10 xv STATEMENT OF THE CASE Nature of the Case: Plaintiffs sought to impede the implementation of a set of Medicaid rates for home therapy services that were to go into effect on October 1. They attempted to invoke § 2001.038 of the APA and the ultra vires cause of action, and asked the district court to foreclose the Commission from superseding the judgment. Trial Court: 200th Judicial District Court, Travis County The Hon. Tim Sulak Presiding Trial Court Disposition: The trial court denied the plea, CR.673 (Appendix Tab B),1 and granted a temporary injunction, CR.587-672 (Appendix Tab A). The court foreclosed supersedeas based on a bond of $500; that matter is being challenged by a separate motion in the same cause. 1 References to the Clerk’s Record appear as “CR.__,” with a numeral indicating the page number and, as appropriate, a paragraph reference. References to the Reporter’s Record appear as __.RR.__, with the first numeral indicating a volume and the second a page number, sometimes followed by a line number. The Supplemental Reporter’s Record is referred to as “SRR.” xvi ISSUES PRESENTED Plaintiffs sought ultra vires and declaratory relief under the Administrative Procedure Act related to the Commission’s adjustment of Medicaid rates for certain therapy services, which were arrived at as a rate adjustment triggered by a decreased appropriation for Medicaid funding. Plaintiffs allege in their trial-court briefing (but not in their live petition) that they are entitled to relief related to the rates, because they are implicitly in conflict with separate administrative rules governing periodic rate review related to costs. Claims regarding the amount of Medicaid rates are subject to the exclusive jurisdiction of the federal Secretary of Health and Human Services, and Texas law does not provide for an administrative process or judicial review related to the rate-setting process. 1. Does plaintiffs’ petition establish jurisdiction based on any of the causes of action asserted? Are the jurisdictional defects incurable? 2. Are Texas-law claims and remedies related to the amount of Medicaid rates preempted by the federal Medicaid Act? Does Texas law purport to create an independent basis for challenging Medicaid rates in state court? 3. Do plaintiffs have a standing to challenge the Medicaid rates or a vested right in a particular level of Medicaid rates? 4. Do plaintiffs have a vested property right on which to base a constitutional due-course-of-law claim or seek inherent judicial review? xvii No. 03-15-00657-CV In the Court of Appeals for the Third Judicial District at Austin, Texas CHRIS TRAYLOR, AS EXECUTIVE COMMISSIONER OF THE TEXAS HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES COMMISSION, et al. Appellants, v. DIANA D., AS NEXT FRIEND OF KD, A CHILD, et al. Appellees. On Appeal from the 200th Judicial District Court of Travis County, Texas APPELLANTS’ BRIEF TO THE HONORABLE THIRD COURT OF APPEALS: Plaintiffs seek to challenge the result of a Medicaid rates adjustment, through a series of procedural mechanisms governing the adoption of the administrative rules governing the Medicaid process. The remedy plaintiffs seek—to keep the old rates—is incompatible with the exceptions to sovereign immunity on which they rely. Those exceptions apply at most to rules, not rates; there is no Texas-law mechanism to challenge the amount of Medicaid rates. The lack of a Texas-law remedy for ratemaking is entirely sensible, because federal law preempts all state law remedies that impact the amount of Medicaid fees related to considerations such as access to care. The federal Secretary of Health and Human Services has exclusive authority to review the amount of Medicaid rates, subject to the remedy of withdrawing federal funds if state levels are too low. 42 U.S.C. § 1396c. Because there is no Texas-court lawsuit that can change the rates, plaintiffs should direct their concerns about access to care to the Secretary. The lawsuit should be dismissed. STATEMENT OF FACTS Plaintiffs would engraft a substantive Texas-law access requirement on the federal Medicaid Act, and to establish a new legal basis for judicial review of Medicaid rates through statutes that allow review of the underlying administrative rules. A full understanding of the procedural and jurisdictional issues in this case requires an understanding of the Medicaid Act’s rate structure and the Texas-law requirements for adopting administrative rules, periodically setting Medicaid rates, and adjusting those rates in other circumstances. Medicaid Medicaid is a Spending Clause program, cooperatively managed by the state and federal governments. E.g., Armstrong v. Exceptional Child Ctr., Inc., 135 S.Ct. 1378, 1382 (2015). The program functions as a contract between the states and the federal government: to qualify for funding, the State tenders and the federal government accepts a Medicaid “plan,” see 42 U.S.C. § 1396a(a), to be administered 2 by the State, see Douglas v. Indep. Living Ctr. of S. Calif., Inc., 132 S.Ct. 1204, 1210 (2012) (federal governments’ acceptance of Medicaid plan, within its expertise, precluded rate claim against state and required plaintiffs to go to federal forum). The availability of funds is predicated on the availability of money appropriated to pay Medicaid benefits. 42 U.S.C. § 1396b(a) (setting amount to be distributed to states “[f]rom the sums appropriated therefor”); accord, e.g., TEX. HUM. RES. CODE § 32.028, 1 TEX. ADMIN. CODE § 355.201(c)(4) (requiring consideration of “levels of appropriated state . . . funds . . . that limit, restrict, or condition the availability of appropriated funds for medical assistance”). A shortfall in Medicaid appropriations requires either further appropriations, or, more rarely, cuts to Medicaid rates. E.g., Colorado Health Care Ass’n v. Colorado Dep’t of Soc. Servs., 842 F.2d 1158, 1171-72 (10th Cir. 1988). The state plan must meet a number of requirements, such as providing a hearing before a State agency for any individual whose claim for medical assistance under the plan is denied. E.g., 42 U.S.C. § 1396a(a)(3). One requirement of the Medicaid Act is “access.” Rates must be: sufficient to enlist enough providers so that care and services are available under the plan at least to the extent that such care and services are available to the general population in the geographic area 42 U.S.C. § 1396a(a)(30)(A). 3 Consistent with the contractual nature of the program, many of its requirements are subjected to the discretion of the federal Secretary of Health and Human Services, who has ultimate authority to suspend Medicaid payments to the states for non-compliance with the Act, 42 U.S.C. § 1396c. For example, the Fifth Circuit has held that the “access” requirement cannot give rise to a statutory cause of action in federal court, because discretion over setting rates to meet the access requirement is vested in the Secretary, rather than the courts. Equal Access for El Paso, Inc. v. Hawkins, 509 F.3d 697, 701 (5th Cir. 2007). The amount of rates is, ultimately, reviewed by the Secretary through the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (“CMS”). This review currently takes place on an ad hoc basis, but CMS is currently pursuing a formal rulemaking that would standardize the data requirements and standards for demonstrating access to care. Medicaid Program; Methods for Assuring Access to Covered Medicaid Services, 80 Fed. Reg. 67576 (Nov. 2, 2015) (to be codified at 42 C.F.R. pt. 447) (Appendix, Tab C). This new rule will establish specific criteria for establishing access to care, including documentation requirements. Id. Texas Statutes and Rules In Texas, Medicaid is governed by Chapter 32 of the Human Resources Code and some provisions in subchapter B of Chapter 531 of the Government Code. See 4 TEX. HUM. RES. CODE ch. 32., TEX. GOV’T CODE ch. 531 subch. B. The statutory provisions—unsurprisingly—mirror federal law. See TEX. HUM. RES. CODE § 32.002 (requiring Chapter be construed in light of federal law and that any provisions that would render Texas ineligible to receive funds inoperative to that extent). The program is administered by the Health and Human Service Commission, and the Commissioner is charged with adopting the necessary administrative rules to implement the system. See id. § 32.021; see also TEX. GOV’T CODE ch. 531 (setting out Commission’s authority and duties). Consistent with the Medicaid Act, the Commission is charged with presenting the State’s medical assistance plan to the federal government for approval by the Secretary. See TEX. HUM. RES. CODE § 32.021(a) (referring to 42 U.S.C. § 1396a(a)(5)). A separate provision of the Government Code creates a general duty to “optimize” Medicaid financing by, among other things, maximizing the receipt of federal funds, creating incentives to use preventive care, increasing and retaining providers in the system to maintain an “adequate provider network.” TEX. GOV’T CODE § 531.02113. Rulemaking: Rates are adopted under a system set out by administrative rule. TEX. HUM. RES. CODE § 32.028(a), § 32.0281; TEX. GOV’T CODE § 531.021(b-1); see 1 TEX. ADMIN. CODE § 355.201. These rules are promulgated under the formal rulemaking 5 requirements of the Administrative Procedure Act. TEX. HUM. RES. CODE § 32.0281(d).2 Ratemaking: The rate making process, by contrast to the underlying rulemaking, is governed by requirements that are different in form and substance from the APA’s. See TEX. HUM. RES. CODE § 32.0282 (setting out public-hearing requirement, different from APA’s). The Human Resources Code makes clear that something different from formal APA process is required. Id. §§ 32.028(a), 32.0281(b)(1). The Medicaid-rate-specific process further distinguishes between the processes for “establishment” and “periodic review,” on the one hand, and “adjustment” on the other. See 1 TEX. ADMIN. CODE ch. 355 subch. B. 2Somewhat confusingly, § 32.0281 states that the adoption of rules is subject both to the APA’s rulemaking provisions, TEX. HUM. RES. CODE § 32.0281(d), and that the same rules are subject to an “appeal” under the contested-case provisions of the APA, id. § 32.0281(e). Subsection (e) is not implicated in this case, which involves no contested-case proceeding. See infra, n. 9. 6 Ratemaking: Establishment and Periodic Review When a rule is “established,” the Commission considers the information detailed in § 355.201(c). HHSC ratemaking staff regularly review new rates based on all required inputs, and consider stakeholder comments regarding potential access- to-care issues. Periodic rate changes are adopted at a public hearing “to allow interested persons to present comments relating to proposed payment rates for medical assistance.” TEX. HUM. RES. CODE § 32.0282(a). By contrast to public hearing requirements for APA rulemaking, there is no requirement that the Commission respond to public comment before the new rate goes into effect, only a notice requirement. The notice requirement is satisfied by publication in the Texas Register, no later than 10 state working days before the effective date of the adjustment. 1 TEX. ADMIN. CODE § 355.201(e). The published notice must include a description of the specific increase or reduction, the date on which it will take effect, a description of the legal and factual bases therefor, a description of any rate setting requirements that cannot be met, and instructions for interested parties to submit written comments prior to the hearing on the rates. 1 TEX. ADMIN. CODE § 355.201(f). Substantively, periodic rate changes are circumscribed by the Commission’s rules, the requirements of state and federal law, economic factors, and “levels of appropriated state and federal funds or state or federal laws or enactments that limit, 7 restrict, or condition the availability of appropriated funds for medical assistance.” See id. §§ 355.201(c), 355.201(c)(4); see also TEX. GOV’T CODE § 531.021(d). With regard to home health programs, an additional provision § 355.8021, governs rates for establishment and periodic review of services. See 1 TEX. ADMIN. CODE § 355.8021. The Commission will “update” schedules for home care “as needed.” Id. § 355.8021(a)(2). Fees are to be based on an analysis of other fees authorized by the federal government for similar services, Medicaid fees paid by other states, a survey of costs reported by home health agencies, the Medicare Low Utilization Payment Adjustment (LUPA) fees; previous payments for these services, or “some combination thereof.” Id. § 355.8021(a)(2)(A). Periodic rate reviews “include,” but are not “limited to, payments for as well as costs associated with providing” home health services. Id. § 355.8021(a)(2)(B). Rates for early-intervention therapeutic intervention are subject to the same inquiry. See 1 TEX. ADMIN. CODE § 355.8441(3)(B); (5)(B); (6)(B); (7)(B) (referring back to § 355.8021 when discussing “EPSDT”3 services by home health agencies); 1 TEX. ADMIN. CODE § 355.8085(g)(3) (specifying that EPSDT services are governed by § 355.8441). Thus, for services governed by § 355.8021(a)(2), review is related to costs. 3 “EPSDT” stands for “Early and Periodic Screening, Diagnosis, and Treatment.” 8 Ratemaking: Adjustments While rates are ‘established’ and periodically ‘reviewed’ under the relevant administrative rules, separate provisions govern adjusting rates. 1 TEX. ADMIN. CODE §§ 355.201(d)(1)(A), (D) (mirroring factors set out in § 531.021(d) of the Government Code for changing rates notwithstanding other legal requirements), 355.201(e) (discussing procedural requirements therefor). Echoing the Government Code’s requirement that rates be adjusted “[n]otwithstanding any other provision” to accommodate the factors such as reduced appropriations, TEX. GOV’T CODE § 531.021(d), (e), the rules provide: Adjustment of fees, rates, and charges. Notwithstanding any other provision of this chapter, the Commission may adjust fees, rates, and charges paid for medical assistance if: (1) state or federal law is enacted, amended, judicially interpreted, or implemented to: (A) require the Commission to increase or reduce a fee, rate or charge paid to a provider for medical assistance; * * * (D) restrict, limit, or condition the availability of appropriated funds to the Commission for payment or reimbursement of medical assistance. 1 TEX. ADMIN. CODE § 355.201(d). The substantive requirements for an adjustment, under subsection (d), are different from those for establishment or periodic review of a rate, under subsection (c), compare id. (allowing a change in rates when 9 appropriations are cut “notwithstanding” other law), with § 355.201(c) (setting out various data to be considered in establishing rates). Adjustments are subject to the same procedural requirements as the rate establishment and review process; interested parties are entitled to submit written comments and attend a public hearing. Id. § 355.201(f) (requiring same type of hearing as for establishment of rule under TEX. HUM. RES. CODE § 32.0282). The administrative rules expressly contemplate the changes in legislation will require new rates, specifying that such changes will not take effect until the new law does. Id. § 355.201(e). One example of a non-periodic rate adjustment occurred in the 2012-13 biennium, when the Legislature mandated specific cuts to particular rates. Gen. Appropriations Act, 2012-13 Biennium, 82d Leg., R.S., ch. 1355, art. II, § 16, 2011 TEX. GEN. LAWS 4025, 4241 (Special Provisions Re: All Health & Human Servs. Agencies, Provider Rates). By contrast to periodic review based on cost, adjustments are triggered by discreet events such as a decrease in appropriations for Medicaid reimbursement. 1 TEX. ADMIN. CODE §§ 355.201(d)(1)(A), (D); see TEX. GOV’T CODE § 531.021(d), (e). The Current Dispute The current state budget contains a rider cutting $186,500,000 in General Revenue Funds and $249,349,498 in Federal Funds in 2016, and similar numbers in 10 2016. 2016-17 Gen. Appropriations Act, 84th Leg., R.S., ch. 1281, art. II, 2015 TEX. SESS. LAW SERV. 4343, 4547 (Health & Human Servs. Comm’n), Rider 50 (“Rider 50”) (Appendix Tab D). The rider specifies cuts for acute care therapy services (including physical, occupational, and speech therapies. Id. It states: HHSC shall reform reimbursement methodology to be in line with industry standards, policies, and utilization for acute care therapy services (including physical, occupational, and speech therapies) while considering stakeholder input and access to care. Out of the amount in subsection (a), in each fiscal year at least $50,000,000 in General Revenue Funds savings should be achieved through rate reductions. Id. (emphasis added). The rider separately addresses $25,000,000 to be made through various medical policy initiatives, setting out initiatives the Commission “may” undertake. Id. Thus, by contrast to the rate cuts, the Commission has flexibility regarding efforts such as “[c]larifying policy language,” Rider 50(c)(1), and requiring “a primary care or treating physician to initiate a signed order or referral prior to an initial therapy evaluation,” id. 50(c)(4). In response, the Commission attempted to change the rates in accordance with Rider 50(c). See CR.18-39. That attempt triggered this lawsuit. The first notice of changed rates under Rider 50 failed to mention the adjustment process, see CR.20 (reciting other rate-related provisions). Following public comment, an internal memorandum suggested that the original rates be 11 changed for various reasons and suggested that the new rates be based on a modification of the prior announcement and hearing, see CR.235-261. As explained above, however, the internal memorandum by Commission staff could not trigger changed rules, because there is no formal requirement or mechanism for addressing the public’s concerns. Accordingly, the Commission withdrew the entire first rate proposal, in light of the internal memorandum plaintiffs describe as a second rate proposal (but which never attempted to meet the procedural requirements to change the rates). CR.235-261. It then proposed the new, October 1, rates. CR.351-373 (Appendix Tab E). The October 1 rates were proposed under the “adjustment” procedure. CR.352 (citing 1 TEX. ADMIN. CODE §§ 355.201(d)(1)(A), (D)). The District Court Plaintiffs instituted suit Travis County district court while the first set of rates was in the administrative process, see CR.4-17, and amended their petition following the internal memorandum, which they have described as a second set of rates, CR.196-210. After the agency announced the October 1 rates, plaintiffs amended their petition again and sought a temporary injunction precluding the Commission from applying the rates while this lawsuit is pending. CR.336-392 (Appendix Tab F). The second amended petition asserted that the providers would go out of business, and the beneficiaries might no longer be able to obtain services. CR.342-43 ¶ 24. They asserted that the rates were adopted without complying with the administrative rules governing establishment and periodic review of rates (1 TEX. 12 ADMIN. CODE §§ 355.8021, 355.8441, 355.8085); several provisions related to formal rulemaking (TEX. GOV’T CODE §§ 2001.022(a), 2001.023(a), 2001.024, 2006.002); that there had been no published notice under the Medicaid Rate setting rule (1 TEX. ADMIN. CODE § 355.201(e), (f)). CR.343 ¶ 25, CR.505 ¶ 2. They further asserted substantive rights to (1) have Medicaid rates ‘maximized,’ CR.343-44 ¶ 26 (citing TEX. GOV’T CODE § 531.02113); and (2) ensure access to care for each beneficiary under the provisions governing MCO rates, CR.344 ¶ 27 (citing TEX. GOV’T CODE § 533.005(a)(21) and 1 TEX. ADMIN. CODE § 353.411(a)(5)). Finally, plaintiffs asserted a due-course of law claim. CR.344-45 ¶ 28. The Commission and Commissioner filed a plea to the jurisdiction and opposed the temporary injunction in the hearing. CR.581-84. The district court granted the temporary injunction and denied defendants’ plea. CR.673, CR.587-672 (Appendix Tab A).The district court’s analysis of the probable right of recovery element accepted plaintiffs’ argument that it is appropriate to enjoin a change in rates because the rate adjustment allegedly violated the administrative rules governing rate establishment and periodic rate review or adoption of an administrative rule under the APA. See CR.591 ¶ 18. The district court incorporated a counter- supersedeas order into the temporary injunction, requiring a bond of $500 to cover the potential expense to the State of not implementing Rider 50(c). CR.596-97. That order is currently being challenged in this Court under Rule of Appellate Procedure 24. 13 While the Rule 24 motion was pending, the trial court heard Appellants’ motion to modify the temporary injunction. The district court denied the motion and stated that the scope of the injunction could be determined in subsequent sanctions proceedings, if the State did not choose to comport with plaintiffs’ view of how rates should be set. SRR.37-39. Summary of Argument Plaintiffs have not stated a claim within either of the exceptions to sovereign immunity they attempt to invoke. That defect is incurable, because (1) Rider 50 mandates the cuts resulting in the rate adjustment that became effective October 1; (2) plaintiffs’ complaints are all about the standards for rate review, not rate adjustment; and (3) consistent with the exclusive federal, executive-department remedy provided by the Medicaid Act, Texas law does not provide judicial review of Medicaid rates. Plaintiffs’ petition avers that the adoption of rates in this case violated several administrative rules (although they never say how), that (implicitly) the adoption of the rate constituted an amendment of some rule (though they don’t say which), and they throw in a substantive argument based on the access requirements for Medicaid-paying managed care organizations (which are not covered by these rates). In short, their petition fails to invoke trial-court jurisdiction regardless of what the record shows. A plaintiff cannot rely on the notice-pleading standard against the 14 State; it must articulate a legal theory within a waiver of immunity from suit and allege facts to support it. The next step would ordinarily be to look at the record to see whether it supports remand for repleading. It does not, as explained below. But the ordinary next step does not apply, because it is first necessary to determine whether plaintiffs can obtain the remedy they seek, regardless of the facts. To the extent plaintiffs complain about the October 1 rates, qua rates, their lawsuit is preempted by federal law. The Medicaid Act preempts contrary state remedies by making claims regarding “access to care”—a claim that is governed exclusively by federal law and is the only cited basis for attacking the substance of the rates—subject to the sole remedy of the federal Secretary of Health and Human Service’s control over rate settings. While the United States Supreme Court has left open the question whether the Secretary’s actions are subject to further federal court proceedings, there can be no doubt that those proceedings must be in federal court, because they will be against, or brought by, the United States. That any right to particular rates is contingent on the Secretary’s actions precludes constitutional standing, any due-course-of-law claim, and any invocation of inherent judicial review. And to the extent plaintiffs complain about the adoption and application of administrative rules, they cannot obtain relief regarding the rate amounts under the causes of action they attempt to invoke. Section 2001.038 cannot be used to 15 challenge particular applications of administrative rules: it is limited to “applicability,” not application, and does not provide for injunctive relief. TEX. GOV’T CODE § 2001.038(a). Nor can the ultra vires cause of action result in the reversal of a particular action taken pursuant to a rule: it operates prospectively only. If plaintiffs’ view of jurisdiction were correct, both § 2001.038 and the ultra vires cause of action would constitute independent bases for judicial review. The Supreme Court and this Court have long rejected both propositions. Finally, the pleadings and evidence affirmatively negate any alternative claim. (1) Plaintiffs have not, as a matter of law, “identified” an administrative rule as required by Third Court precedent, because the only substantive arguments they make are that the rules have been misapplied. That cannot result in a declaration regarding the rules themselves. (2) Their ultra vires claim fails because the Commissioner has done, and threatens to do, nothing that is not provided by law. As with any application of administrative rules, if there is no statutory basis for judicial review and no constitutional basis for inherent review, the defendant’s actions cannot be the basis for an ultra vires claim. And (3), even assuming (in the face of overwhelming precedent), that there could be an ultra vires claim, it fails because as a matter of law the ratemaking was proper exercise of the power to adjust rates pursuant to decreased appropriations. 16 Standards of Review A plaintiff must demonstrate that the allegations in his petition fall within the court’s jurisdiction. Tex. Ass’n of Bus. v. Tex. Air Control Bd., 852 S.W.2d 440, 446 (Tex. 1993) (citing Richardson v. First Nat’l Life Ins. Co., 419 S.W.2d 836, 839 (Tex. 1967). Notice pleading is not enough: the “real substance” of the petition must state a valid legal theory within an exception to sovereign immunity. E.g., Dallas Cnty. Mental Health & Mental Retardation v. Bossley, 968 S.W.2d 339, 343 (Tex. 1998). A defendant’s plea to the jurisdiction based on sovereign immunity is analyzed in two steps: (1) examining the plaintiff’s petition to see if it articulates a claim within the scope of a valid waiver of immunity and (2) determining whether undisputed evidence of jurisdictional facts negates the trial court’s jurisdiction. Tex. Dep’t of Parks & Wildlife v. Miranda, 133 S.W.3d 217, 226 (Tex. 2004). The legal question whether the alleged facts invoke an exception to immunity can require an inquiry into the merits of the claim; conclusory legal allegations are insufficient, without supporting facts, to establish jurisdiction. E.g., Gattis v. Duty, 349 S.W.3d 193, 201 (Tex. App.—Austin 2011, no pet.) If either the pleadings themselves or the evidence affirmatively negates jurisdiction over the claim, the claim must be dismissed. Tex. A&M Univ. Sys. v. Koseoglu, 233 S.W.3d 835, 847 (Tex. 2007). A temporary injunction is reviewed for abuse of discretion. E.g., Walling v. Metcalfe, 863 S.W.2d 56, 58 (Tex. 1993) (per curiam). A trial court abuses its 17 discretion when it fails to analyze or apply the law correctly. In re Sw. Bell Tel. Co., L.P., 226 S.W.3d 400, 403 (Tex. 2007). Argument I. THE LIVE PETITION DOES NOT ATTEMPT TO TIE THE CAUSES OF ACTION IT PLEADS TO THE REMEDIES IT SEEKS. To invoke an exception to immunity a petition must, based on alleged facts, articulate a legal theory that falls within an exception to sovereign immunity as a matter of law. E.g., Bossley, 968 S.W.2d at 343. Plaintiffs’ petition makes no such effort: it merely alleges inconsistencies between the rate-adoption and various administrative rules and statutes. Nowhere does it articulate how the alleged facts support a claim within a waiver of sovereign immunity. It is the plaintiffs’ burden to file a petition that invokes the court’s jurisdiction. Tex. Ass’n of Bus., 852 S.W.2d at 446. Jurisdiction must appear based on the allegations, because the defendant is entitled to a ruling on the plea as early as possible. E.g., State Bar of Tex. v. Gomez, 891 S.W.2d 243, 245 (Tex. 1994). The petition is tested to see whether the pleading party has “alleged facts that affirmatively demonstrate a trial court’s subject-matter jurisdiction.” Tex. Dep’t of Parks & Wildlife v. Miranda, 133 S.W.3d 217, 226 (Tex. 2004). It is not enough merely to mention a cause of action for which immunity is waived: the plaintiff must allege facts sufficient to support the waiver. See Harris County v. Sykes, 136 S.W.3d 635, 639-640 (Tex. 2004) (lawsuit of plaintiff who does not amend petition to include 18 sufficient facts to trigger immunity waiver must be dismissed); see also State v. Holland, 221 S.W.3d 639, 644 (Tex. 2007) (dismissing takings claim that was based on invalid legal theory). More specifically, if the case involves an ultra vires claim against an official, the plaintiff must plead acts that are, as a matter of law, ultra vires. E.g., Sw. Pharmacy Solutions, Inc. v. Tex. Health & Human Servs. Comm’n, 408 S.W.3d 549, 557-58 (Tex. App.—Austin 2013, pet. denied) (ultra vires analysis involves legal inquiry to determine whether alleged acts are prohibited). In sum, a petition that merely names a waiver of immunity, but does not attempt to allege facts and assert a legal claim invoking that waiver of immunity, must be dismissed on a plea to the jurisdiction. The live petition makes no attempt to tie the relief it requests to the legal theories or causes of action invoked in the petition (and is thus jurisdictionally defective), plaintiffs try to circle the square in their trial-court briefing and in the district court’s temporary-injunction order. There, they assert that the adoption of the rules manifests an implicit amendment of the administrative rules. That briefing can’t fix the disconnect between the waivers of immunity plaintiffs invoke and the legal theories on which they rely. The proper inquiry in this lawsuit is not whether plaintiffs’ allegations in the petition successfully trigger jurisdiction, but whether there is any basis for repleading. Holland, 21 S.W.3d at 643, 644; Water Dev’pt Bd. v. Hearts Bluff Game Ranch, Inc., 313 S.W.3d 479, 485, 490 (Tex. App.—Austin 2010), 19 aff’d 381 S.W.3d 468 (Tex. 2012) (no takings claim asserted in pleadings where State’s actions were subsidiary to actions of federal government). II. Plaintiffs’ Lawsuit Has No Arguable Basis in Law. The core of plaintiffs’ lawsuit—which is found not in their live petition but rather in their briefing, CR.509 ¶ 6, and in the text of the temporary injunction order, CR.590 ¶ 11—is that the rate adjustment resulting in the October 1 rates implicitly invalidates the underlying administrative rules by amending them to reach the current rates. Thus, plaintiffs seek to use the mechanism for challenging formal administrative rules under the APA as a collateral vehicle for obtaining judicial review when there is none. And even if they had pleaded a valid rule challenge— which they have not, see infra, Part V.B.2—it would fail as a matter of law because plaintiffs allege violations of the APA and the administrative rules relating to the establishment and periodic review of Medicaid rates. The October 1 rates, however, result from a rate “adjustment” triggered by Rider 50. CR.352. So even if plaintiffs’ view of the procedural requirements of Texas law were correct, there lawsuit would fail for want of jurisdiction. A. Plaintiffs Fail to Address the Distinction Between Review and Adjustment. Plaintiffs’ view of this case depends primarily on the assertion that the October 1 rates are invalid because there is evidence that the Commission did not comply with § 355.8021 and, by extrapolation, with various other procedural 20 requirements and with the APA. CR.343 ¶ 25. They suggest that § 355.8021 has been violated because the rates have not been set according to a particular “formula” set out therein.4 CR.508 ¶ 2. More specifically, plaintiffs appear to suggest that there is a violation of § 355.8021(a)(2), which relates to the periodic review of rates. 1 TEX. ADMIN. CODE § 355.8021(a)(2)(A), (B). Those provisions do not apply at all. And if they did apply, plaintiffs’ lawsuit would nonetheless be jurisdictionally barred because plaintiffs misconstrue their requirements. See infra, Part V.C.1. The October 1 rate notice references §§ 355.201(d)(1)(A) and (D). CR.352. Those provisions are triggered when state law is amended to (1) require the Commission to increase or reduce a rate, 1 TEX. ADMIN. CODE § 355.201(d)(1)(A), or when a law restricts the availability of appropriate funds to the Commission for the payment or reimbursement of medical assistance, 1 TEX. ADMIN. CODE § 355.201(d)(1)(D). When § 355.201(d) is triggered, the Commission may “adjust” rates “notwithstanding any other provision” in the administrative rules. 1 TEX. ADMIN. CODE § 355.201(d) (“Adjustment of fees, rates, and charges”). 4 Far from imposing a formula, § 355.8021 (and its dependent provisions, § 355.8441 and § 355.8085) creates no substantive requirement except that the Commission consider various data in some combination and form. A list of data, stating that it can be considered in any combination, is hardly a “formula.” See AMER. HERITAGE DICTIONARY 691 (4th ed. 1994) (“A method of doing or treating something that relies on an established uncontroversial model or approach.”). 21 All the procedural rules invoked by plaintiffs, CR.343 ¶ 25, expressly apply to the establishment and periodic review of Medicaid rates. E.g., 1 TEX. ADMIN. CODE §§ 355.8021(a)(2) (the Commission will “update the fee schedules . . . as needed); (a)(2)(A) (fee schedules arrived at in these reviews will be made using a list of data “or some combination thereof”); (a)(2)(B) (the Commission “may conduct periodic rate reviews that will include, but not be limited to, payments for as well as the costs associated with providing” these services). Those provisions do not on their face apply to the adjustment of the rates resulting in the October 1 rates because § 355.8021(a)(2) expressly relates to periodic review of rates. By contrast, when the Legislature changes the underlying funding for Medicaid, the adjustment process occurs “notwithstanding” the other requirements of the chapter. 1 TEX. ADMIN. CODE § 355.201(d). To sum up: Rider 50 triggered the adjustment process of § 355.201(d), which occurs notwithstanding other requirements of the Commission’s rules. Plaintiffs complain exclusively about rules that apply to the periodic review of rules based on cost, not the adjustment of rules based on a change in appropriations. B. Plaintiffs Fundamentally Misunderstand Rider 50. Plaintiffs suggest that Rider 50 creates the option to cut the rates, not a mandate to do so. See Rule 24 Resp. at 5 n.2, 6 ¶ 8. Not so: Rider 50(c) made rate cuts for these services a mandatory element of the broader cuts to the Medicaid reimbursement program. 22 1. The rider’s plain text is not optional. The rate cuts in Rider 50(c) are not optional. Part 50(a) makes clear that funding has already been cut from the Medicaid portion of the budget. Rider 50(a). (“Included in appropriations above in Goal B, Medicaid, is a reduction of . . . a biennial total of $373,000,000 in General Revenue Funds and $496,570,428 in Federal Funds.”) Portions of this larger cut “may” include various initiatives. Rider 50(b) (“This reduction shall be achieved through the implementation of the plan described under subsection d which may include any or all of the following initiatives:”). Rider 50(c) is the kicker. After requiring a change in reimbursement methodology to meet industry standards, “while considering stakeholder input and access to care,” the Rider makes specific requirements regarding Medicaid therapy rates: Out of the amount [already cut] in subsection (a), in each fiscal year at least $50,000,000 in General Revenue Funds savings should be achieved through rate reductions. . . . . Rider 50(c). Plaintiffs’ view that the rate cuts are optional hangs entirely on the word “should,” which addresses “rate cuts” that are to be used to account for money that 23 was already cut from the budget, according to Rider 50(a).5 In this context, the word “should” creates a mandatory obligation. Rider 50(a), not Rider 50(c), cuts funds from the budget. The word “should” is an instruction to the Commission regarding the proportion of the total cuts that are to be directed to Medicaid therapy rate reductions. A sentence containing “should” can, in context, create a mandatory obligation. The word “should” is not included in the list of words given a background meaning by the Code Construction Act, see TEX. GOV’T CODE § 311.016, nor is there a large body of case law governing its use as opposed to the more common statutory terms “shall” and “may,” see Thomas v. Groebl, 147 Tex. 70, 78-79, 212 S.W.2d 625, 630 (1948) (“shall” can mean “may,” and vice versa). “Should” is the past tense of “shall,” and, though it is sometimes used to express “probability or expectation,” it also serves to indicate “obligation or duty.” AMER. HERITAGE DICTIONARY 1612 (4th ed. 1994). Thus, like “shall” and “may,” the word “should” can create a mandatory standard in some contexts. See A DICTIONARY OF MODERN LEGAL USAGE (2d ed. 1995) (“Oddly, should, like may . . . is sometimes used to create 5The response suggests that the word “may” also applies to the rate cuts. Resp. at 16 ¶ 21. This is wrong. The word “may” applies to the various initiatives in which the Commission is empowered to initiate to cut an additional $25 million in funding. Rider 50(c). Moreover, while the later reference in Rider 50(d) to Rider 50(c) addresses some optional programs, it is referring to the optional programs to cut the additional $25 million. Rider 50(d) does not make the rate cuts in Rider 50(c) optional, contrary to the plain text of Rider 50(c) and its reference back to Rider 50(a). 24 mandatory standards, as in the ABA Code of Judicial Conduct”). Texas courts have routinely applied decrees using the word “should” as creating mandatory duties in statutes, orders, and instructions.6 It makes sense to treat ‘should’ as mandatory in this context. Rider 50(a) sets out a total amount of cuts, and Rider 50(c) sets out instructions for how to achieve at least $100,000,000 of those cuts during the biennium. Given that the word “should” is directed at a portion of the cuts already made, nothing in the context suggests that the cuts themselves, or their amount, is either conditional or conditioned upon any particular data or analysis. Plaintiffs have implied that the reference to “access to care” impacts the rate changes. See Resp. at 16 ¶ 21 (putting “access to care” next to the rate cuts with an ellipsis). This is misleading: Rider 50 ties access to reformation of reimbursement methodology, not to rate cuts. Rider 50(c). The rate cuts are in a separate sentence. And even if the rate cuts were subject to procedural requirement to perform an “access to care” inquiry, the reference to “access to care” necessarily invokes the 6 See City of Austin v. Cannizzo, 153 Tex. 324, 331, 267 S.W.2d 808, 813 (1954) (“Whatever distinctions may be made between the words will and should by lexicographers and between the phrases ‘the price which the property will bring’ and ‘the price which the property should bring’ by grammarians, the ordinary signification of the latter word and phrase would, by contrast at least, be calculated to lead the jury to award a greater sum, including purely speculative elements of damages.”); Ex Parte Mitchell, 783 S.W.2d 703, 705 (Tex. App.—El Paso 1989, no writ) (support order enforceable even though it says obligor “should” pay); Cullen Ctr. Bank & Trust Co. v. Tex. Commerce Bank, 841 S.W.2d 116, 125 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 1992, writ denied) (use of word “should” does not render finding speculative). 25 Medicaid Act’s interpretation of the term, because there is no contrary definition in Texas law and because Medicaid is a Spending Clause program. 42 U.S.C. § 1396a(a)(30)(A). Thus, the only potential legal question is whether the data supporting the adjustment pass muster under federal law—and that inquiry is in the hands of the Secretary. 2. The post-enactment legislative history proffered by plaintiffs cannot change statutory text. Plaintiffs appear to believe that the number of legislator signatures they can marshal in support of their lawsuit changes the law. E.g., CR.679 ¶ 14, 731-32.7 But such letters are of little, or no, value in determining the meaning of a Legislative enactment. In re Doe, 19 S.W.3d 346, 352 (Tex. 2000) (“[C]ourts construing statutory language should give little weight to post-enactment statements by legislators. Explanations produced, after the fact, by individual legislators are not statutory history, and can provide little guidance as to what the legislature collectively intended.”). “The very notion of ‘subsequent legislative history’ is oxymoronic.” Entergy Gulf States, Inc. v. Summers, 282 S.W.3d 433, 470 n.46 (Tex. 2009). Like all post- 7 Plaintiffs attach even more letters to their response to the Commission’s rule 24 motion. These examples prove the rule: far from indicating the Legislature’s intent, these letters include policy statements from members of the Legislature and even letters from a members of Congress, who have no insight whatsoever into the intent behind Rider 50. Medicaid policy is beyond the judicial power. 26 enactment legislative history, the Legislator letters are of little use to the courts, because they represent the views of the Legislators, not the Legislature as a body at the time of enactment. See Ojo v. Farmers Group, 356 S.W.3d 421, 433 (Tex. 2011) (using Commissioner of Insurance report implemented pursuant to statute as evidence of Legislature’s knowledge of report’s contents). The letters attached to plaintiffs reply are the type of oxymoronic attempt to sway the outcome of a case on political grounds the Supreme Court has long decried: they “are not statutory history.” Doe, 19 S.W.3d at 352. They should not sway the Court to take an unrealistic view of the word “should,” read—as it must be—in light of the Legislature’s choice to cut far more money from the Medicaid budget and dedicate $100 million of that cut to rate cuts—as opposed to other aspects of therapy provision, which are subject to separate cuts of different amounts of money— addressed to home therapy. C. There is No Basis in Texas Law For Obtaining Judicial Review of Medicaid Rates that Are Not Required to be Adopted Through Contested-Case Proceedings. Plaintiffs have repeatedly asserted, though curiously enough not in their live petition, that it is permissible to bring suit to challenge the amount of Medicaid rates through the vehicle of §2001.038, which governs rule challenges. The district court’s temporary-injunction order erroneously presupposes that a rule challenge 27 can be used to obtain injunctive relief requiring a change in Medicaid rates. CR.592- 93. The Supreme Court has expressly rejected that proposition. 1. Plaintiffs’ approach of using § 2001.038 to attack Medicaid rates has been rejected by the Texas Supreme Court. Plaintiffs justify their attempt to obtain substantive relief regarding Medicaid rates through the vehicle of a § 2001.038 suit based on El Paso Hospital District v. Tex. Health & Human Services Commission, 247 S.W.3d 709, 711, 714-15 (Tex. 2008) (“El Paso Hospital District I”). The Supreme Court held that the plaintiff hospitals could seek review of their rates in already-pending, exhausted administrative proceedings based on a new rule. Id. at 715 (allowing Hospitals to obtain “review of the disputed calculation” under then-existing administrative rule, former 1 TEX. ADMIN. CODE § 355.8063(k)(1)(A) (2010), repealed by 35 TEX. REG. 6511, 6513 (2010)). The crux of plaintiffs’ argument is that, by challenging a rule, a plaintiff can necessarily obtain judicial relief regarding the rates adopted under that rule. E.g., CR.507-508. That is precisely the approach that this Court and the Supreme Court rejected following remand. El Paso Cnty. Hosp. Dist. v. Tex. Health & Human Servs. Comm’n, 400 S.W.3d 72, 81 (Tex. 2013) (“El Paso Hospital District II”) (“our prior opinion and judgment did not create a remedy for the hospitals’ past reimbursement claims”); see also Tex. Health & Human Servs. Comm’n v. El Paso Cnty. Hosp. Dist., 351 S.W.3d 460, 487 (Tex. App.—Austin 2011) aff’d 400 S.W.3d 72 (Section 28 2001.038’s scope is limited “solely to the extent of permitting suits against state agencies for declaratory relief concerning the validity or applicability of their rules”).8 The former rule gave the only relief related to rates, not § 2001.038. 2. The ultra vires cause of action cannot be used to retroactively undo rules that became effective on October 1, but for the district court’s improper counter-supersedeas order. Plaintiffs’ argument appears to be that, because they believe that the rates were improperly adopted, they are entitled to injunctive relief against the Commissioner to prevent his implementation of the rates. E.g., CR.246 ¶ 34. But the Commissioner is expressly entitled to implement the Medicaid plan according to the rates adopted through the ratemaking process. Thus, even if the rates were wrong, there could be no ultra vires claim based upon them, because the Commissioner is expressly entitled by law to implement the existing rates.9 An ultra vires claim must be based on an act outside the defendant official’s discretion. E.g., Creedmoor-Maha Water Supply Corp. v. Tex. Comm’n on Envt’l 8Tellingly, in plaintiffs’ sur-reply related to the Rule 24 motion, the only response to this point about El Paso Hospital District II is to double down on El Paso Hospital District I. See Rule 24 Sur- Reply (served but not yet filed) at 5 ¶6. 9 The Human Resources Code includes a provision, now superseded by case law, see see Tex. Dep’t of Protective & Regulatory Servs. v. Mega Child Care, Inc., 145 S.W.3d 170, 198 (Tex. 2004) (providing that if a statute requires a contested-case proceeding, the APA allows judicial review), mandating judicial review when rates are required to be adopted through contested-case procedures, TEX. HUM. RES. CODE § 32.0281(e). The rates in question are not subject to contested-case proceedings by the current text of the Code, but rather to the non-APA “review” and “adjustment” procedures. See supra, n.2. 29 Quality, 307 S.W.3d 505, 517-18 (Tex. App.—Austin 2010, no pet.). The violation must be more than a mistake in judgment: mistaken exercise of a clear grant of executive power is not subject to common-law judicial remedy. Tex. Comm’n of Licensing & Regulation v. Model Search Am., Inc., 953 S.W.2d 289, 292 (Tex. App.— Austin 1997, no writ) (that officials “might decide ‘wrongly’” does not vitiate its authority to act (quoting N. Alamo Water Supply Corp. v. Tex. Dep’t of Health, 839 S.W.2d 455, 459 (Tex. App.—Austin 1992, writ denied)). If the Commission acted consistent with the adjustment rules and Rider 50(c) (which requires that access be considered, but does not mandate a particular form that analysis will take), the Commissioner cannot act ultra vires in implementing the resulting rates. III. That Texas Law Does Not Provide a Judicial Review Mechanism Under Which Texas Courts Set Medicaid Rates Makes Sense, Because Such a System Would Be Preempted by Federal Law. The reason that plaintiffs allege a series of causes of action in state law related to administrative rules, but then seek a series of remedies related to rates based upon those rules, is that Texas law allows challenges to the rules but not the rates. See supra, Part II.A. While there is no jurisdiction over plaintiffs’ claims by operation of Texas law, there could be no jurisdiction over plaintiffs’ only requested relief— declarations regarding the amount of money in the rates and injunctive relief foreclosing application of a particular rate—because any claim related to the amount of Medicaid rates themselves is preempted by federal law. 30 A. The Medicaid Act Makes Rates Subject to the Exclusive Jurisdiction of the Secretary, Subject Only to Potential Federal- Court Proceedings. Armstrong rejected the idea that there is a free-standing right to sue in federal court to enforce provisions of the Medicaid Act that are not, themselves, amenable to judicial enforcement, 135 S.Ct. at 1385, 1387 (judicial right of action must be “unambiguously conferred” in Spending Clause context). This makes sense in light of the broad discretion given to the Secretary to determine whether Medicaid rates meet the Act’s requirements. Moreover, rates are always subject to prior appropriations, which means that there is not only executive discretion in play, but also legislative discretion. 42 U.S.C. § 1396b; TEX. HUM. RES. CODE § 32.028. Spending Clause preemption entails the very specific question whether the State has agreed to the condition of the federal-law remedy by accepting federal funds. See Nat’l Fed’n of Indep. Bus. v. Sebelius, 132 S.Ct. 2566, 2606 (2012) (holding that § 1396a would be unconstitutional as applied to withhold funding from states based on failure to comply with newly imposed Medicaid requirements, absent voluntary state acceptance). There is no doubt that Spending Clause statutes have preemptive effect. See Pharm. Research & Mfrs. of Am. v. Walsh, 538 U.S. 644, 661- 69 (2003) (plurality op.). Supremacy Clause provisions preempt state law, although statute in question was not preempted); id. at 684-690 (O’Connor, J., dissenting on ground that statute was preempted); id. at 675 (Scalia, J., concurring on ground that 31 exclusive remedy of § 1396c has preemptive effect); id. at 683 (Thomas, J., concurring, expressing doubt that private parties have standing to enforce Spending Clause program requirements). But the scope of that preemption must be tied to the State’s acceptance of funding. B. The Medicaid Act Preempts Texas Remedies Related to Medicaid Rates By Creating Exclusive Jurisdiction in the Secretary. The Supremacy Clause makes federal law “the supreme Law of the Land.” U.S. Const. art. VI, cl. 2. The existence of an exclusive federal forum deprives the Texas courts of jurisdiction over a claim. See Mills v. Warner Lambert Co., 157 S.W.3d 424, 427-28 (Tex. 2005). Accordingly, federal statutes that empower federal executive department agencies to act impose a remedy regarding a particular subject matter preempt Texas judicial proceedings. E.g., Entergy Gulf States, Inc. v. Pub. Util. Comm’n, 173 S.W.3d 199, 207 (Tex. App.—Austin 2005, pet. denied) (Texas agency’s failure to give effect to federal agency’s action within its exclusive jurisdiction was preempted). The only potential for judicial action regarding Medicaid rates would be recourse to the Secretary, see Armstrong, 135 S.Ct. at 1385, or potentially a suit in federal court against the Secretary or, hypothetically, the State, id. at 1389 (Breyer, J. concurring) (discussing same process). That exclusive remedy, regardless of whether it allows ancillary federal-court proceedings involving the United States as a party, necessarily preempts any state-law remedy. 32 This result is, likewise, compelled by Article II, § 1 of the Texas Constitution, which prohibits the judicial branch from exercising authority conferred on the executive. TEX. CONST. art. II, § 1. The Texas statutes and rules related to Medicaid mirror the federal Act, which, in turn, creates an exclusive remedy in the federal executive branch. Implying a judicial cause of action in contravention of the Legislature’s choice not to create one would violate the separation of powers. E.g., In re Entergy Corp., 142 S.W.3d 316, 321-22 (Tex. 2004) (rejecting separation-of- powers argument regarding executive exercise of putatively judicial determination on ground that there is no general right to judicial review of executive-department action). Put another way, some executive-department actions are necessarily unreviewable by the judiciary. E.g., Gulf Land Co. v. Atl. Ref. Co., 134 Tex. 59, 73-74, 131 S.W.2d 73, 82 (1939). This is particularly true when a procedure is created by statute, because a statute that creates rights can place them outside judicial review. Houston Mun. Emps. Pension Sys. v. Ferrell, 248 S.W.3d 151, 157-58 (Tex. 2007). And a statute can be designed to incorporate federal standards. E.g., City of Austin v. Chandler, 428 S.W.3d 398, 411 (Tex. App.—Austin 2014, no pet.). Texas law incorporates federal law in this context and, as a result, the exclusive remedy of federal law. Similarly, there are constitutional limitations on the Legislature’s power to impose remedies on the Legislative branch. The suspension of laws provision, TEX. CONST. art. I, § 28, affirmatively limits the judiciary’s power to exercise policy 33 discretion to avoid executive-branch action. E.g., Gerst v. Nixon, 411 S.W.2d 350, 354 (Tex. 1966) (striking down statute allowing court to determine the public good by preponderance of the evidence). Accordingly, the courts lack power to change the budget adopted by the Legislature absent a finding of a constitutional violation. E.g., Jessen Assocs., Inc. v. Bullock, 531 S.W.2d 593, 601-02 (Tex. 1975) (declining to change effect of constitutionally valid budget rider). Judicial review of the October 1 rates would subject a federal decision to state- court second-guessing, transfer executive department functions to the judiciary, and result in non-constitutional review (and suspension) of Rider 50’s spending cuts. The claims related to the amount of rates are preempted. C. Both the Texas and Federal Constitutions Prohibit Judicial Orders that Interfere with the Relationship Between the State and Federal Governments. Put another way, the Secretary’s exclusive remedy powers make Medicaid, like all Spending Clause programs, a continuously negotiated contract between the state and federal governments. As Justice Thomas pointed out in his Walsh concurrence, the Secretary’s power to terminate Medicaid funding carries with it the power to forgive or accept particular policy outcomes for the purpose of encouraging the state to perform better in other areas, or as a recognition of the particular health challenges facing individual states, 538 U.S. at 680-81 (Thomas, J., concurring). Judicial interference with Medicaid rates would mark a direct 34 interference with that discretion. Accordingly, Justice Thomas has questioned whether Medicaid providers and beneficiaries have constitutional standing to complain about the Secretary’s actions. Walsh, 538 U.S. at 683 (Thomas, J., concurring); see also Armstrong, 135 S.Ct. at 1387 (Scalia, J.); see infra, Part IV.B. A cognate provision of the Texas Constitution precludes Texas courts from issuing judgments in this area. The Texas Constitution requires that the Governor “conduct, in person, or in such manner as shall be prescribed by law, all intercourse and business of the State with other States and with the United States.” TEX. CONST. art. IV, § 10. The Legislature has designated the Commission as the Governor’s agent. TEX. HUM. RES. CODE § 32.021. So long as the Commission’s state rates are acceptable to the Secretary, and are not subject to additional, separate requirements of Texas law, they are binding on the courts. Adams v. Calvert, 396 S.W.2d 948, 950 (Tex. 1965) (Governor’s decisions within gap between requirements of state law and of federal law unassailable). This is the flip side of the Secretary’s discretion. If the Commissioner and CMS agree on rates, it would violate the Constitution for a court to set rates differently. Any judicial remedy that does not take into account that rates are the subject of continuous back and forth between the Commission and the federal government violates Article IV, § 10. 35 IV. Plaintiffs Lack a Vested Property Right in Medicaid Rates. The amount of Medicaid rates is always contingent. It is contingent on Legislative and Congressional appropriations. It is contingent on the Secretary’s view of the federal Medicaid Act’s requirements. It is contingent on changes in the market. It is contingent on the State maintaining its current model of providing Medicaid care, and not changing to another. A contingent right is insufficient to invoke the Texas Constitution’s due- course provision. Spring Branch Indep. Sch. Dist. v. Stamos, 695 S.W.2d 556, 560-62 (Tex. 1985); Combs v. City of Webster, 311 S.W.3d 85, 92 (Tex. App.—Austin 2009, pet. denied). And a contingent right as a third-party beneficiary to a government contract may preclude any assertion of constitutional standing. Walsh, 538 U.S. at 680-81 (Thomas, J., concurring). A. Neither the Providers Nor the Beneficiaries Have a Vested Property Right, and Cannot Raise Either A Due-Course or Inherent-Judicial-Review Claim. Any due-course claim must be predicated on a vested right. Stamos, 695 S.W.2d at 560-62. Likewise, inherent review under the Texas Constitution requires a vested right. City of Amarillo v. Hancock, 150 Tex. 231, 233, 239 S.W.2d 788, 790 (1951). If plaintiffs lack a vested right, there is no due-course protection and no inherent review available. 36 1. The provider plaintiffs lack a vested property right. A Medicaid provider has no vested interest in a particular level of Medicaid rates. See S.C. San Antonio, Inc. v. Tex. Dep’t of Human Servs., 891 S.W.2d 773, 778 (Tex. App.—Austin 1995, writ denied) (dismissing rate challenge because plaintiff provider had no vested right in amount of payment, apart from right to reimbursement under applicable rate for services already rendered); Pers. Care Prods. v. Hawkins, 635 F.3d 155, 158-59 (5th Cir. 2011) (no vested right in future rates). It does not have a vested right in avoiding a decrease in rates or profitability based on statutory changes to the Medicaid program. Sw. Pharmacy Solutions, 408 S.W.3d at 564. Nor does it have a cognizable interest in its business model based on an earlier set of rates or rules. Eldercare Props., Inc. v. Dep’t of Human Servs., 63 S.W.3d 551, 556 (Tex. App.—Austin 2001, pet. denied). This does not leave providers without recourse. They have, for example, a vested property interest in remaining part of the Medicaid system and cannot be ejected without process. But it leaves them without a trigger for constitutional protections in this circumstance, where they can easily remain part of the Medicaid program, but complain that their profitability will be impaired by lower Medicaid rates. SSC Mo. City Operating Co., LP v. Tex. Dep’t of Aging & Disability Servs., No. 03-09-00299-CV, 2009 WL 4725286, at *6 (Tex. App.—Austin 2009, pet. denied) (mem. op.) (mere expectation of providing services insufficient to trigger providers’ inherent review claim). The lack of a vested right is fatal to their due-course claim. 37 2. The beneficiary plaintiffs lack a vested property right—in fact, they will suffer no cognizable change in their legal status by a change in the rates. There is a difference between the beneficiary plaintiffs’ asserted potential injuries and their legal rights under Texas law and the Medicaid Act. To be clear, the Commission does not dispute that plaintiffs’ allegations of decreased access are within the scope of the courts’ constitutional authority and, therefore, legally cognizable in the abstract. But it does not follow that they have a sufficient interest to trigger the due-course provision. Moreover, the beneficiaries nonetheless lack standing because their alleged injuries are non-redressable. See Heckman v. Williamson Cnty., 369 S.W.3d 137, 155 (Tex. 2011). Failure to establish redressability is a jurisdictional bar. Tex. Ass’n of Bus., 852 S.W.2d at 446. There is no change in the beneficiaries’ legal status to be redressed. Nothing in the Medicaid Act or the cognate Texas statutes creates a right to care, or a right to access care. They are entitled to have the costs of care reimbursed if they seek care from a participating health care provider, and a “reasonable opportunity to choose a health care plan and primary care provider,” not an absolute right See TEX. GOV’T CODE § 531.0212(b)(2). That is all. That status will not change under the new rates. Accordingly, their due-course claim, and any inherent-review claim, fail. 38 B. The Court Should Follow Justice Scalia’s Lead in Armstrong and Hold that Providers and Beneficiaries Lack Constitutional Standing to Bring Suit Under the Ratemaking Criteria of the Medicaid Act. In part IV of the Armstrong opinion, Justice Scalia referred back to a prior concurrence by Justice Thomas suggesting that private parties cannot establish standing to challenge Medicaid rates because they are merely third-party beneficiaries to the ongoing contractual arrangement between the states and the federal government, 135 S.Ct. at 1387 (Scalia, J.) (plurality op.). This renders any claim non-redressable in the courts, which is a jurisdictional bar to standing. See Heckman, 369 S.W.3d at 155. That view should prevail here. For the same reasons neither the providers nor the beneficiaries have a vested right—primarily that the rates are subject to constant change based on legislative appropriation and other factors, and that the Medicaid Act contemplates resolution of those issues through the Executive Department, see supra, Part III.C—they cannot establish constitutional standing to challenge the amount of Medicaid rates. While they may have demonstrable inconvenience or even injury related to the plan, there can ultimately be no judicial redress because the Executive Department remains free to adopt a contrary view. 39 V. Even if plaintiffs have constitutional standing, they cannot successfully invoke § 2001.038 or the Ultra Vires Cause of Action. Even assuming plaintiffs’ asserted injuries trigger standing, their lawsuit would be barred by sovereign immunity in any event. Plaintiffs attempt to create judicial review of Medicaid rates through the mechanism of § 2001.038 and the ultra vires cause of action, in derogation of the common law and the plain text of the APA. A. Section 2001.038 and the Ultra Vires Cause of Action Cannot Be Used to Obtain Judicial Review. Plaintiffs rely on the ultra vires cause of action and § 2001.038 to seek relief regarding the Commission’s application of its rules to adopt the October 1 rates. A claim for a remedy that is not supported by the invoked waiver of immunity from suit is jurisdictionally barred. E.g., Tex. Parks & Wildlife Dep’t v. Sawyer Trust, 354 S.W.3d 384, 388 (Tex. 2011) (citing City of Houston v. Williams, 216 S.W.3d 827, 828-29 (Tex. 2007) (per curiam)). Plaintiffs cannot achieve judicial review of the rate determination through causes of action that don’t allow this form of relief. 1. The ultra vires cause of action does not apply retroactively because it is not a form of judicial review. The background presumption of Texas administrative law is that there is no judicial review absent a vested property right or another basis for constitutional inquiry. Gen. Servs. Comm’n v. Little-Tex Insulation Co., 39 S.W.3d 591, 599 (Tex. 2001). The ultra vires cause of action is an exception to this general principle, 40 allowing prospective relief to foreclose action in contravention of law. City of El Paso v. Heinrich, 284 S.W.3d 366, 372 (Tex. 2009) (plaintiff must “allege” and “ultimately prove” act that is outside defendant official’s authority); id. at 376 (relief must be prospective). Ultra vires relief cannot reach back in time to undo past executive action, even by prospectively enjoining the results of an administrative proceeding, without becoming a common-law basis for judicial review—which Little- Tex and Heinrich teach us does not exist. 2. Section 2001.038 does not create judicial power to review substantive agency actions, only agency rules. By contrast to the federal system, in which the federal APA provides a general right to review of executive-department action, see 5 U.S.C. § 702, Texas has a limited system of review, in which some executive department determinations are not subject to judicial review, e.g., Gulf Land Co, 134 Tex. at 73-74, 131 S.W.2d at 82, and the others are generally reviewable only if the government’s actions take (or should take) the form of a formal contested-case proceeding or rulemaking, TEX. GOV’T CODE §§ 2001.038, 2001.174; see Tex. Dep’t of Protective & Regulatory Servs. v. Mega Child Care, Inc., 145 S.W.3d 170, 198 (Tex. 2004) (judicial review triggered by requirement that agency proceed under APA). That the Legislature provided for formal administrative rules, but not a contested-case proceeding, to govern Medicaid rates dovetails neatly with the preemptive effect of the Medicaid Act: federal law 41 does not permit judicial review of rate determinations, and Texas law does not contemplate such review. E.g., Ferrell, 248 S.W.3d at 157-58. The two review structures of the APA are a statutory exception to this bar on review, but they are narrow in scope. Because the remedies are statutory, not common law, they are subject to restrictions on statutory waivers of immunity. E.g., City of Amarillo, 150 Tex. at 233, 239 S.W.2d at 790. Ambiguities are resolved in favor of immunity. Wichita Falls State Hosp. v. Taylor, 106 S.W.3d 692, 697 (Tex. 2003); TEX. GOV’T CODE § 311.034. And the pleading requirements are jurisdictional. Prairie View A&M Univ. v. Chatha, 381 S.W.3d 500, 510-513 (Tex. 2012). Section 2001.038 applies to rules. TEX. GOV’T CODE § 2001.038(a). Section 2001.174 applies to contested-case proceedings applying those rules. Id. § 2001.174. The text of § 2001.038 forecloses its use to attack action taken under rules: it addresses the “applicability” of rules, not their application, for a reason. See Id. § 2001.038(a). Contested-case judicial review is subject to strict exhaustion rules. Id. § 2001.171. If § 2001.038 could be used retroactively to challenge application of a rule, it would be an ancillary form of judicial review and render § 2001.171’s exhaustion requirement meaningless. See Charlie Thomas Ford v. A.C. Collins Ford, 912 S.W.2d 271, 275 (Tex. App.—Austin 1995, writ dism’d); Lopez v. Pub. Util. Comm’n, 816 S.W.2d 776, 782 (Tex. App.—Austin 1991, writ denied). 42 3. Plaintiffs’ lawsuit is barred because it seeks to use these causes of action retroactively and specifies no remedy appropriate to the causes of action pleaded. Plaintiffs’ petition relies on these two causes of action to enjoin the outcome of the rate adjustment that resulted in the October 1 rates. Plaintiffs, strikingly, recite only past actions as the basis for their ultra vires claim. See CR.346 ¶ 34 (“the actions of Commissioner Traylor are ultra vires in that his actions taken in promulgating the Rates are outside his statutory and legal authority”). The Commissioner’s actions had already been taken. To the extent that the petition seeks to reach back and undo past action, it is jurisdictionally defective. The ultra vires cause of action cannot be used to obtain that remedy, because it cannot be a form of judicial review: allowing injunctive relief based on an alleged error in past action would render the remedy retroactive, in contravention of Heinrich, and turn it into a basis for common-law judicial review, in derogation of Little-Tex. And § 2001.038 cannot be used to review the application of a rule, because to do so would ignore the text of the APA and vitiate that statute’s exhaustion requirement.10 Because the remedy plaintiffs seek is incommensurate with the either § 2001.038 or the ultra vires cause of action. 10 Nor does § 2001.038 provide a basis for injunctive relief. Compare TEX. GOV’T CODE § 2001.038(a) (providing for declaratory, not injunctive relief) with TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE § 37.011 (expressly providing for injunctive relief ancillary to declaratory relief). Because the Legislature provides a statutory basis for injunctive relief when it intends declaratory and injunctive relief to be issued together, § 2001.038’s remedy cannot implicitly allow injunctive 43 To be clear, § 2001.038 does provide a remedy with regard to past actions related to Medicaid rules: they can be declared invalid despite the fact that they were implemented in the past. E.g., El Paso Hosp. Dist. I, 247 S.W.3d at 711, 714-15. But it does not follow that invalidity triggers a right to different rates. El Paso Hosp. Dist. II, 400 S.W.3d at 81. Likewise, the ultra vires cause of action would be available to enjoin the Commissioner from proceeding to adopt rates without regard to the relevant statutes and rules, but it would do so only prospectively. In each circumstance, the invalidity of the rule or the injunction against extra-legal activity is prospective from issuance of the mandate. B. Plaintiffs’ § 2001.038 Claims Are Barred. As explained above, plaintiffs’ theory that they can obtain relief related to the rates, as opposed to prospective relief related to the underlying administrative rules, has been expressly rejected by this Court and the Texas Supreme Court, which have both held that § 2001.038 addresses only rules, not the resulting rates. El Paso Hosp. Dist. II, 400 S.W.3d at 81; El Paso Hosp. Dist. II, 351 S.W.3d at 487; see supra, Part II.C. The next question is whether the jurisdictional defect caused by plaintiffs’ relief. Recognizing that the Court has relied on El Paso Hospital District I for the proposition that injunctive relief is appropriate, Tex. Dep’t of State Health Servs. v. Balquinta, 429 S.W.3d 726, 749- 750 (Tex. App.—Austin 2014, pet. dism’d, the Commission asks the Court to reconsider that view. The issue of injunctive relief was raised sua sponte in El Paso Hospital District I, which means that the parties did not brief it and the issuance of injunctive relief is, as a result, non-precedential. See U.S. v. L.A. Tucker Truck Lines, Inc., 344 U.S. 33, 38 (1952); Garcia v. Kubosh, 377 S.W.3d 89, 106 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2012, no pet.). 44 misplaced reliance on a foreclosed legal theory is incurable. The defect cannot be cured. 1. Plaintiffs lack a right or privilege. To be clear, constitutional standing does not require a vested property right; the Commission does not challenge plaintiffs’ asserted injury to their businesses, nor does it suggest that the beneficiary plaintiffs will not be inconvenienced if they have to find new providers. In some legal contexts, those injuries would be sufficient to trigger constitutional standing. However, for the same reason plaintiffs have no vested property interests, they cannot articulate a “right or privilege” sufficient to trigger the waiver of immunity in § 2001.038. Because § 2001.038 is a statutory waiver of immunity, e.g., Tex. Comm’n on Envtl. Quality v. Slay, 351 S.W.2d 532, 543 (Tex. App.—Austin 2011, pet. denied), its requirements are strictly construed in favor of preserving immunity, Wichita Falls State Hosp. v. Taylor, 106 S.W.3d 692, 697 (Tex. 2003).11 Thus, failure to meet the pleading requirements of § 2001,038 is a jurisdictional bar. 11The Commission acknowledges this Court’s prior holding that the “right or privilege” inquiry extends to any claim for which there is constitutional standing. Balquinta, 429 S.W.3d at 742-43. Balquinta wrongly extends Finance Commission of Texas v. Norwood, 418 S.W.3d 566, 582 n.83 (Tex. 2013). Footnote 83 of Norwood merely rejected the argument that there is a lower standing requirement for §2001.038 claims than is required by the constitution; it did not address whether the “right or privilege” requirement is more restrictive than the scope of allowable constitutional standing, id. This Court has previously held that a § 2001.038 claim based on something that is not a right or privilege results in dismissal; that is the appropriate rule. Tex. Dep’t of Pub. Safety v. Salazar, 304 S.W.3d 896, 907-08 (Tex. App.—Austin 2009, no pet.). The issue is not squarely 45 A “right” is “an interest or expectation guaranteed by law.” A DICTIONARY OF MODERN LEGAL USAGE 772 (2d ed. 1995). “Privilege” is generally defined as a “person’s legal freedom to do or not to do a given act.” Id. at 693.12 In either case, to be a basis for a § 2001.038 suit, a claim would have to be presently enforceable, not merely legally cognizable; having a legal existence, not merely legal potential. That standard is more narrow than constitutional standing. The temporary injunction order fleshes out plaintiffs’ administrative-law claim, with the assertion that there are formal defects in the ratemaking that render the rates improper because the Commission did not comply with formal requirements for adopting new administrative rules. See CR. 590-91 (asserting that rate adoption requires application of TEX. GOV’T CODE § 2001.022(a) (employment impact statement); § 2001.023(a) (30 days’ notice); § 2006.002(c) (small-business impact statement)). Even assuming plaintiffs’ request for relief threads the two needles of preemption and the prohibition on implied judicial review of past actions, plaintiffs’ legal theory is insufficient to trigger jurisdiction. presented here, because the claims are barred by standing and failure to invoke §2001.038, but the analysis of each claim should be distinct. 12 Accord BLACK’S LAW DICTIONARY 1436 (9th ed. 2009) (defining a “right” as “a legally enforceable claim that another will do or will not do a given act; a recognized and protected interest the violation of which is a wrong”), 1316 (defining “privilege” as a “special legal right, exemption, or immunity granted to a person or class of persons; an exception to a duty”). 46 The providers have no legally cognizable interest in their business model or the continued receipt of particular rates; the only recourse regarding the amount of rates is the discretion of the Secretary. See supra, Part III. The beneficiaries’ situation is not changed at all: they are entitled to have payments made to providers on their behalf, at the rate indicated by law. See supra, Part IV.A. Accordingly, they have no “interest” that can be “affected” by the relevant administrative rules or their application in a ratemaking. For the same reason that these claims are unredressable, they cannot trigger jurisdiction under § 2001.038. 2. Plaintiffs have not “identified” an administrative rule. Nor have plaintiffs successfully identified a particular administrative rule that has been violated. City of Webster, 311 S.W.3d at 101. This is a rate adjustment, not a rulemaking, so none of the Government Code provisions they cite apply. They have cited only administrative rules that govern periodic rate review. See supra, Part II.C. Their jurisdictional hook is that the Commission’s proceedings implicitly amended those rules. But, if completely different rules applied, then plaintiffs have not “identified” a rule the validity or applicability of which they challenge. Under City of Webster, their § 2001.038 claim must be dismissed. a. Plaintiffs cannot reverse engineer a rule challenge from a rate challenge. Plaintiffs seek to strike at the rates by arguing that the issuance of a rate within which they disagree implicitly amends the requirements of the underlying 47 administrative rules. CR.509 ¶ 6. Raising that issue in the briefing does not “identify” it in the petition; plaintiffs have asserted only a potential, contingent application of a rule that they assert, without merit, has been violated. In fact, the Commission’s actions were based on different rules governing the adjustment process, see supra, Part II.C. There is, as a result, no jurisdictional hook based on implied amendment to support plaintiffs’ lawsuit. Certainly, that is the position taken by the Texas Supreme Court when it held that a § 2001.038 proceeding did not entitle plaintiffs to a change in already-final rates. El Paso Hosp. Dist. II, 400 S.W.3d at 81. b. Plaintiffs ignore the application of § 355.201(d). The first defect in plaintiffs’ claim is that it relies on rules that do not apply to rate adjustments triggered by changes in appropriations. Plaintiffs cite § 355.8021 and provisions that refer to it, as well as the reporting requirements for rule adoption under the APA. CR.343 ¶ 25. That argument fails to take into account that the adjustment was made under § 355.201(d), which provides for rate adjustments “notwithstanding” any other statutory or rule-based requirement, when, among other things, the Legislature cuts funding. CR.352 (citing 1 TEX. ADMIN. CODE §§ 355.201(d)(1)(A), (D)). Plaintiffs also assert that there was improper notice of the October 1 rates. CR.343 ¶ 25. The proper notice standard is set out in §§ 355.201(e) and (f). The Commission tendered evidence showing that the notice was properly published on 48 September 4, 2015, in the Texas Register and on the Commission’s website, setting the hearing for September 18, 2015. CR.577-580. Because the relevant statute requires nothing more, the existence of adequate notice is a jurisdictional fact issue that plaintiffs have failed to controvert. C. Plaintiffs’ Ultra Vires Claims Would Fail Even if they Had Been Properly Pleaded. As explained above, the Commissioner cannot act ultra vires in implementing Medicaid rates that are already final: that is his job. See supra, Part II.A. Plaintiffs’ claim might be construed to construed to be that, in issuing the current rates, the Commission’s cost analysis includes none of the data included in § 355.8021(a)(2)(A), or that it is a “periodic rate review” that includes, but is not limited, to analysis of payments and costs for therapy. See CR.591-92. Even if these claims were framed prospectively—applied to future ratemaking, an ultra vires claim could result in relief preventing the Commissioner from acting contrary to statute or rule in future proceedings, see supra, Part II—they would nonetheless be jurisdictionally barred, and the defect is incurable. As explained above, the Commission was not circumscribed by § 355.8021(a)(2)(A), complied with its requirements by providing a “combination” of the data required, and is entitled to do so under deference principles. And § 355.8021(B) cannot be applied to rate adjustments triggered by legislative action. At most, plaintiffs complain that information was not in a particular format (which the rule does not in 49 fact require) and that it was not analyzed using a particular methodology (even though the rule imposes no particular methodology, but rather allows consideration of “some combination” of data). Accordingly, implementation of the October 1 rates is not, as a matter of law, ultra vires. And because the act described is intra vires, suit against the Commissioner must be dismissed. 1. Plaintiffs’ position regarding § 355.8021 would fail to trigger an ultra vires claim in any event. The temporary-injunction order incorrectly suggests that there has been a violation of § 355.8021(a)(2)(A). CR.590 ¶ 9. Not so. Section 355.8021(a)(2)(A) requires the Commission to address a series of data in setting rates or “some combination thereof.” 1 TEX. ADMIN. CODE § 355.8021(a)(2)(A). Regardless of the methodology, there is no dispute that the report incorporates at least some of the elements of § 355.8021(a)(2)(A). And that fact precludes jurisdiction, because the rule does not require consideration of all the data listed in (a)(2)(A), nor does it require it to be in any given format. It requires only “some combination thereof.” If the report aggregates any of the (a)(2)(A) data, in any form, it complies with (a)(2)(A).13 13Plaintiffs’ petition might be read to imply an argument that Rider 50(c) itself requires an independent access analysis. As explained above, that language does not apply to the rate cuts. See supra, Part II.B & n.5. Of course, the federal access requirement still applies. But both the substance and remedy for the access requirement preempt state law either because there is no judicial recourse, per Justice Scalia, or because the only available judicial proceedings are a federal APA 50 Consider how this issue would be resolved if the Legislature had provided judicial review under the APA. The Commission would be entitled to deference on its construction of the technical requirements of its own rule. E.g., R.R. Comm’n v. Tex. Citizens for a Safe Future and Clean Water, 336 S.W.3d 619, 624-25 (Tex. 2011). Because the words “some combination thereof” cannot be read to require, unambiguously, that all the data in (a)(2)(A) be considered, or that it be considered in some particular format, the Commission would prevail. This aspect of plaintiffs’ petition highlights the degree to which they ask for something procedurally new: to invalidate the rule under § 2001.038, based not on the rule itself but on its application, thereby sidestepping the Commission’s discretion—which is entitled to deference—to interpret its own rules. There is no viable rule challenge hidden in plaintiffs’ attack on the October 1 rates. The weakness of plaintiffs’ position is underscored by their trial court briefing. At the end of the day, all of plaintiffs’ jurisdictional allegations boil down to the assertion that the administrative rules impose a particular formula for funding, when in fact they require only that the Commission consider certain information in no particular format, giving none of it a particular weight. See CR.343 ¶ 25. Without a “formula,” the Gordian knot of plaintiffs’ lawsuit is cut, and it must be dismissed. suit against the Secretary, per Justice Breyer, see supra, Part III.B. Under neither view of the law would it be appropriate for a Texas court to answer an access question. 51 They do not require the Commission to respond to public comment regarding this data. They do not require the Commission to publish the contents of any studies on which it relies. And that makes sense, because (1) there is no administrative process in which the public can contest the studies, only a requirement of comment, TEX. HUM. RES. CODE § 32.0282; (2) that requirement is entirely consistent with the Medicaid Act’s provision of an exclusive executive-department remedy for access- to-care issues, see supra, Part III; (3) and it is mandated by the Legislature’s choice, consistent with the Medicaid Act and two centuries of Texas law, not to provide judicial review of rate setting. What matters, at the end of the day, is whether the Secretary is satisfied with the Commission’s access-to-care analysis. There is no Texas-law vehicle for addressing the issue. The temporary injunction order likewise invokes § 355.8021(a)(2)(B). CR.590 ¶ 10; see also Rule 24 Resp. at 5 ¶ 6 (citing testimony at 3.RR.229-230 to effect that October 1 rates were not required to be based on § 355.8021(a)(2)(B)). The easy response to this is that § 355.8021(a)(2)(B) expressly applies only to periodic reviews, not to adjustments. See supra, Part II.A. That Commission employees voluntarily used data that complied with § 355.8021(a)(2)(A) goes only to their efforts to ensure that the rates are acceptable to the Secretary. And that distinction makes sense: periodic rate review updates costs, while adjustment respond to changes made by Congress and the Legislature. A cost study is not necessary to carry out the Legislature’s instruction in Rider 50. 52 2. Plaintiffs’ remaining claims likewise cannot describe an ultra vires act. In addition to the notice and data requirements that directly apply to home care Medicaid rights, plaintiffs raise a number other claims, based on broader statutory requirements. Those claims necessarily fail, both as § 2001.038 and as ultra vires claims Plaintiffs invoke § 531.02113 of the Government Code, which requires “Optimization of Medicaid Financing” and instructs the Commission to “maximize the state’s receipt of federal funds.” TEX. GOV’T CODE § 531.02113(1); CR.343-44 ¶ 26. Plaintiffs appear to view the section as creating a generic vehicle for judicial review of the policy behind setting Medicaid rates. That view is untenable in light of Rider 50(c): the Commission cannot increase the amount of federal Medicaid funds spent contrary to the budget. Nor can the term “maximize” be extended to create a judicial right to a particular amount of funding to set rates at a particular level— Medicaid rates are always subject to being cut by Congress and the Legislature. 42 U.S.C. § 1396b; TEX. HUM. RES. CODE § 32.028, 1 TEX. ADMIN. CODE § 355.201(c)(4). Plaintiffs cite several reporting requirements related to the formal rulemaking process. CR.343 ¶ 25 (referring to TEX. GOV’T CODE § 2006.002 (economic impact analysis and regulatory flexibility analysis for “rules with adverse economic effect”); §§ 2001.022 (local employment impact statement for rulemaking); 2001.023(a), 53 2001.24 (requiring 30 days’ notice before rulemaking, implementing requirements notice)). None of these statutes apply, because ratemaking is not subject to the APA’s formal rulemaking process. To the contrary, as explained above, rates are subject to a shorter, less-involved notice requirement, do not require response to public input, and need not be justified after the public comment period is over. See supra, Part II.A. Finally, plaintiffs suggest that various statutes and rules create a separate “access to care” requirement under Texas law that is independently actionable. CR.344 ¶ 27 (invoking 1 TEX. ADMIN. CODE § 353.411(a)(5) (requiring MCOs to “ensure reasonable availability of specialists); TEX. GOV’T CODE § 533.005(a)(21)(c) (providing that “health care services will be accessible . . . to a comparable extent that health care services would be available to recipients under a fee-for-service or primary care case management model”). Plaintiffs suggest that, because the rates will put the beneficiaries’ current care providers out of business, it will violate this statute. CR.344 ¶ 27. That argument fails. It attempts to cherry-pick language that, when excerpted, gives the impression that there is a separate, greater Texas requirement of access to care that supplements the federal standard. But each of these provisions is entirely coterminous with the federal standard. The federal standard requires rates be set at a level that gives beneficiaries access to care that is comparable to patients with private insurance in the same geographic area. 42 U.S.C. § 1396(a)(30)(A). Each MCO is created to cover a particular geographic area. 54 Indeed, the Texas law provisions on which plaintiffs rely merely echo the language of the Medicaid Act provision that authorizes MCOs. See 42 U.S.C. § 1396b(m)(1)(A)(i).14 And the Medicaid Act requires only that rates be set to ensure there is similar provider availability as would otherwise be available under private insurance, not a general right of all beneficiaries to access care qua care. See supra, Part III. VI. BECAUSE THERE IS NO POTENTIAL FOR RECOVERY, THE COURT SHOULD VACATE THE TEMPORARY INJUNCTION. A temporary injunction must be reversed if the trial court’s decision was so arbitrary that it exceeds the bounds of reasonable discretion. Butnaru v. Ford Motor Co., 84 S.W.3d 198, 204 (Tex. 2002). An element of that discretion requires the court to determine whether there is a cause of action against the defendant. Id. That this lawsuit is barred by immunity in its entirety, yet was allowed to proceed, is an arbitrary abuse of discretion and a failure to determine whether there is a cause of action against defendants. So is issuing an order restraining a change in the amount of Medicaid rates in contravention of the Medicaid Act’s exclusive remedy provision. See supra, Part III. Indeed, the district court has underscored the impropriety of its order in denying 14An MCO “makes services it provides to individuals eligible for benefits under this subchapter accessible to such individuals, within the area served by the organization, to the same extent as such services are made accessible to individuals (eligible for medical assistance under the State plan) not enrolled with the organization.” 42 U.S.C. § 1396b(m)(1)(A)(i). 55 defendants’ motion to modify the temporary injunction. See SRR.37-39. To be enforceable a temporary injunction—indeed any injunction in the Texas system— must “describe in reasonable detail . . . the act or acts sought to be restrained.” TEX. R. CIV. P. 683; Tex. Health & Human Servs. Comm’n v. Advocates for Patient Access, Inc., 399 S.W.3d 615, 628-29 (Tex. App.—Austin 2013, no pet.) (vacating portions of temporary injunction that did not adequately put Commission on notice of its obligations under the injunction). The district court suggested that it was appropriate to require the Commission to confer with plaintiffs before taking future action, and stated that whether the Commission had violated the injunction could be decided at the sanctions hearing. SRR.38. Taking discretion over Medicaid rates from both the Commission and the Secretary and predicating that usurpation of power on a $500 bond, was arbitrary. Likewise, it was an abuse of discretion to treat plaintiffs’ assertions of harm— many of which were contingent on the acts of third parties, e.g., CR.342-43 ¶ 24 (asserting that beneficiaries will lose treatment because providers will go out of business)—as satisfying the probable-right-of-recovery requirement, see Butnaru, 84 S.W.3d at 204. Plaintiffs’ claims are non-redressable as a matter of law, because their legally protected rights and vested interests have not been impacted. See supra, Part IV.A. Accordingly, there is no probable right of recovery. 56 Prayer The Court should render judgment dismissing plaintiffs’ lawsuit. It should also reverse and vacate the temporary injunction. Respectfully submitted. Ken Paxton Attorney General of Texas Charles E. Roy First Assistant Attorney General Scott A. Keller Solicitor General _/s/ Kristofer S. Monson_ Kristofer S. Monson Assistant Solicitor General State Bar No. 24037129 OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL P.O. Box 12548 (MC 059) Austin, Texas 78711-2548 Tel.: (512) 936-1820 Fax: (512) 474-2697 kristofer.monson@texasattorneygeneral.gov Counsel for Appellants 57 CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE On November 12, 2015 this document was served via File&Serve Xpress on: Daniel R. Richards Benjamin H. Hathaway Richards Rodriguez & Skeith LLP 816 Congress Avenue Suite 1200 Austin, Texas 78701 drichards@rrsfirm.com bhathaway@rrsfirm.com Counsel for Appellees /s/ Kristofer S. Monson CERTIFICATE OF COMPLIANCE In compliance with Texas Rule of Appellate Procedure 9.4(i)(2), this brief contains 14,002 words, excluding the portions of the brief exempted by Rule 9.4(i)(1). /s/ Kristofer S. Monson Kristofer S. Monson 58 APPENDIX TABLE OF CONTENTS Tab CR.587-672 Order Granting Temporary Injunction and Denying Supersedeas .....................................................................................................A CR.673 Order Denying Defendants’ Plea to the Jurisdiction ......................................................................................................................... B Medicaid Program; Methods for Assuring Access to Covered Medicaid Services, 80 Fed. Reg. 67576 (Nov. 2, 2015) (to be codified at 42 C.F.R. pt. 447) ................................................................................................................C 2016-17 Gen. Appropriations Act, 84th Leg., R.S., ch. 1281, art. II, 2015 Tex. Sess. Law Serv. 4343, 4547 (Health & Human Servs. Comm’n), Rider 50 ..........................................................................................................D CR.351-73 Tex. Health & Human Servs. Comm’n Rate Analysis Dep’t: Notice of Proposed Adjustments .................................................................... E CR.336-92 Plaintiffs’ Second Amended Original Petition and Application for Injunctive Relief ........................................................................................ F Relevant State Statutes and Rules.................................................................. G Relevant Federal Statutes............................................................................... H A DC BK15274 PG1420 CAUSE NO. D-1-GN-15-003263 DIANA D., as next of friend of KD, a child, § IN THE DISTRICT COURT KAREN G., as next friend of TG and ZM, § children, GUADALUPE P., as next of friend § of LP, a child, SALLY L., as next of friend of § CH, DENA D., as next friend of BD, a child, § Filed in The Distiict Court of Travis County, Texas OCI ACQUISITION, LLC d/b/a § CARE OPTIONS FOR KIDS, § CONNECTCARE SOLUTIONS, LLC § SEP2~ d/b/a CONNECTCARE THERAPY FOR § At 'lfi!_f M. Velva L. Price, District Clerk KIDS, ATLAS PEDIATRIC THERAPY § CONSULTANTS LLC, and PATHFINDER § PEDIATRIC HOME CARE, INC., § § 200th JUDICIAL DISTRICT OF Plaintiffs, § § v. § § CHRIS TRAYLOR, as EXECUTIVE § COMMISSIONER of TEXAS § HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES § COMMISSION, and TEXAS § HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES § COMMISSION, § § Defendants. § TRAVIS COUNTY, TEXAS ORDER GRANTING TEMPORARY INJUNCTION AND DENYING SUPERSEDEAS On the 21 51 and 22"d days of September, 2015 the Court held a hearing on Plaintiffs' application for temporary injunction in the above entitled and numbered cause. The Court has considered the testimony, documentary evidence, pleadings, briefs, and arguments of counsel and GRANTS the Temporary Injunction based on the following: General History: 1) Plaintiffs include the parents as next friends of several minor children who suffer from severe and disabling conditions, including seizure disorders, delayed development, autism, speech developmental delays, epilepsy, cerebral palsy, and other conditions. These Plaintiffs and II Page 1~~m~m~m~Mnrn~~~m~m~~~~ 004236981 587 DC BK15274 PG1421 many other minor children suffering from similar conditions across the State of Texas can exhibit a wide variety of disabling symptoms, including: a. nonverbal b. non-ambulatory c. difficulty with speech d. uncontrolled behavioral outbursts e. difficulty with motor control over their limbs f. difficulty with mental processing of information. 2) Because of these disabling conditions and symptoms, these children depend on home- health providers for physical, occupational, and speech therapy services under the Texas Medicaid program to develop basic skills such as walking, talking, dressing themselves, feeding themselves, understanding simple communications, and maintaining control over their own behavior. The Plaintiffs include several home health service providers who deliver physical, occupational, and speech therapy services under the Texas Medicaid program to the children of Texas who depend on such services. 3) Texas Health and Human Services Commission ("HHSC") and Chris Traylor, as Executive Commissioner of HHSC ("Commissioner Traylor") have developed proposed decreases to the reimbursement rates for physical, occupational, and speech therapy services that will probably result in a decrease, or complete elimination, of available home health services for Medicaid-dependent children across Texas. Proposed Rate Changes: 4) On or about July 20, 2015, HHSC and Commissioner Traylor held a hearing regarding new proposed reimbursement rates to be implemented on September 1, 2015 for physical, 21Page 588 DC BK15274 PG1422 occupational, and speech therapy services under the Texas Medicaid program (the "July 20, 2015 Proposed Rates"). A copy of the July 20, 2015 Proposed Rates is attached hereto as Exhibit A. 5) Following the commencement of this lawsuit, on or about August 20, 2015, HHSC and Commissioner Traylor produced a different set of new proposed reimbursement rates to be implemented on September 1, 2015 for physical, occupational, and speech therapy services under the Texas Medicaid program (the "August 20, 2015 Proposed Rates"). A copy of the August 20, 2015 Proposed Rates is attached hereto as Exhibit A-I. 6) Prior to a temporary injunction hearing at which Plaintiffs sought to enjoin HHSC and Commissioner Traylor from implementing either the July 20, 2015 Proposed Rates or the August 20, 2015 Proposed Rates, HHSC and Commissioner Traylor withdrew both sets of rates and advised the Court that they would start over with a new rate proposal. 7) Nine days later, on September 4, 2015, HHSC and Commissioner Traylor proposed new rates to be implemented on October 1, 2015 for physical, occupational, and speech therapy services under the Texas Medicaid program (the "September 4, 2015 Proposed Rates"). A copy of the September 4, 2015 Proposed Rates is attached hereto as Exhibit A-2. 8) Defendants have exhibited a pattern of behavior attempting to impose new rates, and have withdrawn the rates or taken other steps, resulting in Plaintiffs' challenge to the rates arguably becoming moot. This issue is appropriate for the Court to adjudicate, however, based on the "capable of repetition yet evading review" exception to the mootness doctrine. Davis v. Burnam, 137 S.W.3d 325, 333 (Tex. App.-Austin 2004, no pet.). Defendants' actions withdrawing the proposed rates demonstrate that the action is too short in duration to be litigated fully before the action ceases or expires. Id. Defendants' choice to withdraw the rates and propose similar ones as soon as a hearing has passed creates a reasonable expectation that the 31Page 589 DC BK15274 PG1423 same complaining parties will be subjected to the same action again should the Defendants withdraw the currently pending rates and assert that this case is moot. Id. 9) Pursuant to 1 TAC §355.8021(a)(2)(A), reimbursement rates must be based on: a. an analysis of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services fees for similar services; b. Medicaid fees paid by other states; c. a survey of costs reported by Medicaid home health agencies; d. the Medicare Low Utilization Payment Adjustment (LUPA) fees; e. previous Medicaid payments for Medicaid-reimbursable therapy, nursing, and aide services; or f. some combination thereof. 10) Pursuant to 1 TAC §355.802l(a)(2)(B), periodic rate reviews conducted by HHSC must include, but will not be limited to, consideration of the payments for, as well as all costs associated with, providing these Medicaid-reimbursable therapy services. 11) Any proposed reimbursement rates that modify or disregard the key components of the methodology set forth in 1 TAC §355.8021(a)(2) could constitute a rule change. Accord, El Paso Hosp. Dist. v. Tex. HHS Comm 'n, 247 S.W.3d 709, 714-15 (Tex. 2008). To be valid, rates resulting from a rule change must be adopted through proper rule-making procedures. Id. at 715. 12) Those rule-making procedures include: a. Determining whether a rule may affect a local economy before proposing the rule for adoption. If so, preparing a local employment impact statement for the proposed rule. TEX. Gov'T CODE§ 2001.022(a). b. Providing at least 30 days' notice of the intention to adopt the new rule. TEX. Gov'T CODE § 2001.023(a). The notice must comply with section 2001.024 of the Texas Government Code. This includes, among other things, a note about the public benefits and costs associated with the new rule. TEX. Gov'T CODE § 2001.024(a)(5). c. Preparing, for rules that may have an adverse economic impact on small businesses,: 4JPage 590 DC BK15274 PG1424 i. an economic impact statement that estimates the number of small businesses subject to the proposed rule, projects the economic impact of the rule on small businesses, and describes alternative methods of achieving the purpose of the proposed rule; and u. a regulatory flexibility analysis that includes the agency's consideration of alternative methods of achieving the purpose of the proposed rule. TEX. Gov'T CooE § 2006.002( c). The September 4, 2015 Proposed Rates: 13) The September 4, 2015 Proposed Rates affect at least one local economy. 14) The September 4, 2015 Proposed Rates may have an adverse impact on small businesses. 15) The September 4, 2015 Proposed Rates were probably not determined in compliance with 1 TAC §355.802l(a)(2)(A). 16) The September 4, 2015 Proposed Rates are the result of a periodic rate review under 1 TAC §355.802l(a)(2)(B) that was probably not in compliance with adequate or appropriate consideration of payments for, as well as the costs associated with, providing these Medicaid- reimbursable therapy services. 17) Defendants probably did not adequately or appropriately consider the impact that the September 4, 2015 Proposed Rates would have on access to care if implemented. Failure to Comply with Rule 355.802l(a)(2): 18) The Proposed Rates are probably not adequately or appropriately based on the formula set forth in 1 TAC §355.802l(a)(2)(A); therefore, they may constitute a rule change, which must be adopted through proper rule-making procedures. 19) The September 4, 2015 Proposed Rates are also not based on any identifiable documented criteria. The Truven Data is not data representing Medicaid fees paid by other states, so even if the September 4, 2015 Proposed Rates are based on Truven Data, the September 4, 5 JP a g I.' 591 DC BK15274 PG1425 2015 Proposed Rates are based on something other than the key components of the formula set forth in 1 TAC §355.8021(a)(2)(A). 20) Should it be determined that any of the Proposed Rates comply with the methodology and formula in 1 TAC §355.8021(a)(2)(A), those Proposed Rates could still amount to a rule change because they are probably the result of a periodic rate re:view that failed to adequately or appropriately consider payments for, as well as all costs associated with, providing these Medicaid-reimbursable therapy services. 1 TAC §355.8021(a)(2)(B). 21) The margins analysis conducted by Texas A&M University is seriously flawed and not sufficient to meet the requirements of 1 TAC §355.8021(a)(2)(B). Defendants appear to have performed no other competent cost analysis. Defendants' own purported analysis fails to include overhead, administrative, benefits, employer taxes, therapy materials, testing kits and other costs of providing these Medicaid-reimbursable therapy services. 22) In proposing to promulgate each set of Proposed Rates, Defendants did not follow proper rule-making procedures. Defendants did not: a. determine whether the rule would affect a local economy or prepare a local employment impact statement; b. provide at least 30 days' proper notice of the intention to adopt the new rule. The notice provided did not comply with section 2001.024 of the Texas Government Code; c. prepare an economic impact statement or a regulatory flexibility analysis. 23) The September 4, 2015 Proposed Rates are likely a rule that HHSC did not properly promulgate. They may be invalid and may be enjoined. El Paso Hosp. Dist., 247 S.W.3d at 715. Access to Care: 24) In addition to the above violations of the rule-making process, Texas law requires that HHSC provide Medicaid recipients with proper access to care. Pursuant to the provisions of 1 61Page 592 DC BK15274 PG1426 TAC 353.41 l(a)(S), 1 TAC 353.413(a), and 1 TAC 353.413(d), Texas law requires: that service providers ensure the reasonable availability and accessibility of speech, occupational, and physical therapist specialists for all Medicaid service recipients; that service providers must provide comprehensive and timely speech, occupational and physical therapy services for all Medicaid service recipients; and that HHSC will not delegate its responsibility to deliver speech, occupational, and physical therapy services to all eligible children. 25) HHSC likely neither conducted nor received an adequate, appropriate, or reliable study or analysis on the impact of any of the Proposed Rates on access to care as required by the above regulations. 26) The implementation of the Proposed Rates will likely result in service providers being unable to deliver speech, occupational, and physical therapy services to all eligible children. Because HHSC only provides services to eligible children through service providers, the implementation of either of the proposed rates will probably render service providers unable to comply with 1 TAC 353.41 l(a)(S), and/or 1 TAC 353.413(a), and will probably result in HHSC failing to comply with its responsibility to deliver speech, occupational, and physical therapy services to all eligible children. 27) Any proposed change to reimbursement rates for physical, occupational, and speech therapy services under the Texas Medicaid program during the pendency of this lawsuit would constitute a periodic rate review pursuant to 1 TAC §355.802l(a)(2)(B) and which will include a review of payments for providing Medicaid-reimbursable therapy services and which will include a review of costs associated with providing Medicaid-reimbursable therapy services. 71Page 593 DC BK15274 PG1427 Additional Violations: 28) In addition to the above violations of the rule-making process, each set of Proposed Rates will likely violate Defendants' statutory duty to maximize the Medicaid finance system. TEX. Gov'T CODE §531.02113. 29) HHSC must optimize the Medicaid finance system to: a. maximize the state's receipt of federal funds; b. create incentives for providers to use preventive care; c. increase and retain providers in the system to maintain an adequate provider network; d. more accurately reflect the costs borne by providers; and e. encourage the improvement of the quality of care. Id. 30) If implemented, the Proposed Rates will likely not create incentives for providers to use preventive care, dramatically decrease the number of providers in the system, fail to accurately reflect the costs borne by the providers, and not encourage the improvement of the quality of care. 31) The September 4, 2015 Proposed Rates are probably based on arbitrary criteria that lack adequate or appropriate consideration for the impact on service providers or recipients, and probably lack adequate or appropriate consideration for the legal obligations of Commissioner Traylor and HHSC with regard to the adoption of reimbursement rates. Therefore the September 4, 2015 Proposed Rates are likely in violation of the due course of law provision of the Texas Constitution Art. I, § 19. Need for Temporary Injunction: 32) Plaintiffs have shown a probable right to recovery on their claim for all the above reasons. 81Page 594 DC BK15274 PG1428 33) If a temporary injunction is not granted, Plaintiffs will probably suffer irreparable injury because: a. the minor children represented in this lawsuit, plus thousands of other Texas children receiving pediatric services under the Texas Medicaid program, will probably be deprived of those critical services; b. Defendants' actions will probably cause multiple Texas Medicaid providers to go out of business and/or stop providing Medicaid services; c. Defendants' actions will probably create disincentives for Medicaid providers to use preventive care; d. Defendants' actions will probably decrease the quality of care provided to Medicaid recipients in Texas; and e. Defendants' actions will probably prevent Texas Medicaid beneficiaries from receiving critical services. 34) The probable harm is imminent because the Septembt::r 4, 2015 Proposed Rates are set to take effect on October 1, 2015, likely immediately cutting off care for Medicaid beneficiaries. The adoption or implementation of any of the Proposed Rates may be ultra vires violations of Texas law. Therefore the issuance of a temporary injunction causes less prejudice or harm to the State of Texas, Commissioner Traylor, or HHSC, and the balance of the equities weighs in favor of granting a temporary injunction. Temporary Injunction: Accordingly, it is hereby ORDERED, ADJUDGED and DECREED that a Temporary Injunction is GRANTED to Plaintiffs, and that Commissioner Traylor and HHSC are commanded forthwith to desist and refrain from taking any action to implement the reimbursement rates described in Exhibit A-2 from the date of entry of this Order until final trial in this lawsuit or until further order of this Court. IT IS FURTHER ORDERED, ADJUDGED and DECREED that a Temporary Injunction is GRANTED to Plaintiffs, and that Commissioner Traylor and HHSC are commanded forthwith 9 JP a gt' 595 DC BK15274 PG1429 to desist and refrain from taking any action to propose or implement any change in reimbursement rates for physical, occupational, and speech therapy services under the Texas Medicaid program without conducting a review of payments for providing Medicaid- reimbursable therapy services and conducting a review of costs associated with providing Medicaid-reimbursable therapy services as required by 1 TAC §355.8021(a)(2)(B) from the date of entry of this Order until final trial in this lawsuit or until fu1ther order of this Court. This Order does not affect HHSC's ability to seek CMS's approval of the State Plan Amendment. It is further ORDERED that trial on the merits of this cause is set for January 18, 2016. The Court GRANTS Plaintiffs leave to deposit a check with the trial court clerk in lieu of bond. Five hundred of the $1000.00 deposited by Plaintiffs into the Court's registry on September 23, 2015 shall satisfy the bond requirement to make this Temporary Injunction effective. It is the Court's understanding that the Defendants intend to file a Notice of Appeal and may assert that pursuant to Civil Practice & Remedies Code §6.001 and Texas Rules of Appellate Procedure 24.1 and 25.1, the filing of a Notice of Appeal constitutes automatic supersedeas of this Court's Temporary Injunction. See, Jn re State Bd. for Educator Certification, 452 S.W.3d 802, 804 (Tex. 2014). The Plaintiffs have requested that the Court decline to permit the Temporary Injunction to be superseded. The Court finds and concludes that permitting the Defendants to supersede the Temporary Injunction would render any relief in this matter ineffective. In re State Bd. for Educator Certification, 452 S.W.3d 802, 808 (Tex. 2014). Accordingly, it is ORDERED, ADJUDGED and DECREED that pursuant to Texas Rule of Appellate Procedure 24.2(a)(3), the Court DECLINES to permit the Temporary Injunction to be superseded. Pursuant to Texas Rule of Appellate Procedure 24.2(a)(3), the additional $500.00 IO IP age 596 DC BK15274 PG1430 paid in the above-described deposited check in the amount of $1,000.00 shall serve as the security for this Order declining to permit the Temporary Injunction to be superseded. The clerk of the above-entitled Court shall forthwith, on the filing by Plaintiffs of the bond required, and on approving the same according to the law, issue a Temporary Injunction in conformity with the law and the terms of this Order. .f~ SIGNED on this day ZS of September, 2015. °"..{- <-f-1.1 S-- r· M, Ill Page 597 B DC BK15274 PG1653 Filed in The District Court of Travis County, Texas SEP 2 5 2015 CAUSE NO. D-1-GN-15-003263 At lf.7,!l;y M. Velva L. Price Dislr.il;.LCJ.e.z:k DIANA D., as next of friend of KD, a § IN THE DISTRICT CUlJKT child, Et Al., § Plaintiffs, § § v. § 201st JUDICIAL DISTRICT OF § CHRIS TRAYLOR, as EXECUTIVE § COMMISSIONER of TEXAS HEALTH § AND HUMAN SERVICES § COMMISSION, Et Al., § Defendants. § TRAVIS COUNTY, TEXAS ORDER DENYING DEFENDANTS' PLEA TO THE JURISDICTION On September 22, 2015, the Court took under consideration Defendants' Plea to the Jurisdiction. All parties appeared through their respective counsel. After considering the pleadings and the arguments of counsel, the Court enters the following order. Having considered Defendants' plea to the jurisdiction and supporting brief, Plaintiffs' response, and the evidence, and having heard the argument of counsel, the Court finds that the plea to the jurisdiction should be denied. IT IS THEREFORE ORDERED that Defendants' Plea to the Jurisdiction is DENIED. JTIS SO ORDERED this~September, 2015 . ..t- <./-? 2-~ f•""· Illllll 111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111 004237057 1 673 C Vol. 80 Monday, No. 211 November 2, 2015 Part III Department of Health and Human Services Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services 42 CFR Part 447 Medicaid Program; Methods for Assuring Access to Covered Medicaid Services; Final Rule asabaliauskas on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with RULES VerDate Sep<11>2014 19:43 Oct 30, 2015 Jkt 238001 PO 00000 Frm 00001 Fmt 4717 Sfmt 4717 E:\FR\FM\02NOR3.SGM 02NOR3 67576 Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 211 / Monday, November 2, 2015 / Rules and Regulations DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND 3. By express or overnight mail. You the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid HUMAN SERVICES may send written comments to the Services, 7500 Security Boulevard, following address ONLY: Centers for Baltimore, Maryland 21244, Monday Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Medicare & Medicaid Services, through Friday of each week from 8:30 Services Department of Health and Human a.m. to 4 p.m. To schedule an Services, Attention: CMS–2328–FC, appointment to view public comments, 42 CFR Part 447 Mail Stop C4–26–05, 7500 Security phone 1–800–743–3951. [CMS–2328–FC] Boulevard, Baltimore, MD 21244–1850. Provisions for Public Comment: We 4. By hand or courier. Alternatively, are issuing this final rule with comment RIN 0938–AQ54 you may deliver (by hand or courier) period to provide the opportunity for your written comments ONLY to the further comment on § 447.203(b)(5) to Medicaid Program; Methods for following addresses prior to the close of determine whether further adjustments Assuring Access to Covered Medicaid the comment period: a. For delivery in to the access review requirements Services Washington, DC—Centers for Medicare would be warranted, including the AGENCY: Centers for Medicare & & Medicaid Services, Department of scope of regular state access reviews in Medicaid Services (CMS), HHS. Health and Human Services, Room 445– the absence of a triggering circumstance. ACTION: Final rule with comment period. G, Hubert H. Humphrey Building, 200 After consideration of public comments, Independence Avenue SW., this final rule with comment period SUMMARY: This final rule with comment Washington, DC 20201. limits the scope of services for which period provides for a transparent data- (Because access to the interior of the states will be required to review driven process for states to document Hubert H. Humphrey Building is not beneficiary access, in order to balance whether Medicaid payments are readily available to persons without the need for stronger data and processes sufficient to enlist providers to assure federal government identification, to ensure beneficiary access with beneficiary access to covered care and commenters are encouraged to leave minimizing administrative burden. We services consistent with section their comments in the CMS drop slots believe that additional input would be 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Social Security Act located in the main lobby of the useful to determine whether (the Act) and to address issues raised by building. A stamp-in clock is available modifications of these state access that process. The final rule with for persons wishing to retain a proof of comment period also recognizes review requirements may be warranted. filing by stamping in and retaining an Therefore, we are providing an electronic publication as an optional extra copy of the comments being filed.) means of providing public notice of opportunity for comment specifically on b. For delivery in Baltimore, MD— the access review requirements, proposed changes in rates or ratesetting Centers for Medicare & Medicaid methodologies that the state intends to including the service categories required Services, Department of Health and for ongoing review, elements of the include in a Medicaid state plan Human Services, 7500 Security amendment (SPA). We are providing an review, and the timeframe for Boulevard, Baltimore, MD 21244–1850. submission. CMS also requests opportunity for comment on whether If you intend to deliver your future adjustments would be warranted comment on whether we should allow comments to the Baltimore address, call exemptions based on state program to the provisions setting forth telephone number (410) 786–7195 in requirements for ongoing state reviews characteristics (for example, high advance to schedule your arrival with managed care enrollment), the of beneficiary access. one of our staff members. provisions of this rule from which states DATES: Effective Date: These regulations Comments erroneously mailed to the are effective on January 4, 2016. could be exempted based on these addresses indicated as appropriate for specific program characteristics, and Comment Date: To be assured of hand or courier delivery may be delayed consideration, comments on alternatives to ensuring compliance and received after the comment period. with section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act § 447.203(b)(5) must be received at one For information on viewing public of the addresses provided below, no for any exempted services in lieu of the comments, see the beginning of the procedures described in this final rule later than 5 p.m. on January 4, 2016. SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section. ADDRESSES: In commenting, please refer with comment period. For example, the FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: proposed rule included the requirement to file code CMS–2328–FC. Because of Jeremy Silanskis, (410) 786–1592. staff and resource limitations, we cannot for states to conduct an access review accept comments by facsimile (FAX) SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: for all services every 5 years and this transmission. Inspection of Public Comments: All final rule with comment period will You may submit comments in one of comments received before the close of require that states conduct an access four ways (please choose only one of the the comment period are available for review on five specific service ways listed): viewing by the public, including any categories (and other categories when 1. Electronically. You may submit personally identifiable or confidential the state or CMS has received a electronic comments on this regulation business information that is included in significantly higher than usual volume to http://www.regulations.gov. Follow a comment. We post all comments of beneficiary or provider access the ‘‘Submit a comment’’ instructions. received before the close of the complaints for a geographic area) every 2. By regular mail. You may mail comment period on the following Web 3 years. The changes in this final rule written comments to the following site as soon as possible after they have with comment period resulted in large asabaliauskas on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with RULES address ONLY: Centers for Medicare & been received: http://regulations.gov. part from our consideration of Medicaid Services, Department of Follow the search instructions on that comments received from the public, Health and Human Services, Attention: Web site to view public comments. including requests for additional clarity CMS–2328–FC, P.O. Box 8016, Comments received timely will be with respect to some of these matters. Baltimore, MD 21244–8016. also available for public inspection as While we believe these changes will Please allow sufficient time for mailed they are received, generally beginning assist states in implementing the access comments to be received before the approximately 3 weeks after publication review and monitoring requirements, close of the comment period. of a document, at the headquarters of we are seeking additional comment on VerDate Sep<11>2014 19:43 Oct 30, 2015 Jkt 238001 PO 00000 Frm 00002 Fmt 4701 Sfmt 4700 E:\FR\FM\02NOR3.SGM 02NOR3 Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 211 / Monday, November 2, 2015 / Rules and Regulations 67577 these provisions so that we can standardized, transparent process, Medicaid service payment rates to determine whether future adjustment of rather than setting nationwide providers. To align with the statutory these requirements through additional standards. requirements, states may employ any rulemaking would be warranted. In In this final rule with comment number of strategies to ensure or addition, we are publishing a request for period, we are providing increased state improve access to care that are targeted information (RFI) that solicits feedback flexibility within a framework to toward one or more of these factors. from stakeholders on whether and document measures supporting We have not previously defined which core access measures, thresholds, beneficiary access to services. This final through federal regulation an approach and appeals processes would provide rule with comment period implements to guide states in meeting the statutory additional information or approaches methods for states to use in complying access requirement at section that would be useful to us and states in with section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act. In the absence ensuring access to care for Medicaid by requiring that states review data and of federal guidance and a clear process beneficiaries. We are interested in trends to evaluate access to care for for monitoring and ensuring access, at access measures that would apply covered services and conduct public times budget-driven payment changes in regardless of the service delivery processes to obtain public input on the state Medicaid programs led to approach adopted by the state, and adequacy of access to covered services confusion and litigation for states and to would include access measures in the Medicaid program. This possible access problems for applicable for populations enrolled in information will be updated and beneficiaries. CMS’s review of state managed care. Ultimately, our RFI- monitored regularly. Should the data payment rate methodologies for related goals are to better measure, reveal short-comings in Medicaid compliance with this requirement was monitor, and ensure Medicaid access beneficiaries’ access to care, states must on a case-by-case basis and was across state program and delivery take corrective actions. The final rule hampered by the lack of consistent systems and understand the economic with comment period also recognizes information related to beneficiary and policy factors that affect access to electronic publication as an optional access. We historically relied on state care. The RFI is published elsewhere in means of providing public notice of certifications and available supporting this Federal Register along with proposed changes in rates or ratesetting information to conclude that Medicaid information on where respondents can methodologies that the state intends to payment rates met the statutory send their responses. include in a Medicaid state plan standards. amendment (SPA). This final rule with In the May 6, 2011 proposed rule, we I. Background comment period will meet the proposed to adopt an approach for states A. General Information expectations of the May 6, 2011 to analyze access to care for Medicaid proposed rule to establish a transparent services through data and information In the May 6, 2011 Federal Register data-driven process that ensures that from beneficiaries and providers. The (76 FR 26342), we published the rates are consistent with section approach specifically focused on: (1) ‘‘Medicaid Program; Methods for 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act. The extent to which enrollee needs are Assuring Access to Covered Medicaid met; (2) the availability of care and Services’’ proposed rule (hereinafter B. State Ratesetting and Access to Care providers; and (3) changes in referred to as the ‘‘May 6, 2011 The Medicaid statute requires that beneficiary utilization. The purpose of proposed rule’’) that outlined a states provide coverage to certain groups the proposed regulation was not to standardized, transparent, data-driven of individuals, and also requires that create an access standard or rate process for states to document that such coverage include certain minimum thresholds that each state must meet, provider payment rates are consistent benefits. States may elect to cover other but to develop a standard process for with efficiency, economy, and quality of populations and benefits. To give each state to follow in documenting care and are sufficient to enlist enough meaning to coverage requirements and access to care. The regulation proposed providers so that care and services are options, beneficiaries must have to require that states conduct regular available under the plan at least to the meaningful access to the health care reviews of Medicaid access to care that extent that such care and services are items and services that are within the rely upon: Payment data, trends in available to the general population in scope of the covered benefits. This is utilization, provider enrollment, the geographic area as required by consistent with the requirements of feedback from providers and section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Social section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act, which beneficiaries, and other pertinent Security Act (the Act). In the May 6, provides that states must have methods information that describes access to 2011 proposed rule, we recognized that and procedures to assure that payments Medicaid services. The access data states must have some flexibility in to providers are ‘‘sufficient to enlist reviews would be used to inform state designing appropriate approaches to enough providers so that care and payment changes as well as our demonstrate and monitor access to care, services are available under the plan at approval decisions when states which reflects unique and evolving state least to the same extent that such care proposed provider payment reductions. service delivery models and service rate and services are available to the general In addition, the proposed rule specified structures. Within the proposed rule, we population in the geographic area,’’ that states must conduct a public discussed how a uniform approach to which we refer to as the ‘‘access process when reducing Medicaid meeting the statutory requirement under requirement.’’ Many factors affect payment rates and monitor changes in section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act could whether beneficiaries have access to access to care after payment reductions asabaliauskas on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with RULES prove difficult given current limitations Medicaid services, including but not are approved by us and go into effect. on data, local variations in service limited to: The beneficiaries’ health care Earlier this year, the Supreme Court delivery, beneficiary needs, and needs and characteristics; state or local decided in Armstrong v. Exceptional provider practice roles. For these service delivery models; procedures for Child Center, Inc., 135 S. Ct. 1378 (2015) reasons, we proposed federal guidelines enrolling and reimbursing qualified that the Medicaid statute does not to frame alternative approaches for providers; the availability of providers provide a private right of action to states to demonstrate consistency with in the community; the capacity of providers to enforce state compliance the access requirement using a Medicaid participating providers; and with section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act in VerDate Sep<11>2014 19:43 Oct 30, 2015 Jkt 238001 PO 00000 Frm 00003 Fmt 4701 Sfmt 4700 E:\FR\FM\02NOR3.SGM 02NOR3 67578 Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 211 / Monday, November 2, 2015 / Rules and Regulations federal court. As a result, provider and services. The delivery system design service utilization or overall provider beneficiary legal challenges are not and accompanying payment payments for high cost services as a available to supplement CMS review methodologies can significantly shape result of program innovations that and enforcement to ensure beneficiary beneficiaries’ abilities to access needed emphasize preventive care and divert access to covered services. To care by facilitating the availability of individuals into more appropriate strengthen CMS review and such care. In addition, the delivery treatment modalities, including serving enforcement capabilities, this final rule system model and payment them in the most integrated setting with comment period provides for the methodologies can improve access to appropriate to the needs of the development of needed information to care by making available care individual consistent with Olmstead v. monitor and measure Medicaid access management teams, physician L.C. 527 S.Ct. 581 (1999), we do not see to care. The final rule with comment assistants, community care those reductions as being at odds with period will provide more transparency coordinators, telemedicine and the statutory requirements or provisions on access in Medicaid fee-for-service telehealth, nurse help lines, health described in this final rule with (FFS) systems than ever before and information technology and other comment period. The provisions of the allow us to make informed data-driven methods for providing coordinated care final rule with comment period allow decisions and document our decisions and services and support in a setting states the opportunity to transparently when considering proposed rate and timeframe that meet beneficiary discuss the methods and analyses that reductions and other methodology needs. they use to demonstrate compliance changes that may reduce beneficiaries’ We have issued a series of State with section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act. abilities to receive needed care. In Medicaid Directors (SMD) letters to The analysis and the follow-up addition, because the proposed rule was promote and provide guidance on monitoring data should clarify whether issued several years prior to the pathways to implementing integrated and how changes in care and payment Armstrong decision and therefore does care models which can provide higher data result from delivery and payment not address CMS’ or states’ role in light quality care at lower cost. We have also systems reform rather than reductions in of Armstrong’s limits on providers’ and worked with states to explore access to care. beneficiaries’ ability to take legal action innovative approaches to improving The flexibility in designing service regarding access, CMS is also issuing a care and lowering cost through the delivery systems and provider payment Request for Information to obtain public Innovation Accelerator Program, the methodologies, as described above, is input into additional approaches to Medicaid Value-Based Learning consistent with the requirement in Medicaid’s statutory access Collaborative series, group workshop section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act that requirements for CMS to consider. sessions, and one-to-one technical state Medicaid plans must provide: While states will continue to have the assistance discussions. All of these Such methods and procedures relating discretion to set program rates and efforts seek to drive systemic changes in to the utilization of, and the payment improve access to care through a variety the Medicaid program that manage for, care and services available under of strategies, this final rule, and any program costs consistent with the the plan as may be necessary to additional measures we adopt, will economy and efficiency provisions of safeguard against unnecessary increase the information available to section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act while utilization of such care and services. As CMS, to ensure that rates meet the also promoting the quality of care. well, states must assure that payments requirements of section 1902(a)(30)(A) As state delivery system models have are consistent with efficiency, economy, of the Act and that access improvement evolved, so have their provider payment and quality of care and are sufficient to strategies work to improve care delivery systems. For most services, states enlist enough providers so that care and when there are deficiencies. We are also develop rates based on the costs of services are available under the plan at developing internal standard operating providing the service, a review of the least to the same extent that such care procedures to bolster the administrative amount paid by commercial payers in and services are available to the general record that is used to document the private market, or as a percentage of population in the geographic area. compliance with the final rule for rates paid under the Medicare program Consistent with the requirement in individual SPAs and ensure that there is for equivalent services. Often, rates are section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act to consistent national application of these updated based on specific trending provide payment for quality care in an policies. factors such as the Medicare Economic effective and efficient manner, states Index or a Medicaid trend factor that can use their ratesetting policies to seek C. Medicaid Service Delivery Systems incorporates a state-determined the best value. Achieving best value has and Provider Payment Methodologies inflation adjustment rate. Rates may been a key strategy for some states that States have broad flexibility under the include incentive payments that have attempted to reduce costs in the Act to establish service delivery systems encourage providers to serve Medicaid Medicaid program in these difficult for covered health care items and populations and improve care. For fiscal times. We do not intend to impair services, to design the procedures for instance, some states have authorized states’ abilities to pursue that goal, or to enrolling providers of such care, and to Medicaid providers to receive separate impair states’ abilities to explore set the methods for establishing payments for treatment services and for innovative approaches to providing provider payment rates. For instance, care coordination and care management. services and lowering costs for other many states provide medical assistance Some states have increased provider reasons. In this final rule with comment primarily through capitated managed payments based on achievement of period, we hope to clarify that, although asabaliauskas on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with RULES care arrangements, while others use FFS certain specified quality or health states must demonstrate that payment arrangements (with or without outcome measures. beneficiaries have access to covered primary care case management). We have worked with states to design services at least comparable to others in Increasingly, states are developing payment and service delivery systems to the geographic area, this access can be service delivery models that emphasize ensure program savings are aligned with through service delivery networks, medical homes, health homes, or better care quality and promote rather using payment methodologies different broader integrated care models to than reduce access to services. Although from other individuals in the geographic provide and coordinate medical states may experience reductions in area. Comparable access does not VerDate Sep<11>2014 19:43 Oct 30, 2015 Jkt 238001 PO 00000 Frm 00004 Fmt 4701 Sfmt 4700 E:\FR\FM\02NOR3.SGM 02NOR3 Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 211 / Monday, November 2, 2015 / Rules and Regulations 67579 necessarily require that beneficiaries challenging payment rate reductions as data used to measure and analyze access obtain services from the same providers, inconsistent with the statutory access to care and mechanisms to receive or the same number of providers, as provision. Further, resulting court information from beneficiaries and other other individuals in the geographic area. decisions have not offered consistent stakeholders. approaches to compliance. These This final rule with comment period D. Modifications to State Payment Rates recognizes the importance of stronger decisions have at times left states, Payment rates should be neither too providers, and beneficiaries without processes and data to ensure access to low nor too high to ensure access to care clear and consistent guidelines and care while supporting state flexibility to for Medicaid beneficiaries and to ensure resulted in uncertainty in moving design the appropriate measures to the economy and efficiency of Medicaid forward in designing service delivery demonstrate and monitor access to care, services and spending. Setting total systems and payment methodologies. which reflect the unique and evolving payments too high does not necessarily For instance, several federal Courts of state service delivery models and improve beneficiary access. This is Appeals have addressed access and service rate structures. A uniform particularly true when higher payments payment issues, but there has been no approach to meeting the statutory are targeted to select providers and do consensus concerning the data or requirement under section not necessarily translate into improved standards that would be relevant in 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act could prove access to services. Payment reductions determining compliance with the challenging at this time, given local or other adjustments to payment rates Medicaid statute. More recently, in variations in service delivery, can help to manage Medicaid program March 2015, the Supreme Court ruled in beneficiary needs, provider practice costs and ensure efficiency of service Armstrong v. Exceptional Child Center, roles, and limitations on data. At this provision, without necessarily violating Inc., 135 S. Ct. 1378 (2015) that the time, we are issuing this final rule with requirements to ensure access to care. Medicaid statute does not provide a comment period to establish approaches For example, a state may amend its private right of action for providers and for states to demonstrate consistency program to use a selective contract to beneficiaries to challenge payment rates with the access requirement using a provide incontinence supplies which in federal court. The lack of a private consistent, transparent process, rather results in lower payment rates for those right of action underscores the need for than setting nationwide standards. supplies while maintaining statewide stronger non-judicial processes to These approaches will also strengthen access to those supplies. Or a state may ensure access, including stronger our ability to make sound and data- reduce payments for hospital processes at both the state and federal driven decisions about the adequacy of readmissions to encourage the hospital state payment rates. levels for developing data on beneficiary to collaborate with a primary care case This final rule with comment period access and reviewing the effect on management provider in the will not directly require states to adjust beneficiary access of changes to community. A state may also rebalance payment rates; nor will it require states payment methodologies. In issuing this its long term services and supports to adopt policies that are inconsistent final rule with comment period, we spending consistent with Olmstead v. with efficiency, economy, and quality of have reviewed options to ensure that L.C. 527 S. Ct. 581 (1999) to ensure that care. Even if access issues are states are adhering to the statute in light older adults and individuals with discovered as a result of the analysis of the absence of a private right of action disabilities can receive high quality that is required under this rule, states for noncompliance in federal court community-based services. may be able to resolve those issues However, payment reductions or following the Armstrong decision. through means other than increasing other adjustments can, in some In the May 6, 2011 proposed rule, we payment rates. This rule requires that circumstances, compromise beneficiary intended to establish consistent beneficiary access must be considered access to services. Consequently, we procedures that all states would follow in setting and adjusting payment affirm in this final rule with comment in reviewing and understanding methodologies for Medicaid services. If period that such payment rate changes Medicaid access to care on an ongoing a problem is identified, any number of be made only with consideration of the basis and monitoring access after steps, including payment increases, potential impact on access to care for reducing or restructuring rates. might be appropriate to address the Medicaid beneficiaries and with Specifically, we proposed that states problem, such as: Redesigning service effective processes for assuring access. conduct ongoing access reviews for all delivery strategies or improving Payment rate changes do not comply Medicaid services over 5-year periods provider enrollment and retention with the Medicaid access requirements that evaluate: The extent to which efforts. This final rule with comment if they result in a denial of sufficient enrollee needs are met; the availability period provides that we will review access to covered care and services. of care and providers; and changes in these access issues in making SPA Non-compliant changes could adversely beneficiary utilization of covered approval decisions, and describes a affect beneficiaries’ abilities to obtain services. We proposed that within the more consistent and transparent way for needed, cost-effective preventive care, reviews, states would need to include states to collect and analyze the create stress on safety-net providers, and information about access gathered necessary information to support such counteract state delivery reform efforts through ongoing beneficiary feedback reviews. that seek to reduce cost and increase mechanisms and comparisons of We consider the requirements of this quality. Medicaid payments to Medicare, final rule with comment period as a At times, budget-driven payment commercials rates, or Medicaid service component of a broader strategy to asabaliauskas on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with RULES changes have led to confusion among costs. We proposed that when states ensure access in the Medicaid program. states and providers about the analysis reduce or restructure rates in ways that However, the 2011 proposed rule did required to demonstrate compliance could harm access to care, they consider not anticipate the Supreme Court with Medicaid access requirements at concerns raised by beneficiaries and decision: Armstrong v. Exceptional section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act. States stakeholders and develop and monitor Child Center, Inc., 135 S. Ct. 1378 attempting to reduce Medicaid costs indices to ensure sustained access after (2015), which underscored the primacy through payment rate changes have implementing the rate changes. States of CMS’s role in ensuring access. For increasingly been faced with litigation would have the discretion to choose the this reason, CMS may consider VerDate Sep<11>2014 19:43 Oct 30, 2015 Jkt 238001 PO 00000 Frm 00005 Fmt 4701 Sfmt 4700 E:\FR\FM\02NOR3.SGM 02NOR3 67580 Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 211 / Monday, November 2, 2015 / Rules and Regulations additional approaches to promote access demonstrate access to care by states describe the measures that were to care. We will, for example, examine documenting in an access monitoring used to conduct the review and their the feasibility of establishing a core set review plan their consideration of: relationship to enrollee needs, the of access metrics and thresholds that Enrollee needs; the availability of care availability of care and providers, can be universally applied across all and providers; and the utilization of service utilization and Medicaid states and services, as well as services. The experiences of payment rates as compared to other appropriate ways to gather that beneficiaries should be a primary payment structures. information. Additionally, we will determinant of whether access is Proposed § 447.203(b)(2) described assess the feasibility of processes that sufficient. We solicited comments that the timeframe for states to conduct the target and resolve access to care issues would serve to help states narrow the data review and make the information at an individual level, such as robust focus of the data review to core available to the public through complaint resolution or formal hearings elements that would demonstrate accessible public records or Web sites processes. sufficient access to care. We received, on an on-going basis for all covered Specifically, as we issue this final rule through public comments, many services. We proposed that the annual with comment period, we are suggested elements that states could reviews begin no later than 2013, so concurrently issuing a request for incorporate into access reviews, but states would have the discretion to information (RFI) that solicits feedback there was no consensus among determine a timeframe to review each from stakeholders on whether and commenters as to measures that could covered Medicaid service, as long as the which core access measures, thresholds, be universally applied across all state reviewed a subset of services each and appeals processes would provide services. We will continue to study year and each covered service is additional information or approaches whether a core set of measures and reviewed at least once every 5 years. We that would be useful to us and states in thresholds should be applied to provided states this 5-year cycle to ensuring access to care for Medicaid Medicaid access to care and are reduce the burden while beneficiaries. We are interested in soliciting more information from accommodating the need for review to access measures that would apply stakeholders on this question through assure compliance with section regardless of the service delivery the RFI process. 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act. approach adopted by the state, and Proposed § 447.203(b)(1)(i) through Because of the need to demonstrate would include access measures (iii) would have required states to service access in the context of a applicable for populations enrolled in review and make publically available payment rate reduction, we proposed in managed care. Ultimately, our RFI- data trends and factors that measure: § 447.203(b)(3)(i) that states would need related goals are to better measure, Enrollee needs; availability of care and to conduct the review relevant to the monitor, and ensure Medicaid access providers; and utilization of services. affected service prior to submission of a across state program and delivery Consistent with the statutory SPA implementing a reduction. If the systems and understand the economic requirement, we proposed that states state had already reviewed access and policy factors that affect access to review this data by state designated relating to the types of services that are care. The RFI is published elsewhere in geographic location. subject to the rate reduction within 12 this Federal Register along with We proposed revisions to months prior to the proposed rate information on where respondents can § 447.203(b)(1)(iii)(B) to require that the reduction, and maintained an ongoing send their responses. review must include: (1) An estimate of monitoring mechanism for beneficiary In addition to issuing this final rule the percentile which Medicaid payment complaints, its review relative to the with comment period and the RFI, we represents of the estimated average rate reduction could be referenced in also will improve our administrative customary provider charges; (2) an the previous review. To ensure processes associated with documenting estimate of the percentile which sustained access to care, we included the basis for approval and disapprovals Medicaid payment represents of one, or provisions at § 447.203(b)(3)(ii) that when states propose SPAs that reduce more, of the following: Medicare would require states to develop ongoing rates or restructure payments in ways payment rates, the average commercial monitoring procedures through which that may affect access to care. The payment rates, or the applicable they periodically review indices to information that is gathered by states Medicaid allowable cost of the services; measure sustained access to care. We through the processes described in this and (3) an estimate of the composite also proposed at § 447.203(b)(4) to final rule with comment, as well as average percentage increase or decrease require states to have a mechanism for through additional state and CMS resulting from any proposed revision in beneficiary input on access to care, such processes for ensuring Medicaid access payment rates. as hotlines, surveys, ombudsman or to care, will be the basis for our We proposed in other equivalent mechanisms. approval decisions and we will build § 447.203(b)(1)(iii)(B)(3) that the Additionally, we proposed at our administrative SPA records with Medicaid payment rates must include § 447.203(b)(5) a corrective action this information. both base and supplemental payments procedure requiring states to submit a for Medicaid services. Since states often remediation plan should access issues II. Summary of Proposed Provisions reimburse service providers according be discovered through the access review We proposed to address state to different payment schedules based on or monitoring processes. These processes for setting payment rates by governmental status, we proposed at requirements were proposed to ensure amending existing regulations at § 447.203(b)(1)(iii)(C) that states stratify that states would oversee and address asabaliauskas on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with RULES § 447.203, § 447.204, and § 447.205. The the access review data by state future access concerns. following is a summary of our government owned or operated, non- state government owned or operated B. Medicaid Provider Participation and proposals. and private providers. Public Process To Inform Access to Care A. Documentation of Access to Care and In § 447.203(b)(1)(iii)(D), we proposed In § 447.204, we proposed to Service Payment Rates to describe the minimum content that implement the statutory requirement We proposed to revise § 447.203(b) to must be in included in the rate review. that Medicaid payment rates must be require state Medicaid agencies to Specifically, we proposed to require that consistent with efficiency, economy, VerDate Sep<11>2014 19:43 Oct 30, 2015 Jkt 238001 PO 00000 Frm 00006 Fmt 4701 Sfmt 4700 E:\FR\FM\02NOR3.SGM 02NOR3 Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 211 / Monday, November 2, 2015 / Rules and Regulations 67581 and quality and are sufficient to enlist The following are brief summaries of a more systematic approach than enough providers so that services under the public comments received, and our currently exists in the Medicaid the plan are available to beneficiaries at responses to those public comments: program for states and us to evaluate least to the extent that those services are beneficiary access to services. The A. General Comments available to the general population. We regulatory framework also seeks to proposed to revise § 447.204(a)(1) We received many comments that ensure that states will have the through (a)(2) to require that states were general in nature and were not information necessary to consider and consider, when proposing to reduce or specific to any of the provisions of the evaluate access issues. We will continue restructure Medicaid payment rates, the May 6, 2011 proposed rule. We have to work closely with states and other data collected through the proposed summarized and responded to those partners to appropriately review access requirement at § 447.203 and undertake comments below. to care and address access issues, while Comment: Several commenters urged remaining cognizant that states need to a public process that solicits input on CMS to delay implementation of the make program adjustments and operate the potential impact of the proposed final rule and work with states to find within budgets. In addition, the RFI will reduction of Medicaid service payment alternative approaches to measuring solicit further information on whether rates on beneficiary access to care. In access. Commenters also recommended and which core access measures, § 447.204(b), we also proposed to clarify that CMS convene a workgroup with that we may disapprove a proposed rate thresholds and appeals processes would state Medicaid agencies to develop provide additional information or reduction or restructuring SPA that does access thresholds. One commenter not include or consider the data review approaches that would be useful to us wrote that CMS and states would be and states in ensuring access to care to and a public process. Disapproving the better served to work together to SPA means that a state would not have Medicaid beneficiaries. identify reasonable criteria under which Comment: A number of commenters authority to implement the proposed state legislatures could make timely and requested that CMS provide an rate reduction or restructuring and meaningful adjustments to provider incentive mechanism to encourage would continue to pay providers rates and states could document the states to address access issues in a according to the rate methodology potential impact to access. timely manner. Commenters specifically described in the state plan. Response: We have worked with suggested that an enhanced C. Public Notice of Changes in states and federal partners to identify administrative matching rate be made Statewide Methods and Standards for appropriate access measures and a available for costs associated with the manageable process for state Medicaid final rule. Setting Payment Rates agencies to meet the statutory Response: To receive federal financial We proposed to clarify and modernize requirements of section 1902(a)(30)(A) participation (FFP) for Medicaid changes to the public notice of the Act. This included listening services, states must comply with the requirement at § 447.205. We also sessions with the National Association applicable statutory and regulatory solicited comments on whether it is of Medicaid Directors to hear state requirements. To the extent that state advisable to delete the term concerns regarding Medicaid access to activities described in this final rule ‘‘significant’’ from § 447.205(a) and care and how states were working to with comment period are for the proper explicitly state that notice is required address access issues. We worked with and efficient administration of the for any change in rates. Alternatively, many states and providers individually Medicaid state plan, the administrative we solicited comments on whether to to understand state-specific access match rate is available to states. We do adopt a threshold for significance and issues and the types of information that not have the statutory authority to what that threshold might be. states and providers rely upon to provide an enhanced administrative discuss access to care. Finally, we match rate for these activities. Further, we proposed to recognize worked with HHS’ Assistant Secretary Comment: Several commenters electronic publication as an optional for Planning and Evaluation (ASPE) to requested that CMS clarify what means of publishing payment notice. To investigate if there are national access constitutes a payment change. A do so, we proposed adding measures that may be applied across all commenter noted that providers often § 447.205(d)(iv), which would allow states and services for compliance with view years when rates do not increase notice to be published on a Web site section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act. The as payment reductions. Another noted developed and maintained by the single policies reflected in this final rule with that the preamble of the May 6, 2011 state Medicaid agency or other comment period are consistent with proposed rule refers to ‘‘payments’’ and responsible state agency that is these efforts and the public comments ‘‘rates’’ interchangeably but that courts accessible to the general public on the we received. This final rule with have defined payments to include all Internet. comment period is being published after Medicaid provider revenues rather than III. Analysis of and Responses to Public extensive consultation, 4 years after we only Medicaid FFS rates. The Comments issued the proposed rule. Further commenter stated that if the final rule delaying this rule could result in considers all Medicaid revenues We received at total of 181 comments confusion as to the application of the received by providers, states may be from states, advocacy groups, providers, access requirements of section challenged to make any change to the provider organizations and individuals 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act, especially Medicaid program that might reduce on the May 6, 2011 proposed rule. The given the Supreme Court’s decision in provider revenues. The commenter also asabaliauskas on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with RULES comments ranged from support for the Armstrong v. Exceptional Child Center, suggested that the final rule clarify that proposal to specific questions or Inc., 135 S. Ct. 1378 (2015), which the statute refers to specific service rates comments regarding the proposed specifically stated that providers do not under the Medicaid state plan or waiver changes. We received some comments have a private right of action to enforce rather than all Medicaid provider that were outside of the scope of the section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act and payments. proposed rule, and therefore, not that CMS is ultimately responsible for Response: The statute requires that addressed in this final rule with enforcing the statutory requirements. states have methods and procedures comment period. This final rule with comment provides relating to Medicaid payment rates so VerDate Sep<11>2014 19:43 Oct 30, 2015 Jkt 238001 PO 00000 Frm 00007 Fmt 4701 Sfmt 4700 E:\FR\FM\02NOR3.SGM 02NOR3 67582 Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 211 / Monday, November 2, 2015 / Rules and Regulations that such rates are sufficient to enlist state actions pertaining to provider Comment: Many commenters enough providers to ensure access to payment rate setting, including requested that we broaden the proposed care. The final rule refers to actions to legislatively mandated rate reductions, regulatory framework to apply to reduce or restructure rates which may are subject to the access analysis and provider payment rates beyond those result in less access to care. While the public process requirements and that authorized under the Medicaid state final rule applies only to Medicaid fee- legislatively mandated rate cuts cannot plan. Commenters specifically requested for-service rates for state plan covered be implemented retroactively. that the regulation apply to rates paid by services, which may not include all Response: We agree with the Medicaid managed care organizations Medicaid revenues received by a commenters that it is important for and rates paid under Medicaid waiver provider, the rule does contemplate states to evaluate access any time the programs. Many commenters were broader payment changes that may state proposes a change to its Medicaid concerned that a proposal to address affect access, such as reductions to reimbursement methodologies that will access issues under managed care supplemental provider payments. In result in a reduction or restructuring of delivery systems is needed. Some addition, reviewing additional data will provider rates. This final rule with commenters called for specific revisions enable CMS to better identify and work comment period does not provide for to managed care regulations to set forth with states to address access exceptions to this requirement to review clearer standards for managed care rate deficiencies that may arise if rates are access when there is a state legislative reviews. One commenter suggested that not updated for many years, and if requirement. But nothing in this rule CMS should incorporate into the necessary to address them through changes the longstanding policies that actuarial soundness review, standards compliance action. At this time, we permit a state to submit a SPA with an for transparency in rate setting for generally do not review individual effective date as early as the first day of managed care organizations and require Medicaid payment rates as part of the the quarter in which a plan is submitted states to evaluate the impact of managed SPA process, but we review the (but only after public notice of the new care rate cuts on access. Another methodologies that states apply to set rates have been issued). This policy commenter offered that the rule should their provider rates or payments. permits states flexibility to implement be extended to apply to children This final rule with comment period approvable rate changes without delay enrolled in managed care. requires states to review access while it undergoes federal review. Thus, Response: As stated in the May 6, information on an ongoing basis for states may continue to implement rate 2011 proposed rule, section primary care services, including reductions retroactively to the first day physician, federally qualified health of the quarter in which an approvable 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act specifically centers (FQHC), clinic, dental care, etc.; SPA is submitted to CMS. applies to payment for care and services physician specialist services (for Comment: Several commenters available under the state plan, which we example, cardiology, urology, requested that we make the following interpret to refer to payments to radiology); behavioral health services, data public for all providers, providers and not to capitated payments including mental health and substance beneficiaries, and stakeholders to to managed care entities. While abuse disorder treatment; pre- and post- review and comment upon: (1) Data Medicaid access to services under natal obstetric services including labor analysis and any supporting managed care arrangements is an and delivery; and home health services documentation; (2) SPA submissions important issue, that issue is addressed (as defined in § 440.70), whether or not and supporting documentation; and (3) through reviews of network sufficiency the payment methodologies change. all communication between CMS and and managed care quality review States may also choose to select states pertaining to data analysis and processes. As a result, we are not additional services to review through SPAs. addressing access to care under the access monitoring review plan. In Response: In this rule, we require managed care arrangements in this addition, when changes to payment states to make the data analysis and rulemaking effort. Similarly, methods to methodologies are made through the supporting documentation available assure access to care, including payment SPA process, the state must be able to both to the public and to CMS. While methodologies, are reviewed in the support that change with publication of specific information approval process for Medicaid waiver documentation that access to care will related to SPA submissions and and demonstration programs (and, when not be adversely affected, and must disposition is not required under this appropriate, may be monitored in the monitor access after the change is made. final rule with comment period, these evaluation of a demonstration program). If, for example, a state removes an materials may be available through As a result, we did not specifically annual inflation adjustment and Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) address those programs within the therefore freezes rates from 1 year to the requests. We recommend that states context of this rulemaking process. next when an increase in inflation was publish the access monitoring review Separate recent CMS initiatives have anticipated, a current access review will plans and subsequent data collected addressed the framework for Medicaid be required to support approval of a through those plans on their Web sites managed care and home and community SPA, and the state will also need to for full transparency. Furthermore, we based service programs, including continue to monitor access. In addition, continue to post approved SPAs on the access and quality review methods. In whether or not the state changes www.Medicaid.gov Web site and will January 16, 2014, we issued the ‘‘Home payment methodologies (including for post state access review plans so that and Community-Based State Plan services outside of the ongoing they are publicly available. Issuing all of Services Program, Waivers, and asabaliauskas on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with RULES monitoring and review requirements), the communications and documentation Provider Payment Reassignments’’ final required ongoing mechanisms to receive associated with the SPA review process rule (79 FR 2947–3039), and on June 1, beneficiary and provider feedback as it is ongoing would add burden 2015, we published the ‘‘Medicaid would indicate to states and CMS access without adding significant relevant Managed Care, CHIP Delivered in issues that arise for any Medicaid information, and would significantly Managed Care, Medicaid and CHIP service. slow the process for CMS to review and Comprehensive Quality Strategies, and Comment: Several commenters approve state submissions, many of Revisions related to Third Party suggested the final rule clarify that all which are time sensitive. Liability’’ proposed rule (80 FR 31097– VerDate Sep<11>2014 19:43 Oct 30, 2015 Jkt 238001 PO 00000 Frm 00008 Fmt 4701 Sfmt 4700 E:\FR\FM\02NOR3.SGM 02NOR3 Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 211 / Monday, November 2, 2015 / Rules and Regulations 67583 31297) which proposed to align the provider costs. Ultimately Medicaid be exempt from conducting the ongoing rules governing Medicaid managed care payment rates must sufficient to ensure access data reviews and/or the rate with those of other major sources of beneficiary access to care, whether or reduction monitoring procedures and coverage, including coverage through not providers are shifting costs to other what threshold for such exemptions Qualified Health Plans and Medicare payers. would be appropriate. We understand Advantage plans. The Medicaid Comment: A commenter suggested that many states carve out certain managed care proposed rule specifically that CMS exempt the effects of care services from managed care capitation discusses requirements for network coordination initiatives from access rates and continue to pay for those adequacy. documentation requirements. Other services through FFS. We also Comment: A commenter requested commenters more specifically suggested understand that many of the individuals that the regulation explicitly state that that CMS should exempt from access who remain in state FFS systems may all Medicaid long-term services and documentation requirements services to have complex care needs. We note that supports options must be included in which beneficiary access is limited by states already have significant flexibility these reviews. coordination of care activities of home within the final provisions of the rule to Response: All Medicaid services and community based providers, choose measures within their access covered under the state plan are especially when these activities may monitoring review plans that are included within the scope of the result in loss of access to care in tailored to state delivery systems. This regulatory requirements of this final rule medically underserved or rural areas. could allow, for instance, a state with with comment period. We will require Response: Care coordination is an high levels of managed care enrollment an access analysis to support a request important aspect of a well-designed to focus on specific care needs of the for approval of any rate reduction or health care system and this regulation populations that remain in FFS after a restructuring for any service in the state does not intend to discourage states managed care transition. plan. As a baseline, the final rule with from implementing care coordination Comment: A number of commenters comment period will require that states programs or other efforts that seek to offered that the rule inhibits a state’s review and publish access studies for lower cost and improve the quality of ability to make adjustments to payment primary care services; physician care. Such activities should enhance rates that may be necessary to deal with specialist services; behavioral health access to care by arranging for state economic and fiscal crisis. services, including mental health and individuals to receive appropriate care Commenters also noted that CMS substance abuse disorder treatment; pre- when needed. Therefore, we do not should acknowledge that states cannot and post-natal obstetric services agree that exemptions to the dismiss local budgetary issues or including labor and delivery; and home requirements of this final rule with casually increase revenue to address health services on an ongoing basis. comment period should be applied to perceived access to care issues. Other States may also select additional states that offer care coordination. commenters stated that the rule will services to add to this list. In addition, Comment: Commenters requested infringe on states’ abilities to make access studies and continued specific exceptions to the procedures budget decisions. Some commenters monitoring will be required for covered described in the final rule based on state raised concerns that the timing of a state services when payment rates have been Medicaid program features. As legislative session makes it difficult for reduced or restructured, or when the examples, commenters requested states to comply with the due dates of state receives a significant volume of exceptions for states with a majority of the access monitoring review plans. public input raising access to care individuals enrolled in managed Response: The final rule with issues. We are requesting public Medicaid and relatively few enrolled in comment period does not prohibit states comment on the service categories FFS systems, states with all payer from implementing (through a SPA) selected for inclusion in baseline access payment systems, states that pay payment rate reductions, as long as analysis. Additional services will need Medicare rates, and for services where beneficiaries will maintain sufficient to be reviewed as reductions to payment Medicaid is the only or primary payer access to care. In the May 6, 2011 rates or as access issues become of care. The commenters stated that proposed rule, we acknowledged the apparent. These additional services requiring states with these program reality that state budgets often play a must be monitored periodically for a features to follow the procedures role in Medicaid rate-setting. This final minimum of 3 years following the initial described in the rule would be rule with comment period requires that rate reduction. inefficient. states have a process in place to review Comment: One commenter stated that Response: This final rule with and monitor access to care to determine providers can practice cost-shifting by comment period applies to all covered the impact various program changes overcharging some patients to make up services under the state plan for which have on beneficiary access. The rule for low Medicaid rates. The commenter payment is made on a FFS basis. does not prescribe specific state actions noted that cost-shifting permits equal However we are soliciting comments to address access to care issues. The rule access even if Medicaid rates are not through the final rule with comment instead requires procedures that will consistent with economy and efficiency. period on whether we should consider inform states and CMS of access Response: The focus of this rule is to further rulemaking or guidance, as concerns before SPA approval and on an provide a reasonable approach for states appropriate, to allow for such ongoing basis. This information should to document access to care for Medicaid exemptions to the scope of required be useful to state legislators as they services under the state plan. While we access reviews required under make budgetary decisions and is not asabaliauskas on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with RULES agree with the commenter that the § 447.203(b)(5), including whether to intended to hamper the legislative adequacy of payment rates in meeting permit streamlined approaches to process. provider costs are not necessarily the measuring access to care based on Comment: A commenter requested only or the decisive factor in ensuring specific circumstances within states. For that we clarify how CMS would handle access to care, in this final rule with instance, we are particularly interested access issues that arise due to events comment period, we do not require that in whether states with higher that are not within the state’s control, states establish access by reviewing the percentages of beneficiaries enrolled such as through competitive bidding relationship of payment rates to with managed care organizations should programs for certain Durable Medical VerDate Sep<11>2014 19:43 Oct 30, 2015 Jkt 238001 PO 00000 Frm 00009 Fmt 4701 Sfmt 4700 E:\FR\FM\02NOR3.SGM 02NOR3 67584 Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 211 / Monday, November 2, 2015 / Rules and Regulations Equipment, Prosthetics, Orthotics, and state plan rates, and thus would need to concerns. We are soliciting comments in Supplies (DMEPOS). make corrective payments if the this final rule with comment period on Response: There may be any number amendment is disapproved. whether additional categories of service of issues that contribute to inadequate Comment: Many commenters offered should be added to the list of required service access within state Medicaid that CMS should require higher ongoing reviews included in the rule. programs. Though some causes of access standards for services with known Comment: Commenters suggested that issues may be out of a state’s control, access issues. Many providers and as part of the final rule, CMS should the statutory requirements still apply provider groups highlighted access recognize that some states are entirely or and a state must implement appropriate challenges unique to the services that in part Health Professional Shortage remediation measures in an effort to they provide. These providers noted Areas (HPSA) or Medically Underserved address access issues. The strategies for access challenges specific to many Areas (MUA) which makes increasing remediation are not limited to increases services, including, but not limited to: access a more difficult challenge, in payments and states may employ any Primary care services; mental health particularly in a 12-month frame. number of approaches to assuring better services; maternity services; long term Response: We appreciate that some access to Medicaid state plan services. care and supports; family planning and states or geographic areas within states To competitively bid for medical contraception; pharmacy; specialty care; are in HPSAs or MUAs, which present devices and supplies, states are dental care; hospital services; End Stage challenges in improving access to care. currently required to waive ‘‘freedom of Renal Disease (ESRD) services; physical We are restating that this final rule with choice’’ through the exception provided therapy; transplants for essential body comment period does not require under section 1915(a)(1)(B) of the Act organs; and community and ambulatory specific improvements or timeframes for and federal regulation at 42 CFR care. Similarly, commenters wrote that improvement in access to care when 431.54(d). Section 1915(a)(1)(B)(i) and state access reviews should be Medicaid access is consistent with the the regulation at § 431.54(d) expressly segmented to identify the needs of statute and the availability of care for require that adequate services or devices children and individuals with particular the general population in a geographic must be available to recipients under a health care needs that may go unmet. area. We recognize that some areas competitive bidding program. States Response: We agree that there are within states may face particular should consider this requirement in unique qualities in service categories, challenges in meeting the health needs structuring their competitive bidding delivery systems, and populations that of the individuals residing in those programs and drafting requests for bids. require independent analysis and that areas, and states should describe the If a state’s competitive bidding program certain categories of service are known challenges within their access reviews does not meet this standard, than it is to be more prone to access to care issues and discuss how they affect the not in compliance with § 431.54(d) and in the Medicaid program. This is one of Medicaid program in particular. section 1915(a)(1)(B) of the Act. the challenges that CMS and states face Comment: Some commenters stated Comment: One commenter requested in selecting access data and measures that the proposed rule did not provide that CMS clarify whether states would that are appropriate and also addressing an appropriate balance between need to have CMS approval for a change concerns on the part of states regarding economy and efficiency and access by to payment rates or methodologies prior administrative burden. Based on the allowing states to invoke cost as a to implementing a change. The public comments we received, the final constraint only when they can address commenter noted that a SPA should be rule with comment period requires that access issues in some way other than an necessary any time a state proposes to ongoing access reviews focus on the increase in payment rates. Other implement changes in law, policy, or following categories of services: Primary commenters noted that emphasizing practice that may result in reduction of care services; physician specialist access to care over economy and payment, regardless of whether it services (for example, cardiology, efficiency is at odds with many state requires modification of existing plan urology, radiology); behavioral health innovation strategies that aim to lower language. Similarly, commenters urged services, including mental health and cost and improve care. that state Medicaid programs cannot substance abuse disorder treatment; pre- Response: The rule does not limit a implement provider payment reductions and post-natal obstetric services state’s ability to reduce or restructure until they have complied with the including labor and delivery; and home rates based on information that the rates proposed regulatory process for assuring health services. We believe these are not economic and efficient; rather, it access to care and CMS has approved services are both in high demand and ensures that states take appropriate the state’s SPA to reduce provider commonly utilized by Medicaid measures to document access to care payments. beneficiaries (see: The Kaiser consistent with section 1902(a)(30)(A) of Response: Without exception, our Commission on Medicaid and the the Act. Under the Act, rates are neither policy, as set forth in § 447.201(b), is Uninsured. Medicaid Moving Forward. economic nor efficient if they do not that states must receive approval Julia Paradise. March 2015). States may also ensure that individuals have through the SPA process to modify also select additional services to add to appropriate access to covered services. Medicaid payment methodologies. CMS this list. This final rule with comment We interpret section 1902(a)(30)(A) of approval ensures that the changes in period also requires that all services that the Act as a balanced approach to service payment methodologies comply are subject to reduced rates or Medicaid rate-setting and we encourage with all applicable regulatory and restructured rates and that could impact states to utilize appropriate information statutory requirements and are eligible access will also need to be reviewed and and program experience to develop rates asabaliauskas on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with RULES for FFP. SPAs may be effective no monitored as part of a state’s access to meet all of its requirements. Further, earlier than the first day of the quarter monitoring review plan. we expect states to document that in which a state submits an amendment. We will work with states to identify, Medicaid rates are economic and While there is no specific regulatory or based on feedback from beneficiaries efficient when the state submits changes statutory requirement that a state wait and providers and other available to payment methodologies through a until SPA approval to implement a information and data, additional SPA. We will continue to document as reduction in payment rates, the state services that may require more regular part of our SPA review process why the must reimburse providers at approved review based on data analysis or known methodology is in line with statutory VerDate Sep<11>2014 19:43 Oct 30, 2015 Jkt 238001 PO 00000 Frm 00010 Fmt 4701 Sfmt 4700 E:\FR\FM\02NOR3.SGM 02NOR3 Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 211 / Monday, November 2, 2015 / Rules and Regulations 67585 requirements. We will continue to work Response: The statute requires and the comparison of Medicaid rates to with state leaders and stakeholders and Medicaid payment rates to be sufficient other payer systems. will consider issuing policy guidance on to ensure access to care and services for Response: We agree that state standards for economy and efficiency beneficiaries, and this final rule with oversight efforts and rate setting policies through future rulemaking efforts. We comment provides considerable should discourage over-utilization. We are actively working with states toward flexibility to consider relevant factors support state efforts to identify innovative delivery system designs that including market rates. The requirement utilization associated with promote economy and efficiency to assure access to services is not inappropriate care through processes through person centered coordinated limited in scope to when a state is that can include prior authorization, care and value-based purchasing. We do proposing a change to its payment rate claims review, and care management not view the requirements described in methodology, but rather, applies to initiatives. Regulations at 42 CFR part this final rule with comment period or current rates as well. If a state has not 456 specifically discuss the the access provisions under section changed its Medicaid payment requirements concerning control of the 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act in conflict methodology for many years, we believe utilization of Medicaid services in with these efforts. it is just as important to assess those certain settings, or for certain services. Comment: A commenter noted that by rates to determine if the rates are still The regulatory framework presented in using only access metrics, it would be sufficient to ensure access as it is to this final rule with comment period very unlikely that state access reviews evaluate the effect of proposed changes describes several data points that may would ever show that emergency room to rate methodologies. The provisions of be indicators of access within a given rates violate the statute because the final rule with comment period state; however, we recognize that no one hospitals, in practice, usually do not opt allow for state flexibility to take into measure offers a precise indication of out of serving Medicaid patients. The account market conditions in carrying sufficient or insufficient access to care. commenter further stated that rates to out their access monitoring review If a state experiences a severe decline in Medicaid hospitals could sustain equal plans. We have considered state service utilization without a plausible access to emergency room services, but concerns with the burden associated explanation, there may be an access could simultaneously be entirely with the rule and have focused the concern worthy of investigation. The inconsistent with efficiency, economy, ongoing access reviews on: primary care same is true of beneficiary needs. If a and quality of care. services; physician specialist services state experiences a spike in beneficiaries Response: This final rule with (for example, cardiology, urology, who experience difficulty receiving a comment period focuses specifically on radiology); behavioral health services, particular service in a geographic documenting compliance with the including mental health and substance region, this could indicate access issues access to care requirements of section abuse disorder treatment; pre- and post- and should be investigated. Because the 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act. This rule statutory provisions at section natal obstetric services including labor includes a multi-faceted approach to 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act refer to and delivery; and home health services. reviewing access data, soliciting payment rates and comparisons to the Access to these services should be feedback from beneficiaries, providers general population, it is necessary for indicators that beneficiaries have and other stakeholders, and public states to compare Medicaid payment ongoing access to primary sources of processes to raise issues specific to state rates to the rates of Medicare or private care. States may also select additional rate actions that may impact access to payers. We expect that states will services to add to this list. Ongoing care. We do not disagree that providers evaluate access in consideration of access concerns with other services can that have a requirement or mission to outcome-based care as new approaches be addressed through public input provide care could still receive to payment and deliver systems take Medicaid payment that falls short of processes also required under this final form. The final rule with comment their full cost of providing the care rule with comment period. We note that period allows states broad flexibility to furnished. This is an issue that is the final rule with comment period does consider the impact of new types of relevant to the state’s rate-setting not require a payment floor for any payments and care delivery in the process, but not necessarily an access Medicaid service. access monitoring review plans. issue. These issues could be raised by Comment: One commenter Comment: One commenter requested hospitals in the rate-setting procedures recommended that CMS clearly explain that CMS specifically examine out-of- required under section 1902(a)(13)(A) of in the rule that the statute includes state Medicaid payments, particularly in the Act, but we agree that there could strong policy against over-utilization of states with historically high-volume, be additional opportunities for public medical services, and it is both out-of-state use of services. input. We are including in the final rule appropriate and desirable that states Response: We have not set out with comment period, requirements that adopt rate policies that will discourage specific requirements for out-of-state states develop mechanisms for ongoing unnecessary utilization of services and providers in this final rule with provider feedback, which should allow embody incentives for more efficient comment period. To the extent that hospitals and other providers who seek use of health care resources. individuals in the state obtain access to higher rates to raise concerns to states. Commenters wrote that measuring a particular type of service through out- Comment: A commenter stated that utilization of covered services to of-state providers, including through the proposed rule does not provide determine appropriate access is in telemedicine or telehealth, or to the sufficient discretion to consider market conflict with and ignores many states’ extent that individuals in a geographic asabaliauskas on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with RULES considerations and expressed concern efforts to ensure appropriate utilization. area generally obtain services through that the proposed rule should require To remedy this conflict, commenters out-of-state providers, the state will states to implement a process to suggested that CMS clarify the law need to consider such providers in evaluate access regardless of whether a requires states to enroll enough reviewing access to care. state is seeking changes to rates. providers to ensure access rather than Comment: One commenter stated that Further, the commenter expressed ensure that people are actively seeking the regulatory effort should be expanded concern regarding the establishment of treatment. These commenters also to address section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the a price floor for Medicaid services. objected to measuring enrollee needs Act’s quality of care requirements. VerDate Sep<11>2014 19:43 Oct 30, 2015 Jkt 238001 PO 00000 Frm 00011 Fmt 4701 Sfmt 4700 E:\FR\FM\02NOR3.SGM 02NOR3 67586 Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 211 / Monday, November 2, 2015 / Rules and Regulations Response: We currently have several consideration to comments from those obstetric services including labor and initiatives in place to improve upon who advocate on behalf Medicaid delivery; and home health services. We quality within Medicaid delivery beneficiaries. have made this change in consideration systems and strengthen quality Response: The public comment of state burden and to focus ongoing measures. We are actively engaged with period is a unique opportunity for the access monitoring on highly needed and states and other stakeholders in public to contribute to the regulatory utilized services. States may also select developing quality guidelines, for process. All comments are considered in additional services to add to this list. example the Child and Adult Core the development of final regulations. While the suspension of a rate reduction Health Care Quality Measurement Sets Input from beneficiaries and their may be an appropriate corrective action, developed in conjunction with the advocates is essential because that input we are not requiring a specific approach National Quality Forum. While the most directly reflects the success or to addressing access issues within the focus of this final regulation is limited failure to obtain beneficiary access to final rule with comment period and we in scope to access to care, we will care. And the importance of that input will work with states on appropriate continue our work to promote quality is not limited to the rulemaking process. remedies. improvement within state Medicaid This is why this final rule with Comment: A commenter requested programs and may, in the future, comment period requires that states that CMS provide a list of the covered develop regulatory or subregulatory maintain ongoing systems to collect and services and benefits that fall under the guidance on quality standards. We also analyze beneficiary comments and 5-year access review cycles described in recognize that access and quality can be complaints concerning access to care. the May 6, 2011 proposed rule to ensure related and beneficiaries may provide The importance of beneficiary needs that all services are included. beneficial input to states on this and ongoing feedback are highlighted in Response: We proposed that states relationship through the processes states the framework described in the review all services covered in the develop in accordance with this rule. proposed and final rules. Medicaid state plan over 5-year cycles. Comment: Several commenters stated Medicaid allows states the option to B. Documentation of Access to Care and cover certain services and the list of that the requirements of the notice of Service Payment Rates (§ 447.203) services that individual states would proposed rule-making create a stricter standard than what is required under Comment: Many commenters agreed have been required to review would the statute. Some commenters offered that it is important for states to conduct vary. The scope of services proposed for that the requirement will be difficult to access reviews to examine access and review are described in regulation at 42 meet and would effectively preclude a related data in different geographic CFR part 440. Based on public state from making program changes. regions throughout the state. comments, we have revised the access Response: Prior to the issuance of this Response: We appreciate support for review requirements in this final rule final rule with comment period, several the proposed data analysis with comment period to be more states implemented a number of the requirements. We have adopted without targeted so as to only require regulatory provisions we proposed in change many of the proposed measurement of a discrete set of the May 6, 2011 proposed rule. These requirements in this final rule with services, which provides additional data states recognized the need to review and comment period. on access while reducing administrative monitor data and to work with Comment: Many commenters burden on states. States must conduct stakeholders to address potential access suggested that we modify the access access monitoring reviews every 3 years issues in light of cuts to Medicaid review procedures to require baseline for the following categories of service: payment rates. Based on the work of access analysis prior to taking action to Primary care services; physician these states, we consider the approve provider rate reductions, specialist services (for example, requirements of the final rule with ongoing monitoring to detect problems, cardiology, urology, radiology); comment period to be reasonable and and corrective action when problems behavioral health services, including achievable. As discussed in the May 6, are detected. Some commenters offered mental health and substance abuse 2011 proposed rule and in this final rule that CMS should suspend the rate disorder treatment; pre- and post-natal with comment period, the requirements reduction until corrective measures are obstetric services including labor and of the rule do not limit state flexibility taken. delivery; and home health services. in program operation. Nor do the Response: Consistent with the States may also need to add additional regulatory requirements go beyond the commenters’ suggestion, this final rule services to the access monitoring review scope of what is necessary to reasonably with comment period requires that plan based on access to care concerns document beneficiary access to care. states conduct baseline reviews of the that arise out of the information Instead, the rule provides states with core services defined in this regulation received by states through the public procedures to document compliance and monitor access data to ensure input processes described in this final with the statutory requirement to ensure compliance with section 1902(a)(30)(A) rule with comment period. We note that access to care. These procedures permit of the Act. States are also required to states may have additional alternative states considerable flexibility in the review and submit access data when processes to identify access to care analysis of data reflecting access, and in states submit rate proposals that may issues for services in addition to those the measures that a state must take to have a negative impact on access to care required under the final rule. This rule respond to access concerns. and continue monitoring for 3 years is not intended to preclude states from Comment: One commenter stated that afterwards through the process outlined continuing to use those processes and asabaliauskas on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with RULES Medicare and Social Security have not in the access monitoring review plan. In does not intend to limit additional state experienced the same challenges facing addition, we have revised the ongoing access to care review activities for Medicaid, likely because their access monitoring review plan activities Medicaid services that are already beneficiaries have considerable political to require a review of primary care effective. clout. The commenter stated that services; physician specialist services; Comment: We received several policymakers must factor in this reality behavioral health services, including comments that requested additional when reviewing the proposed rule mental health and substance abuse guidance on how states should review comments and provide special disorder treatment; pre- and post-natal access to consider geography. VerDate Sep<11>2014 19:43 Oct 30, 2015 Jkt 238001 PO 00000 Frm 00012 Fmt 4701 Sfmt 4700 E:\FR\FM\02NOR3.SGM 02NOR3 Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 211 / Monday, November 2, 2015 / Rules and Regulations 67587 Commenters recommended that CMS manner that appropriately reflects the statutory requirements, and the reasons define the relevant ‘‘geographic area’’ local health care delivery system of each for our determination. We continue to that states should use for access state, as outlined in this final rule with consider whether core measures and comparisons, while others specifically comment period. A state’s rate of access thresholds would help states and suggested that CMS should require insured and uninsured may not be CMS assure access to care in the states to assess Medicaid beneficiary directly related to the ability of an Medicaid program and we are access in designated rural geographic individual on Medicaid to access a accordingly issuing a RFI, as well as this locations of a state. One commenter covered Medicaid benefit since the final rule with comment period, to suggested that we require states to ability to access care is different from gather additional information on this review trends and factors as they vary having the means to pay for care. While topic. by state geography and to emphasize the the final rule with comment period does Comment: Commenters requested that importance of geographic variation not specify how states should make we clarify scenarios when restructuring through specific changes to the such comparisons to the general rate methodologies would result in regulatory text. population, we note that a state’s access issues and trigger the Response: To clarify, states must analysis should be robust and consider requirements of this rule. assure that access is available to both demands for care and whether Response: There may be any number Medicaid beneficiaries to the extent that individuals have an ability to pay for of payment methodology changes that care is available to the general such care if individuals without could harm access to care and we population in a geographic area. The coverage are included in the analysis. cannot set forth an exhaustive list. One actual definition of geographic area may Comment: Several commenters noted common type of restructuring is a vary by state and the extent and need to that courts have determined that the change in the targeting of supplemental which states review and monitor access term ‘‘general population’’ only means payments. States may alter payments in based on geographic area may depend people who have private insurance and ways that are budget neutral as a whole on the data and other information that not the uninsured and requiring for the amendment action, but would states are required to review as part of Medicaid to compare its coverage to reduce payments for some providers. the framework of this final rule with private plans without accounting for the For instance, some states make up for comment period. For instance, states access of the uninsured is an artificial low base payment rates through lump may receive information that access to standard. sum supplemental provider payments. care is an issue in one specific region Response: The final rule does not The supplemental payments are often within the state and focus monitoring define standards for measuring medical targeted to certain providers and may be and remediation strategies on that services available to the general dependent upon the availability of local region. Other states may have more population in a geographic area. States governments to fund the nonfederal statewide access concerns that require a are instead allowed to analyze access share of payments. A change in county-by-county analysis and strategy issues within broad parameters in a supplemental payments that reduces the to address access on a statewide basis. manner that appropriately reflects the total amounts that providers receive or At this time, we are not defining state local health care delivery system of each shifts funds from one provider to geographic areas or the specific state, as outlined in this final rule with another could result in access to care geographic considerations that states comment period. issues and is one example of a potential must include in access reviews. CMS Comment: Several commenters payment restructuring that could will rely on states and the processes requested clarification as to how the negatively impact access to care. Where described in this final rule with agency will evaluate the data from there is uncertainty, we will work with comment period, including the public access reviews. The commenters also states to help identify other situations processes that allow stakeholders to sought clarification as to how CMS where the processes described in this comment on the access monitoring would apply or evaluate the data when final rule with comment period should review plans, to determine appropriate deciding to approve or disapprove a apply. geographic considerations. SPA. Comment: Several commenters Comment: Commenters requested that Response: Under this final rule with requested that CMS mandate that states we clarify the difference between a comment period, states will follow make the annual data reviews publically ‘‘comparable population’’ to Medicaid specific procedures to review and available. Commenters further requested and statutory designation of ‘‘the monitor access to care and to solicit that CMS require states to disclose the general population in a geographic feedback from stakeholders through reports with a sufficient amount of time area.’’ A few commenters wrote that the ongoing public processes. We also to review the data and provide regulations need to acknowledge that require a public review timeframe for comments prior to the state’s the law requires Medicaid to be the access monitoring review plan submission of a SPA. compared to the general population. which will allow interested parties to Response: We are finalizing the Some commenters stated that the review and comment on states’ access provision to require that states make appropriate comparison is between monitoring review plans for a period no access data reviews available to the Medicaid and those in the general less than 30 days before the monitoring public and to CMS for review. In population regardless of insurance plan is finalized and submitted to CMS. addition, prior to submitting a SPA that status, while others stated that the We will review this information in total reduces or restructures Medicaid comparison to the general population is when reviewing SPAs but have not, at payment rates or otherwise have a asabaliauskas on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with RULES unrealistic and should be removed from this time, required any specific negative impact on access to care, states consideration. thresholds that would determine an are required to conduct a public process Response: The regulation adopts the amendment to be approved or that solicits feedback from stakeholders statutory standard of ‘‘the general disapproved. We will document as part in consideration of the access reviews population’’ and we have applied this in of our SPA review process that states are conducted by the states. Access this final rule with comment period. following the process described in this monitoring review plans will be States are allowed to analyze access final rule with comment period, that published and made available to the issues within broad parameters in a access to care is consistent with the public for review and comment for a VerDate Sep<11>2014 19:43 Oct 30, 2015 Jkt 238001 PO 00000 Frm 00013 Fmt 4701 Sfmt 4700 E:\FR\FM\02NOR3.SGM 02NOR3 67588 Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 211 / Monday, November 2, 2015 / Rules and Regulations period of no less than 30 days, prior to review timeframe for the access Comment: Several comments being finalized and furnished to CMS monitoring review plan which will suggested that the scope of access for review. allow interested parties to review and reviews should be limited to mandatory Comment: We received many comment on the state’s monitoring services. Other comments urged that comments that requested more detail on plans for a period of no less than 30 access reviews only be required where how a state can sufficiently demonstrate days before the monitoring plan is there is considerable empirical evidence access to care, including thresholds for finalized and submitted to CMS. of an access problem such as: Primary sufficient access. Some commenters Comment: Commenters requested that care; and physician specialist services; raised concerns that without mandatory the ongoing access reviews include the and dental services for children. thresholds states would never know agency’s summary of the views of Additional commenters suggested state CMS’ expectations for meeting the beneficiaries and of providers of the access reviews should focus on access to requirements of the statute. Other covered service obtained through the specialists, especially pediatric commenters recommended that we input of medical care advisory subspecialists. provide states with the flexibility to committee under § 431.12(e). Response: After careful consideration determine the elements most Response: We agree that feedback of all the comments received, we are appropriate for review of access to care from beneficiaries and providers on revising this final rule with comment that are meaningful for their specific access to care is important and should period to eliminate the requirement that populations and programs. be considered by states in evaluating states review all covered services within Response: Currently, there are no access and as they make decisions about a 5-year period, and instead will require national standards to demonstrate Medicaid rates. This final rule with that states review a discrete set of access for each Medicaid covered comment period requires that states services provided by various provider service that would take into account have a mechanism for ongoing types and site of service that are related differences in state geographic locations. beneficiary input and that states log the to particular types of beneficiary needs Since the issuance of the May 6, 2011 volume and nature of responses to every 3 years. These are: Primary care proposed rule, we have worked with beneficiary input. In addition, we have services; physician specialist services many states to review state data sources added a requirement that states (for example, cardiology, urology, and develop monitoring plans to establish and maintain a similar radiology); behavioral health services demonstrate compliance with the provider feedback mechanism. Both (including both mental health and statute. That experience and the public feedback mechanisms are incorporated substance abuse disorder treatment comments received through this into state access monitoring review services); pre- and post-natal obstetric rulemaking process have further plans within the final rule with services including labor and delivery; suggested that particular measures may comment period. CMS will rely on and home health services. These be specific to individual services and information from the beneficiary and categories represent frequently used systems and that states should have provider feedback mechanisms to services in Medicaid and can serve as some flexibility and discretion in understand real-time access to care indicators that beneficiaries are determining the measures and concerns and may require states add receiving access to care. States may at thresholds, to allow states to take into services to their access monitoring their discretion add additional services account varying circumstances. We review plans based on this information. to their access review monitoring plans. requested comments on specific Depending on the nature of the In addition, we have included a thresholds that states could use to concerns, states may need to take requirement for states to review measure access within their Medicaid actions to address more immediate additional service categories as programs. While we received some needs though, as the concerns may vary, determined necessary based on the comments with suggestions of CMS is not specifying actions or public input processes described in this thresholds, we did not receive timeframes that states must take at this rule. We note that states may have suggestions for metrics that could be time. alternative processes to identify access applied across all states without States are expected to solicit feedback to care issues for services in addition to additional consideration or compelling during the development of the access those required under the final rule. This evidence that the standards offered in monitoring review plan and corrective rule is not intended to preclude states comments would necessarily ensure action plans and could also use the from continuing to use those processes consistency with section 1902(a)(30)(A) existing Medical Care Advisory and does not intend to limit additional of the Act. We will continue to study Committees for input into the process. state access to care review activities for whether a core set of measures or Comment: Several commenters Medicaid services that are already thresholds should be applied to the suggested that CMS should develop a effective. Medicaid program and are soliciting template for access monitoring review Comment: One commenter suggested more information from stakeholders plans that includes the Medicaid that FQHC reimbursement rates be given through the RFI process described payment rate comparisons, stakeholder a separate category in the access review earlier. feedback, and provider feedback. process as they receive an advantageous Therefore, while we continue to study Response: Each state Medicaid Medicaid reimbursement rate which this issue, in this final rule with program is unique, and as such, this could skew the lower rates for many comment period we are adopting the final rule with comment period allows Medicaid family planning services. proposed multi-faceted approach to states the flexibility to design and Response: The final rule requires asabaliauskas on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with RULES reviewing access to care that includes implement access measures specific to states to identify payment rate data analysis and feedback from the characteristics of their state. At this comparisons for service by provide type beneficiaries, providers and time, we are not issuing a template or and site of service. This should address stakeholders rather than national specific format for states to conduct the commenters concerns. We recognize thresholds. The analysis of this their access monitoring review plans. the important role FQHCs play in information must also weigh relevant However, CMS will identify model delivering health care services to state-specific circumstances. As a result, plans for states to consider as they Medicaid beneficiaries. We expect that we are requiring states to have a public develop their own plans. states would include them, as VerDate Sep<11>2014 19:43 Oct 30, 2015 Jkt 238001 PO 00000 Frm 00014 Fmt 4701 Sfmt 4700 E:\FR\FM\02NOR3.SGM 02NOR3 Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 211 / Monday, November 2, 2015 / Rules and Regulations 67589 appropriate, in the ongoing access to Comment: Several commenters instance, one commenter suggested that care reviews for the types of services requested that CMS clarify the CMS require an impact analysis of rate that they provide. The statute requires anticipated approach for reviewing cuts on the ability of high Medicaid that states pay an all-inclusive access when a state adds a new service volume providers to meet staffing prospective payment system (PPS) rate or benefit. requirements and quality and safety to FQHC providers or an alternative Response: This final rule with standards. Other commenters payment methodology that results in comment period clarifies that states recommended that the numbers of payment at least at the PPS rate. The must conduct a baseline access review providers willing to care for Medicaid PPS rate recognizes costs associated for new services within 3 years of the patients be compared to some measure with all of the Medicaid services that effective date of the SPAs that of patient need to provide an indication FQHCs provide and is not specific to authorizes the service for FFP if the of whether access is adequate. particular service. So, while services service falls under a certain subset of Commenters lamented that the rule did furnished by FQHCs may increase service categories defined in this not specifically address circumstances beneficiary access to certain categories regulation. All other new services will related to care in hospitals, family of care, payments made to FQHCs are fall under the rate reduction or payment planning centers, long term services and not going to be relevant to the payments restructuring protocol outlined in this supports and many additional benefit made to other types of providers. final rule with comment period whereby categories. Comment: Several commenters SPAs reducing or restructuring payment Response: While we are not adopting suggested that state-level reviews of rates for the services are submitted with any specific metrics at this time, we are beneficiary access to specialty an analysis of access to care and are continuing to evaluate the feasibility of pharmacies are critically important for monitored periodically for a minimum establishing a set of core metrics and assisting states in determining whether period of 3 years. thresholds and are soliciting input from Medicaid beneficiaries’ access to Comment: Some commenters stakeholders on these approaches specialty pharmacy services under the suggested that CMS allow independent through the RFI. We considered these state plan is at least equivalent to that third parties to conduct the access comments in developing this final rule available to the general population is reviews, stating that access reviews with comment period, and hope that the the geographic area. Commenters also should be objective and conducted by information provided through the noted that access issues may already an organization/academic institution public comment process informs state exist in most states due to the that is impartial. access monitoring review plans. We Response: Ultimately, states are included examples of a number of combination of low dispensing fee rates responsible for ensuring compliance metrics that states should consider and insufficient reimbursement for with statutory and regulatory within the regulatory text. These specialty products. requirements. States have flexibility in measures represent the type and scope Response: As discussed, this final rule determining the available resources to of information that states should review with comment period will require states meet the regulatory requirement through the access monitoring review to review a certain subset of services described in this final rule with process. As we review state access every 3 years, including primary care comment period. While we are not monitoring review plans, our services; physician specialist services; requiring use of an independent third expectation will be that the plans are behavioral health services, including robust and are carefully designed to party to conduct access reviews, the mental health and substance abuse indicate access to care issues as they option is certainly available to states. disorder treatment; pre- and post-natal develop. We also anticipate that Additionally, we will consider obstetric services including labor and stakeholders will provide feedback on alternative approaches to addressing delivery; and home health services. state access monitoring review plans, Medicaid access issues that While we have not included specialty including on proposed, baselines, beneficiaries face through a hearing or pharmacies, we have included the metrics and thresholds, and that states complaint driven process. We intend to requirement for states to review access will review the feedback and make solicit feedback on the feasibility and for additional services based on a appropriate changes to their monitoring implementation options for such an significantly higher than usual level of plans. approach through an RFI process. beneficiary or provider access Comment: Some commenters complaints. States may also select 1. Access Review Data Requirements suggested that the proposed regulations additional services to add to reviews at Comment: Several commenters should be revised to allow for some their discretion. suggested that CMS should require metrics that establish a prima facie Comment: Another commenter states to disclose payment and other assurance that care and services for expressed concern that states will claims data states use to conduct their Medicaid enrollees are available at least attempt to satisfy pharmacy access access reviews. to the extent that they are available to requirements simply by demonstrating Response: Section 447.203(b)(1) will the general population in the geographic or offering the availability of mail order require states to review and make area. For instance, if at least 80 percent pharmacy, which may not be adequate publically available data trends and or more of the service providers for a for certain Medicaid beneficiaries. factors that measure access, as particular service such as hospitals, Response: Access requirements are represented by beneficiary needs, physicians, labs, etc. in a geographic not met by the ‘‘availability’’ of provider availability of care and providers, area are enrolled in the Medicaid asabaliauskas on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with RULES types if the Medicaid population cannot utilization of services, and service program, the commenter offered that obtain needed services from those payment information. These publically would reasonably mean access is provider types. To the extent that mail available measures will support the SPA available. order pharmacies are not adequate or submission. Response: As we discussed in the appropriate for some Medicaid Comment: Comments suggested preamble of the May 6, 2011 proposed beneficiaries, availability of mail order provider and service specific metrics, rule, CMS is not currently proposing pharmacies would not constitute access threshold, and considerations should be national standards to be applied across to pharmacy services. incorporated into the final rule. For all service categories or uniformly for all VerDate Sep<11>2014 19:43 Oct 30, 2015 Jkt 238001 PO 00000 Frm 00015 Fmt 4701 Sfmt 4700 E:\FR\FM\02NOR3.SGM 02NOR3 67590 Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 211 / Monday, November 2, 2015 / Rules and Regulations states. We also think it is important to services. While some states pay for future rulemaking or subregulatory note that enrollment alone in the services through rates based on guidance and are reviewing ways to Medicaid program does not mean Medicare fee structures, many services standardize access monitoring and sufficient access is available. There are are reimbursed through cost remediation efforts. In this rule, we other factors that must be considered. reconciliation or other methodologies require that states review data that However, we are continuing to study that do not follow Medicare approaches. considers enrollee needs, the whether a core set of measures or Therefore, it would be difficult to availability of care and providers, and thresholds should be applied to standardize an analysis similar to the service utilization. Within the Medicaid, and, if so, what those specific MedPAC approach for assessing framework, this final rule with comment measures would be, and are soliciting adequate Medicare payments. As period continues to provide states with input through the RFI process. previously discussed, this final rule significant flexibility in reviewing data Comment: Several commenters with comment period allows states to demonstrate and monitor access to suggested that specific information for considerable discretion to review access care which reflects their local healthcare specific populations be required data based on a state’s program and local delivery systems. States also have the elements within the access reviews. In considerations as long as the review is ability to add to the framework to better particular, one commenter suggested consistent with the standardized and represent access to services within the children and young adults with ESRD transparent process described in this state. should have specific consideration in final rule with comment period. Comment: Several commenters access reviews since they have complex Comment: Some commenters recommended that CMS consider care needs. Other commenters suggested suggested that the framework described identifying a set of uniform measures that states should examine the needs of in the rule relies heavily on Medicaid that states must collect data on or that adolescents ages 12 to 21 as a distinct provider reimbursement rates, CMS weighs more heavily in its subgroup in the pediatric population beneficiary surveys, and provider analysis, based on CMS experience and due to their significant unmet health engagement, with the latter two existing studies. While some needs. Others requested that CMS considerations being subjective and commenters suggested such uniform articulate that child and adolescent potentially at odds with one another. data elements would enable access mental health services are a high Response: This final rule with comparisons across states and facilitate priority for monitoring access in comment period requires that states best practices, other commenters recognition of the severe shortages of review access information focused on: suggested that CMS provide flexibility child and adolescent mental health the availability of care and providers, to states by permitting the use of other professionals. enrollee needs, and service utilization. measures based on the strength of the Response: We do not dispute the In addition, states must consider alternatives. importance of these types of services information from beneficiaries and Response: We appreciate the value of and we understand the commenters’ providers, as well as provider payments. common data sets to help compare concerns. To the extent that states We do not view this information as access across states; however, we also understand that there are specific access conflicting, but instead a comprehensive recognize the importance of allowing issues for certain populations, it would review of access to care that considers states flexibility in designing and be prudent to develop remediation a number of factors that may indicate implementing appropriate access plans that focus on improving access for compliance with the statute. measures which reflect each state those populations. States will be Comment: We received many Medicaid program. Because each state required to review, at a minimum, comments that were critical of the Medicaid program faces unique primary care services; physician framework of the May 6, 2011 proposed challenges and it is difficult to create specialist services; behavioral health rule which focused on the availability of data sets that uniformly apply across all services, including mental health and care and providers, enrollee needs and service categories, we are not at this substance abuse disorder treatment; pre- service utilization. One commenter time requiring specific access measures and post-natal obstetric services suggested that CMS should incorporate in the final rule with comment period. including labor and delivery, home measures through future rulemaking As discussed, we will continue to study health services, and other service and guidance, but only after Medicaid and solicit feedback on standard data categories when the state or CMS has and CHIP Payment and Access sets through a RFI process. received a significantly higher than Commission (MACPAC) completes its Comment: Several commenters usual volume of beneficiary or provider process of identifying a set of measures suggested that consideration be given to access complaints for a geographic area. to determine and track access levels. race, ethnicity, rural, and urban, States may also select additional The commenter further suggested that primary language spoken, eligibility services to add to this list. We are for purposes of the final rule, CMS subgroup, geography, age and income of requesting comments on the selected should identify existing data and Medicaid beneficiaries. categories of services outlined above. measures based on its experience and Response: We appreciate these Comment: One commenter suggested existing resources rather than the suggestions. We have not specified the that CMS should require that Medicaid framework described in the proposed level of detail at which states are payment analyses determine the degree rule. required to investigate access to care. to which Medicaid payments are Response: While we appreciate the States have the option to add the above sufficient by, at a minimum, following comment and intend to continue to elements to their access monitoring asabaliauskas on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with RULES the same set of analyses that MedPAC work with states to identify appropriate efforts and we hope that the access undertakes when assessing the access measures, the components of the monitoring review plans become more adequacy of Medicare Payments. broad framework that are described in sophisticated over time. Response: States have significant this final rule with comment period are discretion in establishing payment viewed by industry experts as good 2. Beneficiary Information methods across services, providers, and indicators of access to health care Comment: Most commenters states, whereas Medicare uses national services. We are considering providing expressed support for the provisions rates adjusted for geography for all states with additional guidance through requiring a mechanism to solicit VerDate Sep<11>2014 19:43 Oct 30, 2015 Jkt 238001 PO 00000 Frm 00016 Fmt 4701 Sfmt 4700 E:\FR\FM\02NOR3.SGM 02NOR3 Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 211 / Monday, November 2, 2015 / Rules and Regulations 67591 feedback from beneficiaries on access will be independently heard by a payment rate analysis should only issues. In addition to the feedback hearings officer. We may propose this include the net amount of payments, mechanisms for beneficiaries, many process through future rulemaking, including supplemental payments, to commenters also suggested mechanisms which will include notice and the provider, and that payment data to gain feedback from service providers, opportunity for public comment. should appropriately deduct, or account caregivers, and advocates. A few Comment: One commenter for any taxes or assessments that are commenters urged that we target encouraged CMS to work with state required to be paid by Medicaid feedback on specific issues (for Medicaid agencies to collect Consumer providers. Some commenters even example, mental health, and women’s Assessment of Healthcare Providers and suggested a separate payment rate health) and mandate types of feedback Systems (CAHPS) data for FFS metric to reflect public hospitals and mechanisms, while other commenters beneficiaries in a similar manner to providers that pay the non-federal share urged CMS to allow states flexibility to what is collected for Medicare FFS of the Medicaid payments. determine the best tools to obtain beneficiaries. Response: Section 1902(a)(30)(A) of feedback. Commenters also requested Response: We are currently working the Act describes payment rates for clarification regarding the types of with state Medicaid agencies to collect Medicaid care and services. Our feedback mechanisms CMS would and use the CAHPS survey data for regulatory purview is to review all state consider acceptable and the standards institutional and primary care settings payment rate methodologies through the that CMS would use when reviewing and we will continue to assist states in SPA process to ensure the payment rates beneficiary input. collecting this or similar data in the are economic, efficient, and sufficient to Response: We appreciate the future. To the extent possible, we will assure access. The requirements commenters’ support for this provision work with states to use the CAHPS contained in this final rule with and we are finalizing § 447.203(b)(4) survey data to support the analysis and comment period set forth a framework that requires states to have mechanisms oversight procedures described in this for states to use to demonstrate their for obtaining ongoing beneficiary final rule with comment period. payment rate methodologies are feedback through hotlines, surveys, Comment: Commenters suggested that sufficient to ensure access. To the extent ombudsman, or other equivalent states should also obtain provider and that payments are made to providers mechanisms. We continue to offer states beneficiary feedback during the outside of a state plan rate methodology the ability to implement feedback development of corrective action plans (for example, uncompensated care pool mechanisms tailored to their program so that beneficiary and provider payments, Medicaid DSH, or HIT characteristics and to use feedback experience may better inform the state’s payments), such payments would not be mechanisms that are already in place actions. directly included in the state’s rate and working to meet the objectives of Response: We are finalizing analysis. But rate analysis is only one this final rule with comment period. In § 447.203(b)(4), which requires states to part of an overall access analysis, and consideration of comments from have a mechanism for obtaining ongoing these other payments may affect providers and provider groups, we are beneficiary feedback through hotlines, provider’s participation rates in adding a requirement within the final surveys, ombudsman, or other Medicaid by providing additional rule with comment period that states equivalent mechanisms. We are also incentive to serve Medicaid patients. have a mechanism for ongoing provider adding a provision that requires states to Comment: We received a significant feedback. While CMS will not formally have similar mechanisms in place for number of comments regarding the approve state feedback mechanisms, provider feedback. One mechanism that proposed requirement to compare states are required in this final rule with states could use is the Medical Care Medicaid rates to the rates of other comment period to maintain a record of Advisory Committees that are already payers; some commenters supported the the volume and nature of responses to required in federal regulations. We proposed requirement while other beneficiary feedback. believe that states should solicit commenters opposed it. One commenter Comment: One commenter suggested feedback during the development of suggested that the only way CMS could that CMS establish a mechanism for corrective action plans or use the demonstrate that Medicaid access is at beneficiaries and stakeholders to raise existing Medical Care Advisory least comparable to that of the general concerns about access issues directly to Committees for input into the process. population is through a comparison to CMS. commercial rates. Another commenter Response: Because each state designs 3. Access Review Medicaid Payment contended that it is difficult to and administers its own Medicaid Data determine actual commercial rates program within the federal framework, Comment: We received numerous because often this information is we believe it is most appropriate for comments regarding which factors considered proprietary. One state beneficiaries and stakeholders to raise should or should not be included in the expressed concern about not being able access concerns with the state directly, payment rate analysis. Many to meet this requirement because there rather than to CMS. To the extent that commenters requested CMS exclude are no large commercial plans within a beneficiary or stakeholder’s access Disproportionate Share Hospital (DSH) the state. Other commenters suggested concerns are not addressed by the state payments in the analysis, while other that it is ineffective to base rate adequately, those concerns may be commenters stated these payments comparisons on other payers’ rates raised to CMS although we are not should be included. Commenters also alone and some states may be relying on establishing a formal process at the suggested that uncompensated care pool unsound data for comparisons. A few asabaliauskas on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with RULES federal level. As part of the final rule payments, Health Information commenters cautioned against using with comment period, states will be Technology (HIT) payments and other Medicare rates as a comparison, citing required to promptly respond to specific types of supplemental payments be that Medicare does not offer the same access problems, with an appropriate excluded from the rate analysis. One benefits as Medicaid (for example, investigation, analysis, and response. In commenter suggested that states should comprehensive dental and pediatric) addition, we are exploring the feasibility separately show percentiles with and and that the Medicare payment rates do of requiring a state level formal hearings without supplemental payments. not reflect the costs incurred by the process where access to care concerns Additional commenters stated the Medicare provider to provide the VerDate Sep<11>2014 19:43 Oct 30, 2015 Jkt 238001 PO 00000 Frm 00017 Fmt 4701 Sfmt 4700 E:\FR\FM\02NOR3.SGM 02NOR3 67592 Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 211 / Monday, November 2, 2015 / Rules and Regulations services. One commenter sought or restructured or where a significantly rates are sufficient to enlist providers clarification on whether the review higher than usual volume of beneficiary, into the Medicaid program or not, since must include all three proposed provider, or stakeholder access generally providers do not determine comparisons or could be limited to at complaints. Within primary care whether to provide care to an individual least one. services, we are including dental care as based on the rate for a single service. Response: The framework in the final one of the service categories states must This final rule with comment period rule with comment period recognizes review as part of the access monitoring requires states to provide an analysis to that access to covered services may be review plan. We also agree that access compare Medicaid rates to other private affected by multiple factors. One such needs may vary between pediatric and and public health payer rates. This factor is the Medicaid payment rates in adult populations and we are requiring analysis will only serve as an indicator comparison to other payers. We states to describe within their plans, the of whether low rates may be a source of maintain that a comparison can be a characteristics of the beneficiary access issues. A better determination of useful tool for states in determining the populations, including considerations whether the rates are sufficient to enlist adequacy of their rates; however, it for care, services, and payment providers into the Medicaid program should not be relied upon without variations for pediatric and adult will be the analysis of enrollee needs, taking into account other factors that populations, as well as individuals with the availability of providers and impact access. To the extent a state has disabilities. utilization trends, as well as beneficiary issues making comparisons to private or Comment: One commenter urged and stakeholder feedback that will be public health payer rates because the CMS not to require the publication of all received through the processes data is not available for a particular payers’ rates. described in this rule. service, we would expect the state to Response: This final rule with Comment: A commenter noted an explain this as part of its analysis and comment period does not require a state error in the proposed regulatory text. conduct other appropriate reviews of to publish the rates used by other Specifically, the May 6, 2011 proposed Medicaid rates. payers. Although we are finalizing the rule would have required that states Comment: Some commenters requirement for states to conduct a calculate the ‘‘percentile’’ estimate expressed support for a two-pronged percentage comparison of Medicaid which Medicaid payment represents of review: One comparing Medicaid FFS payment rates to other payers within the one, or more, of the following: Medicare payments in relation to Medicare state, this is not intended to require the payment rates, the average commercial payment rates; and Medicaid FFS publication of other payers’ specific rates, or the applicable Medicaid payments in relation to the payment rates. allowable cost of the service. The rates used by Medicaid managed care Comment: Commenters offered that commenter notes that CMS likely organizations within the state. the May 6, 2011 proposed rule does not intended states to calculate the Response: The final rule with clarify that access reviews of Medicaid ‘‘percentage’’ of which Medicaid comment period requires that states payment data should be collected and payment represents the other payer or include percentage comparisons of provided for each individual item or cost amounts. Medicaid payment rates to other public service rather than in the aggregate. Response: We agree with the and private health coverage rates within Commenters requested that CMS require commenter and we have corrected this the state for all services reviewed under transparency of the state’s analysis of in this final rule with comment period. the access monitoring review plan by provider rates and access determination We also note that, based on comments, provider type and site of service (e.g. for stakeholders to provide meaningful we revised the payment analysis so that primary care providers within office input of the changes to the state and states are required to determine the settings). We would expect the state to CMS. The commenters noted that percentage of which Medicaid payments include Medicaid managed care aggregate numbers would not allow an represent other public or private payer payment rates in these comparisons to adequate review of potential access rates for the services subject to the the extent practical. issues and would lack the specificity to access monitoring review plan Comment: Some commenters identify any needed corrective action for requirements by provider type and site suggested CMS specify that children’s individual types of Medicaid services. of service. access to primary care, specialty care Some commenters suggested that CMS Comment: Some commenters agreed and oral health services must be analyze rates for each code and that that the proposed use of fee percentiles included in the first reviews conducted committees be established to determine as an effective way of representing the by states. Additionally, other if rates for each code are sufficient. distribution of fees charged by providers commenters suggested that CMS should Additionally, commenters stressed the in a particular area. specify that children’s access to dental importance that states gather and Response: We are revising the services must be included in the first compare similar data sets from regulations to require that states review review conducted by states, as HHS has commercial insurers, Medicare, and percentage comparisons of Medicaid placed considerable emphasis on this other payers within their state. payment rates to other public or private issue and 5 years is an eternity in the Response: We approve states’ rate health coverage rates within geographic lifetime of a child. methodologies for compliance with areas of the state. Response: This final rule with regulation and statute, but generally do Comment: Many commenters comment period requires that the access not approve individual service rates suggested that CMS require states to monitoring review plan include a unless a state presents a final rate, or a compare Medicaid payment rates to the asabaliauskas on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with RULES review of primary care services; fee schedule, as the output of a rate provider’s actual cost as part of the physician specialist services; behavioral methodology. This final rule with access review. Some commenters stated health services, including mental health comment period does not change that CMS should specifically clarify that and substance abuse disorder treatment; policy or imply that CMS will review provider rates need not be tied to, or pre- and post-natal obstetric services individual rates for sufficiency. based on provider costs, while others including labor and delivery, home Reviewing individual rates within a fee suggested CMS should mandate that health services, and for services where schedule would not necessarily provide rates meet a certain percentage of either payment rates have been reduced a better determination of whether the provider cost. One commenter suggested VerDate Sep<11>2014 19:43 Oct 30, 2015 Jkt 238001 PO 00000 Frm 00018 Fmt 4701 Sfmt 4700 E:\FR\FM\02NOR3.SGM 02NOR3 Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 211 / Monday, November 2, 2015 / Rules and Regulations 67593 that CMS should require the access proposed requirements, we considered 4. Stratification Requirements reviews to account for average comments related to burden in Comment: Some commenters customary provider charges and also the developing this final rule with comment supported the proposed stratification extent to which providers in the period. The requirements of the final requirement for the access review, while geographic area are requiring these rule with comment period are not other commenters opposed such a charges to be paid in full. Still other predicated upon a significant change in requirement. commenters stated that healthcare payment policy, but whether the Response: After careful consideration, charges have virtually no relationship to proposed changes could negatively we are not finalizing this requirement. the true cost of procuring services, and impact access. Where there is confusion Section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act does therefore, are not a valid reference for over whether a change may cause harm not specify that beneficiaries have comparison. to access to care, we will work with access to care within specific provider Response: The framework described states to make a determination. ownership categories, but rather that in this final rule with comment period Comment: Some commenters stated access be viewed within the service addresses how states can demonstrate that Medicaid payment rates should be categories as a whole and within and monitor sufficient access to care as reviewed and analyzed as new required by section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the technology is introduced into the associated geographic areas. We Act. Neither provider cost nor charges is medical community to determine understand that payments do vary based a required review element in meeting whether access to the new technology is on provider ownership status and we the requirements of the final rule with limited. Commenters also suggested that intend to review those differences comment period. We acknowledge and medical conditions affecting Medicaid outside of the scope of this final rule support states’ efforts in working toward populations may develop that with comment period. delivery system reforms that promote substantially affect the need for certain 5. Access Review Timeframe more effective care and lower cost. We covered items and services, such as the Comment: Several commenters have issued several guidance letters on rise in HIV infection in the early 1980s. addressed the timeframe of the on-going reform models that can be supported The commenters concluded that any reviews and offered alternatives to the under the Medicaid program and, similar health-related changes should timeframe in the May 6, 2011 proposed within those letters, have cautioned that require review of provider payments access to care should be considered as rates to ensure continued access to rule. One commenter suggested part of a reform model. necessary items and services; this is not requiring that each state complete a full Comment: Commenters suggested that reflected in the proposed 5-year review program access review by the end of the the regulations be revised to address structure. second full calendar year following the ‘‘payment’’ as referring to both Response: Our intent is to define a effective date of the regulations, request individual health care service rates, as process by which states can effectively that all services be reviewed every 3 well as payments for care and services and consistently measure beneficiary years, and that one-third of all services on an aggregate basis such as total access to medical services in the be reviewed each year. Other payments for all care and services or Medicaid program. To the extent that commenters suggested that rates be total payments for all acute hospital care advances in technology and/or reviewed more frequently than every 5 and services. unforeseen challenges arise that have an years and suggested various alternative Response: This rule only addresses impact on the delivery of care in the for more frequent review. While other how states can demonstrate and monitor Medicaid program, we expect these commenters suggested that yearly sufficient access to care as required by types of changes to be considered when reviews are excessive without a change section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act, which reviewing access to care but only to the in payments and that it is more describes payment rates for Medicaid extent that it increases or decreases appropriate to monitor access after care and services. The requirements access to services as established in implementation of rate changes to contained in this final rule with section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act. As determine the impact of the change. comment period set forth a framework such, this final rule with comment Response: The timeframe outlined in for states to use to demonstrate their period offers flexibility to states to the May 6, 2011 proposed rule was payment rate methodologies are demonstrate access within the context designed to ensure a timely review of sufficient to ensure access. We of each state’s local health care delivery access, while accommodating the time, appreciate the comment but, as system. manpower, and data constraints of state previously discussed, we are not Comment: We received some Medicaid agencies. After considering requiring states to review access for comments indicating that establishing a the public comments, we have each individual item, service, or standard equivalent to commercial determined that a full program review procedure payment rate. insurance would need to be established over 5 years is too burdensome. Comment: One commenter expressed by the Congress and doing so through Therefore, we have revised this concern that the proposed requirement the proposed rule is an administrative requirement to include a review of: in § 447.203(b)(3) is unreasonable and expansion of the Medicaid entitlement, Primary care services; physician impedes the efficient operation of the one that may or may not be achievable specialist services; behavioral health Medicaid program because all changes even if substantial increases in state and services (including mental health and in payment policy can be considered federal program funding were possible. substance abuse disorder treatment); ‘‘significant’’. Response: We did not propose to pre- and post-natal obstetric services asabaliauskas on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with RULES Response: Reviews of access to care establish a standard equivalent to including labor and delivery; and home are necessary to ensure the state commercial insurance. Rather, this rule health services; services where either Medicaid program is providing will require states to make comparisons payment rates have been reduced or sufficient services to its beneficiaries. of Medicaid service rates to private or restructured; and services for which a We discussed the reasons for issuing public health payer rates. We are aware higher than usual volume of this regulation at length in the May 6, that a number of states already perform beneficiaries, providers, or stakeholders 2011 proposed rule. Although there is these types of calculations for varying have raised access to care issues. The some burden associated with the administrative purposes. ongoing reviews will be conducted VerDate Sep<11>2014 19:43 Oct 30, 2015 Jkt 238001 PO 00000 Frm 00019 Fmt 4701 Sfmt 4700 E:\FR\FM\02NOR3.SGM 02NOR3 67594 Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 211 / Monday, November 2, 2015 / Rules and Regulations every 3 years and intend to measure the methodology changes made through Response: We agree with the current status of access to services SPAs, as well as ongoing feedback from commenters though the list of services within the state. We chose to require beneficiaries, providers and other that commenters suggested that states that states conduct the ongoing reviews stakeholders. prioritize would have required levels of every 3 years based on comments Comment: Some commenters state effort similar to what we proposed. indicating that the 5 year proposed suggested as an alternative to the For the reasons discussed in more detail review periods were too infrequent to proposed timeline, that states should be above, we will require that the access adequately capture changes in access to required to conduct a comprehensive monitoring review plan include a care. In addition, SPAs reducing and public access review within 180 review of primary care services; payment rates for the services other than days prior to submission of the physician specialist services; behavioral those mentioned above must be proposed payment rate change. health services, including mental health submitted with an analysis of access to Response: We believe that the changes and substance abuse disorder treatment; care and then reviewed for a minimum in access to care that occur within 180 pre- and post-natal obstetric services period of 3 years. States may also select days between a review and SPA including labor and delivery; home additional services to review at their submission and a year between review health services, and for services where discretion. and submission would be negligible. either payment rates have been reduced Comment: Some commenters Furthermore, states are required to or restructured or where a significantly requested that CMS require states to monitor access ongoing for 3 years once higher than usual level of beneficiary, post their access review online by a rate reduction goes into effect so any provider or stakeholder access January 15th each year since access access to care issues that arise between complaints have been received. States reviews are to be completed by January the initial review and SPA submission may also select additional services to 1st. will be detected through state review at their discretion. Response: We consider the monitoring procedures. completion date to be synonymous with 6. Special Provisions for Proposed Comment: We received some Provider Rate Reductions the date the access monitoring review comments suggesting that the regulation plan should be published or readily Comment: We received many carve out a separate effective date of comments on the requirement that made available upon request. We have January 1, 2013 for the first rate review access monitoring review plans revised the final rule with comment required under the regulation and the accompany SPAs that proposed rate period to require that states issue the subsequent rate reviews be conducted reductions. Many commenters suggested access monitoring review plan by July 1 of each review year. This coincides with every 5 years thereafter. Other that we modify the access review the beginning of most state fiscal years commenters stated that CMS should procedures to require baseline access and allows states sufficient time after require states to begin the access analysis prior to taking action to reduce the issuance of this final rule with reviews as soon as possible. Some provider rates, ongoing monitoring comment period to conduct the first commenters stated that CMS could processes to detect problems, and review for service categories subject to require states to begin reviews on the corrective action when problems are ongoing review. sooner of the first day of the state fiscal detected. Some of the commenters Comment: Many commenters year or the first day of the calendar year stated that CMS should suspend the rate suggested revisions to the timeline for after the final rule with comment period reduction until corrective measures are review that would require states to becomes effective. taken. Other commenters requested that conduct access studies and monitor Response: We had proposed that CMS eliminate the requirement that program changes on an annual basis. states make available the first access proposed rate changes be accompanied For example, commenters suggested data reviews beginning January 1 of the by an analysis of access or face CMS require states to conduct annual year beginning no sooner than 12 disapproval. reviews and compare information from months after the effective date of the Response: In the May 6, 2011 year-to-year and analyze trends, final rule with comment period. Based proposed rule, we discussed the basis averages, and notations of changes in on comments regarding the delay in and reasoning behind requiring access access to care over time. access review information, we are information in making SPA decisions. Response: We agree that revising the proposed timeframe and This final rule with comment period comprehensive studies of access are will require states to publish the access requires that states conduct baseline important. However, we have also monitoring review plans by July 1 after reviews and monitoring procedures considered concerns from states over the effective date of this final rule with when implementing rate reductions or the burden associated with the data comment period. The access monitoring restructuring rates in ways that may requirements discussed in the May 6, review plans must be updated by July negatively affect access to care. 2011 proposed rule and the resources 1st every 3 years thereafter. As Consistent with commenters’ that states estimate would be required to discussed, this timeframe corresponds suggestions, this rule requires that states collect and analyze access information with the start of state fiscal years for the conduct baseline reviews and ongoing for all covered Medicaid services. majority of states and provides states monitoring of access data to ensure Therefore, to comply with section with time to gather the necessary data compliance with section 1902(a)(30)(A) 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act, we focus and resources to perform accurate and of the Act. access review requirements on ongoing detailed access reviews. Based on feedback from states that asabaliauskas on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with RULES reviews of primary care services, Comment: Several commenters ongoing 5-year access reviews for all physician specialist services, mental suggested that priority be given to services would overly burden state health services, pre- and post-natal certain services for which access agencies, we determined a process obstetric services including labor and problems have been documented. The similar to the commenters’ to be the delivery, and home health services and list of services included physician appropriate regulatory framework. Such to focus state efforts on review and services, dental services, mental health a process will include a review of monitoring access to care for all other services, and many specialty care primary care services, physician Medicaid services specific to rate services. specialist services, behavioral health VerDate Sep<11>2014 19:43 Oct 30, 2015 Jkt 238001 PO 00000 Frm 00020 Fmt 4701 Sfmt 4700 E:\FR\FM\02NOR3.SGM 02NOR3 Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 211 / Monday, November 2, 2015 / Rules and Regulations 67595 services including mental health, pre- providers, and that the requirement be methodology restructuring or only those and post-natal obstetric services comparability to the private sector. that result in rate reductions. including labor and delivery, home Response: Section 1902(a)(30)(A) of Response: A state must develop health services and for services where the Act requires that payments be procedures to monitor continued access either payment rates have been reduced sufficient to enlist enough providers so to care after implementation of state or restructured or for which a that care and services are available plan service rate reduction or payment significantly higher than usual level of under the plan at least to the extent that restructuring that may reduce access to beneficiary, provider or stakeholder such care and services are available to care. The procedures must define a complaints have been received. While the general population in the geographic periodic review of state determined the suspension of a rate reduction may area. We expect states to address access indices that will serve to demonstrate be an appropriate corrective action, we issues, whether through a formal sustained service access, consistent with will not require a specific approach to corrective action plan, or if more efficiency, economy, and quality of care. addressing access issues within this appropriate, on a case by case basis. Comment: One commenter requested rule, and we will work with states on Comment: Some commentators that CMS clarify how a state would appropriate remedies given the facts and requested more specific requirements demonstrate sustained access after nuances of particular situations. We for monitoring access after a rate implementation of a SPA that reduces or intend to work with states to monitor reduction is implemented, including the restructures rates. access data and determine an request that CMS set specific timeframes Response: The monitoring procedures appropriate course of action should required in § 447.203(b)(6)(ii) require for the required monitoring procedures. access issues arise. that a state develop procedures to Response: Section 447.203(b)(6)(ii) monitor access after implementation of 7. Compliance With Access allows the state flexibility to develop a SPA that results in rate reduction or Requirements access monitoring strategies. While payment restructuring. Such monitoring monitoring procedures are required of Comment: Some commenters should include enrollee needs, states, each state may develop the suggested that CMS approve an access availability of care and providers, monitoring plan that best accommodates utilization of services, and service review within 90 days of receipt and if its data and other resources, while still the review is deemed unacceptable, that payment information. States must adequately monitoring access to conduct reviews periodically over a CMS disapprove a SPA submittal or take services. This final rule with comment corrective action to address inadequate minimum 3-year period following period incorporates a specified time implementation of a SPA that reduces or access to care. period of 3 years for monitoring Response: While we will not formally restructures rates. following the implementation of a SPA Comment: Several commenters approve or disapprove access reviews, that reduces or restructures payment recommended changes to the review all reviews must include the elements rates. and monitoring requirements of the described in the regulations and we will review the plans using this standard. Comment: Some commenters proposed rule. Some commenters We will not approve SPAs that are suggested that we provide clear and requested that CMS provide additional unsupported by data and the processes broad discretion to states in managing flexibility to states in establishing described in this final rule with rates, and a clear path toward expedient appropriate methods for measuring and comment period, and will pursue approval of a rate reduction, provided monitoring beneficiary access to compliance action should a state fail to that the states have mechanisms in services. Other commenters suggested conduct the baseline access data place to monitor and correct adverse that states should periodically review reviews. impacts to access. and monitor access and states determine Response: This final rule with the measures of access and beneficiary 8. Monitoring Procedures comment period continues to offer information included in such reviews Comment: Some commenters states broad discretion to manage rates allowing states to take a more balanced suggested that we revise the access and includes procedures to ensure that approach to evaluating access. demonstration to state that states must proposed changes in the program do not Response: This final rule with ‘‘consider’’ the access impact and violate section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act. comment period offers states significant commit to ongoing monitoring when Comment: Some commenters flexibility in determining the measures appropriate. suggested that CMS should define in the of access and beneficiary information Response: We agree that states should regulation its role in post- included in the review as the conduct ongoing monitoring efforts on implementation monitoring. commenter suggests. However, we access to care and included oversight Response: We will review access to believe that a defined time period for and monitoring procedures within this care data each time a state submits a rate completion of the access to care reviews final rule with comment period. To the reduction or restructuring of payment allows the collected data to serve as an extent that states find access to care SPA or any time the agency is made acceptable comparative analytical tool issues as part of the access monitoring aware of access to care issues. The over a number of years whenever states review plan processes that are ongoing monitoring procedures in the regulation proposes to restructure or reduce rates or associated with specific rate actions, are intended to be used to inform the or when beneficiaries alert the agency to we expect the state to take actions to state and federal government of the access to care issues. Timely reviews remediate those issues. If a state does overall status of access to care in their also allow states to demonstrate ongoing asabaliauskas on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with RULES not take remediation actions, the state program. In addition, CMS may use the compliance with the section would not be in compliance with the access to care data to monitor the 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act. Section statute and would be at risk of losing adequacy of rates over time, and may 447.203(b)(6)(ii) will require states to FFP. use it to address areas in which access develop ongoing monitoring procedures Comment: Commenters requested that is insufficient. through which they periodically review CMS define access issues and action Comment: One commenter requested indices to measure sustained access to plans as system-wide rather than case- that CMS clarify if the monitoring care. Our goal is to provide a consistent by-case as identified by beneficiaries or requirements apply to all payment path for all states to document access to VerDate Sep<11>2014 19:43 Oct 30, 2015 Jkt 238001 PO 00000 Frm 00021 Fmt 4701 Sfmt 4700 E:\FR\FM\02NOR3.SGM 02NOR3 67596 Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 211 / Monday, November 2, 2015 / Rules and Regulations care consistent with the Act but to also the beneficiary and provider feedback Comment: Some commenters allow states flexibility to measure and mechanisms must be available to Tribes suggested advocate groups should also monitor access within state means. and Indian Health providers. In have an opportunity for ongoing input Comment: Some commenters stated addition, consistent with Executive which should be differentiated from the that states should be required to use the Order 13175, HHS Policy, and the CMS mechanism provided for public input. same methodology to measure access Tribal Consultation Policy, states are Response: We understand that once a rate reduction is put into place required to consult with tribes to receive advocate groups currently have many so that a fair comparison of the impact their input. We also encourage states to opportunities to provide feedback to of the rate reduction may be made. develop specialized mechanisms that states on Medicaid issues and offer Response: We generally agree that would be responsive to input from important insights for state consistency in a state’s methodology beneficiaries from other populations consideration. This final rule with may allow for better comparisons of that have particular access concerns. comment period offers advocates and access over a period of time; however, Comment: Several commenters other stakeholders an opportunity to states may need to make adjustments requested that states or CMS establish provide feedback on specific state rate and changes to the analysis based on advisory groups to help determine actions through the public process modifications of service delivery whether state payment rates sufficiently procedures. In addition, we would systems, payment rates or other program provide for access to care. Commenters expect that individuals advocating on changes that may affect access to care. suggested that the groups be comprised behalf of a Medicaid beneficiary would States and CMS may also determine that of a variety of stakeholders, such as have access to the mechanism for an analysis is not feasible to conduct or beneficiaries, beneficiary advocacy ongoing beneficiary feedback described does not accurately demonstrate access groups, clinicians, and provider trade in this rule. after conducting a review For these organizations. reasons, we are not restricting states 10. Addressing Access Questions and Response: Current § 431.12 requires Remediation of Access Issues from making modifications to their that state Medicaid agencies establish Comment: We received several methodology when the changes intend Medical care advisory committees that comments regarding the subsequent to improve the analysis or present include provider and beneficiary actions if an access issue is identified. reasonable alternative approaches to participation. We are finalizing the Many commenters were in support of reviewing access to care. requirement that states have a the requirement for states to submit a Comment: Some commenters mechanism for ongoing provider corrective action plan, while many suggested, as part of monitoring feedback, similar to the process for commenters were opposed to such a identified access issues, an annual ongoing beneficiary feedback. This requirement. Commenters stated review and public town hall meetings could include the Medical care advisory opposition and expressed concern about should be implemented. Response: We considered requiring committee required at § 431.12. the lack of ‘‘threshold’’ for the scope or that states conduct a public process for Comment: Commenters requested that severity of an access issue that would monitoring activities similar to that we clarify the decision to require require the submission of a corrective which is described for the submission of ongoing beneficiary feedback when action plan. While some commenters SPA that reduce rate or restructure other requirements of the proposed rule, sought clarification from CMS, others payment in circumstances when the such as the public process, involve implied that the state should be able to changes could result in access issues. providers and other stakeholders. In define such threshold, especially in This final rule with comment period addition, commenters requested that instances that are clearly compliant requires states to have mechanisms for CMS clarify the standard against which with the statutory standard. Some ongoing beneficiary, provider, and other we would require states to consider commenters suggested that CMS should stakeholder feedback and those input from beneficiaries and other not approve a SPA or permit a payment mechanisms should ensure that state stakeholders. A commenter noted that reduction to be imposed until corrective monitoring activities are effective and the level of input and magnitude of action measures are taken. Other were properly developed. proposed SPA changes are not always commenters suggested that CMS should correlated. affirmatively require states to suspend 9. Mechanisms for Ongoing Input Response: After considering the or reverse a payment reduction if an Comment: Many commenters comments received, we are including in access issue is identified. A few supported the requirement that states this final rule with comment period the commenters urged CMS to impose have ongoing mechanisms (hotlines, requirement that states consider sanctions on states that fail to remedy surveys, ombudsman, etc.) for provider feedback similar to the access issues timely. Still other beneficiary input on access to care. requirement for ongoing beneficiary commenters requested that CMS remove Some of the commenters suggested that feedback. This could be accomplished any references to remedies for access we add a specific mechanism for through state Medical care advisory issues that do not involve increasing feedback from tribes, tribal committees, logging of issues raised by payment rates. Commenters also organizations, and Indian Health providers, or other means. States must discussed the 90-day timeframe to Providers. incorporate feedback from beneficiaries submit corrective action plan after Response: We appreciate the support and providers are part of the access discovery. Some concerns were raised for the requirement that states have an monitoring review plan procedures. that the 90-day timeframe was overly asabaliauskas on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with RULES ongoing mechanism for beneficiary There is no threshold or standard that hasty, while others thought it feedback. We have also considered we will apply to stakeholder feedback; appropriate. comments from providers and provider rather, the requirements will assure that Response: After careful consideration organizations and will require that states understand access to care of all of the comments received, we are states have a similar mechanism for concerns from the community as they finalizing § 447.203(b)(8) requiring a provider feedback. Tribes and Indian arise and consider that information as state to develop and submit a corrective Health providers are an important part they make changes to their Medicaid action plan to CMS within 90 days of of the Medicaid community and both program. discovery of an access deficiency. The VerDate Sep<11>2014 19:43 Oct 30, 2015 Jkt 238001 PO 00000 Frm 00022 Fmt 4701 Sfmt 4700 E:\FR\FM\02NOR3.SGM 02NOR3 Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 211 / Monday, November 2, 2015 / Rules and Regulations 67597 submitted action plan must aim to Response: We are finalizing § 447.203 however, the term ‘‘modified’’ is not remediate the access deficiency within that will require states to publish, or defined in the rule. 12 months. This requirement ensures promptly make available upon request, Response: We believe that in the that the access deficiency is addressed the access monitoring review plan. context of the regulatory language and in a timely manner while allowing the Within the access monitoring review we are confirming here that modified state time to address underlying causes plan, a state must monitor continued means to reduce or restructure Medicaid of the access issue, be it payment rates, access to care following rate reduction service payment rates in circumstances provider participation, etc. Section or payment restructuring. when the changes could result in access 447.203(b)(8) clarifies that states have a Comment: A commenter suggested issues. To the extent that states are number of options to address access to that CMS should implement a unsure whether a change could result in care issues. These remediation efforts mechanism to fast-track any substantive access issues, we will work with states can include but are not limited to: access concerns that are uncovered individually to make a determination. increasing payment rates; improving during state-level review; states should Comment: One commenter suggested outreach to providers; reducing barriers not be permitted to wait until the start that CMS outline the remedies that to provider enrollment; providing of the next calendar year to fix a beneficiaries and providers will have if additional transportation to services; or substantive problem. access issues are discovered and the improving care coordination. This is an Response: Once access issues are state proceeds with implementing a SPA acknowledgement that access to care is identified, the state will have 90 days to without regard to the issues. not always about payment rates but submit to CMS for review a corrective Response: This final rule with rather that when enough providers are action plan; the goal of this plan must comment period requires that states enlisted in the program, states may need be to resolve the identified access issues monitor access to care after to find ways to connect beneficiaries within 12 months. This timeframe has implementing Medicaid payment rate with the care and services they need. been developed to minimize the length reductions and identify and remediate Comment: Some commenters stated of time beneficiaries may experience issues that are found as a result of the that states need more than 12 months to decreased access while realistically access review and monitoring efforts. implement corrective action when accommodating a state’s resources, The rule also requires an ongoing access issues are discovered, whereas allowing sufficient time to address the mechanism for beneficiaries, providers, other commenters believed that underlying causes of identified access and other stakeholders to raise concerns allowing states 12 months to resolve the issues. over access to care. States are required issue was too long. Commenters stated Comment: Commenters raised to maintain a record of the volume and concerns that that the 12-month time concerns that the remediation process nature of the response to those frame attached to the corrective action could result in a SPA backlog because concerns. We expect that the monitoring plan could encourage longer-term states would need to address access procedures and mechanisms for ongoing measures, which may have an adverse issues before moving forward with state input will work together to raise effect on provider participation. One plan changes. ongoing access concerns. commenter stated the final rule should Response: State plan changes must recognize the potential need for state C. Medicaid Provider Participation and comply with statutory and regulatory legislative action to address identified Public Process To Inform Access to Care requirements. To the extent a state access issues and the 12-month (§ 447.204) identifies areas of inadequate access to timeframe could potentially be too short Medicaid services, we could not We received several comments that for a state to make these changes, approve any SPA that could potentially discussed concerns over the proposed especially in states with biennial impede access further. We will work changes to the public process legislative sessions. with states to address these issues on an requirements. Response: We are finalizing as needed basis. Comment: One commenter stated that § 447.203(b)(8) that requires a state to Comment: One commenter stated that the public process requirements are not develop and submit a corrective action the final rule should remove the enforceable because they are not a plan to CMS within 90 days of requirement for data gathering and focus specific requirement in statute. discovery of an access issue. The on monitoring and corrective action. Response: The purpose of this final submitted action plan must aim to The commenter further suggested that if, rule with comment period is to provide remediate the access deficiency within and when, access issues are found, a states with standard processes that 12 months. This timeframe has been state should develop and implement a consider and document access to care in developed to minimize the length of corrective action plan. These activities the Medicaid program consistent with time beneficiaries may experience would be supplemented through section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act. We decreased access while realistically ongoing mechanisms for obtaining respectfully disagree that the proposed accommodating a state’s resources and beneficiary input, using hotlines, changes to the public process are not allowing sufficient time to address the surveys and other tools. contemplated within the requirements underlying causes of identified access Response: We have revised the of that section. The regulatory guidance issues. Although longer-term measures requirements of this final rule with within this rule relies upon public may be needed to fully address the comment period to have a greater focus interaction to, in part, gauge and underlying causes of an access issue, it on monitoring and corrective action. document whether beneficiaries and asabaliauskas on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with RULES is imperative that a corrective action Data gathering is essential to these stakeholders raise concerns that plan aim to resolve the access issue activities and, as previously discussed, proposed rate changes will have a within 12 months, in the interest of we are focusing the data review efforts meaningful effect on beneficiary needs preserving adequate beneficiary access. in consideration of state burden. and the availability of care and Comment: Commenters suggested that Comment: A commenter noted that providers. We maintain that such we require states to publicly report and the May 6, 2011 proposed rule states information is necessary to understand address any decline in access to services that CMS may disapprove a SPA if a rate state rate proposals and inform CMS following rate reductions. is ‘‘modified’’ without an access review; approval actions. VerDate Sep<11>2014 19:43 Oct 30, 2015 Jkt 238001 PO 00000 Frm 00023 Fmt 4701 Sfmt 4700 E:\FR\FM\02NOR3.SGM 02NOR3 67598 Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 211 / Monday, November 2, 2015 / Rules and Regulations Comment: Commenters noted that the public process should include: the implement on an ongoing basis. To May 6, 2011 proposed rule may create proposed SPA; material submitted by overcome these issues, commenters a timing problem for states by requiring the state Medicaid agency in connection wrote that the final rule should clarify the public process to occur prior to the with the proposed SPA; the information that states have flexibility in monitoring submission of a SPA. Commenters that CMS reviews to approve a SPA; and access to care and recommend that we anticipate that the public process does information on how interested parties remove the requirements of ongoing not allow sufficient time for states to may promptly obtain such materials. ‘‘beneficiary input’’ since the public prepare and submit SPAs. Commenters Commenters also requested that all state process and ongoing beneficiary also stated that the public process plans and proposed SPAs should be feedback mechanisms are duplicative. requirement increases the time it takes posted on state Web sites or the CMS Response: This final rule with to submit a SPA by at least 30 days. As Web site. comment period does not require a an alternative, some commenters Response: This final rule with particular mechanism for states to suggested that the public process occur comment period does not address the receive feedback from beneficiaries and prior to the effective date of the SPA public process under section other stakeholders that are affected by consistent with the public notice 1902(a)(13)(A) of the Act that is required Medicaid rate-setting. The preamble to requirement. for institutional rate setting. This rule the May 6, 2011 proposed rule Response: Under the processes addresses only the procedures necessary specifically discussed state flexibilities required by this final rule with to document compliance with section and the ability of states to rely on comment period, to the extent that a 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act to assure that current processes to demonstrate access state wishes to change payment rates provider payment rates are sufficient for to care to the extent that states already that may affect access, the state will beneficiary access to care. Those have such processes in place. In this need to be up to date in following the procedures must include a public input rule, we are implementing a standard access review procedures and public mechanism for comments on access to set of procedures, including feedback input mechanisms. If the state does not care. This final rule with comment from stakeholders, that all states must have the required access review data, or period provides states with considerable follow to document access to care has not recently prepared an access flexibility to determine appropriate consistent with section 1902(a)(30)(A) of analysis, there could be a delay in its public input mechanisms. We suggest the Act. States develop the particular ability to submit an approvable SPA that interested parties work with states mechanisms to enact the procedures submission. We note that this rule does to ensure that these mechanisms are either consistent with current practices not affect the timing provisions for SPA effective. or in other ways that meet beneficiary effective dates. States may make SPAs Comment: Commenters suggested that needs and address access concerns effective as early as the first day within CMS be more prescriptive in how states within each state. The public process the quarter in which the SPA is should conduct the public process requirements for institutional rates and submitted so even a 30-day delay based upon a proven methodology. One the ongoing public input mechanisms should rarely change the proposed commenter suggested a formal serve different purposes. The ongoing effective date of a state’s SPA action. ‘‘Listserv’’ for comments similar to the public input mechanisms apply to all Furthermore, we also note that states are federal proposed rule listserv for public services, are not limited to input already subject to a similar process access to comments. A commenter regarding proposed changes in rates, related to conducting notice prior to requested that families, caregivers, and and includes a clear opportunity for SPA submissions through the Tribal providers be able to represent their beneficiary feedback on access. The Notification processes established under concerns to the Medicaid agencies and beneficiary feedback mechanism allows section 1916 of the Act. have processes in place that allow them states to understand any access to care Comment: Commenters stated that the to represent the voice of Medicaid concerns in real time as they occur. We proposed changes were overly beneficiaries where appropriate. respectfully disagree that those efforts prescriptive and that CMS should allow Response: While we continue to allow are duplicative. individual states to determine how to for states to determine exact procedures Comment: Several commenters interact with stakeholders on changes to for soliciting input from beneficiaries recommended that CMS strengthen the Medicaid payment methodologies. and stakeholders, we appreciate the regulation to state that any SPAs Response: We provided states with suggestion that states could use a submitted without having completed the flexibility to determine the listserv to reach its intended audience. the public process requirement would appropriate mechanism to solicit input The mechanisms for ongoing beneficiary be disapproved. A commenter from beneficiaries and affected feedback required in this final rule with specifically proposed that the regulatory stakeholders. States that have these comment period will allow beneficiaries text be modified so that CMS ‘‘must’’ mechanisms in place are under no and stakeholders to voice concerns disapprove a SPA if submitted without requirement to change their approach. related to access to care in multiple a state meeting the public process This final rule with comment period forums, such as hotlines and requirements described at § 447.204(b). requires that a state document ombudsman programs. We agree that Response: The regulations require that beneficiary and stakeholder feedback beneficiary and stakeholder feedback is states provide a mechanism for public and use that information to inform how vital to understanding access to care input when reducing or restructuring they evaluate access to care to meet the both as it pertains to specific rate Medicaid payment rates in statutory requirement. This information proposals and on an ongoing basis. circumstances that could result in asabaliauskas on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with RULES will both inform CMS’s approval actions Comment: Some commenters offered access issues. We retain the authority to and serve as the state’s public record for concerns that the specific requirements consider the circumstances of and compliance with section 1902(a)(30)(A) of public input is an unclear process content of a SPA submittal to determine of the Act. and that it is difficult for states to obtain its compliance with statutory and Comment: We received many stakeholder input on all services. regulatory requirements before making comments that requested states provide Commenters further stated that public approval decisions. specific information as part of the process creates a substantial Comment: One commenter wrote that public process. Commenters stated that administrative burden for the state to discretionary language in § 447.204(b) VerDate Sep<11>2014 19:43 Oct 30, 2015 Jkt 238001 PO 00000 Frm 00024 Fmt 4701 Sfmt 4700 E:\FR\FM\02NOR3.SGM 02NOR3 Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 211 / Monday, November 2, 2015 / Rules and Regulations 67599 ‘‘the agency may disapprove a proposed reduction of 10 percent or more, a CMS- and/or a change in the scope or SPA using the authority . . . or may defined threshold; or any rate reduction definition of Medicaid benefits. take a compliance action’’ could enjoin or alteration in reimbursement methods. Response: We did not propose an a rate alteration or reduction based Many commenters also suggested that expansion of the public notice solely on the fact that the SPA is not yet CMS should delete the term requirement to include changes in CMS-approved. ‘‘significant’’ altogether. coverage policy and the public notice Response: As we indicated above, we Response: The public notice regulation discusses notice of changes do not intend in this rulemaking to requirement informs providers of in statewide methods and standards for change the requirements relating to the changes in state plan methods and setting payment rates. Since this rule effective date of approvable SPAs. How standards that have either a positive or addresses policies related to section these requirements are applied and negative impact on rate-setting. As 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act, which is interpreted in judicial review in the discussed in the May 6, 2011 proposed specific to state plan service rates and federal courts is an issue that is beyond rule, it is difficult to determine a access to care, we are not addressing the scope of this rulemaking. threshold of a significant change in changes to coverage policies at this Comment: Several commenters payment methods and standards since time. suggested requiring states to implement the determination to participate or Comment: One commenter offered an ongoing input process for every continue to participate in Medicaid is that the public notice requirement change, regardless of the scope. Other provider specific. This final rule with should be amended to tie in with the commenters noted the rule creates a comment period should reduce the public process requirement described in significant administrative burden for administrative and financial burden of the May 6, 2011 proposed rule. The states and stated it would be an issuing notice by allowing states to commenter offered that since the new inefficient use of limited resources in publish on state agency Web site. In public process is required prior to a situations where states are making consideration of this and comments state submitting a SPA, the process minor changes. The commenters from providers requesting the removal should tie in with the requirements set requested that CMS work with states to of the term ‘‘significant’’ and the past forth in § 447.205 as to how notice define a threshold that would trigger the ambiguity in interpreting whether should be given. need for beneficiary input. The Response: The public process and notice is required, we are removing the commenters also recommended that public notice requirements serve term ‘‘significant’’ in this final rule with CMS adopt language for such a process different purposes. The public notice comment period. Aside from the applies to any changes in state plan similar to that contained in the specific exceptions described in the methods and standards, and is proposed ‘‘Monitoring Access’’ regulation, notice will be required for all published 1 day prior to the effective provisions whereby the state is able to changes in state plan methods and date of a Medicaid SPA. The public define the procedures and process. Response: The requirements in this standards with the effective date of this notice informs the public of a proposed final rule with comment period for final rule with comment period. change in Medicaid rate-setting or public input allow states flexibility to Comment: A commenter suggested policy without necessarily considering design public input mechanisms that that the public notice regulation public feedback as part of the are appropriate for state-specific describe requirements specific to tribal policymaking process. The public circumstances. Considering that there is consultation. process requirement provides so much variability in the Medicaid Response: While the May 6, 2011 opportunity for the public to provide program and the delivery of Medicaid proposed rule did not address tribal input into determining beneficiary services, CMS is concerned that consultation, the CMS tribal access to care. defining the significance of a rate consultation requirements were detailed Comment: A few commenters reduction or payment restructuring in policy in the November 17, 2011 objected to the use of web-based before a state institutes a beneficiary document entitled ‘‘CMS Tribal publications as an option to issue public feedback mechanism would undermine Consultation Policy.’’ The policy notice. One commenter cited a number the inclusion of the process in this incorporates provision in the American of reasons for the opposition, including: regulation. Many states have indicated Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 The benefit of printed notice over to CMS through other venues that the (Recovery Act) and the Children’s Internet notice; the fact that state Web feedback mechanism is a primary Health Insurance Program sites do not have strong readership indicator of access to care. Reauthorization Act of 2009 (CHIPRA). when compared to newspapers; limited Additional information regarding the access to the Internet in many poor and D. Public Notice of Changes in CMS Tribal Consultation Policy is rural communities; potential problems Statewide Methods and Standards for available at http://www.cms.gov/ that individuals with disabilities or Setting Payment Rates (§ 447.205) Outreach-and-Education/American- illness may have with using the Comment: We received comments Indian-Alaska-Native/AIAN/ Internet; lack of assurance that states that suggested various thresholds for Consultation.html. CMS will continue will maintain Internet sites sufficiently; significant changes and removal of the to consult with Tribal leaders on the and difficulty in archiving web-based term significant from the public notice delivery of health care for American publications for courts, historians, requirement. Some commenters Indians/Alaska Natives (AI/AN) served researchers and archivists. The requested that states be allowed to by the Marketplace, Medicare, commenter stated that the proposal asabaliauskas on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with RULES define the term ‘‘significant’’ in the Medicaid, Children’s Health Insurance would leave the public with large gaps regulations, while others requested that Program (CHIP), or any other health care in public information. CMS define both the terms ‘‘significant’’ program funded by CMS and make Response: We have addressed many and ‘‘change’’ in the final rule. A updates to the policy as necessary. of the issues raised in the comment in number of commenters suggested Comment: One commenter offered this final rule with comment period. For thresholds for issuing public notice, that the public notice requirement instance, the rule provides that a state’s including: any reduction in payment; a should be expanded so that a ‘‘change’’ electronic publication must be regular reduction of 5 percent or more; a includes both a change in payment rates and known. This offers significant VerDate Sep<11>2014 19:43 Oct 30, 2015 Jkt 238001 PO 00000 Frm 00025 Fmt 4701 Sfmt 4700 E:\FR\FM\02NOR3.SGM 02NOR3 67600 Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 211 / Monday, November 2, 2015 / Rules and Regulations advantages over paper-based that the regulation is intended to • Section 447.203(b)(3) changes the publications that may appear on any establish a process by which states analysis of payments to compare day in the calendar year and should monitor and measure access, rather than Medicaid payments as a percentage of alleviate some concerns over access to just the requirement that data is due to other public and private health payment the state Web sites. We agree that these CMS. rates within geographic areas of the Web sites must meet national standard • Section 447.203(b) is revised to state. We proposed that states compare to assure access to individuals with clarify that the states’ access monitoring Medicaid rates to provider charges and disabilities, and we are including this review plans must be developed in Medicare payments rates, the average requirement in the final rule with consultation with the state’s medical commercial payment rates or the comment period. Such standards are care advisory committee and submitted applicable allowable cost of Medicaid issued by the Architectural and to CMS, and will be reviewed by CMS. services. We also proposed that states Transportation Barriers Compliance This section has been revised to also stratify this information based on Board, and are referred to as ‘‘section indicate that the plans must be made provider ownership status. The final 508’’ standards. Alternatively, the available for public review and rule with comment period modified the World Wide Web Consortium’s Web comment for a period of no less than 30 requirement to streamline the Content Accessibility Guidelines days prior to the finalization of the plan information and allow states flexibility (WCAG) 2.0 Level AA standards would and submission to CMS. This allows in demonstrating the comparative also be considered as acceptable stakeholders time to comment on the analysis of the Medicaid payment rates national standard for Web site appropriateness of the specific measures as now defined in § 447.203(b)(1)(C). accessibility. For more information, see the state will use to determine that there The analysis required in the final rule the WCAG Web site at http:// is adequate access to Medicaid services. with comment reduces administrative www.w3.org/TR/WCAG20/. We also • Section 447.203(b)(1) is revised to burden associated with the proposed note that states currently have the state that the access monitoring review requirements while continuing to option to publish notice in a state plan must include the items specified provide a basis to understand how register that is similar to the Federal under the access review procedures, as Medicaid service payments compared to Register. Like the Federal Register, well as data sources, methodologies, other health payer payments. The many state registers are web-based and assumptions, trends and factors, and statute discusses the sufficiency of rates states already routinely use them to thresholds so that it is clear that in ensuring access to services; however, publish notice as an alternative to measurable data and analysis are as we have stated, rates may not be the paper-based publication. Therefore, we essential components of the access only or most important determinant of do not view the proposed flexibility as monitoring review plans. access in the Medicaid program. a significant departure from the current • Section 447.203(b)(1) is revised by • Section 447.203(b)(4) provides available options. Furthermore, we replacing the term ‘‘access review’’ with details on the review plan standards and believe that web-based publication will ‘‘access monitoring review plan’’ for the methodologies. To provide additional be as accessible to poor and rural reasons described above. We made clarity on types of information that communities as publication in a state clarifying changes to the monitoring states can use for these reviews, we have register. plan framework, specifying that reviews described suggested data elements for Comment: A commenter suggested must measure whether beneficiary state consideration including, but not that CMS reconsider the statement in needs are fully met, that the providers limited to: time and distance standards, § 447.205(b) which allows states to analyzed as part of the review are providers participating in the Medicaid change reimbursement as long as the enrolled in the program, and that the program, providers with open panels, change is made to conform to Medicare access analysis must demonstrate access providers accepting new Medicaid without public notice. The commenter to care within state specified geographic beneficiaries, service utilization stated that Medicare serves a areas. This is consistent with the patterns, identified beneficiary needs, significantly different population than statutory requirements. We also added a logs of beneficiary and provider Medicaid, has different conditions of requirement that the analysis describe feedback and suggestions for participation, and may be a relative low the characteristics of the beneficiary improvement, etc. While not payer of professional services in some population (including considerations for specifically required, these data locations. care, service, and payment variations for elements may be used by states to Response: The May 6, 2011 proposed pediatric and adult populations and for address the framework described in the rule did not contemplate modifying the individuals with disabilities). This is final rule with comment and represents exception to public notice in instances important to understand specific access the scope of the analysis that states where the change in Medicaid rates is needs within geographic areas. should conduct when reviewing access consistent with Medicare. At this time • Section 447.203(b)(2) is revised to to care. This responds to state and we are not adopting the commenter’s specify that beneficiary and provider provider concerns that the data reviews suggestion. input must be considered within the in the May 6, 2011 proposed rule lacked access monitoring review plans. We clear direction and standards for how IV. Provisions of the Final Regulations have also indicated potential sources of CMS will evaluate the sufficiency of a This final rule with comment period this information, such as the public rate- state’s access analysis. incorporates many of the provisions of setting process, medical care advisory • Section 447.203(b)(5) regarding the the May 6, 2011 proposed rule but also committees, and letters to state and ‘‘Access Review Timeline’’ has been asabaliauskas on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with RULES makes substantial modifications based federal officials. In addition to the data modified to clarify that states will need on responses to the public comments. the state will review, ongoing input to comply with the provision of this Those provisions of this final rule with from beneficiaries and providers will final rule with comment period. We comment period that differ from the help states understand access issues received many comments on the timing proposed rule are as follows: (and suggestions to improve access) on associated with the access data reviews. • The term ‘‘access review’’ is a real-time basis and potentially target In the final rule with comment, states replaced throughout by the term ‘‘access access improvements and remediation will be required to conduct the first monitoring review plan’’ to emphasize strategies. review for the specified subset of VerDate Sep<11>2014 19:43 Oct 30, 2015 Jkt 238001 PO 00000 Frm 00026 Fmt 4701 Sfmt 4700 E:\FR\FM\02NOR3.SGM 02NOR3 Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 211 / Monday, November 2, 2015 / Rules and Regulations 67601 ongoing services by July 1 after the state submits a SPA to reduce payment • In § 447.204(a), the term effective date of the final rule with or restructure payment in circumstances ‘‘recipients’’ is changed to comment period and update the when the changes could result in ‘‘beneficiaries.’’ analysis every 3 years by July 1 of each diminished access for the service or • Section 447.204(a)(1) is revised to review year. This corresponds with the services affected by the SPA. We have incorporate the baseline data review start of the fiscal year for most states further clarified in this paragraph that a requirement and as part of the and provides sufficient time to develop state must update the access monitoring information that states consider prior to the baseline monitoring plan. review plan within 12 months of the the submission of a SPA that proposes • Section 447.203(b)(5)(ii) was effective date of the submitted SPA. to reduce or restructure Medicaid revised to change the requirement that • Section 447.203(b)(6)(ii) which service payment rates. The results of the states review all covered services within describes monitoring procedures, has baseline data should inform states on a 5-year period to require that states been retitled ‘‘Monitoring procedures.’’ compliance with section 1902(a)(30)(A) review a subset of service categories at The monitoring process has been of the Act and project the potential least once every 3 years. Language has modified to require incorporation of impact of rate policies on access to care. also been added to this section to clarify access monitoring review plans and • Section 447.204(a)(2) is revised to that the states are required to ‘‘complete procedures, including period review indicate that prior to the submission of a full review of the data collected protocols and clearly defined measures a SPA that proposes to reduce or through the monitoring plan and thresholds, into the Medicaid state restructure Medicaid service payment methodology.’’ Paragraphs (b)(5)(ii)A, plan reimbursement methodology and rates, states must consider input from (ii)(B), (ii)(C), (ii)(D), and (ii)(E) were to require the first monitoring review to providers, as well as input from added to define the specific categories occur within a year after the effective beneficiaries and other affected of services that must be included in the date of a SPA rate change and continue stakeholders. This change was added access monitoring review plan. periodically for a period of at least 3 based on public comments that Paragraph (b)(5)(ii)(A) adds primary care years after the effective date of the SPA requested that feedback from providers services which includes physician, be considered in addition to authorizing the payment reduction or FQHC, clinic, dental care, etc. Paragraph beneficiaries as part of the public restructuring. (b)(5)(ii)(B) adds physician specialist process. • Section 447.203(b)(7) describes that • Section 447.204(b) is modified to services which includes services which states must have mechanisms for more clearly state that with any are provided via a referral from a ongoing beneficiary input on access to proposed SPA affecting payment rates, primary care provider, for example, care (through hotlines, surveys, states must provide the most recent cardiology, urology and radiology. ombudsman, or another equivalent access monitoring review plan, if any, Paragraph (b)(5)(ii)(C) adds behavioral mechanism). In response to concerns together with an analysis of the effect of health services which includes mental over individual access issues, we the change in payment rates on access, health, substance use disorder, etc. revised the provision to require states to and a specific analysis of the Paragraphs (b)(5)(ii)(D) adds pre- and post-natal obstetric services including promptly respond to public input with information and concerns expressed in labor and delivery. Paragraph an appropriate investigation, analysis, input from affected stakeholders. With (b)(5)(ii)(E) adds home health services. and response. The state is also required this change, is more clearly delineated These categories were added because to maintain records of the input and the that states must furnish the information they are frequently used services in nature of the state’s responses. While gathered under the procedures of the Medicaid, and access to these services CMS recognizes that services provided final rule with comment to CMS as part indicates that an individual has primary through home and community-based of the SPA submission process. We will sources of care, which may increase the waivers or 1115 demonstrations are not use this information to inform our SPA likelihood of having their care needs bound by the procedural requirements approval decisions. met. Paragraph (b)(5)(ii)(F) has been of this rule, states may understand • Section 447.204(c) and (d) were added clarify that additional services through these feedback mechanisms edited to more clearly describe CMS’s are to be added to the access monitoring access issues that may also arise for enforcement process if a state does not review plan when states reduce or individuals receiving services through submit the supporting documentation restructure rates. Paragraph (b)(5)(ii)(G) those delivery systems. described in the final rule with was added to require states to review • Section 447.203(b)(8) is revised to comment period along with SPAs. If a access for additional services based on clarify that states have a number of state does not submit the supporting a significantly higher than usual level of options to address access to care issues documentation, then the SPA would be beneficiary, provider, or stakeholder that are identified through the access disapproved. Likewise, if a state submits access complaints. Paragraph monitoring review plans. These a SPA and the access analysis does not (b)(5)(ii)(H) was added to allow remediation efforts can include but are demonstrate adequate access, the SPA additional types of services selected by not limited to: modifying payment rates; would be disapproved. To address the state. These modifications remove improving outreach to providers; access deficiencies, CMS may also take some burden from the states, reducing barriers to provider a compliance action using the particularly those that have enrollment; providing additional procedures described at § 430.35 of this continuously monitored Medicaid transportation to services; improving chapter which is specified at 447.204(d). access to care and do not have care coordination; or changing provider These edits were made for clarity and asabaliauskas on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with RULES widespread access issues. We are licensing or scope of practice polices. did not alter the agency’s proposed requesting comment on the revisions to This is an acknowledgement that access approach to enforcing the provisions of paragraphs (b)(5)(ii)(A) through (ii)(E). to care is not determined by payment the final rule with comment period. • Section 447.203(b)(6)(i) was revised rates alone but rather that when enough • Section 447.205(iv) was proposed to to clarify that access monitoring review providers are enlisted in the program allow states to issue public notice on plans shall be updated to incorporate an states may need to find ways to connect Web sites maintained by the single state access review as described under beneficiaries with the care and services agency. We revised this section to paragraph (b)(1) of this section when a that they need. provide some additional parameters VerDate Sep<11>2014 19:43 Oct 30, 2015 Jkt 238001 PO 00000 Frm 00027 Fmt 4701 Sfmt 4700 E:\FR\FM\02NOR3.SGM 02NOR3 67602 Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 211 / Monday, November 2, 2015 / Rules and Regulations around notice publications, requiring day notice in the Federal Register and In the May 6, 2011, proposed rule (76 that publication Web site must be easily solicit public comment before a FR 26352–26359), we solicited public reached from a hyperlink that provides collection of information requirement is comments on each of the section general information to beneficiaries and submitted to the Office of Management 3506(c)(2)(A) required issues for the providers and the state specific page on and Budget (OMB) for review and following information collection the federal Medicaid Web site and that approval. To fairly evaluate whether an requirements (ICRs). PRA-related the state ensures compliance with information collection should be comments were received as indicated national standards to ensure access to approved by OMB, section 3506(c)(2)(A) below in section C under ‘‘Comments individuals with disabilities (that is, of the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 Associated with the Collection of section 508 standards). Further, we requires that we solicit comment on the Information Requirements.’’ clarified that the notice must be issued following issues: as part of regular and known provider • The need for the information A. Wages bulletin updates and maintained on the collection and its usefulness in carrying state’s Web site for no less than 3 years. To derive average costs, we used data out the proper functions of our agency. from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics’ These changes are necessary to ensure • The accuracy of our estimate of the May 2014 National Occupational that notices are easily accessible to the information collection burden. Employment and Wage Estimates for all public (and CMS) and will remain available for a sufficient period of time. • The quality, utility, and clarity of salary estimates (www.bls.gov/oes/ the information to be collected. current/oes_nat.htm). In this regard, the V. Collection of Information • Recommendations to minimize the following table presents the mean Requirements information collection burden on the hourly wage, the cost of fringe benefits Under the Paperwork Reduction Act affected public, including automated (calculated at 100 percent of salary), and of 1995, we are required to provide 60- collection techniques. the adjusted hourly wage. NATIONAL OCCUPATIONAL EMPLOYMENT AND WAGE ESTIMATES Adjusted Mean hourly wage Fringe benefit Occupation title Occupation code hourly wage ($/hr) ($/hr) ($/hr) Business Operations Specialist ............................................... 13–1000 33.69 33.69 67.38 Computer and Information Analyst .......................................... 15–1120 42.25 42.25 84.50 General and Operations Manager ........................................... 11–1021 56.35 56.35 112.70 Management Analyst ............................................................... 13–1111 43.68 43.68 87.36 Social Science Research Assistant ......................................... 19–4061 20.71 20.71 41.42 As indicated, we are adjusting our determine appropriate data sources that provided to the general population employee hourly wage estimates by a will be used to conduct the review. We within a geographic area. Based on factor of 100 percent. This is necessarily believe most of the data that will be public comments received we are a rough adjustment, both because fringe used to inform access is available to revising the requirements of benefits and overhead costs vary states and may already be collected by § 447.203(b) to limit the scope of significantly from employer to states as part of Medicaid program Medicaid services that states must employer, and because methods of reviews and payment rate-setting review on an ongoing basis. This final estimating these costs vary widely from procedures. We also note that states rule with comment period stipulates study to study. Nonetheless, there is no have flexibility to compare Medicaid that states must develop an access practical alternative and we believe that rates to one or more of Medicare rates, monitoring review plan for the specified doubling the hourly wage to estimate commercial rates, or Medicaid cost, as service categories and update the plan total cost is a reasonably accurate may be appropriate to the service under every 3 years. States will also be estimation method. review. The burden associated with required to develop an access these requirements is the time and effort monitoring review plan when a state B. ICRs Carried Over From the Proposed associated with analyzing this submits a SPA to reduce or restructure Rule (May 6, 2011; 76 FR 26352–26359) information, making it available to the payment rates in circumstances where 1. ICRs Regarding Access Monitoring public, and periodically updating the the changes could result in access issues Review Plans (§ 447.203(b)) information relative to activities states for the service or services affected by the are already undertaking. We have SPA. In this way, states would consider Section 447.203(b) requires that states attempted to mitigate any new burden the impact that such proposals may develop and make public an access by identifying data that states are likely have on access to care and demonstrate monitoring review plan that considers, to currently possess, identifying other compliance with section 1902(a)(30)(A) at a minimum: Beneficiary needs, the data sources that might be informative of the Act. States may complete this availability of care and providers, to state access reviews, and limiting the review within the prior 12 months of utilization of services, characteristics of categories of services states will be the SPA submission. asabaliauskas on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with RULES the beneficiary population, and provider required to review. payment rates. States are also required b. Access Monitoring Review Plan under this provision to monitor data a. Access Monitoring Review Plan Framework and beneficiary and provider input on Timeline The data analysis activities described an ongoing basis and address known Section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act in this final rule with comment period access issues through corrective action. requires states to ensure that Medicaid are claimable as administrative claiming This final rule with comment period beneficiaries have access to care and activities and are reimbursable at the provides states with the discretion to services that is equivalent to care general 50 percent FFP rate for VerDate Sep<11>2014 19:43 Oct 30, 2015 Jkt 238001 PO 00000 Frm 00028 Fmt 4701 Sfmt 4700 E:\FR\FM\02NOR3.SGM 02NOR3 Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 211 / Monday, November 2, 2015 / Rules and Regulations 67603 administrative expenditures, insofar as and a description of the specific develop and make the access monitoring they are necessary for the proper and measures the state will use to analyze review plans publically available under efficient administration of the Medicaid access to care. We recommend that § 447.203(b)(1) through (4) will affect all state plan as described at section states use existing provider feedback states. We have defined specific 1903(a)(7) of the Act. More specifically, mechanism such as medical care categories of services that states must utilization review is identified as an advisory committees described in develop access monitoring review plans allowable Medicaid administrative § 431.12 to ease burden on states rather for, while allowing states to include activity in guidance that was issued in than create new requirements. additional service categories as the form of a SMD letter dated Section 447.203(b)(3) requires that necessary. We assume states will December 20, 1994 (www.medicaid.gov/ states include percentage comparisons conduct reviews in the context of rate Federal-Policy-Guidance/downloads/ of Medicaid payment rates to other reductions or restructuring payment SMD122094.pdf). We also believe that public (including, as practical, Medicaid rates and we consider the burden states may be collecting some of this managed care rates) or private health associated with rate reduction or information as part of current review coverage rates within geographic areas restructuring reviews as part of the efforts for various purposes, including of the state. This requirement was ongoing estimated burden. program administration and oversight, modified based on comments received The one-time burden associated with quality activities, integrity and payment, to allow states maximum flexibility in the requirements under § 447.203(b)(1) and as part of other performance comparing Medicaid payment rates to through (5) is the time and effort it standards and measures required under the rates of other payers. would take, on average, each of the 50 the Affordable Care Act. Section 447.203(b)(4) describes the state Medicaid programs and the District The provisions at § 447.203(b)(1) minimum content that must be in of Columbia (51 total respondents) to through (3) require that states develop included in the monitoring plan. States develop and make publically available and make publically available an access are required to describe: The measures an access monitoring review plan for the monitoring review plan using data the state uses to analyze access to care specific categories of Medicaid services. trends and factors that considers: issues, how the measures relate to the The uniform nature of the initial menu Beneficiary needs, availability of care overarching framework, access issues of services required for the access and providers, and changes in that are discovered as a result of the monitoring review plans are the reason beneficiary utilization of covered review, and the state Medicaid agency’s we present average impacts. services. Consistent with the statutory recommendations on the sufficiency of We estimate that it will take 5,100 hr requirement, we have clarified that access to care based on the review. to develop the access monitoring review states demonstrate access to care within Section 447.203(b)(5) describes the plan, 8,160 hr to collect and analyze the specific geographic regions. After timeframe for states to develop and data, and 2,040 to publish the plan and careful consideration of the comments complete its access monitoring review 510 hr for a manager to review and received, we are finalizing the review plan the data review and make the approve the plan (15,810 total hours). framework with some modifications in information available to the public We also estimate a cost of $22,631,80 an effort to minimize the administrative through accessible public records or per state and a total of $1,154,221.80. burden associated with the requirement. Web sites on an on-going basis for the In deriving these figures we used the Though we recognize that no following categories of services: Primary following hourly labor rates and time to methodology to gauge access to care is care, physician specialist services, complete each task: 80 hr at $41.42/hr flawless, we believe that the framework, behavioral health, pre- and post-natal for a research assistant staff to gather as supported by state data sources, is obstetric services including labor and data, 80 hr at $84.50/hr for an appropriate to inform whether the delivery, home health services and information analyst staff to analyze the Medicaid access requirements are met. additional services as determined data, 100 hr at $87.36/hr for Section 447.203(b)(1) and (2) necessary by the state or CMS. The management analyst staff to develop the describes the minimum factors that initial access monitoring review plans content of the access monitoring review states must considered when developing are to be completed by July 1 after the plan, 40 hr at $67.38/hr for business an access monitoring review plan. effective date of this final rule with operations specialist staff to publish the Specifically, we require the review to comment period. The plan must be access monitoring review plan, and 10 include feedback from both Medicaid updated at least every 3 years, but no hr at $112.70/hr for managerial staff to beneficiaries and Medicaid providers, later than July 1 of the update year. We review and approve the access an analysis of Medicaid payment data, estimate that the requirements to monitoring review plan. TABLE 1—ACCESS MONITORING REVIEW PLAN—ONE-TIME BURDEN PER STATE Cost per Adjusted monitoring Requirement Occupation title Burden hours hourly wage plan ($/hr) ($/State) Gathering Data ............................................... Social Science Research Assistant .............. 80 41.42 3,313.60 Analyzing Data ............................................... Computer and Information Analyst ............... 80 84.50 6,760 asabaliauskas on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with RULES Developing Content of Access Monitoring Management Analyst .................................... 100 87.36 8,736 Review Plan. Publishing Access Monitoring Review Plan .. Business Operations Specialist .................... 40 67.38 2,695.20 Reviewing and Approving Access Monitoring General and Operations Manager ................ 10 112.70 1,127.00 Review Plan. Total Burden Per State ........................... ........................................................................ 310 ........................ 22,631.80 VerDate Sep<11>2014 19:43 Oct 30, 2015 Jkt 238001 PO 00000 Frm 00029 Fmt 4701 Sfmt 4700 E:\FR\FM\02NOR3.SGM 02NOR3 67604 Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 211 / Monday, November 2, 2015 / Rules and Regulations TABLE 2—ACCESS MONITORING REVIEW PLAN—ONE-TIME TOTAL BURDEN Anticipated number of Cost of review per state Total cost estimate Total hours state reviews ($) ($) 51 15,810 22,631.80 1,154,221.80 The ongoing burden associated with data, determine whether to add or drop complete each task: 80 hr at $41.42/hr the requirements under § 447.203(b)(1) measures, consider public feedback, and for a research assistant staff to gather through (5) is the time and effort it write-up new conclusions based on the data, 80 hr at $84.50/hr for an would take each of the 50 state information they review. In this regard, information analyst staff to analyze the Medicaid programs and the District of we estimate it will take 5,100 hr to data, 100 hr at $87.36/hr for Columbia (51 total respondents) to develop the access monitoring review management analyst staff to update the develop and make publically available plan, 8,160 hr to collect and analyze the content of the access monitoring review an access monitoring review plan for the data, and 2,040 to publish the plan, and plan, 40 hr at $67.38/hr for business specific categories of Medicaid services. 510 hr for a manager to review and operations specialist staff to publish the The access monitoring review plans approve the plan (15,810 total hours). access monitoring review plan, and 10 must be updated at least every 3 years. We also estimate a cost of $22,631,80 We anticipate that the average initial hr at $112.70/hr for managerial staff to per state and a total of $1,154,221.80. and ongoing burden is likely to be the In deriving these figures we used the review and approve the access same since states will need to re-run the following hourly labor rates and time to monitoring review plan. TABLE 3—ACCESS MONITORING REVIEW PLAN–ONGOING BURDEN PER STATE (ANNUAL) Cost per Adjusted monitoring Requirement Occupation title Burden hours hourly wage plan ($/hr) ($/State) Gathering Data ............................................... Social Science Research Assistant .............. 80 41.42 3,313.60 Analyzing Data ............................................... Computer and Information Analyst ............... 80 84.50 6,760 Updating Content of Access Monitoring Re- Management Analyst .................................... 100 87.36 8,736 view Plan. Publishing Access Monitoring Review Plan .. Business Operations Specialist .................... 40 67.38 2,695.20 Reviewing and Approving Access Monitoring General and Operations Manager ................ 10 112.70 1,127.00 Review Plan. Total Burden Per State ........................... ........................................................................ 310 ........................ 22,631.80 TABLE 4—ACCESS MONITORING REVIEW PLAN—ONGOING TOTAL BURDEN (ANNUAL) Anticipated number of Cost of review per state Total cost estimate Total hours state reviews ($) ($) 51 15,810 22,631.80 1,154,221.80 The requirements and burden will be § 447.203(b)(6)(ii) is the time and effort associated with this final rule with submitted to OMB under control it would take each of the 50 state comment period. number 0938–1134 (CMS–10391). Medicaid programs and the District of We estimate that it will take, on Annualized over the three-year Columbia to monitor continued access average, 880 hr to develop the reporting period, we estimate 17 following the implementation of a SPA monitoring procedures, 528 hr to responses, 5,270 hr, $7,543.93 (per that reduces or restructures payment periodically review the monitoring state), and $384,740.60 (aggregate). rates. The requirements will affect all results, and 66 hr for review and 2. ICRs Regarding Monitoring states that implement a rate reduction or approval of the monitoring procedures Procedures (§ 447.203(b)(6)(ii)) restructure payment rates. We estimate (1,474 total hours). We also estimate an Section 447.203(b)(6)(ii) requires that in each SPA submission cycle, 22 average cost of $5,929.14 per state and states to have procedures within the states will implement these rate changes a total of $130,441.08. access monitoring review plan to based on the number of states that In deriving these figures we used the monitor continued access after proposed such reductions in FY 2010. following hourly labor rates and time to implementation of a SPA that reduces or Please note that we are using FY 2010 complete each task: 40 hr at $87.36/hr asabaliauskas on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with RULES restructures payment rates. The as the basis for our estimate because of for management analyst staff to develop monitoring procedures must be in place the unusual high volume of rate the monitoring procedures, 24 hr at for at least 3 years following the reduction SPAs that states submitted $87.36/hr for management analyst staff effective date of a SPA that reduces or during this period. By basing our to periodically review the monitoring restructures payment rates. estimate on FY 2010 data, we anticipate results, and 3 hr at $112.70/hr for The ongoing burden associated with the highest potential for burden management staff to review and approve the requirements under the monitoring procedures. VerDate Sep<11>2014 19:43 Oct 30, 2015 Jkt 238001 PO 00000 Frm 00030 Fmt 4701 Sfmt 4700 E:\FR\FM\02NOR3.SGM 02NOR3 Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 211 / Monday, November 2, 2015 / Rules and Regulations 67605 TABLE 5—ACCESS MONITORING PROCEDURES FOLLOWING RATE REDUCTION SPA—BURDEN PER STATE (ANNUAL) Adjusted Cost per data Requirement Occupation title Burden hours hourly wage review ($/hr) ($/State) Develop Monitoring Procedures .................... Management Analyst .................................... 40 87.36 3,494.40 Periodically Review Monitoring Results ......... Management Analyst .................................... 24 87.36 2,096.64 Approve Monitoring Procedures .................... General and Operations Manager ................ 3 112.70 338.10 Total Burden Per State ........................... ........................................................................ 67 ........................ 5,929.14 TABLE 6—ACCESS MONITORING PROCEDURES FOLLOWING RATE REDUCTION SPA—TOTAL BURDEN (ANNUAL) Anticipated number of Cost of review per state Total cost estimate Total hours state reviews ($) ($) 22 1,474 5,929.14 130,441.08 The requirements and burden will be records of the beneficiary input and the develop and implement beneficiary submitted to OMB under control nature of the state response. feedback mechanisms. number 0938–1134 (CMS–10391). We estimate that the requirement will We estimate that it will take an affect all states that do not currently average 5,100 hr to develop the feedback 3. ICRs Regarding Ongoing Input have a means of beneficiary feedback. effort and 255 hr to approve the (§ 447.203(b)(7)) Since we currently do not know which feedback effort (5,355 total hours). We Section 447.203(b)(7) requires that states have implemented these also estimate an average cost of states have a mechanism for obtaining mechanisms, we are assuming in our $9,299.50 per state and a total of ongoing beneficiary, provider and estimate that all states will need to $474,274.50. stakeholder input on access to care develop new mechanisms. The one-time In deriving these figures we used the issues, such as hotlines, surveys, burden associated with the following hourly labor rates and time to ombudsman, or other equivalent requirements under § 447.203(b)(7) is complete each task: 100 hr at $87.36/hr mechanisms. States must promptly the time and effort it would take, on for management analyst staff to develop respond to public input with an average, for each of the 50 state the feedback effort and 5 hr at $112.70/ appropriate investigation, analysis, and Medicaid programs and the District of hr for managerial staff to review and response. They must also maintain Columbia (51 total respondents) to approve the feedback effort. TABLE 7—BENEFICIARY FEEDBACK MECHANISM—ONE-TIME BURDEN PER STATE Adjusted Cost per data Requirement Occupation title Burden hours hourly wage review ($/hr) ($/State) Developing Feedback Effort .......................... Management Analyst .................................... 100 87.36 8,736 Approve Feedback Effort ............................... General and Operations Manager ................ 5 112.70 563.50 Total Burden Per State ........................... ........................................................................ 105 ........................ 9,299.50 TABLE 8—BENEFICIARY FEEDBACK MECHANISM—ONE-TIME TOTAL BURDEN Anticipated number of Cost of review per state Total cost estimate Total hours state reviews ($) ($) 51 5,355 9,299.50 474,274.50 The ongoing burden associated with review and make recommendations for estimate an average cost of $7,115.50 the requirements under § 447.203(b)(7) and conduct follow-up on the feedback. per state and a total of $362,890.50. is the time and effort it would take each We do not estimate that the approval of In deriving these figures we used the of the 50 state Medicaid programs and the recommendations will not require as following hourly labor rates and time to the District of Columbia (51 total significant effort from managers. We complete each task: 75 hr at $87.36/hr respondents) to monitor beneficiary estimate that it will take an average of for management analyst staff to monitor asabaliauskas on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with RULES feedback mechanisms. 3,825 hr to monitor the feedback results, The overall effort associated with feedback results and 5 hr at $112.70/hr and 255 hr to approve the feedback for managerial staff to review and monitoring the feedback will primarily effort (4,080 total hours). We also approve the feedback effort. be incurred by analysts who will gather, VerDate Sep<11>2014 19:43 Oct 30, 2015 Jkt 238001 PO 00000 Frm 00031 Fmt 4701 Sfmt 4700 E:\FR\FM\02NOR3.SGM 02NOR3 67606 Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 211 / Monday, November 2, 2015 / Rules and Regulations TABLE 9—BENEFICIARY FEEDBACK MECHANISM—ONGOING BURDEN PER STATE (ANNUAL) Adjusted Cost per data Requirement Occupation title Burden hours hourly wage review ($/hr) ($/State) Monitoring Feedback Results ........................ Management Analyst .................................... 75 87.36 6,552.00 Oversee Feedback Effort ............................... General and Operations Manager ................ 5 112.70 563.50 Total Burden Per State ........................... ........................................................................ 80 ........................ 7,115.50 TABLE 10—BENEFICIARY FEEDBACK MECHANISM—ONGOING TOTAL BURDEN (ANNUAL) Anticipated number of Cost of review per state Total cost estimate Total hours state reviews ($) ($) 51 4,080 7,115.50 362,890.50 The requirements and burden will be determine how many states will identify requiring corrective action, 400 hr to submitted to OMB under control access issues as they conduct their data develop the corrective action plans, and number 0938–1134 (CMS–10391). reviews and monitoring activities. We 30 hr to review and approve the assume that many states currently have corrective action plans (630 total hours). 4. ICRs Regarding Corrective Action mechanisms in place to monitor access We also estimate an average cost of Plan (§ 447.203(b)(8)) to care and identify issues. While we are $5,579.70 per state and a total of Section 447.203(b)(8) institutes a careful not to under-estimate the burden $55,797.00. corrective action procedure that requires associated with this provision, we In deriving these figures we used the states to submit to CMS a corrective believe that a maximum of 10 states may following hourly labor rates and time to action plan should access issues be identify access issues per year. The on- complete each task: 20 hr at $87.36/hr discovered through the access time burden associated with the for management analyst staff to identify monitoring processes. The requirement requirements under § 447.203(b)(7) is issues requiring corrective action, 40 hr is intended to ensure that states will the time and effort it would take 10 state at $87.36/hr for management analyst oversee and address any future access Medicaid programs to develop and staff to develop the corrective action concerns. implement corrective action plans. plans, and 3 hr at $112.70/hr for This is a new requirement and thus We estimate that it will take an managerial staff to review and approve we have no past data to use to average of 200 hr to identify issues the corrective action plans. TABLE 11—CORRECTIVE ACTION PLAN—BURDEN PER STATE Adjusted Cost per data Requirement Occupation title Burden hours hourly wage review ($/hr) ($/State) Identifying Issues for Action ............................ Management Analyst ..................................... 20 87.36 1,747.20 Developing the Corrective Plan ...................... Management Analyst ..................................... 40 87.36 3,494.40 Approve Corrective Plan ................................. General and Operations Manager ................. 3 112.70 338.10 Total Burden Per State ............................ ......................................................................... 63 ........................ 5,579.70 TABLE 12—CORRECTIVE ACTION PLAN—TOTAL BURDEN Anticipated number of Cost of review per state Total cost estimate Total hours state reviews ($) ($) 10 630 5,579.70 55,797.00 The requirements and burden will be proposed reduction or restructuring of states will develop and implement these submitted to OMB under control Medicaid service payment rates on rate changes that would require a public number 0938–1134 (CMS–10391). beneficiary access to care. In process based on the number of states § 447.204(b), we have also clarified that that proposed such reductions in FY 5. ICRs Regarding Public Process to we may disapprove a proposed rate 2010. Again, we are using FY 2010 as Engage Stakeholders (§ 447.204) asabaliauskas on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with RULES reduction or restructuring if the SPA the estimate due to the high number of Sections 447.204(a)(1) and (a)(2) does not include or consider the data rate reduction proposals submitted by require that states consider (when review and a public process. As an states in that year. proposing to reduce or restructure alternative, or additionally, we may take We estimate that it will take an Medicaid payment rates) the data a compliance action in accordance with average of 440 hr to develop the public collected through § 447.203 and § 430.35. process and 66 hr for review and undertake a public process that solicits We are estimating, annually, that for approval of the public process (506 total input on the potential impact of the each SPA revision approximately 22 hours). We also estimate an average cost VerDate Sep<11>2014 19:43 Oct 30, 2015 Jkt 238001 PO 00000 Frm 00032 Fmt 4701 Sfmt 4700 E:\FR\FM\02NOR3.SGM 02NOR3 Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 211 / Monday, November 2, 2015 / Rules and Regulations 67607 of $2,085.30 per state and a total of complete each task: 20 hr at $87.36/hr hr for managerial staff to review and $45,876.60. for management analyst staff to develop approve the public process. In deriving these figures we used the the public process and 3 hr at $112.70/ following hourly labor rates and time to TABLE 13—PUBLIC PROCESS—ONE-TIME BURDEN PER STATE PER SPA Adjusted Cost per SPA Requirement Occupation title Burden hours hourly wage ($) ($/hr) Develop the Public Process ............................ Management Analyst ..................................... 20 87.36 1,747.20 Approve Public Process .................................. General and Operations Manager ................. 3 112.70 338.10 Total Burden Per State ............................ ......................................................................... 23 ........................ 2,085.30 TABLE 14—PUBLIC PROCESS—ONE-TIME TOTAL BURDEN Anticipated number of Cost of review per state Total cost estimate Total hours state reviews ($) ($) 22 506 2,085.30 45,876.60 The ongoing burden associated with activities. We do not estimate that cost of $3,832.50 per state and a total of the requirements under § 447.204 is the efforts associated with review and $84,315.00 time and effort it would take 22 state approval of the activities will increase In deriving these figures we used the Medicaid programs to oversee a public for overseeing managers. We estimate it following hourly labor rates and time to process. will take an average of 880 hr to oversee complete each task: 40 hr at $87.36/hr The overall effort associated with the public process and 66 hr for review for management analyst staff to oversee developing the public process will and approval of the public process (946 the public process and 3 hr at $112.70/ primarily be incurred by analysts who total hours). We also estimate an average hr for managerial staff to review and develop and initiate public process approve the public process. TABLE 15—PUBLIC PROCESS—ONGOING BURDEN PER STATE Adjusted Cost per SPA Requirement Occupation title Burden hours hourly wage ($) ($/hr) Oversee the Public Process ........................... Management Analyst ..................................... 40 87.36 3,494.40 Approve Public Process .................................. General and Operations Manager ................. 3 112.70 338.10 Total Burden Per State ............................ ......................................................................... 43 ........................ 3,832.50 TABLE 16—PUBLIC PROCESS—ONGOING TOTAL BURDEN (ANNUAL) Anticipated number of Cost of review per state Total cost estimate Total hours state reviews ($) ($) 22 946 3,832.50 84,315.00 The requirements and burden will be public via the Internet. The burden documentation, including rate reduction submitted to OMB under control associated with developing and issuing SPA documents ready to submit to number 0938–1134 (CMS–10391). public notice at § 447.205 is not affected CMS. These commenters were by this requirement since the revision concerned that the efforts would create 6. ICRs Regarding Public Notice of would simply address an additional (in a significant backlog of SPAs. Changes in Statewide Methods and this case, electronic) means of Standards for Setting Payment Rates Response: As previously discussed, notification. Consequently, we do not we have considered concerns related to (§ 447.205) include the electronic notice activity in the proposed burden and have modified The provisions at § 447.205 clarify our burden analysis. the ongoing regulatory requirements to asabaliauskas on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with RULES when states must issue public notice to C. Comments Associated With the reduce the burden. We also note that the providers and allow for the electronic Collection of Information Requirements challenges presented by initial access publication of those notices. Section reviews, including time constraints, 447.205(d)(2)(iv)(A) through (D) allow Comment: Several commenters noted were considered in the finalizing this those notices to be published on the that it could take a state up to 6 months rule. Though initial access reviews, single state Medicaid agency or other and consume many resources to either triggered by the routine, rotating state-developed and maintained Web conduct ongoing access reviews (in review process, or by submission of a site that is accessible to the general conjunction with a SPA) and have the SPA, will require a significant time VerDate Sep<11>2014 19:43 Oct 30, 2015 Jkt 238001 PO 00000 Frm 00033 Fmt 4701 Sfmt 4700 E:\FR\FM\02NOR3.SGM 02NOR3 67608 Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 211 / Monday, November 2, 2015 / Rules and Regulations investment, subsequent reviews are regulatory impact analysis as part of this this regulation to surpass the threshold expected to be more manageable, due to final rule with comment period. We do for economic significance. pre-established metrics and review not believe that there is potential for D. Summary of Annual Burden mechanisms. We have conducted a Estimates TABLE 17—ANNUAL RECORDKEEPING AND REPORTING REQUIREMENTS Total Hourly labor Total labor OMB Burden per Total annual capital/ Number of Number of cost of cost of Total cost Regulation section(s) Control response burden mainte- respondents responses reporting reporting ($) No. (hours) (hours) nance costs ($/hr) ($) ($) 447.203(b)(1)–(4) (one-time requirement) .................... 0938–1134 51 17 80 1,360 41.42 56,331.20 0 56,331.20 80 1,360 84.50 114,920.00 0 114,920.00 100 1,700 87.36 148,512.00 0 148,512.00 40 680 67.38 45,818.40 0 45,818.40 10 170 112.70 19,159.00 0 19,159.00 Subtotal ........................ .................. 51 17 310 5,270 .................... 384,740.60 0 384,740.60 447.203(b)(1)–(4) (on-going requirement) .................... 0938–1134 51 51 80 4,080 41.42 168,993.60 0 168,993.60 80 4,080 84.50 344,760.00 0 344,760.00 100 5,100 87.36 445,536.00 0 445,536.00 40 2,040 67.38 137,455.20 0 137,455.20 10 510 112.70 54,477.00 0 54,477.00 Subtotal ........................ .................. 51 51 310 15,810 .................... 1,154,221.80 0 1,154,221.80 447.203(b)(6)(ii) ................... 0938–1134 22 22 64 1,408 87.36 123,002.88 0 123,002.88 3 66 112.70 7,438.20 0 7,438.20 Subtotal ........................ .................. 22 22 67 1,474 .................... 130,441.08 0 130,441.08 447.203(b)(7) (one-time re- quirement) ........................ 0938–1134 51 17 100 1,700 87.36 148,512.00 0 5 85 112.70 9,579.50 0 Subtotal ........................ .................. 51 17 105 1,785 .................... 158,091.50 0 158,091.50 447.203(b)(7) (on-going re- quirement) ........................ 0938–1134 51 51 75 3,825 87.36 334,152.00 0 334,152.00 5 255 112.70 28,738.50 0 28,738.50 Subtotal ........................ .................. 51 51 80 4,080 .................... 362,890.50 0 362,890.50 447.203(b)(8) (one-time re- quirement) ........................ 0938–1134 10 3.3 60 198 87.36 17,297.28 0 17,297.28 3 9.9 112.70 1,115.73 0 1,115.73 Subtotal ........................ .................. 10 3.3 63 207.9 .................... 18,413.01 0 18,413.01 447.204(a)(1) and (2) (one- time requirement) ............ 0938–1134 22 7.3 20 146 87.36 12,754.56 0 12,754.56 3 21.9 112.70 2,468.13 0 2,468.13 Subtotal ........................ .................. 22 7.3 23 167.9 .................... 15,222.69 .................... 15,222.69 447.204(a)(1) and (2) (on- going requirement) .......... 0938–1134 22 22 40 880 87.36 76,876.80 0 76,876.80 3 66 112.70 7,438.20 0 7,438.20 Subtotal ........................ .................. 22 22 43 946 .................... 84,315.00 0 84,315.00 SUB-TOTAL (One Time Re- quirements) ...................... .................. .................... 44.6 568 8,905 .................... 706,908.88 0 706,908.88 SUB-TOTAL (On-Going Requirements) .......... .................. .................... 146 433 20,836 .................... 1,601,427.30 0 1,601,427.30 TOTAL .................. .................. .................... 381.2 896 27,956 .................... 2,150,244.68 0 2,150,244.68 E. Submission of PRA-Related cms.hhs.gov, or call the Reports Email: OIRA_submission@ Comments Clearance Office at 410–786–1326. omb.eop.gov. We submitted a copy of this final rule We invite public comments on these ICR-related comments are due to OMB for its review of the rule’s potential information collection December 2, 2015. information collection and requirements. If you wish to comment, VI. Response to Comments asabaliauskas on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with RULES recordkeeping requirements. The please identify the rule (CMS–2328–FC) requirements are not effective until they and submit your comments to the OMB Because of the large number of public have been approved by the OMB. desk officer via one of the following comments we normally receive on To obtain copies of the supporting transmissions: Federal Register documents, we are not statement and any related forms for the Mail: OMB, Office of Information and able to acknowledge or respond to them proposed collections discussed above, Regulatory Affairs, Attention: CMS Desk individually. We will consider all please visit CMS’ Web site at Officer. comments we receive by the date and www.cms.hhs.gov/Paperwork@ Fax Number: 202–395–5806, OR time specified in the DATES section of VerDate Sep<11>2014 19:43 Oct 30, 2015 Jkt 238001 PO 00000 Frm 00034 Fmt 4701 Sfmt 4700 E:\FR\FM\02NOR3.SGM 02NOR3 Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 211 / Monday, November 2, 2015 / Rules and Regulations 67609 this preamble, and, when we proceed In fact, the guidance provided under for the RFA because we and the with a subsequent document, we will this rule intends to focus disparate state Secretary have determined that this respond to the comments in the efforts in monitoring and overseeing final rule with comment period will not preamble to that document. data and beneficiary concerns, which have a significant economic impact on offers a clear framework to comply with a substantial number of small entities. VII. Regulatory Impact Statement section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act. In the In addition, section 1102(b) of the Act A. Statement of Need absence of federal guidance, states have requires us to prepare a regulatory This final rule with comment period likely misspent resources in efforts to impact analysis if a rule may have a revises regulatory provisions in interpret and comply with section significant impact on the operations of 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act. We will also a substantial number of small rural § 447.203 and § 447.204 to create a make every effort, in collaboration with hospitals. This analysis must conform to standardized, transparent process for state and federal partners, to identify the provisions of section 604 of the states to follow as part of their broader resources and tools that states may use RFA. For purposes of section 1102(b) of efforts to assure that payments are to review and monitor access to care the Act, we define a small rural hospital consistent with efficiency, economy, within their state Medicaid programs. In as a hospital that is located outside of and quality of care and are sufficient to this final rule with comment period, we a Metropolitan Statistical Area for enlist enough providers so that care and are soliciting public comments to begin Medicare payment regulations and has services are available to the general identifying data sources and will fewer than 100 beds. We are not population in the geographic area, as continue to provide assistance as states preparing an analysis for section 1102(b) required by section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the develop their reviews and monitoring Act. This rule also clarifies and amends of the Act because we and the Secretary procedures. have determined that this final rule with § 447.205, which require states to issue Based on our analysis above, we public notice to their providers when comment period will not have a estimate that even if these data significant impact on the operations of changing Medicaid payment methods collection efforts were totally new to a and standards. The changes to the a substantial number of small rural state and each state were to either bid hospitals. public notice requirement will alleviate a contract to gather and publish the data confusion on when states must issue Section 202 of the Unfunded collection effort and public process Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (UMRA) notice to providers and recognize required under this rule or conduct the electronic media as a means to issue the also requires that agencies assess collection and public process with state anticipated costs and benefits before notices. agency resources, the economic effects issuing any rule whose mandates B. Overall Impact would not surpass $100 million or more require spending in any 1 year of $100 in any 1 year. We have examined the impacts of this Further, we are not requiring states to million in 1995 dollars, updated rule as required by Executive Order directly adjust payment rates as a result annually for inflation. In 2015, that 12866 on Regulatory Planning and of the provisions of this final rule with threshold is approximately $144 Review (September 30, 1993), Executive comment period, nor to take any steps million. This final rule with comment Order 13563 on Improving Regulation that would not be consistent with period will not impose a mandate that and Regulatory Review (January 18, efficiency, economy, and quality of care. will result in the expenditure by state, 2011), the Regulatory Flexibility Act Rather, these rules propose to clarify local, and tribal governments, in the (RFA)) (September 19, 1980, Pub. L. 96– that beneficiary access must be aggregate, or by the private sector, of 354), section 1102(b) of the Social considered in setting and adjusting more than $144 million in any one year. Security Act, section 202 of the payment methodology for Medicaid Executive Order 13132 establishes Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 services. If a problem is identified, any certain requirements that an agency (March 22, 1995; Pub. L. 104–4), number of steps might be appropriate, must meet when it promulgates a Executive Order 13132 on Federalism such as redesigning service delivery proposed rule (and subsequent final (August 4, 1999), and the Congressional strategies, or improving provider rule) that imposes substantial direct Review Act (5 U.S.C. 804(2)). enrollment and retention efforts. It has requirement costs on state and local Executive Order 12866 and 13563 historically been within our regulatory governments, preempts state law, or direct agencies to assess all costs and authority to make SPA approval otherwise has federalism implications. benefits of available regulatory decisions based on sufficiency of Since the estimated total cost associated alternatives and, if regulation is beneficiary service access and this rule with the provisions in this final rule necessary, to select regulatory merely provides a more consistent and with comment period is around $2.3 approaches that maximize net benefits transparent way to gather and analyze million annually, it will not impose (including potential economic, the necessary information to support significant costs on state or local environmental, public health and safety such reviews. governments, the requirements of E.O. effects, distributive impacts, and The RFA requires agencies to analyze 13132 are not applicable. We also note equity). A regulatory impact analysis options for regulatory relief for small that the costs associated with this final (RIA) must be prepared for major rules entities, if a rule has a significant impact rule with comment are allocated across with economically significant effects on a substantial number of small 51 state governments. To the extent that ($100 million or more in any 1 year). We entities. For purposes of the RFA, small costs are for the proper and efficient do not believe that there is potential for entities include small businesses, administration of the Medicaid state asabaliauskas on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with RULES this provision to surpass the threshold nonprofit organizations, and small plan, many of the activities required for economic significance because the government jurisdictions. For details, under this final rule are likely available proposed data analysis effort is see the Small Business Administration’s at the Medicaid matching rate for generally consistent with current state Web site at https://www.sba.gov/sites/ administrative expenditures. oversight and review activities and default/files/files/Size_Standards_ In accordance with the provisions of states have flexibility within the reviews Table.pdf. Individuals and states are not Executive Order 12866, this regulation to use their existing data or build upon included in the definition of a small was reviewed by the Office of that data when reviewing access to care. entity. We are not preparing an analysis Management and Budget. VerDate Sep<11>2014 19:43 Oct 30, 2015 Jkt 238001 PO 00000 Frm 00035 Fmt 4701 Sfmt 4700 E:\FR\FM\02NOR3.SGM 02NOR3 67610 Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 211 / Monday, November 2, 2015 / Rules and Regulations C. Regulatory Alternatives Considered period, there are no standardized, services and requires additional review This section provides an overview of transparent methodologies for and monitoring over three years for regulatory alternatives that CMS demonstrating access to care that would services subject to rate reductions or considered for this final rule with be appropriate to adopt at this time. restructuring of payments or when the Rather than prescribe data measures Medicaid agency receives a significantly comment period. In determining the that may not align with all services or higher than usual level of complaints appropriate approach to guide states in set threshold standards, we have about access to care from beneficiaries, their efforts to meet the requirements of adopted a general framework, which providers, or other stakeholders. In this section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act and sets forth a three-part review that way, the final rule with comment period demonstrate sufficient access to applies across services and delivery ensures that access to care reviews for Medicaid services, we consulted with systems and will allow states the most services will be conducted as SMDs, federal agency policy officials flexibility to determine, through current potential issues arise or circumstances and the MACPAC. Based, in part, on or new data sources, appropriate change. We believe that, absent rate these discussions we arrived at the measures of access to care. As states reductions or restructuring of payments, provisions discussed in this rule, which analyze their existing data sources and the 3-year review and monitoring seek to balance state obligations to meet those that we identify through work periods combined with ongoing the statutory requirement of section with MACPAC and our federal partners, solicitation of information about access 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act and potential we believe that states may arrive at best from beneficiaries are sufficient to new burden associated with the practices for determining sufficient identify access issues that may occur proposal. To achieve this balance, we Medicaid access to care which could be over time. have set forth a process that provides a replicated across state delivery systems This final rule with comment period framework for states to demonstrate and will evolve with new approaches to will require states to develop access to Medicaid services using delivering health care to Medicaid monitoring procedures after available data resources and in beneficiaries. In addition, we are issuing implementing provider rate reductions consideration of unique and evolving an RFI to solicit feedback from or restructuring rates in ways that may health care delivery systems. We have stakeholders on whether data exists to negatively impact access to care. We also emphasized the importance of develop core access measures and require these monitoring procedures considering beneficiary input in thresholds would provide additional because the impact of rate changes on determining and monitoring access to information or approaches that would access to care may not be apparent at Medicaid services throughout the be useful to us and states in ensuring the time the changes are adopted. We process as discussed in this final rule access to care to Medicaid beneficiaries. considered not requiring states to with comment period. monitor access after implementing the 2. Access Review Timeframe and 1. Access Monitoring Review Plan changes and to continue to rely on the Monitoring Procedures 5-year reviews to ensure that access is The process for documenting access States will be required to develop maintained. However, we believe that it to care and service payment rates access monitoring review plans for the is important for states to identify and described at § 447.203 will require states following service categories: Primary address access issues that arise from to develop and make publically care; physician specialist services; specific SPA actions, such as available access monitoring review behavioral health; pre- and post-natal reimbursement rate reductions or plans that address the extent to which obstetric services, including labor and restructuring. beneficiary needs are met, the delivery; home health services and other availability of care and providers, and service categories as determined 3. Beneficiary Input on Access to Care changes in beneficiary utilization of necessary based on beneficiary, provider The requirements of § 447.203 and covered services and other factors. The or stakeholder complaints; the access § 447.204 emphasize the importance of access monitoring review plan would monitoring review plans must be involving beneficiaries in determining also include percentage comparisons of reviewed and updated at least every 3 access issues and the impact that state Medicaid payment rates to other public years. States must also submit an access rate changes will have on access to care. or private health coverage rates within review, completed within the 12 months Specifically, we require that states geographic areas of the state. The access prior, with any SPA that proposes to implement an ongoing mechanism for monitoring review plans are to be reduce or restructure provider payments beneficiary input on access to care developed for a subset of Medicaid for each of the impacted services. We (through hotlines, surveys, ombudsman, service categories and updated at least have arrived at this subset of service or another equivalent mechanism) and every 3 years or, in the context of a SPA categories because they are frequently receive input from beneficiaries (and proposal to reduce provider rates or used services in Medicaid and they are affected stakeholders) on the impact that restructure provider rates in considered gateway services, meaning if proposed rates changes will have circumstance that may negatively a beneficiary has access to these through a public process. We believe impact access to care, within 12 months services, it is likely that the majority of that beneficiaries’ experiences in of implementing the SPA. the beneficiary’s needs are being met. accessing Medicaid services is the most As an alternative to the proposed We considered requiring the review important indicator of whether access is framework for reviewing access to care, for all services on an annual basis or a sufficient and beneficiary input will be we considered requiring states to report review period that is more frequent than particularly informative in identifying asabaliauskas on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with RULES standard data measures to demonstrate 5 years. After careful consideration of access issues. sufficient access to care and section the burden associated with annual We also considered a requirement that 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act. We also reviews, which were a foremost concern states consult with beneficiaries when considered setting national access for some commenters, we determined 3 developing their corrective action plans thresholds or requiring states to year ongoing reviews as an appropriate in instances when the access data establish and demonstrate access frequency period. The final rule with reviews or monitoring procedures thresholds. As we have highlighted comment period provides for more identify access issues. While we throughout this final rule with comment frequent reviews for fewer high demand encourage states to solicit beneficiary VerDate Sep<11>2014 19:43 Oct 30, 2015 Jkt 238001 PO 00000 Frm 00036 Fmt 4701 Sfmt 4700 E:\FR\FM\02NOR3.SGM 02NOR3 Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 211 / Monday, November 2, 2015 / Rules and Regulations 67611 input on corrective action plans, we did (ii) The availability of care through this section, baseline and updated data not make this a specific regulatory enrolled providers to beneficiaries in associated with the measures, any issues requirement and we leave it to the each geographic area, by provider type with access that are discovered as a states’ discretion to develop the and site of service; result of the review, and the state corrective action plans as part of their (iii) Changes in beneficiary utilization agency’s recommendations on the current policy development methods. of covered services in each geographic sufficiency of access to care based on area. the review. In addition, the access List of Subjects in 42 CFR Part 447 (iv) The characteristics of the monitoring review plan must include Accounting, Administrative practice beneficiary population (including procedures to periodically monitor and procedure, Drugs, Grant programs- considerations for care, service and access for at least 3 years after the health, Health facilities, Health payment variations for pediatric and implementation of a provider rate professions, Medicaid, Reporting and adult populations and for individuals reduction or restructuring, as discussed recordkeeping requirements, and Rural with disabilities); and in paragraph (b)(6)(ii) of this section. areas. (v) Actual or estimated levels of (5) Access monitoring review plan For the reasons set forth in the provider payment available from other timeframe. Beginning July 1, 2016 the preamble, the Centers for Medicare & payers, including other public and State agency must: Medicaid Services amends 42 CFR private payers, by provider type and site (i) Develop its access monitoring chapter IV as set forth below: of service. review plan by July 1 of the first review (2) Access monitoring review plan year, and update this plan by July 1 of PART 447—PAYMENTS FOR beneficiary and provider input. The each subsequent review period; SERVICES access monitoring review plan must (ii) For all of the following, complete include an analysis of data and the an analysis of the data collected using ■ 1. The authority citation for part 447 state’s conclusion of the sufficiency of the methodology specified in the access continues to read as follows: access to care that will consider relevant monitoring review plan in paragraphs provider and beneficiary information, (b)(1) through (4) of this section, with a Authority: Sec. 1102 of the Social Security including information obtained through separate analysis for each provider type Act (42 U.S.C. 1302). public rate-setting processes, the and site of service furnishing the type of ■ 2. Section 447.203 is amended by medical care advisory committees service at least once every 3 years: revising the section heading and established under § 431.12 of this (A) Primary care services (including paragraph (b) to read as follows: chapter, the processes described in those provided by a physician, FQHC, paragraph (b)(7) of this section, and clinic, or dental care). § 447.203 Documentation of access to care other mechanisms (such as letters from (B) Physician specialist services (for and service payment rates. providers and beneficiaries to State or example, cardiology, urology, * * * * * Federal officials), which describe access radiology). (b) In consultation with the medical to care concerns or suggestions for (C) Behavioral health services care advisory committee under § 431.12 improvement in access to care. (including mental health and substance of this chapter, the agency must develop (3) Access monitoring review plan use disorder). a medical assistance access monitoring comparative payment rate review. For (D) Pre- and post-natal obstetric review plan and update it, in each of the services reviewed, by the services including labor and delivery. accordance with the timeline provider types and sites of service (e.g. (E) Home health services. established in paragraph (b)(5) of this primary care physicians in office (F) Any additional types of services section. The plan must be published settings) described within the access for which a review is required under and made available to the public for monitoring analysis, the access paragraph (b)(6) of this section; review and comment for a period of no monitoring review plan must include an (G) Additional types of services for less than 30 days, prior to being analysis of the percentage comparison of which the state or CMS has received a finalized and submitted to CMS for Medicaid payment rates to other public significantly higher than usual volume review. (including, as practical, Medicaid of beneficiary, provider or other (1) Access monitoring review plan managed care rates) and private health stakeholder access complaints for a data requirements. The access insurer payment rates within geographic geographic area, including complaints monitoring review plan must include an areas of the state. received through the mechanisms for access monitoring analysis that (4) Access monitoring review plan beneficiary input consistent with includes: Data sources, methodologies, standards and methodologies. The paragraph (b)(7) of this section; and baselines, assumptions, trends and access monitoring review plan and (H) Additional types of services factors, and thresholds that analyze and analysis must, at a minimum, include: selected by the state. inform determinations of the sufficiency The specific measures that the state uses (6) Special provisions for proposed of access to care which may vary by to analyze access to care (such as, but provider rate reductions or geographic location within the state and not limited to: Time and distance restructuring—(i) Compliance with will be used to inform state policies standards, providers participating in the access requirements. The State shall affecting access to Medicaid services Medicaid program, providers with open submit with any State plan amendment such as provider payment rates, as well panels, providers accepting new that proposes to reduce provider as the items specified in this section. Medicaid beneficiaries, service payment rates or restructure provider asabaliauskas on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with RULES The access monitoring review plan must utilization patterns, identified payments in circumstances when the specify data elements that will support beneficiary needs, data on beneficiary changes could result in diminished the state’s analysis of whether and provider feedback and suggestions access, an access review, in accordance beneficiaries have sufficient access to for improvement, the availability of with the access monitoring review plan, care. The plan and monitoring analysis telemedicine and telehealth, and other for each service affected by the State will consider: similar measures), how the measures plan amendments as described under (i) The extent to which beneficiary relate to the access monitoring review paragraph (b)(1) of this section needs are fully met; plan described in paragraph (b)(1) of completed within the prior 12 months. VerDate Sep<11>2014 19:43 Oct 30, 2015 Jkt 238001 PO 00000 Frm 00037 Fmt 4701 Sfmt 4700 E:\FR\FM\02NOR3.SGM 02NOR3 67612 Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 211 / Monday, November 2, 2015 / Rules and Regulations That access review must demonstrate timelines to address those issues. While submission the supporting sufficient access for any service for the corrective action plan may include documentation described in paragraph which the state agency proposes to longer-term objectives, remediation of (b) of this section, for failure to reduce payment rates or restructure the access deficiency should take place document compliance with statutory provider payments to demonstrate within 12 months. access requirements. Any such compliance with the access (i) The state’s corrective actions may disapproval would follow the requirements at section 1902(a)(30)(A) address the access deficiencies through procedures described at part 430 of the Act. a variety of approaches, including, but Subpart B of this title. (ii) Monitoring procedures. In not limited to: Increasing payment rates, (d) To remedy an access deficiency, addition to the analysis conducted improving outreach to providers, CMS may take a compliance action through paragraphs (b)(1) through (4) of reducing barriers to provider using the procedures described at this section that demonstrates access to enrollment, proving additional § 430.35 of this chapter. care is sufficient as of the effective date transportation to services, providing for ■ 4. Section 447.205 is amended by of the State plan amendment, a state telemedicine delivery and telehealth, or adding paragraph (d)(2)(iv) to read as must establish procedures in its access improving care coordination. follows: monitoring review plan to monitor (ii) The resulting improvements in continued access to care after access must be measured and § 447.205 Public notice of changes in implementation of state plan service sustainable. Statewide methods and standards for rate reduction or payment restructuring. ■ 3. Section 447.204 is revised to read setting payment rates. The frequency of monitoring should be as follows: * * * * * informed by the public review described (d) * * * in paragraph (b) of this section and § 447.204 Medicaid provider participation (2) * * * should be conducted no less frequently and public process to inform access to care. (iv) A Web site developed and than annually. maintained by the single State agency or (A) The procedures must provide for (a) The agency’s payments must be consistent with efficiency, economy, other responsible State agency that is a periodic review of state determined accessible to the general public, and clearly defined measures, baseline and quality of care and sufficient to enlist enough providers so that services provided that the Web site: data, and thresholds that will serve to under the plan are available to (A) Is clearly titled and can be easily demonstrate continued sustained beneficiaries at least to the extent that reached from a hyperlink included on service access, consistent with those services are available to the Web sites that provide general efficiency, economy, and quality of care. (B) The monitoring procedures must general population. In reviewing information to beneficiaries and be in place for a period of at least 3 payment sufficiency, states are required providers, and included on the State- years after the effective date of the state to consider, prior to the submission of specific page on the Federal Medicaid plan amendment that authorizes the any state plan amendment that proposes Web site. payment reductions or restructuring. to reduce or restructure Medicaid (B) Is updated for bulletins on a (7) Mechanisms for ongoing service payment rates: regular and known basis (for example, beneficiary and provider input. (i) States (1) The data collected, and the the first day of each month), and the must have ongoing mechanisms for analysis performed, under § 447.203. public notice is issued as part of the beneficiary and provider input on (2) Input from beneficiaries, providers regular update; access to care (through hotlines, and other affected stakeholders on (C) Includes the actual date it was surveys, ombudsman, review of beneficiary access to the affected released to the public on the Web site; grievance and appeals data, or another services and the impact that the or equivalent mechanisms), consistent proposed rate change will have, if any, (D) Complies with national standards with the access requirements and public on continued service access. The state to ensure access to individuals with process described in § 447.204. should maintain a record of the public disabilities; and (ii) States should promptly respond to input and how it responded to such (E) Includes protections to ensure that public input through these mechanisms input. the content of the issued notice is not citing specific access problems, with an (b) The state must submit to CMS modified after the initial publication appropriate investigation, analysis, and with any such proposed state plan and is maintained on the Web site for response. amendment affecting payment rates: no less than a 3-year period. (iii) States must maintain a record of (1) Its most recent access monitoring Dated: September 17, 2015. data on public input and how the state review plan performed under Andrew M. Slavitt, responded to this input. This record § 447.203(b)(6) for the services at issue; will be made available to CMS upon (2) An analysis of the effect of the Acting Administrator, Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services. request. change in payment rates on access; and (8) Addressing access questions and (3) A specific analysis of the Dated: October 22. 2015. remediation of inadequate access to information and concerns expressed in Sylvia M. Burwell, care. When access deficiencies are input from affected stakeholders. Secretary, Department of Health and Human identified, the state must, within 90 (c) CMS may disapprove a proposed Services. days after discovery, submit a corrective state plan amendment affecting payment [FR Doc. 2015–27697 Filed 10–29–15; 11:15 am] asabaliauskas on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with RULES action plan with specific steps and rates if the state does not include in its BILLING CODE 4120–01–P VerDate Sep<11>2014 19:43 Oct 30, 2015 Jkt 238001 PO 00000 Frm 00038 Fmt 4701 Sfmt 9990 E:\FR\FM\02NOR3.SGM 02NOR3 D CONFERENCE COMMITTEE REPORT 3RD Printing H.B. NO. 1 GENERAL APPROPRIATIONS BILL HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES COMMISSION (Continued) (HHSC) in Goal B, Medicaid, and Goal C, Children's Health Insurance Program, HHSC may implement the following quality-based reforms in the Medicaid and CHIP programs: a. develop quality-based outcome and process measures that promote the provision of efficient, quality health care and that can be used to implement quality-based payments for acute and long-term care services across delivery models and payment systems; b. implement quality-based payment systems for compensating a health care provider or facility participating in the Medicaid and CHIP programs; c. implement quality-based payment initiatives to reduce potentially preventable readmissions and potentially preventable complications; and d. implement a bundled payment initiative in the Medicaid program, including a shared savings component for providers that meet quality-based outcomes. The executive commissioner may select high-cost and/or high-volume services to bundle and may consider the experiences of other payers and other state of Texas programs that purchase healthcare services in making the selection. e. Under the Health and Human Services Commission's authority in 1 T.A.C. Sec. 355.307(c), the commission may implement a Special Reimbursement Class for long term care commonly referred to as "small house facilities." Such a class may include a rate reimbursement model that is cost neutral and that adequately addresses the cost differences that exist in a nursing facility constructed and operated as a small house facility, as well as the potential for off-setting cost savings through decreased utilization of higher cost institutional and ancillary services. The payment increment may be based upon a provider incentive payment rate. Required Reporting: The commission shall provide annual reports to the Governor's Office of Budget, Planning, and Policy and Legislative Budget Board on December 1, 2015 and December 1, 2016 that include (1) the quality-based outcome and process measures developed; (2) the progress of the implementation of quality-based payment systems and other related initiatives; (3) outcome and process measures by health service region; and (4) cost-effectiveness of quality- based payment systems and other related initiatives. 47. Texas Office for the Prevention of Developmental Disabilities. Out of General Revenue Funds appropriated above in Strategy A.1.1, Enterprise Oversight and Policy, the Health and Human Services Commission shall expend an amount not to exceed $200,000 each fiscal year for salaries, travel expenses, and other costs in order to support the Office for Prevention of Developmental Disabilities. Grants and donations for the Texas Office for Prevention of Developmental Disabilities received through the authority provided by Article IX, Sec. 8.01, Acceptance of Gifts of Money, are not subject to this limit and shall be expended as they are received as a first source, and General Revenue shall be used as a second source to support the office. 48. Supplemental Payments. It is the intent of the Legislature that when the Health and Human Services Commission calculates supplemental payments, data be collected to provide transparency regarding claims associated with the supplemental payment program. An independent audit of the program, including a review of regional affiliations, uncompensated care claims for both uninsured and insured individuals, and contractual agreements, and a report with findings should be completed and distributed annually on March 1 to the Governor, the Lieutenant Governor, the Speaker of the House of Representatives, the Senate Finance Committee members, the House Appropriations Committee members, and the Legislative Budget Board. 49. Prevent Eligibility Determination Fraud. It is the intent of the Legislature that to prevent fraud and to maximize efficiencies, the Health and Human Services Commission shall use technology to identify the risk for fraud associated with applications for benefits. Within the parameters of state and federal law, the commission shall set appropriate verification and documentation requirements based on the application's risk to ensure agency resources are targeted to maximize fraud reduction and case accuracy. 50. Medicaid Funding Reduction and Cost Containment. a. Included in appropriations above in Goal B, Medicaid, is a reduction of $186,500,000 in General Revenue Funds and $249,349,498 in Federal Funds in fiscal year 2016 and $186,500,000 in General Revenue Funds and $247,220,930 in Federal Funds in fiscal year A529-Conf-2-B II-96 May 25, 2015 HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES COMMISSION (Continued) 2017, a biennial total of $373,000,000 in General Revenue Funds and $496,570,428 in Federal Funds. The Health and Human Services Commission (HHSC) is authorized to transfer these reductions between fiscal years and to allocate these reductions among health and human services agencies as listed in Article II of this Act, pursuant to the requirement to submit a plan included in Subsection (d) of this rider. b. This reduction shall be achieved through the implementation of the plan described under subsection (d) which may include any or all of the following initiatives: (1) Continue strengthening and expanding prior authorization and utilization reviews, (2) Incentivize appropriate neonatal intensive care unit utilization and coding, (3) Fully implement dually eligible Medicare/Medicaid integrated care model and long- term services and supports quality payment initiative, (4) Maximize co-payments in Medicaid programs, (5) Increase fraud, waste, and abuse prevention and detection, (6) Explore changes to premium structure for managed care organizations and contracting tools to reduce costs and increase efficiency, (7) Renegotiate more efficient contracts, including reducing the administrative contract profit margin and establish rebate provisions where possible, (8) Develop a dynamic premium development process for managed care organizations that has an ongoing methodology for reducing inappropriate utilization, improving outcomes, reducing unnecessary spending, and increasing efficiency, (9) Implement fee-for-service payment changes and managed care premium adjustments that incentivize the most appropriate and effective use of services, (10) Improve birth outcomes, including improving access to information and payment reform, (11) Increase efficiencies in the vendor drug program, (12) Increase third party recoupments, (13) Create a pilot program on motor vehicle subrogation, (14) Assess options to reduce costs for retroactive Medicaid claims, (15) Review the cost effectiveness of including children with disabilities in dental managed care, (16) Review and determine the benefits of providing the managed care-organizations with the ability to create a pharmacy lock-in program, and (17) Implement additional initiatives identified by HHSC. c. HHSC shall reform reimbursement methodology to be in line with industry standards, policies, and utilization for acute care therapy services (including physical, occupational, and speech therapies) while considering stakeholder input and access to care. Out of the amount in subsection (a), in each fiscal year at least $50,000,000 in General Revenue Funds savings should be achieved through rate reductions and $25,000,000 in General Revenue Funds savings may be achieved through various medical policy initiatives listed in items (1)-(10), below. If $25,000,000 in savings is not achieved through various medical policy initiatives in fiscal year 2016, the amount of unrealized savings (the difference between $25,000,000 in General Revenue Funds and savings actually achieved in fiscal year 2016) should be achieved through additional rate reductions in fiscal year 2017 while continuing any A529-Conf-2-B II-97 May 25, 2015 HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES COMMISSION (Continued) initiatives implemented in fiscal year 2016 that have been found to produce savings. HHSC may achieve savings through various medical policy initiatives, taking into consideration the following: (1) Clarifying policy language regarding co-therapy definition, documentation, and billing requirements, (2) Clarifying who can participate in therapy sessions in policy that interns, aides, students, orderlies and technicians can participate in therapy sessions when they are directly and appropriately supervised according to provider licensure requirements, but they are not eligible to enroll as providers and bill Texas Medicaid for services, (3) Consolidate Traditional, Comprehensive Care Program and Home Health Agency therapy policies into one policy, (4) Require a primary care or treating physician to initiate a signed order or referral prior to an initial therapy evaluation. The initial evaluation may require prior authorization and the signed order or referral must be dated prior to the evaluation, (5) Require a primary care or treating physician to order the therapy services based on the outcomes of the evaluation, (6) Clarify medical necessity for therapy services to ensure prior authorization staff who are reviewing requests are using guidelines based on the nationally recognized standards of care, (7) Require licensed Medicaid enrolled therapists to document and support decisions for continued therapy based on professional assessment of a client's progress relative to their individual treatment plan and in concert with the client's primary care physician and the individual and/or family, (8) Ensure appropriate duration of services by aligning authorization periods with national standards, (9) Streamline prior authorization processes, and (10) Implement policies that ensure services are provided in the most cost-efficient and medically appropriate setting, and implementation of other medical or billing policy changes. d. HHSC shall develop a plan to allocate the reductions required by Subsection (a) of this rider by taking actions such as those suggested under Subsection (b) and (c) of this rider to the budgets of the health and human services agencies as listed in Chapter 531, Government Code. The plan shall include reduction amounts by strategy and fiscal year and shall be submitted in writing before December 1, 2015 to the Legislative Budget Board, the Governor, and the Comptroller of Public Accounts. 51. Improve Efficiencies in Benefit Applications. Out of funds appropriated above, in order to improve efficiencies, the Health and Human Services Commission shall promote online submissions of applications for benefits administered by the agency. HHSC shall develop standards and technical requirements to allow organizations to electronically submit applications. It is the intent of the Legislature that HHSC only expend funds or utilize agency resources to partner with entities whose role in submitting benefit applications has been statutorily established, or with entities that provide in-person assistance using the agency's website for clients. 52. Dental and Orthodontia Providers in the Texas Medicaid Program. It is the intent of the Legislature that the Health and Human Services Commission (HHSC) use funds appropriated above in Strategy G.1.1, Office of Inspector General, to strengthen the capacity of the HHSC Inspector General to detect, investigate, and prosecute abuse by dentists and orthodontists who participate in the Texas Medicaid program. Further, it is the intent of the Legislature that HHSC conduct more extensive reviews of medical necessity for orthodontia services in the Medicaid program. A529-Conf-2-B II-98 May 25, 2015 E Exhibit A to Plaintiffs' Second Amended Original Petition and Application for Injunctive Relief TEXAS HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES COMMISSION RATE ANALYSIS DEPARTMENT Notice of Proposed Adjustments to Fees, Rates or Charges for Physical, Occupational, and Speech Therapy provided by Comprehensive Outpatient Rehabilitation Facilities/Outpatient Rehabilitation Facilities {CORF/ORF), Home Health Agencies {HHA), and Independent Therapists Adjustments are proposed to be effective October 1, 2015 Public Rate Hearing September 18, 2015 Page 1 351 Exhibit A to Plaintiffs' Second Amended Original Petition and Application for Injunctive Relief SUMMARY OF PROPOSED ADJUSTMENTS To Be Effective October 1, 2015 Included in this document is information relating to the proposed adjustments to Medicaid payment rates for Physical, Occupational, and Speech Therapy provided by Comprehensive Outpatient Rehabilitation Facilities/Outpatient Rehabilitation Facilities (CORF/ORF), Home Health Agencies (HHA), and Independent Therapists. The rates are proposed to be effective October 1, 2015. Hearing The Health and Human Services Commission (HHSC) will conduct a public hearing to receive comments regarding the proposed adjustments to Medicaid rates detailed in this document on September 18, 2015, at 9:00 a.m. in the Public Hearing Room of the John H. Winters Building at 701 West 51 st Street, Austin, Texas. Entry is through security at the main entrance of the building facing West 51 st Street. HHSC will consider concerns expressed at the hearing prior to final rate approval. This public hearing is held in compliance with the provisions of Human Resources Code §32.0282 and the Texas Administrative Code, Title 1 (1 TAC), §355.201, which require a public hearing on proposed payment rate adjustments. Should you have any questions regarding the information in this document, please contact: Megan Wolfe, Rate Analysis for Acute Care Services Texas Health and Human Services Commission (512) 730-7456; FAX: (512) 730-7475 E-mail: megan .wolfe@hhsc.state.tx.us Background HHSC is responsible for the reimbursement determination functions for the Texas Medicaid Program. The proposed rate adjustments presented in this document are based on direction provided by the 2016-2017 General Appropriations Act, 34th Legislature, Regular Session, Article II, Rider 50, at pages 11-96 through 11-98 (Health and Human Services Section, Health and Human Services Commission). Methodology The specific administrative rules that govern the establishment of the fees in this proposal include these rules in 1 TAC: • §355.201 (d)(1 )(A) and (D), which authorize HHSC to adjust rates for medical assistance if state law is enacted requiring a rate reduction or restricting the availability of appropriated funds. Public Rate Hearing September 18, 2015 Page 2 352 Exhibit A to Plaintiffs' Second Amended Original Petition and Application for Injunctive Relief • §355.8021, which addresses the reimbursement methodology for home health services and durable medical equipment, prosthetics, orthotics, and supplies; • §355.8085, which addresses the reimbursement methodology for physicians and other practitioners; • §355.8441, which addresses the reimbursement methodology for Early and Periodic Screening, Diagnosis, and Treatment (EPSDT) services (known in Texas as Texas Health Steps). Proposed Rate Adjustments As indicated above, the proposed rate adjustments are based on direction provided by the 2016-2017 General Appropriations Act, 84th Legislature, Regular Session, Article II, Rider 50, at pages 11-96 through 11-98. Proposed rate adjustments were calculated based on an analysis of Medicaid fees paid by other states and previous Texas Medicaid payments for Medicaid-reimbursable therapy services. Where current Texas Medicaid rates exceed 150 percent of the median of other states' rates for the same service, a percentage reduction is applied. An alternative percentage reduction is applied to Texas Medicaid rates that do not exceed 150 percent of the median of other states' rates for the same service and in cases where information on other states' rates is not available. Specific proposed payment rate adjustments are listed in the attachments outlined below: Att 1 - CORFORF Therapies Att 2 - HHA Therapies Att 3 - Independent Therapists Written Comments Written comments regarding the proposed payment rate adjustments may be submitted in lieu of, or in addition to, oral testimony until 5 p.m. the day of the hearing. Written comments may be sent by U.S. mail to the Texas Health and Human Services Commission, Attention: Rate Analysis, Mail Code H-400, P.O. Box 149030, Austin, Texas 78714-9030; by fax to Rate Analysis at (512) 730-7475; or by e-mail to RADAcuteCare@hhsc.state.tx.us. In addition, written comments may be sent by overnight mail or hand delivered to Texas Health and Human Services Commission, Attention: Rate Analysis, Mail Code H-400, Brown-Heatly Building, 4900 North Lamar, Austin, Texas 78751. Persons with disabilities who wish to attend the hearing and require auxiliary aids or services should contact Rate Analysis at (512) 730-7401 at least 72 hours in advance, Public Rate Hearing September 18, 2015 Page 3 353 Exhibit A to Plaintiffs' Second Amended Original Petition and Application for Injunctive Relief so appropriate arrangements can be made. Public Rate Hearing September 18, 2015 Page 4 354 Exhibit A to Plaintiffs' Second Amended Original Petition and Application for Injunctive Relief ATTACHMENT 1- COMPREHENSIVE OUTPATIENT REHABILITATION FACILITY/OUTPATIENT REHABILITATION FACILITY (CORF/ORF) (proposed to be effective October 1, 2015) CURRENT PROPOSED current l'roposea Age Current Adjusted Proposed Adjusted TOS* Procedure Code Long Description ** Range Medicaid Fee Medicaid Fee Medicaid Fee Medicaid Fee 1 92507 ** 0-20 $39.78 $39.78 $28.67 $28.67 1 92507 ** 21-999 $39.78 $39.78 $28.67 $28.67 1 92508 ** 0-20 $19.90 $19.90 $14.93 $14.93 1 92508 ** 21-999 $19.90 $19.90 $14.93 $14.93 1 92521 ** 0-20 $140.62 $140.62 $105.47 $105.47 1 92521 ** 21-999 $140.62 $140.62 $105.47 $105.47 1 92522 ** 0-20 $175.77 $175.77 $131.83 $131.83 1 92522 ** 21-999 $175.77 $175.77 $131.83 $131.83 1 92523 ** 0-20 $234.36 $234.36 $175.77 $175.77 1 92523 ** 21-999 $234.36 $234.36 $175.77 $175.77 1 92524 ** 0-20 $117.18 $117.18 $87.89 $87.89 1 92524 ** 21-999 $117.18 $117.18 $87.89 $87.89 1 92526 ** 0-999 $39.78 $39.78 $38.41 $38.41 1 92610 ** 0-999 $234.36 $234.36 $226.27 $226.27 1 97001 ** 0-20 $167.40 $167.40 $125.55 $125.55 1 97001 ** 21-999 $167.40 $167.40 $125.55 $125.55 1 97002 ** 0-20 $150.66 $150.66 $113.00 $113.00 1 97002 ** 21-999 $150.66 $150.66 $113.00 $113.00 1 97003 ** 0-20 $167.40 $167.40 $125.55 $125.55 1 97003 ** 21-999 $167.40 $167.40 $125.55 $125.55 1 97004 ** 0-20 $150.66 $150.66 $113.00 $113.00 1 97004 ** 21-999 $150.66 $150.66 $113.00 $113.00 1 97012 ** 0-20 $39.78 $39.78 $38.41 $38.41 1 97012 ** 21-999 $39.78 $39.78 $38.41 $38.41 1 97014 ** 0-20 $39.78 $39.78 $29.84 $29.84 1 97014 ** 21-999 $39.78 $39.78 $29.84 $29.84 1 97016 ** 0-20 $39.78 $39.78 $29.84 $29.84 1 97016 ** 21-999 $39.78 $39.78 $29.84 $29.84 1 97018 ** 0-20 $39.78 $39.78 $29.84 $29.84 1 97018 ** 21-999 $39.78 $39.78 $29.84 $29.84 1 97022 ** 0-20 $39.78 $39.78 $38.41 $38.41 1 97022 ** 21-999 $39.78 $39.78 $38.41 $38.41 1 97024 ** 0-20 $39.78 $39.78 $29.84 $29.84 1 97024 ** 21-999 $39.78 $39.78 $29.84 $29.84 1 97026 ** 0-20 $39.78 $39.78 $29.84 $29.84 1 97026 ** 21-999 $39.78 $39.78 $29.84 $29.84 1 97028 ** 0-20 $39.78 $39.78 $38.41 $38.41 1 97028 ** 21-999 $39.78 $39.78 $38.41 $38.41 1 97032 ** 0-20 $39.78 $39.78 $38.41 $38.41 1 97032 ** 21-999 $39.78 $39.78 $38.41 $38.41 1 97033 ** 0-20 $39.78 $39.78 $38.41 $38.41 1 97033 ** 21-999 $39.78 $39.78 $38.41 $38.41 1 97034 ** 0-20 $39.78 $39.78 $38.41 $38.41 1 97034 ** 21-999 $39.78 $39.78 $38.41 $38.41 1 97035 ** 0-20 $39.78 $39.78 $38.41 $38.41 355 Exhibit A to Plaintiffs' Second Amended Original Petition and Application for Injunctive Relief ATTACHMENT 1- COMPREHENSIVE OUTPATIENT REHABILITATION FACILITY/OUTPATIENT REHABILITATION FACILITY (CORF/ORF) (proposed to be effective October 1, 2015) CURRENT PROPOSED current l'roposea Age Current Adjusted Proposed Adjusted TOS* Procedure Code Long Description ** Range Medicaid Fee Medicaid Fee Medicaid Fee Medicaid Fee 1 97035 ** 21-999 $39.78 $39.78 $38.41 $38.41 1 97036 ** 0-20 $39.78 $39.78 $38.41 $38.41 1 97036 ** 21-999 $39.78 $39.78 $38.41 $38.41 1 97039 ** 0-20 $39.78 $39.78 $29.84 $29.84 1 97039 ** 21-999 $39.78 $39.78 $29.84 $29.84 1 97110 ** 0-20 $39.78 $39.78 $38.41 $38.41 1 97110 ** 21-999 $39.78 $39.78 $38.41 $38.41 1 97112 ** 0-20 $39.78 $39.78 $38.41 $38.41 1 97112 ** 21-999 $39.78 $39.78 $38.41 $38.41 1 97113 ** 0-20 $39.78 $39.78 $38.41 $38.41 1 97113 ** 21-999 $39.78 $39.78 $38.41 $38.41 1 97116 ** 0-20 $39.78 $39.78 $30.08 $30.08 1 97116 ** 21-999 $39.78 $39.78 $30.08 $30.08 1 97124 ** 0-20 $39.78 $39.78 $29.84 $29.84 1 97124 ** 21-999 $39.78 $39.78 $29.84 $29.84 1 97139 ** 0-20 $39.78 $39.78 $39.00 $39.00 1 97139 ** 21-999 $39.78 $39.78 $39.00 $39.00 1 97140 ** 0-20 $39.78 $39.78 $30.84 $30.84 1 97140 ** 21-999 $39.78 $39.78 $30.84 $30.84 1 97150 ** 0-20 $19.90 $19.90 $19.21 $19.21 1 97150 ** 21-999 $19.90 $19.90 $19.21 $19.21 1 97530 ** 0-20 $39.78 $39.78 $38.41 $38.41 1 97530 ** 21-999 $39.78 $39.78 $38.41 $38.41 1 97535 ** 0-20 $39.78 $39.78 $38.41 $38.41 1 97537 ** 0-20 $39.78 $39.78 $38.41 $38.41 1 97542 ** 0-20 $39.78 $39.78 $38.41 $38.41 1 97750 ** 0-20 $39.78 $39.78 $38.41 $38.41 1 97750 ** 21-999 $39.78 $39.78 $38.41 $38.41 1 97760 ** 0-20 $39.78 $39.78 $38.87 $38.87 1 97761 ** 0-20 $39.78 $39.78 $38.41 $38.41 1 97762 ** 0-20 $40.36 $40.36 $35.09 $35.09 1 97799 ** 0-20 $39.78 $39.78 $38.41 $38.41 1 97799 ** 21-999 $39.78 $39.78 $38.41 $38.41 Physical or manipulative therapy performed for maintenance rather than 1 S8990 restoration 0-999 $52.33 $52.33 $39.00 $39.00 1 S9152 Speech therapy, re-evaluation 0-999 $210.92 $210.92 $203.64 $203.64 *Type of Service (TOS) 1 Medical Services **Required Notice: The five-character code included in this notice is obtained from the Current Procedural Terminology (CPT®), 356 Exhibit A to Plaintiffs' Second Amended Original Petition and Application for Injunctive Relief ATTACHMENT 1- COMPREHENSIVE OUTPATIENT REHABILITATION FACILITY/OUTPATIENT REHABILITATION FACILITY (CORF/ORF) (proposed to be effective October 1, 2015) CURRENT PROPOSED current l'roposea Age Current Adjusted Proposed Adjusted TOS* Procedure Code Long Description ** Range Medicaid Fee Medicaid Fee Medicaid Fee Medicaid Fee copyright 2015 by the American Medical Association (AMA). CPT is developed by the AMA as a listing of descriptive terms and five character identifying codes and modifiers for reporting medical services and procedures performed by physicians. The responsibility for the content of this notice is with HHSC and no endorsement by the AMA is intended or should be implied. The AMA disclaims responsibility for any consequences or liability attributable or related to any use, nonuse or interpretation of information contained in this notice. Fee schedules, relative value units, conversion factors and/or related components are not assigned by the AMA, are not part ofCPT, and the AMA is not recommending their use. The AMA does not directly or indirectly practice medicine or dispense medical services. The AMA assumes no liability for data contained or not contained. 357 Exhibit A to Plaintiffs' Second Amended Original Petition and Application for Injunctive Relief ATTACHMENT 2 - HOME HEALTH AGENCY (HHA) (proposed to be effective October 1, 2015) CURRENT PROPOSED Current Proposed TOS Procedure Modifier Modifier Age Current Adjusted Proposed Adjusted * Code 1 2 Long Description ** Range Medicaid Fee Medicaid Fee Medicaid Fee Medicaid Fee 1 92507 ** 0-20 $135.14 $135.14 $100.34 $100.34 1 92507 ** 21-999 $115.46 $115.46 $100.34 $100.34 1 92508 ** 0-20 $67.57 $67.57 $50.68 $50.68 1 92508 ** 21-999 $67.57 $67.57 $50.68 $50.68 1 92521 ** 0-20 $120.00 $120.00 $90.00 $90.00 1 92521 ** 21-999 $70.33 $70.33 $67.90 $67.90 1 92522 ** 0-20 $150.00 $150.00 $112.50 $112.50 1 92522 ** 21-999 $87.92 $87.92 $84.89 $84.89 1 92523 ** 0-20 $200.00 $200.00 $150.00 $150.00 1 92523 ** 21-999 $117.22 $117.22 $113.18 $113.18 1 92524 ** 0-20 $100.00 $100.00 $75.00 $75.00 1 92524 ** 21-999 $58.61 $58.61 $56.59 $56.59 1 92526 ** 0-20 $135.14 $135.14 $130.48 $130.48 1 92526 ** 21-999 $115.46 $115.46 $111.48 $111.48 1 92610 ** 0-20 $200.00 $200.00 $193.10 $193.10 1 92610 ** 21-999 $117.22 $117.22 $113.18 $113.18 1 97001 ** 0-20 $137.20 $137.20 $102.90 $102.90 1 97001 ** 21-999 $114.03 $114.03 $85.52 $85.52 1 97001 AT ** 0-20 $114.03 $114.03 $85.52 $85.52 1 97001 AT ** 21-999 $114.03 $114.03 $85.52 $85.52 c 97001 ** 0-20 $114.03 $114.03 $85.52 $85.52 c 97001 ** 21-999 $114.03 $114.03 $85.52 $85.52 1 97002 ** 0-20 $123.48 $123.48 $92.61 $92.61 1 97002 ** 21-999 $102.63 $102.63 $76.97 $76.97 1 97002 AT ** 0-20 $102.63 $102.63 $76.97 $76.97 1 97002 AT ** 21-999 $102.63 $102.63 $76.97 $76.97 c 97002 ** 0-20 $102.63 $102.63 $76.97 $76.97 c 97002 ** 21-999 $102.63 $102.63 $76.97 $76.97 1 97003 ** 0-20 $137.20 $137.20 $102.90 $102.90 1 97003 ** 21-999 $116.25 $116.25 $89.21 $89.21 1 97003 AT ** 0-20 $116.25 $116.25 $89.21 $89.21 1 97003 AT ** 21-999 $116.25 $116.25 $89.21 $89.21 c 97003 ** 0-20 $116.25 $116.25 $89.21 $89.21 c 97003 ** 21-999 $116.25 $116.25 $89.21 $89.21 1 97004 ** 0-20 $123.48 $123.48 $92.61 $92.61 1 97004 ** 21-999 $104.63 $104.63 $78.47 $78.47 1 97004 AT ** 0-20 $104.63 $104.63 $78.47 $78.47 1 97004 AT ** 21-999 $104.63 $104.63 $78.47 $78.47 c 97004 ** 0-20 $104.63 $104.63 $78.47 $78.47 c 97004 ** 21-999 $104.63 $104.63 $78.47 $78.47 1 97012 ** 21-999 $113.05 $113.05 $109.15 $109.15 1 97012 AT ** 0-20 $113.05 $113.05 $109.15 $109.15 1 97012 AT ** 21-999 $113.05 $113.05 $109.15 $109.15 1 97012 AT GO ** 0-20 $114.51 $114.51 $110.56 $110.56 1 97012 AT GO ** 21-999 $114.51 $114.51 $110.56 $110.56 1 97012 AT GP ** 0-20 $112.32 $112.32 $108.44 $108.44 358 Exhibit A to Plaintiffs' Second Amended Original Petition and Application for Injunctive Relief ATTACHMENT 2 - HOME HEALTH AGENCY (HHA) (proposed to be effective October 1, 2015) CURRENT PROPOSED Current Proposed TOS Procedure Modifier Modifier Age Current Adjusted Proposed Adjusted * Code 1 2 Long Description ** Range Medicaid Fee Medicaid Fee Medicaid Fee Medicaid Fee 1 97012 AT GP ** 21-999 $112.32 $112.32 $108.44 $108.44 1 97012 GO ** 0-20 $135.14 $135.14 $130.48 $130.48 1 97012 GO ** 21-999 $114.51 $114.51 $110.56 $110.56 1 97012 GP ** 0-20 $135.14 $135.14 $130.48 $130.48 1 97012 GP ** 21-999 $112.32 $112.32 $108.44 $108.44 c 97012 ** 0-20 $113.05 $113.05 $109.15 $109.15 c 97012 ** 21-999 $113.05 $113.05 $109.15 $109.15 c 97012 GO ** 0-20 $114.51 $114.51 $110.56 $110.56 c 97012 GO ** 21-999 $114.51 $114.51 $110.56 $110.56 c 97012 GP ** 0-20 $112.32 $112.32 $108.44 $108.44 c 97012 GP ** 21-999 $112.32 $112.32 $108.44 $108.44 1 97014 ** 21-999 $113.05 $113.05 $84.79 $84.79 1 97014 AT ** 0-20 $113.05 $113.05 $84.79 $84.79 1 97014 AT ** 21-999 $113.05 $113.05 $84.79 $84.79 1 97014 AT GO ** 0-20 $114.51 $114.51 $85.88 $85.88 1 97014 AT GO ** 21-999 $114.51 $114.51 $85.88 $85.88 1 97014 AT GP ** 0-20 $112.32 $112.32 $84.24 $84.24 1 97014 AT GP ** 21-999 $112.32 $112.32 $84.24 $84.24 1 97014 GO ** 0-20 $135.14 $135.14 $101.36 $101.36 1 97014 GO ** 21-999 $114.51 $114.51 $85.88 $85.88 1 97014 GP ** 0-20 $135.14 $135.14 $101.36 $101.36 1 97014 GP ** 21-999 $112.32 $112.32 $84.24 $84.24 c 97014 ** 0-20 $113.05 $113.05 $84.79 $84.79 c 97014 ** 21-999 $113.05 $113.05 $84.79 $84.79 c 97014 GO ** 0-20 $114.51 $114.51 $85.88 $85.88 c 97014 GO ** 21-999 $114.51 $114.51 $85.88 $85.88 c 97014 GP ** 0-20 $112.32 $112.32 $84.24 $84.24 c 97014 GP ** 21-999 $112.32 $112.32 $84.24 $84.24 1 97016 ** 21-999 $113.05 $113.05 $84.79 $84.79 1 97016 AT ** 0-20 $113.05 $113.05 $84.79 $84.79 1 97016 AT ** 21-999 $113.05 $113.05 $84.79 $84.79 1 97016 AT GO ** 0-20 $114.51 $114.51 $85.88 $85.88 1 97016 AT GO ** 21-999 $114.51 $114.51 $85.88 $85.88 1 97016 AT GP ** 0-20 $112.32 $112.32 $84.24 $84.24 1 97016 AT GP ** 21-999 $112.32 $112.32 $84.24 $84.24 1 97016 GO ** 0-20 $135.14 $135.14 $101.36 $101.36 1 97016 GO ** 21-999 $114.51 $114.51 $85.88 $85.88 1 97016 GP ** 0-20 $135.14 $135.14 $101.36 $101.36 1 97016 GP ** 21-999 $112.32 $112.32 $84.24 $84.24 c 97016 ** 0-20 $113.05 $113.05 $84.79 $84.79 c 97016 ** 21-999 $113.05 $113.05 $84.79 $84.79 c 97016 GO ** 0-20 $114.51 $114.51 $85.88 $85.88 c 97016 GO ** 21-999 $114.51 $114.51 $85.88 $85.88 c 97016 GP ** 0-20 $112.32 $112.32 $84.24 $84.24 c 97016 GP ** 21-999 $112.32 $112.32 $84.24 $84.24 1 97018 ** 21-999 $113.05 $113.05 $91.08 $91.08 359 Exhibit A to Plaintiffs' Second Amended Original Petition and Application for Injunctive Relief ATTACHMENT 2 - HOME HEALTH AGENCY (HHA) (proposed to be effective October 1, 2015) CURRENT PROPOSED Current Proposed TOS Procedure Modifier Modifier Age Current Adjusted Proposed Adjusted * Code 1 2 Long Description ** Range Medicaid Fee Medicaid Fee Medicaid Fee Medicaid Fee 1 97018 AT ** 0-20 $113.05 $113.05 $91.08 $91.08 1 97018 AT ** 21-999 $113.05 $113.05 $91.08 $91.08 1 97018 AT GO ** 0-20 $114.51 $114.51 $91.08 $91.08 1 97018 AT GO ** 21-999 $114.51 $114.51 $91.08 $91.08 1 97018 AT GP ** 0-20 $112.32 $112.32 $91.08 $91.08 1 97018 AT GP ** 21-999 $112.32 $112.32 $91.08 $91.08 1 97018 GO ** 0-20 $135.14 $135.14 $101.36 $101.36 1 97018 GO ** 21-999 $114.51 $114.51 $91.08 $91.08 1 97018 GP ** 0-20 $135.14 $135.14 $101.36 $101.36 1 97018 GP ** 21-999 $112.32 $112.32 $91.08 $91.08 c 97018 ** 0-20 $113.05 $113.05 $91.08 $91.08 c 97018 ** 21-999 $113.05 $113.05 $91.08 $91.08 c 97018 GO ** 0-20 $114.51 $114.51 $91.08 $91.08 c 97018 GO ** 21-999 $114.51 $114.51 $91.08 $91.08 c 97018 GP ** 0-20 $112.32 $112.32 $91.08 $91.08 c 97018 GP ** 21-999 $112.32 $112.32 $91.08 $91.08 1 97022 ** 21-999 $113.05 $113.05 $109.15 $109.15 1 97022 AT ** 0-20 $113.05 $113.05 $109.15 $109.15 1 97022 AT ** 21-999 $113.05 $113.05 $109.15 $109.15 1 97022 AT GO ** 0-20 $114.51 $114.51 $110.56 $110.56 1 97022 AT GO ** 21-999 $114.51 $114.51 $110.56 $110.56 1 97022 AT GP ** 0-20 $112.32 $112.32 $108.44 $108.44 1 97022 AT GP ** 21-999 $112.32 $112.32 $108.44 $108.44 1 97022 GO ** 0-20 $135.14 $135.14 $130.48 $130.48 1 97022 GO ** 21-999 $114.51 $114.51 $110.56 $110.56 1 97022 GP ** 0-20 $135.14 $135.14 $130.48 $130.48 1 97022 GP ** 21-999 $112.32 $112.32 $108.44 $108.44 c 97022 ** 0-20 $113.05 $113.05 $109.15 $109.15 c 97022 ** 21-999 $113.05 $113.05 $109.15 $109.15 c 97022 GO ** 0-20 $114.51 $114.51 $110.56 $110.56 c 97022 GO ** 21-999 $114.51 $114.51 $110.56 $110.56 c 97022 GP ** 0-20 $112.32 $112.32 $108.44 $108.44 c 97022 GP ** 21-999 $112.32 $112.32 $108.44 $108.44 1 97024 ** 21-999 $113.05 $113.05 $84.79 $84.79 1 97024 AT ** 0-20 $113.05 $113.05 $84.79 $84.79 1 97024 AT ** 21-999 $113.05 $113.05 $84.79 $84.79 1 97024 AT GO ** 0-20 $114.51 $114.51 $85.88 $85.88 1 97024 AT GO ** 21-999 $114.51 $114.51 $85.88 $85.88 1 97024 AT GP ** 0-20 $112.32 $112.32 $84.24 $84.24 1 97024 AT GP ** 21-999 $112.32 $112.32 $84.24 $84.24 1 97024 GO ** 0-20 $135.14 $135.14 $101.36 $101.36 1 97024 GO ** 21-999 $114.51 $114.51 $85.88 $85.88 1 97024 GP ** 0-20 $135.14 $135.14 $101.36 $101.36 1 97024 GP ** 21-999 $112.32 $112.32 $84.24 $84.24 c 97024 ** 0-20 $113.05 $113.05 $84.79 $84.79 c 97024 ** 21-999 $113.05 $113.05 $84.79 $84.79 360 Exhibit A to Plaintiffs' Second Amended Original Petition and Application for Injunctive Relief ATTACHMENT 2 - HOME HEALTH AGENCY (HHA) (proposed to be effective October 1, 2015) CURRENT PROPOSED Current Proposed TOS Procedure Modifier Modifier Age Current Adjusted Proposed Adjusted * Code 1 2 Long Description ** Range Medicaid Fee Medicaid Fee Medicaid Fee Medicaid Fee c 97024 GO ** 0-20 $114.51 $114.51 $85.88 $85.88 c 97024 GO ** 21-999 $114.51 $114.51 $85.88 $85.88 c 97024 GP ** 0-20 $112.32 $112.32 $84.24 $84.24 c 97024 GP ** 21-999 $112.32 $112.32 $84.24 $84.24 1 97026 ** 21-999 $113.05 $113.05 $84.79 $84.79 1 97026 AT ** 0-20 $113.05 $113.05 $84.79 $84.79 1 97026 AT ** 21-999 $113.05 $113.05 $84.79 $84.79 1 97026 AT GO ** 0-20 $114.51 $114.51 $85.88 $85.88 1 97026 AT GO ** 21-999 $114.51 $114.51 $85.88 $85.88 1 97026 AT GP ** 0-20 $112.32 $112.32 $84.24 $84.24 1 97026 AT GP ** 21-999 $112.32 $112.32 $84.24 $84.24 1 97026 GO ** 0-20 $135.14 $135.14 $101.36 $101.36 1 97026 GO ** 21-999 $114.51 $114.51 $85.88 $85.88 1 97026 GP ** 0-20 $135.14 $135.14 $101.36 $101.36 1 97026 GP ** 21-999 $112.32 $112.32 $84.24 $84.24 c 97026 ** 0-20 $113.05 $113.05 $84.79 $84.79 c 97026 ** 21-999 $113.05 $113.05 $84.79 $84.79 c 97026 GO ** 0-20 $114.51 $114.51 $85.88 $85.88 c 97026 GO ** 21-999 $114.51 $114.51 $85.88 $85.88 c 97026 GP ** 0-20 $112.32 $112.32 $84.24 $84.24 c 97026 GP ** 21-999 $112.32 $112.32 $84.24 $84.24 1 97028 ** 21-999 $113.05 $113.05 $109.15 $109.15 1 97028 AT ** 0-20 $113.05 $113.05 $109.15 $109.15 1 97028 AT ** 21-999 $113.05 $113.05 $109.15 $109.15 1 97028 AT GO ** 0-20 $114.51 $114.51 $110.56 $110.56 1 97028 AT GO ** 21-999 $114.51 $114.51 $110.56 $110.56 1 97028 AT GP ** 0-20 $112.32 $112.32 $108.44 $108.44 1 97028 AT GP ** 21-999 $112.32 $112.32 $108.44 $108.44 1 97028 GO ** 0-20 $135.14 $135.14 $130.48 $130.48 1 97028 GO ** 21-999 $114.51 $114.51 $110.56 $110.56 1 97028 GP ** 0-20 $135.14 $135.14 $130.48 $130.48 1 97028 GP ** 21-999 $112.32 $112.32 $108.44 $108.44 c 97028 ** 0-20 $113.05 $113.05 $109.15 $109.15 c 97028 ** 21-999 $113.05 $113.05 $109.15 $109.15 c 97028 GO ** 0-20 $114.51 $114.51 $110.56 $110.56 c 97028 GO ** 21-999 $114.51 $114.51 $110.56 $110.56 c 97028 GP ** 0-20 $112.32 $112.32 $108.44 $108.44 c 97028 GP ** 21-999 $112.32 $112.32 $108.44 $108.44 1 97032 ** 21-999 $113.05 $113.05 $109.15 $109.15 1 97032 AT ** 0-20 $113.05 $113.05 $109.15 $109.15 1 97032 AT ** 21-999 $113.05 $113.05 $109.15 $109.15 1 97032 AT GO ** 0-20 $114.51 $114.51 $110.56 $110.56 1 97032 AT GO ** 21-999 $114.51 $114.51 $110.56 $110.56 1 97032 AT GP ** 0-20 $112.32 $112.32 $108.44 $108.44 1 97032 AT GP ** 21-999 $112.32 $112.32 $108.44 $108.44 1 97032 GO ** 0-20 $135.14 $135.14 $130.48 $130.48 361 Exhibit A to Plaintiffs' Second Amended Original Petition and Application for Injunctive Relief ATTACHMENT 2 - HOME HEALTH AGENCY (HHA) (proposed to be effective October 1, 2015) CURRENT PROPOSED Current Proposed TOS Procedure Modifier Modifier Age Current Adjusted Proposed Adjusted * Code 1 2 Long Description ** Range Medicaid Fee Medicaid Fee Medicaid Fee Medicaid Fee 1 97032 GO ** 21-999 $114.51 $114.51 $110.56 $110.56 1 97032 GP ** 0-20 $135.14 $135.14 $130.48 $130.48 1 97032 GP ** 21-999 $112.32 $112.32 $108.44 $108.44 c 97032 ** 0-20 $113.05 $113.05 $109.15 $109.15 c 97032 ** 21-999 $113.05 $113.05 $109.15 $109.15 c 97032 GO ** 0-20 $114.51 $114.51 $110.56 $110.56 c 97032 GO ** 21-999 $114.51 $114.51 $110.56 $110.56 c 97032 GP ** 0-20 $112.32 $112.32 $108.44 $108.44 c 97032 GP ** 21-999 $112.32 $112.32 $108.44 $108.44 1 97033 ** 21-999 $113.05 $113.05 $109.15 $109.15 1 97033 AT ** 0-20 $113.05 $113.05 $109.15 $109.15 1 97033 AT ** 21-999 $113.05 $113.05 $109.15 $109.15 1 97033 AT GO ** 0-20 $114.51 $114.51 $110.56 $110.56 1 97033 AT GO ** 21-999 $114.51 $114.51 $110.56 $110.56 1 97033 AT GP ** 0-20 $112.32 $112.32 $108.44 $108.44 1 97033 AT GP ** 21-999 $112.32 $112.32 $108.44 $108.44 1 97033 GO ** 0-20 $135.14 $135.14 $130.48 $130.48 1 97033 GO ** 21-999 $114.51 $114.51 $110.56 $110.56 1 97033 GP ** 0-20 $135.14 $135.14 $130.48 $130.48 1 97033 GP ** 21-999 $112.32 $112.32 $108.44 $108.44 c 97033 ** 0-20 $113.05 $113.05 $109.15 $109.15 c 97033 ** 21-999 $113.05 $113.05 $109.15 $109.15 c 97033 GO ** 0-20 $114.51 $114.51 $110.56 $110.56 c 97033 GO ** 21-999 $114.51 $114.51 $110.56 $110.56 c 97033 GP ** 0-20 $112.32 $112.32 $108.44 $108.44 c 97033 GP ** 21-999 $112.32 $112.32 $108.44 $108.44 1 97034 GO ** 0-20 $135.14 $135.14 $130.48 $130.48 1 97034 GO ** 21-999 $114.51 $114.51 $110.56 $110.56 1 97034 GP ** 0-20 $135.14 $135.14 $130.48 $130.48 1 97034 GP ** 21-999 $112.32 $112.32 $108.44 $108.44 1 97035 ** 21-999 $113.05 $113.05 $109.15 $109.15 1 97035 AT ** 0-20 $113.05 $113.05 $109.15 $109.15 1 97035 AT ** 21-999 $113.05 $113.05 $109.15 $109.15 1 97035 AT GO ** 0-20 $114.51 $114.51 $110.56 $110.56 1 97035 AT GO ** 21-999 $114.51 $114.51 $110.56 $110.56 1 97035 AT GP ** 0-20 $112.32 $112.32 $108.44 $108.44 1 97035 AT GP ** 21-999 $112.32 $112.32 $108.44 $108.44 1 97035 GO ** 0-20 $135.14 $135.14 $130.48 $130.48 1 97035 GO ** 21-999 $114.51 $114.51 $110.56 $110.56 1 97035 GP ** 0-20 $135.14 $135.14 $130.48 $130.48 1 97035 GP ** 21-999 $112.32 $112.32 $108.44 $108.44 c 97035 ** 0-20 $113.05 $113.05 $109.15 $109.15 c 97035 ** 21-999 $113.05 $113.05 $109.15 $109.15 c 97035 GO ** 0-20 $114.51 $114.51 $110.56 $110.56 c 97035 GO ** 21-999 $114.51 $114.51 $110.56 $110.56 c 97035 GP ** 0-20 $112.32 $112.32 $108.44 $108.44 362 Exhibit A to Plaintiffs' Second Amended Original Petition and Application for Injunctive Relief ATTACHMENT 2 - HOME HEALTH AGENCY (HHA) (proposed to be effective October 1, 2015) CURRENT PROPOSED Current Proposed TOS Procedure Modifier Modifier Age Current Adjusted Proposed Adjusted * Code 1 2 Long Description ** Range Medicaid Fee Medicaid Fee Medicaid Fee Medicaid Fee c 97035 GP ** 21-999 $112.32 $112.32 $108.44 $108.44 1 97036 GO ** 0-20 $135.14 $135.14 $130.48 $130.48 1 97036 GO ** 21-999 $114.51 $114.51 $110.56 $110.56 1 97036 GP ** 0-20 $135.14 $135.14 $130.48 $130.48 1 97036 GP ** 21-999 $112.32 $112.32 $108.44 $108.44 1 97039 ** 21-999 $112.32 $112.32 $90.00 $90.00 1 97039 AT ** 0-20 $112.32 $112.32 $90.00 $90.00 1 97039 AT ** 21-999 $112.32 $112.32 $90.00 $90.00 1 97039 GO ** 0-20 $135.14 $135.14 $101.36 $101.36 1 97039 GP ** 0-20 $135.14 $135.14 $101.36 $101.36 c 97039 ** 0-20 $112.32 $112.32 $90.00 $90.00 c 97039 ** 21-999 $112.32 $112.32 $90.00 $90.00 1 97110 ** 21-999 $113.05 $113.05 $109.15 $109.15 1 97110 AT ** 0-20 $113.05 $113.05 $109.15 $109.15 1 97110 AT ** 21-999 $113.05 $113.05 $109.15 $109.15 1 97110 AT GO ** 0-20 $114.51 $114.51 $110.56 $110.56 1 97110 AT GO ** 21-999 $114.51 $114.51 $110.56 $110.56 1 97110 AT GP ** 0-20 $112.32 $112.32 $108.44 $108.44 1 97110 AT GP ** 21-999 $112.32 $112.32 $108.44 $108.44 1 97110 GO ** 0-20 $135.14 $135.14 $130.48 $130.48 1 97110 GO ** 21-999 $114.51 $114.51 $110.56 $110.56 1 97110 GP ** 0-20 $135.14 $135.14 $130.48 $130.48 1 97110 GP ** 21-999 $112.32 $112.32 $108.44 $108.44 c 97110 ** 0-20 $113.05 $113.05 $109.15 $109.15 c 97110 ** 21-999 $113.05 $113.05 $109.15 $109.15 c 97110 GO ** 0-20 $114.51 $114.51 $110.56 $110.56 c 97110 GO ** 21-999 $114.51 $114.51 $110.56 $110.56 c 97110 GP ** 0-20 $112.32 $112.32 $108.44 $108.44 c 97110 GP ** 21-999 $112.32 $112.32 $108.44 $108.44 1 97112 ** 21-999 $113.05 $113.05 $109.15 $109.15 1 97112 AT ** 0-20 $113.05 $113.05 $109.15 $109.15 1 97112 AT ** 21-999 $113.05 $113.05 $109.15 $109.15 1 97112 AT GO ** 0-20 $114.51 $114.51 $110.56 $110.56 1 97112 AT GO ** 21-999 $114.51 $114.51 $110.56 $110.56 1 97112 AT GP ** 0-20 $112.32 $112.32 $108.44 $108.44 1 97112 AT GP ** 21-999 $112.32 $112.32 $108.44 $108.44 1 97112 GO ** 0-20 $135.14 $135.14 $130.48 $130.48 1 97112 GO ** 21-999 $114.51 $114.51 $110.56 $110.56 1 97112 GP ** 0-20 $135.14 $135.14 $130.48 $130.48 1 97112 GP ** 21-999 $112.32 $112.32 $108.44 $108.44 c 97112 ** 0-20 $113.05 $113.05 $109.15 $109.15 c 97112 ** 21-999 $113.05 $113.05 $109.15 $109.15 c 97112 GO ** 0-20 $114.51 $114.51 $110.56 $110.56 c 97112 GO ** 21-999 $114.51 $114.51 $110.56 $110.56 c 97112 GP ** 0-20 $112.32 $112.32 $108.44 $108.44 c 97112 GP ** 21-999 $112.32 $112.32 $108.44 $108.44 363 Exhibit A to Plaintiffs' Second Amended Original Petition and Application for Injunctive Relief ATTACHMENT 2 - HOME HEALTH AGENCY (HHA) (proposed to be effective October 1, 2015) CURRENT PROPOSED Current Proposed TOS Procedure Modifier Modifier Age Current Adjusted Proposed Adjusted * Code 1 2 Long Description ** Range Medicaid Fee Medicaid Fee Medicaid Fee Medicaid Fee 1 97116 ** 21-999 $113.05 $113.05 $109.15 $109.15 1 97116 AT ** 0-20 $113.05 $113.05 $109.15 $109.15 1 97116 AT ** 21-999 $113.05 $113.05 $109.15 $109.15 1 97116 AT GO ** 0-20 $114.51 $114.51 $110.56 $110.56 1 97116 AT GO ** 21-999 $114.51 $114.51 $110.56 $110.56 1 97116 AT GP ** 0-20 $112.32 $112.32 $108.44 $108.44 1 97116 AT GP ** 21-999 $112.32 $112.32 $108.44 $108.44 1 97116 GO ** 0-20 $135.14 $135.14 $120.30 $120.30 1 97116 GO ** 21-999 $114.51 $114.51 $110.56 $110.56 1 97116 GP ** 0-20 $135.14 $135.14 $120.30 $120.30 1 97116 GP ** 21-999 $112.32 $112.32 $108.44 $108.44 c 97116 ** 0-20 $113.05 $113.05 $109.15 $109.15 c 97116 ** 21-999 $113.05 $113.05 $109.15 $109.15 c 97116 GO ** 0-20 $114.51 $114.51 $110.56 $110.56 c 97116 GO ** 21-999 $114.51 $114.51 $110.56 $110.56 c 97116 GP ** 0-20 $112.32 $112.32 $108.44 $108.44 c 97116 GP ** 21-999 $112.32 $112.32 $108.44 $108.44 1 97124 ** 21-999 $113.05 $113.05 $84.79 $84.79 1 97124 AT ** 0-20 $113.05 $113.05 $84.79 $84.79 1 97124 AT ** 21-999 $113.05 $113.05 $84.79 $84.79 1 97124 AT GO ** 0-20 $114.51 $114.51 $85.88 $85.88 1 97124 AT GO ** 21-999 $114.51 $114.51 $85.88 $85.88 1 97124 AT GP ** 0-20 $112.32 $112.32 $84.24 $84.24 1 97124 AT GP ** 21-999 $112.32 $112.32 $84.24 $84.24 1 97124 GO ** 0-20 $135.14 $135.14 $101.36 $101.36 1 97124 GO ** 21-999 $114.51 $114.51 $85.88 $85.88 1 97124 GP ** 0-20 $135.14 $135.14 $101.36 $101.36 1 97124 GP ** 21-999 $112.32 $112.32 $84.24 $84.24 c 97124 ** 0-20 $113.05 $113.05 $84.79 $84.79 c 97124 ** 21-999 $113.05 $113.05 $84.79 $84.79 c 97124 GO ** 0-20 $114.51 $114.51 $85.88 $85.88 c 97124 GO ** 21-999 $114.51 $114.51 $85.88 $85.88 c 97124 GP ** 0-20 $112.32 $112.32 $84.24 $84.24 c 97124 GP ** 21-999 $112.32 $112.32 $84.24 $84.24 1 97139 ** 21-999 $113.05 $113.05 $109.15 $109.15 1 97139 AT ** 0-20 $113.05 $113.05 $109.15 $109.15 1 97139 AT ** 21-999 $113.05 $113.05 $109.15 $109.15 1 97139 AT GO ** 0-20 $114.51 $114.51 $110.56 $110.56 1 97139 AT GO ** 21-999 $114.51 $114.51 $110.56 $110.56 1 97139 AT GP ** 0-20 $112.32 $112.32 $108.44 $108.44 1 97139 AT GP ** 21-999 $112.32 $112.32 $108.44 $108.44 1 97139 GO ** 0-20 $135.14 $135.14 $130.48 $130.48 1 97139 GO ** 21-999 $114.51 $114.51 $110.56 $110.56 1 97139 GP ** 0-20 $135.14 $135.14 $130.48 $130.48 1 97139 GP ** 21-999 $112.32 $112.32 $108.44 $108.44 c 97139 ** 0-20 $113.05 $113.05 $109.15 $109.15 364 Exhibit A to Plaintiffs' Second Amended Original Petition and Application for Injunctive Relief ATTACHMENT 2 - HOME HEALTH AGENCY (HHA) (proposed to be effective October 1, 2015) CURRENT PROPOSED Current Proposed TOS Procedure Modifier Modifier Age Current Adjusted Proposed Adjusted * Code 1 2 Long Description ** Range Medicaid Fee Medicaid Fee Medicaid Fee Medicaid Fee c 97139 ** 21-999 $113.05 $113.05 $109.15 $109.15 c 97139 GO ** 0-20 $114.51 $114.51 $110.56 $110.56 c 97139 GO ** 21-999 $114.51 $114.51 $110.56 $110.56 c 97139 GP ** 0-20 $112.32 $112.32 $108.44 $108.44 c 97139 GP ** 21-999 $112.32 $112.32 $108.44 $108.44 1 97140 ** 21-999 $113.05 $113.05 $109.15 $109.15 1 97140 AT ** 0-20 $113.05 $113.05 $109.15 $109.15 1 97140 AT ** 21-999 $113.05 $113.05 $109.15 $109.15 1 97140 AT GO ** 0-20 $114.51 $114.51 $110.56 $110.56 1 97140 AT GO ** 21-999 $114.51 $114.51 $110.56 $110.56 1 97140 AT GP ** 0-20 $112.32 $112.32 $108.44 $108.44 1 97140 AT GP ** 21-999 $112.32 $112.32 $108.44 $108.44 1 97140 GO ** 0-20 $135.14 $135.14 $123.36 $123.36 1 97140 GO ** 21-999 $114.51 $114.51 $110.56 $110.56 1 97140 GP ** 0-20 $135.14 $135.14 $123.36 $123.36 1 97140 GP ** 21-999 $112.32 $112.32 $108.44 $108.44 c 97140 ** 0-20 $113.05 $113.05 $109.15 $109.15 c 97140 ** 21-999 $113.05 $113.05 $109.15 $109.15 c 97140 GO ** 0-20 $114.51 $114.51 $110.56 $110.56 c 97140 GO ** 21-999 $114.51 $114.51 $110.56 $110.56 c 97140 GP ** 0-20 $112.32 $112.32 $108.44 $108.44 c 97140 GP ** 21-999 $112.32 $112.32 $108.44 $108.44 1 97150 ** 21-999 $113.05 $113.05 $109.15 $109.15 1 97150 AT ** 0-20 $113.05 $113.05 $109.15 $109.15 1 97150 AT ** 21-999 $113.05 $113.05 $109.15 $109.15 1 97150 AT GO ** 0-20 $114.51 $114.51 $110.56 $110.56 1 97150 AT GO ** 21-999 $114.51 $114.51 $110.56 $110.56 1 97150 AT GP ** 0-20 $112.32 $112.32 $108.44 $108.44 1 97150 AT GP ** 21-999 $112.32 $112.32 $108.44 $108.44 1 97150 GO ** 0-20 $67.57 $67.57 $65.24 $65.24 1 97150 GO ** 21-999 $114.51 $114.51 $110.56 $110.56 1 97150 GP ** 0-20 $67.57 $67.57 $65.24 $65.24 1 97150 GP ** 21-999 $112.32 $112.32 $108.44 $108.44 c 97150 ** 0-20 $113.05 $113.05 $109.15 $109.15 c 97150 ** 21-999 $113.05 $113.05 $109.15 $109.15 c 97150 GO ** 0-20 $114.51 $114.51 $110.56 $110.56 c 97150 GO ** 21-999 $114.51 $114.51 $110.56 $110.56 c 97150 GP ** 0-20 $112.32 $112.32 $108.44 $108.44 c 97150 GP ** 21-999 $112.32 $112.32 $108.44 $108.44 1 97530 ** 21-999 $113.05 $113.05 $109.15 $109.15 1 97530 AT ** 0-20 $113.05 $113.05 $109.15 $109.15 1 97530 AT ** 21-999 $113.05 $113.05 $109.15 $109.15 1 97530 AT GO ** 0-20 $114.51 $114.51 $110.56 $110.56 1 97530 AT GO ** 21-999 $114.51 $114.51 $110.56 $110.56 1 97530 AT GP ** 0-20 $112.32 $112.32 $108.44 $108.44 1 97530 AT GP ** 21-999 $112.32 $112.32 $108.44 $108.44 365 Exhibit A to Plaintiffs' Second Amended Original Petition and Application for Injunctive Relief ATTACHMENT 2 - HOME HEALTH AGENCY (HHA) (proposed to be effective October 1, 2015) CURRENT PROPOSED Current Proposed TOS Procedure Modifier Modifier Age Current Adjusted Proposed Adjusted * Code 1 2 Long Description ** Range Medicaid Fee Medicaid Fee Medicaid Fee Medicaid Fee 1 97530 GO ** 0-20 $135.14 $135.14 $130.48 $130.48 1 97530 GO ** 21-999 $114.51 $114.51 $110.56 $110.56 1 97530 GP ** 0-20 $135.14 $135.14 $130.48 $130.48 1 97530 GP ** 21-999 $112.32 $112.32 $108.44 $108.44 c 97530 ** 0-20 $113.05 $113.05 $109.15 $109.15 c 97530 ** 21-999 $113.05 $113.05 $109.15 $109.15 c 97530 GO ** 0-20 $114.51 $114.51 $110.56 $110.56 c 97530 GO ** 21-999 $114.51 $114.51 $110.56 $110.56 c 97530 GP ** 0-20 $112.32 $112.32 $108.44 $108.44 c 97530 GP ** 21-999 $112.32 $112.32 $108.44 $108.44 1 97535 ** 21-999 $113.05 $113.05 $109.15 $109.15 1 97535 AT ** 0-20 $113.05 $113.05 $109.15 $109.15 1 97535 AT ** 21-999 $113.05 $113.05 $109.15 $109.15 1 97535 AT GO ** 0-20 $114.51 $114.51 $110.56 $110.56 1 97535 AT GO ** 21-999 $114.51 $114.51 $110.56 $110.56 1 97535 AT GP ** 0-20 $112.32 $112.32 $108.44 $108.44 1 97535 AT GP ** 21-999 $112.32 $112.32 $108.44 $108.44 1 97535 GO ** 0-20 $135.14 $135.14 $130.48 $130.48 1 97535 GO ** 21-999 $114.51 $114.51 $110.56 $110.56 1 97535 GP ** 0-20 $135.14 $135.14 $130.48 $130.48 1 97535 GP ** 21-999 $112.32 $112.32 $108.44 $108.44 c 97535 ** 0-20 $113.05 $113.05 $109.15 $109.15 c 97535 ** 21-999 $113.05 $113.05 $109.15 $109.15 c 97535 GO ** 0-20 $114.51 $114.51 $110.56 $110.56 c 97535 GO ** 21-999 $114.51 $114.51 $110.56 $110.56 c 97535 GP ** 0-20 $112.32 $112.32 $108.44 $108.44 c 97535 GP ** 21-999 $112.32 $112.32 $108.44 $108.44 1 97537 ** 21-999 $113.05 $113.05 $109.15 $109.15 1 97537 AT ** 0-20 $113.05 $113.05 $109.15 $109.15 1 97537 AT ** 21-999 $113.05 $113.05 $109.15 $109.15 1 97537 AT GO ** 0-20 $114.51 $114.51 $110.56 $110.56 1 97537 AT GO ** 21-999 $114.51 $114.51 $110.56 $110.56 1 97537 AT GP ** 0-20 $112.32 $112.32 $108.44 $108.44 1 97537 AT GP ** 21-999 $112.32 $112.32 $108.44 $108.44 1 97537 GO ** 0-20 $135.14 $135.14 $130.48 $130.48 1 97537 GO ** 21-999 $114.51 $114.51 $110.56 $110.56 1 97537 GP ** 0-20 $135.14 $135.14 $130.48 $130.48 1 97537 GP ** 21-999 $112.32 $112.32 $108.44 $108.44 c 97537 ** 0-20 $113.05 $113.05 $109.15 $109.15 c 97537 ** 21-999 $113.05 $113.05 $109.15 $109.15 c 97537 GO ** 0-20 $114.51 $114.51 $110.56 $110.56 c 97537 GO ** 21-999 $114.51 $114.51 $110.56 $110.56 c 97537 GP ** 0-20 $112.32 $112.32 $108.44 $108.44 c 97537 GP ** 21-999 $112.32 $112.32 $108.44 $108.44 1 97542 ** 21-999 $113.05 $113.05 $109.15 $109.15 1 97542 AT ** 0-20 $113.05 $113.05 $109.15 $109.15 366 Exhibit A to Plaintiffs' Second Amended Original Petition and Application for Injunctive Relief ATTACHMENT 2 - HOME HEALTH AGENCY (HHA) (proposed to be effective October 1, 2015) CURRENT PROPOSED Current Proposed TOS Procedure Modifier Modifier Age Current Adjusted Proposed Adjusted * Code 1 2 Long Description ** Range Medicaid Fee Medicaid Fee Medicaid Fee Medicaid Fee 1 97542 AT ** 21-999 $113.05 $113.05 $109.15 $109.15 1 97542 AT GO ** 0-20 $114.51 $114.51 $110.56 $110.56 1 97542 AT GO ** 21-999 $114.51 $114.51 $110.56 $110.56 1 97542 AT GP ** 0-20 $112.32 $112.32 $108.44 $108.44 1 97542 AT GP ** 21-999 $112.32 $112.32 $108.44 $108.44 1 97542 GO ** 0-20 $135.14 $135.14 $130.48 $130.48 1 97542 GO ** 21-999 $114.51 $114.51 $110.56 $110.56 1 97542 GO ** 21-999 $114.51 $114.51 $110.56 $110.56 1 97542 GP ** 0-20 $135.14 $135.14 $130.48 $130.48 1 97542 GP ** 21-999 $112.32 $112.32 $108.44 $108.44 c 97542 ** 0-20 $113.05 $113.05 $109.15 $109.15 c 97542 ** 21-999 $113.05 $113.05 $109.15 $109.15 c 97542 GO ** 0-20 $114.51 $114.51 $110.56 $110.56 c 97542 GO ** 21-999 $114.51 $114.51 $110.56 $110.56 c 97542 GP ** 0-20 $112.32 $112.32 $108.44 $108.44 c 97542 GP ** 21-999 $112.32 $112.32 $108.44 $108.44 1 97750 GO ** 0-20 $135.14 $135.14 $130.48 $130.48 1 97750 GO ** 21-999 $114.51 $114.51 $110.56 $110.56 1 97750 GP ** 0-20 $135.14 $135.14 $130.48 $130.48 1 97750 GP ** 21-999 $112.32 $112.32 $108.44 $108.44 1 97760 GO ** 0-20 $135.14 $135.14 $130.48 $130.48 1 97760 GP ** 0-20 $135.14 $135.14 $130.48 $130.48 1 97761 GO ** 0-20 $135.14 $135.14 $130.48 $130.48 1 97761 GP ** 0-20 $135.14 $135.14 $130.48 $130.48 1 97762 GO ** 0-20 $135.14 $135.14 $130.48 $130.48 1 97762 GP ** 0-20 $135.14 $135.14 $130.48 $130.48 1 97799 ** 21-999 $113.05 $113.05 $109.15 $109.15 1 97799 AT ** 0-20 $113.05 $113.05 $109.15 $109.15 1 97799 AT ** 21-999 $113.05 $113.05 $109.15 $109.15 1 97799 AT GO ** 0-20 $114.51 $114.51 $110.56 $110.56 1 97799 AT GO ** 21-999 $114.51 $114.51 $110.56 $110.56 1 97799 AT GP ** 0-20 $112.32 $112.32 $108.44 $108.44 1 97799 AT GP ** 21-999 $112.32 $112.32 $108.44 $108.44 1 97799 GO ** 0-20 $135.14 $135.14 $130.48 $130.48 1 97799 GO ** 21-999 $114.51 $114.51 $110.56 $110.56 1 97799 GP ** 0-20 $135.14 $135.14 $130.48 $130.48 1 97799 GP ** 21-999 $112.32 $112.32 $108.44 $108.44 c 97799 ** 0-20 $113.05 $113.05 $109.15 $109.15 c 97799 ** 21-999 $113.05 $113.05 $109.15 $109.15 c 97799 GO ** 0-20 $114.51 $114.51 $110.56 $110.56 c 97799 GO ** 21-999 $114.51 $114.51 $110.56 $110.56 c 97799 GP ** 0-20 $112.32 $112.32 $108.44 $108.44 c 97799 GP ** 21-999 $112.32 $112.32 $108.44 $108.44 367 Exhibit A to Plaintiffs' Second Amended Original Petition and Application for Injunctive Relief ATTACHMENT 2 - HOME HEALTH AGENCY (HHA) (proposed to be effective October 1, 2015) CURRENT PROPOSED Current Proposed TOS Procedure Modifier Modifier Age Current Adjusted Proposed Adjusted * Code 1 2 Long Description ** Range Medicaid Fee Medicaid Fee Medicaid Fee Medicaid Fee Physical or manipulative therapy performed for maintenance rather than 1 S8990 restoration 0-999 $57.14 $57.14 $55.17 $55.17 Speech therapy, re- 1 S9152 evaluation 0-20 $180.00 $180.00 $173.79 $173.79 Speech therapy, re- 1 S9152 evaluation 21-999 $105.50 $105.50 $101.86 $101.86 *Type of Service (TOS) 1 Medical Services c Home Health Agency Modifiers AT Acute Treatment GO Occupational Therapy GP Physical Therapy **Required Notice: The five-character code included in this notice is obtained from the Current Procedural Terminology (CPT®), copyright 2015 by the American Medical Association (AMA). CPT is developed by the AMA as a listing of descriptive terms and five character identitying codes and modifiers for reporting medical services and procedures performed by physicians. The responsibility for the content of this notice is with HHSC and no endorsement by the AMA is intended or should be implied. The AMA disclaims responsibility for any consequences or liability attributable or related to any use, nonuse or interpretation of information contained in this notice. Fee schedules, relative value units, conversion factors and/or related components are not assigned by the AMA, are not part of CPT, and the AMA is not recommending their use. The AMA does not directly or indirectly practice medicine or dispense medical services. The AMA assumes no liability for data contained or not contained. 368 Exhibit A to Plaintiffs' Second Amended Original Petition and Application for Injunctive Relief ATTACHMENT 3 - INDEPENDENT THERAPIST (proposed to be effective October 1, 2015) CURRENT PROPOSED Current Proposed TOS Procedure Age Place of Current Adjusted Proposed Adjusted * Code Long Description ** Range Service Medicaid Fee Medicaid Fee Medicaid Fee Medicaid Fee 1 92507 ** 0-20 $31.25 $31.25 $28.67 $28.67 1 92507 ** 0-20 P2 $33.79 $33.79 $28.67 $28.67 1 92507 ** 21-999 $31.25 $31.25 $28.67 $28.67 1 92507 ** 21-999 P2 $33.79 $33.79 $28.67 $28.67 1 92508 ** 0-20 $15.63 $15.63 $11.72 $11.72 1 92508 ** 0-20 P2 $15.63 $15.63 $11.72 $11.72 1 92508 ** 21-999 $15.63 $15.63 $11.72 $11.72 1 92508 ** 21-999 P2 $15.63 $15.63 $11.72 $11.72 1 92521 ** 0-20 $117.18 $117.18 $87.89 $87.89 1 92521 ** 0-20 P2 $120.00 $120.00 $90.00 $90.00 1 92521 ** 21-999 $117.18 $117.18 $87.89 $87.89 1 92521 ** 21-999 P2 $120.00 $120.00 $90.00 $90.00 1 92522 ** 0-20 $146.48 $146.48 $109.86 $109.86 1 92522 ** 0-20 P2 $150.00 $150.00 $112.50 $112.50 1 92522 ** 21-999 $146.48 $146.48 $109.86 $109.86 1 92522 ** 21-999 P2 $150.00 $150.00 $112.50 $112.50 1 92523 ** 0-20 $195.30 $195.30 $146.48 $146.48 1 92523 ** 0-20 P2 $200.00 $200.00 $150.00 $150.00 1 92523 ** 21-999 $195.30 $195.30 $146.48 $146.48 1 92523 ** 21-999 P2 $200.00 $200.00 $150.00 $150.00 1 92524 ** 0-20 $97.65 $97.65 $73.24 $73.24 1 92524 ** 0-20 P2 $100.00 $100.00 $75.00 $75.00 1 92524 ** 21-999 $97.65 $97.65 $73.24 $73.24 1 92524 ** 21-999 P2 $100.00 $100.00 $75.00 $75.00 1 92526 ** 0-20 $31.25 $31.25 $30.17 $30.17 1 92526 ** 0-20 P2 $33.79 $33.79 $32.62 $32.62 1 92526 ** 21-999 $31.25 $31.25 $30.17 $30.17 1 92526 ** 21-999 P2 $33.79 $33.79 $32.62 $32.62 1 92610 ** 0-999 $195.30 $195.30 $188.56 $188.56 1 92610 ** 0-999 P2 $200.00 $200.00 $193.10 $193.10 1 97001 ** 0-20 $130.20 $130.20 $97.65 $97.65 1 97001 ** 0-20 P2 $137.20 $137.20 $102.90 $102.90 1 97001 ** 21-999 $130.20 $130.20 $97.65 $97.65 1 97001 ** 21-999 P2 $137.20 $137.20 $102.90 $102.90 1 97002 ** 0-20 $117.18 $117.18 $87.89 $87.89 1 97002 ** 0-20 P2 $123.48 $123.48 $92.61 $92.61 1 97002 ** 21-999 $117.18 $117.18 $87.89 $87.89 1 97002 ** 21-999 P2 $123.48 $123.48 $92.61 $92.61 1 97003 ** 0-20 $130.20 $130.20 $97.65 $97.65 1 97003 ** 0-20 P2 $137.20 $137.20 $102.90 $102.90 1 97003 ** 21-999 $130.20 $130.20 $97.65 $97.65 1 97003 ** 21-999 P2 $137.20 $137.20 $102.90 $102.90 1 97004 ** 0-20 $117.18 $117.18 $87.89 $87.89 1 97004 ** 0-20 P2 $123.48 $123.48 $92.61 $92.61 369 Exhibit A to Plaintiffs' Second Amended Original Petition and Application for Injunctive Relief ATTACHMENT 3 - INDEPENDENT THERAPIST (proposed to be effective October 1, 2015) CURRENT PROPOSED Current Proposed TOS Procedure Age Place of Current Adjusted Proposed Adjusted * Code Long Description ** Range Service Medicaid Fee Medicaid Fee Medicaid Fee Medicaid Fee 1 97004 ** 21-999 $117.18 $117.18 $87.89 $87.89 1 97004 ** 21-999 P2 $123.48 $123.48 $92.61 $92.61 1 97012 ** 0-20 $31.25 $31.25 $30.17 $30.17 1 97012 ** 0-20 P2 $33.79 $33.79 $32.62 $32.62 1 97012 ** 21-999 $31.25 $31.25 $30.17 $30.17 1 97012 ** 21-999 P2 $33.79 $33.79 $32.62 $32.62 1 97014 ** 0-20 $31.25 $31.25 $23.44 $23.44 1 97014 ** 0-20 P2 $33.79 $33.79 $25.34 $25.34 1 97014 ** 21-999 $31.25 $31.25 $23.44 $23.44 1 97014 ** 21-999 P2 $33.79 $33.79 $25.34 $25.34 1 97016 ** 0-20 $31.25 $31.25 $23.44 $23.44 1 97016 ** 0-20 P2 $33.79 $33.79 $25.34 $25.34 1 97016 ** 21-999 $31.25 $31.25 $23.44 $23.44 1 97016 ** 21-999 P2 $33.79 $33.79 $25.34 $25.34 1 97018 ** 0-20 $31.25 $31.25 $23.44 $23.44 1 97018 ** 0-20 P2 $33.79 $33.79 $25.34 $25.34 1 97018 ** 21-999 $31.25 $31.25 $23.44 $23.44 1 97018 ** 21-999 P2 $33.79 $33.79 $25.34 $25.34 1 97022 ** 0-20 $31.25 $31.25 $30.17 $30.17 1 97022 ** 0-20 P2 $33.79 $33.79 $32.62 $32.62 1 97022 ** 21-999 $31.25 $31.25 $30.17 $30.17 1 97022 ** 21-999 P2 $33.79 $33.79 $32.62 $32.62 1 97024 ** 0-20 $31.25 $31.25 $23.44 $23.44 1 97024 ** 0-20 P2 $33.79 $33.79 $25.34 $25.34 1 97024 ** 21-999 $31.25 $31.25 $23.44 $23.44 1 97024 ** 21-999 P2 $33.79 $33.79 $25.34 $25.34 1 97026 ** 0-20 $31.25 $31.25 $23.44 $23.44 1 97026 ** 0-20 P2 $33.79 $33.79 $25.34 $25.34 1 97026 ** 21-999 $31.25 $31.25 $23.44 $23.44 1 97026 ** 21-999 P2 $33.79 $33.79 $25.34 $25.34 1 97028 ** 0-20 $31.25 $31.25 $30.17 $30.17 1 97028 ** 0-20 P2 $33.79 $33.79 $32.62 $32.62 1 97028 ** 21-999 $31.25 $31.25 $30.17 $30.17 1 97028 ** 21-999 P2 $33.79 $33.79 $32.62 $32.62 1 97032 ** 0-20 $31.25 $31.25 $30.17 $30.17 1 97032 ** 0-20 P2 $33.79 $33.79 $32.62 $32.62 1 97032 ** 21-999 $31.25 $31.25 $30.17 $30.17 1 97032 ** 21-999 P2 $33.79 $33.79 $32.62 $32.62 1 97033 ** 0-20 $31.25 $31.25 $30.17 $30.17 1 97033 ** 0-20 P2 $33.79 $33.79 $32.62 $32.62 1 97033 ** 21-999 $31.25 $31.25 $30.17 $30.17 1 97033 ** 21-999 P2 $33.79 $33.79 $32.62 $32.62 1 97034 ** 0-20 $31.25 $31.25 $30.17 $30.17 1 97034 ** 0-20 P2 $33.79 $33.79 $32.62 $32.62 370 Exhibit A to Plaintiffs' Second Amended Original Petition and Application for Injunctive Relief ATTACHMENT 3 - INDEPENDENT THERAPIST (proposed to be effective October 1, 2015) CURRENT PROPOSED Current Proposed TOS Procedure Age Place of Current Adjusted Proposed Adjusted * Code Long Description ** Range Service Medicaid Fee Medicaid Fee Medicaid Fee Medicaid Fee 1 97034 ** 21-999 $31.25 $31.25 $30.17 $30.17 1 97034 ** 21-999 P2 $33.79 $33.79 $32.62 $32.62 1 97035 ** 0-20 $31.25 $31.25 $30.17 $30.17 1 97035 ** 0-20 P2 $33.79 $33.79 $32.62 $32.62 1 97035 ** 21-999 $31.25 $31.25 $30.17 $30.17 1 97035 ** 21-999 P2 $33.79 $33.79 $32.62 $32.62 1 97036 ** 0-20 $31.25 $31.25 $30.17 $30.17 1 97036 ** 0-20 P2 $33.79 $33.79 $32.62 $32.62 1 97036 ** 21-999 $31.25 $31.25 $30.17 $30.17 1 97036 ** 21-999 P2 $33.79 $33.79 $32.62 $32.62 1 97039 ** 0-20 $31.25 $31.25 $23.44 $23.44 1 97039 ** 0-20 P2 $33.79 $33.79 $25.34 $25.34 1 97039 ** 21-999 $31.25 $31.25 $23.44 $23.44 1 97039 ** 21-999 P2 $33.79 $33.79 $25.34 $25.34 1 97110 ** 0-20 $31.25 $31.25 $30.17 $30.17 1 97110 ** 0-20 P2 $33.79 $33.79 $32.62 $32.62 1 97110 ** 21-999 $31.25 $31.25 $30.17 $30.17 1 97110 ** 21-999 P2 $33.79 $33.79 $32.62 $32.62 1 97112 ** 0-20 $31.25 $31.25 $30.17 $30.17 1 97112 ** 0-20 P2 $33.79 $33.79 $32.62 $32.62 1 97112 ** 21-999 $31.25 $31.25 $30.17 $30.17 1 97112 ** 21-999 P2 $33.79 $33.79 $32.62 $32.62 1 97113 ** 0-20 $36.70 $36.70 $35.43 $35.43 1 97113 ** 0-20 P2 $39.69 $39.69 $38.32 $38.32 1 97113 ** 21-999 $36.70 $36.70 $35.43 $35.43 1 97113 ** 21-999 P2 $39.69 $39.69 $38.32 $38.32 1 97116 ** 0-20 $31.25 $31.25 $30.08 $30.08 1 97116 ** 0-20 P2 $33.79 $33.79 $30.08 $30.08 1 97116 ** 21-999 $31.25 $31.25 $30.08 $30.08 1 97116 ** 21-999 P2 $33.79 $33.79 $30.08 $30.08 1 97124 ** 0-20 $31.25 $31.25 $23.44 $23.44 1 97124 ** 0-20 P2 $33.79 $33.79 $25.34 $25.34 1 97124 ** 21-999 $31.25 $31.25 $23.44 $23.44 1 97124 ** 21-999 P2 $33.79 $33.79 $25.34 $25.34 1 97139 ** 0-20 $31.25 $31.25 $30.17 $30.17 1 97139 ** 0-20 P2 $33.79 $33.79 $32.62 $32.62 1 97139 ** 21-999 $31.25 $31.25 $30.17 $30.17 1 97139 ** 21-999 P2 $33.79 $33.79 $32.62 $32.62 1 97140 ** 0-20 $31.25 $31.25 $30.84 $30.84 1 97140 ** 0-20 P2 $33.79 $33.79 $30.84 $30.84 1 97140 ** 21-999 $31.25 $31.25 $30.84 $30.84 1 97140 ** 21-999 P2 $33.79 $33.79 $30.84 $30.84 1 97150 ** 0-20 $31.25 $31.25 $30.17 $30.17 1 97150 ** 0-20 P2 $33.79 $33.79 $32.62 $32.62 371 Exhibit A to Plaintiffs' Second Amended Original Petition and Application for Injunctive Relief ATTACHMENT 3 - INDEPENDENT THERAPIST (proposed to be effective October 1, 2015) CURRENT PROPOSED Current Proposed TOS Procedure Age Place of Current Adjusted Proposed Adjusted * Code Long Description ** Range Service Medicaid Fee Medicaid Fee Medicaid Fee Medicaid Fee 1 97150 ** 21-999 $31.25 $31.25 $30.17 $30.17 1 97150 ** 21-999 P2 $33.79 $33.79 $32.62 $32.62 1 97530 ** 0-20 $31.25 $31.25 $30.17 $30.17 1 97530 ** 0-20 P2 $33.79 $33.79 $32.62 $32.62 1 97530 ** 21-999 $31.25 $31.25 $30.17 $30.17 1 97530 ** 21-999 P2 $33.79 $33.79 $32.62 $32.62 1 97535 ** 0-20 $31.25 $31.25 $30.17 $30.17 1 97535 ** 0-20 P2 $33.79 $33.79 $32.62 $32.62 1 97537 ** 0-20 $31.25 $31.25 $30.17 $30.17 1 97537 ** 0-20 P2 $33.79 $33.79 $32.62 $32.62 1 97542 ** 0-20 $31.25 $31.25 $30.17 $30.17 1 97542 ** 0-20 P2 $33.79 $33.79 $32.62 $32.62 1 97750 ** 0-20 $31.25 $31.25 $30.17 $30.17 1 97750 ** 0-20 P2 $33.79 $33.79 $32.62 $32.62 1 97750 ** 21-999 $31.25 $31.25 $30.17 $30.17 1 97750 ** 21-999 P2 $33.79 $33.79 $32.62 $32.62 1 97760 ** 0-20 $32.76 $32.76 $31.63 $31.63 1 97760 ** 0-20 P2 $35.42 $35.42 $34.20 $34.20 1 97761 ** 0-20 $31.25 $31.25 $30.17 $30.17 1 97761 ** 0-20 P2 $33.79 $33.79 $32.62 $32.62 1 97762 ** 0-20 $39.73 $39.73 $35.09 $35.09 1 97762 ** 0-20 P2 $42.97 $42.97 $35.09 $35.09 1 97799 ** 0-20 $31.25 $31.25 $30.17 $30.17 1 97799 ** 0-20 P2 $33.79 $33.79 $32.62 $32.62 1 97799 ** 21-999 $31.25 $31.25 $30.17 $30.17 1 97799 ** 21-999 P2 $33.79 $33.79 $32.62 $32.62 Physical or manipulative therapy performed for maintenance 1 S8990 rather than restoration 0-999 $31.25 $31.25 $30.17 $30.17 Physical or manipulative therapy performed for maintenance 1 S8990 rather than restoration 0-999 P2 $33.79 $33.79 $32.62 $32.62 1 S9152 Speech therapy, re-evaluation 0-20 $180.00 $180.00 $173.79 $173.79 1 S9152 Speech therapy, re-evaluation 0-20 P2 $180.00 $180.00 $173.79 $173.79 1 S9152 Speech therapy, re-evaluation 21-999 $175.77 $175.77 $169.71 $169.71 *Type of Service (TOS) 1 !Medical Services Place of Service P2 !Home 372 Exhibit A to Plaintiffs' Second Amended Original Petition and Application for Injunctive Relief ATTACHMENT 3 - INDEPENDENT THERAPIST (proposed to be effective October 1, 2015) CURRENT PROPOSED Current Proposed TOS Procedure Age Place of Current Adjusted Proposed Adjusted * Code Long Description ** Range Service Medicaid Fee Medicaid Fee Medicaid Fee Medicaid Fee **Required Notice: The five-character code included in this notice is obtained from the Current Procedural Terminology (CPT®), copyright 2015 by the American Medical Association (AMA). CPT is developed by the AMA as a listing of descriptive terms and five character identifying codes and modifiers for reporting medical services and procedures performed by physicians. The responsibility for the content of this notice is with HHSC and no endorsement by the AMA is intended or should be implied. The AMA disclaims responsibility for any consequences or liability attributable or related to any use, nonuse or interpretation of information contained in this notice. Fee schedules, relative value units, conversion factors and/or related components are not assigned by the AMA, are not part of CPT, and the AMA is not recommending their use. The AMA does not directly or indirectly practice medicine or dispense medical services. The AMA assumes no liability for data contained or not contained. 373 F 9/8/2015 2:49:47 PM Velva L. Price District Clerk Travis County CAUSE NO. D-1-GN-15-003263 D-1-GN-15-003263 Shaun Glasson DIANA D., as next of friend of KD, a child, § IN THE DISTRICT COURT KAREN G., as next friend of TG and ZM, § children, GUADALUPE P., as next of friend § of LP, a child, SALLY L., as next of friend of § CH, DENA D., as next friend of BD, a child, § OCI ACQUISITION, LLC d/b/a § CARE OPTIONS FOR KIDS, § CONNECTCARE SOLUTIONS, LLC § d/b/a CONNECTCARE THERAPY FOR § KIDS, ATLAS PEDIATRIC THERAPY § CONSULTANTS LLC, and PATHFINDER § PEDIATRIC HOME CARE, INC., § § 200TH JUDICIAL DISTRICT OF Plaintiffs, § § v. § § CHRIS TRAYLOR, as EXECUTIVE § COMMISSIONER of TEXAS § HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES § COMMISSION, and TEXAS § HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES § COMMISSION, § § Defendants. § TRAVIS COUNTY, TEXAS PLAINTIFFS' SECOND AMENDED ORIGINAL PETITION AND APPLICATION FOR INJUNCTIVE RELIEF TO THE HONORABLE JUDGE OF SAID COURT: Although entrusted with the responsibility of operating the Texas Medicaid system in accordance with applicable Texas and federal law, Defendants Chris Traylor, as Executive Commissioner of the Texas Health and Human Services Commission, and the Texas Health and Human Services Commission promulgated and then abruptly withdrew, in the face of a temporary injunction hearing requested by Plaintiffs, two illegal sets of cuts to the reimbursement rates for providers of physical, occupational, and speech therapy services to 1826.002 435836 " g (' 11 336 Texas Medicaid beneficiaries. Nine days after withdrawing the first two sets of illegal rate cuts, Defendants continued their inexplicable rush to implement destructive cuts to critical Medicaid rates by publishing a third set of illegal cuts, to be effective October 1, 2015. As with the first two sets of rates proposed by Defendants, this newest set of rates violates Article I, § 19 of the Texas Constitution and numerous Texas statutes and regulations. If implemented, the newest cuts will force Texas Medicaid providers to cease providing services critical to the health and development of Texas' most vulnerable residents, its children. Plaintiffs Diana D., Karen G., Guadalupe P., Sally L., and Dena D. are the mothers and next friends of children receiving speech, occupational, and therapy services from home health agencies under the Texas Medicaid program. Plaintiffs OCI Acquisition, LLC d/b/a Care Options for Kids, ConnectCare Solutions, LLC d/b/a ConnectCare Therapy for Kids, Atlas Pediatric Therapy Consultants LLC, and Pathfinder Pediatric Home Care, Inc. are duly licensed home health agencies providing pediatric speech, occupational, and physical therapy services under the Texas Medicaid program. Because Defendants' actions are unlawful and will cause immediate and irreparable injury to the children whose mothers are bringing this suit, to thousands of other Texas children receiving services under the Texas Medicaid program, and to Texas Medicaid providers, Plaintiffs are requesting that the Court grant a declaratory judgment that the proposed rates are void and injunctive relief preventing the implementation of those rates. I. DISCOVERY CONTROL PLAN 1. Plaintiffs intend to conduct discovery under Level 3 of Texas Rule of Civil Procedure 190 .4 and will seek a Court Order in accordance with the requirements of such Rule. 2 337 II. PARTIES 2. Plaintiff Diana D. is the mother and next friend of KD, who is nine years old. Both are residents of Travis County, Texas. 3. Plaintiff Karen G. is the mother and next friend of TG, who is fifteen years old, and ZM, who is thirteen years old. All are residents of Williamson County, Texas. 4. Plaintiff Guadalupe P. is the mother and next friend of LP, who is two years old. Both are residents of Travis County, Texas. 5. Plaintiff Sally L. is the mother and next friend of CH, who is four years old. Both are residents of Travis County, Texas. 6. Plaintiff Dena D. is the mother and next friend of BD, who is eight years old. Both are residents of Hays County, Texas. 7. Plaintiffs OCI Acquisition, LLC d/b/a Care Options for Kids and ConnectCare Solutions LLC d/b/a ConnectCare Therapy for Kids (collectively "Care Options for Kids" or "COFK"), are affiliated entities and duly licensed Texas pediatric home health agencies that provide speech, occupational, and physical therapy services to children across the State of Texas, including in Travis County, Texas. COFK's headquarters and principal place of business is in Dallas, Dallas County, Texas. 8. Plaintiff Atlas Pediatric Therapy Consultants LLC ("Atlas") is a duly licensed Texas pediatric home health agency that provides speech, occupational, and physical therapy services to children in North Texas. Its headquarters and principal place of business is in Arlington, Tarrant County, Texas. 9. Plaintiff Pathfinder Pediatric Home Care, Inc. ("Pathfinder") is a duly licensed, family-owned Texas pediatric home health agency that provides speech, occupational, and 3 338 physical therapy services to children in 115 Texas counties, primarily in East Texas. Pathfinder's headquarters and principal place of business in The Woodlands, Montgomery County, Texas. 10. Care Options for Kids, Atlas, and Pathfinder are referred to collectively as "Provider Plaintiffs". 11. Defendant Chris Traylor, as Executive Commissioner of the Texas Health and Human Services Commission ("Commissioner Traylor") has appeared and answered. 12. Defendant Texas Health and Human Services Commission ("HHSC") 1s an agency of the State of Texas, and has appeared and answered. III. JURISDICTION AND VENUE 13. Jurisdiction and venue are appropriate in this Court under TEX. Crv. PRAC. & REM. CODE §37.002(b) and TEX. Gov'T CODE §2001.038(b). IV. FACTUALBACKGROUND 14. Medicaid is a health insurance program, jointly operated and funded by the federal and state governments, for the medical care of low-income and other eligible persons. While federal law establishes Medicaid's basic parameters, each state, including Texas, decides the types and ranges of services, payment levels for services, and administrative services it will provide. Specifically, each state, including Texas, prepares a written plan ("State Plan") describing the nature and scope of its Medicaid program. Once the State Plan is approved by the U.S. Secretary of Health and Human Services, the state is responsible for operating the program to conform to that plan. 15. Although recently described by the governor of Texas as "riddled with operational, managerial, structural and procedural problems," HHSC is the agency responsible for the Texas Medicaid program. HHSC arranges for the delivery of most Medicaid services 4 339 through contracts with managed care organizations ("MCOs") licensed by the Texas Department of Insurance. MCOs contract directly with doctors and other health care providers to create provider networks for Medicaid beneficiaries. HHSC pays each MCO a monthly amount to coordinate and deliver health services for the Medicaid members enrolled in the MCO's health plan. The MCOs are required to provide to their members all medically necessary services mandated by the Texas State Plan, including pediatric occupational, speech, and physical therapy services ("Pediatric Services"). 16. Diana D. is the mother and next friend of a child currently receiving Pediatric Services from Care Options for Kids. KD, her nine year old daughter, suffers from Rett syndrome, delayed development, and a seizure disorder. KD is nonverbal, non-ambulatory, suffers from swallowing seizures, and has difficulty using her hands and feet. Due to her condition, KD is unable to receive therapy outside her home. Because Diana D. is unable to afford the rates of a commercial provider, the Texas Medicaid program is the only source of the Pediatric Services her daughter requires. 17. Karen G. is the mother and next friend of two children currently rece1vmg Pediatric Services from Care Options for Kids. TG, her fifteen year old son, was born with a brain injury and suffers from autism and speech developmental delay. ZM, her thirteen year old son, suffers from multiple issues, including seizure disorder, mesial temporal sclerosis disorder, and autism. Due to their conditions, TG and ZM are unable to receive therapy outside their home. Because Karen G. is unable to afford the rates of a commercial provider, the Texas Medicaid program is the only source of the Pediatric Services her sons require. 18. Guadalupe P. is the mother and next friend of a child currently receiving Pediatric Services from Care Options for Kids. LP, her two year old daughter, is diagnosed with Williams 5 340 syndrome and subglottic stenosis, and as a result, has developmental delays, aortic stenosis, and a heart murmur. Due to these conditions, LP is unable to receive therapy outside her home. Because Guadalupe P. is unable to afford the rates of a commercial provider, the Texas Medicaid program is the only source of the Pediatric Services her daughter requires. 19. Sally L. is the mother and next friend of a child currently receiving Pediatric Services from Care Options for Kids. CH, her four year old son, is diagnosed with moderate autism and, as a result, has challenges with speech, applied behavior, outbursts, transitions, and following directions. Due to these conditions, CH is unable to receive therapy outside his home. Because Sally L. is unable to afford the rates of a commercial provider, the Texas Medicaid program is the only source of the Pediatric Services her son requires. 20. Dena D. is the mother and next friend of a child currently receiving Pediatric Services. BD, her eight year old daughter, is diagnosed with Cerebral Palsy and post-traumatic epilepsy. Due to these conditions, BD is unable to receive therapy outside her home. Because Dena D. is unable to afford the rates of a commercial provider, the Texas Medicaid program is the only source of the Pediatric Services her daughter requires. 21. Care Options for Kids is a duly-licensed Texas pediatric home health agency that provides Pediatric Services to Texas children from birth through twenty-one years of age in the children's homes. It is the largest pediatric home health organization in the state of Texas; of all children who receive therapy services in a home environment, approximately nine percent of them receive their services from Care Options for Kids. COFK has over 400 employees, and all of its revenues are generated from services provided to children under the Medicaid program. 6 341 22. Atlas and Pathfinder are also duly-licensed Texas pediatric home health agencies providing Pediatric Services to Texas children. Pathfinder is a family-owned business. Atlas is a small business under the definition in Tex. Govt. Code 2006.001. 23. Provider Plaintiffs deliver a wide range of critical services to the children served by the Texas Medicaid program, including required Pediatric Services. The Provider Plaintiffs' pediatric physical therapists assist children with mild to severe defects in gross motor skills, specializing in the treatment and management of a variety of congenital, developmental, neuromuscular, skeletal, and acquired disorders and diseases. The therapists' goals are to promote overall wellness and independence for the children and their families. The Provider Plaintiffs' speech language pathologists focus on helping their patients with language development, articulation skills, and oral/motor feeding challenges, working to remediate communication disorders that interfere with or impede the child's effective communication. The goals of those professionals are to increase the child's communication skills to an age- appropriate or functional ability level. The Provider Plaintiffs' pediatric occupational therapists are trained to assist children with their individual physical and development issues, and work with the children to teach them how to perform daily activities, interact socially, and become functional and independent adults. 24. Defendants have promulgated new proposed reimbursement rates to be implemented October 1, 2015 for physical, occupational, and speech therapy services, including Pediatric Services, under the Texas Medicaid program ("the Rates"). A copy of the Rates is attached as Exhibit A. The Rates, which are the third set of rates that Defendants have promulgated in less than sixty days, will impose severe cuts to the current Medicaid reimbursement rates for speech, occupational, and physical therapy services. If the Rates are 7 342 allowed to take effect, numerous Medicaid providers, including the Provider Plaintiffs, will be unable to continue providing Medicaid services. Many providers will be forced to cease operations entirely. The forced closure of multiple Medicaid providers, particularly those providing services to children, will make it impossible for Texas to comply with state-mandated access standards. Such closures will deny needed services to children, including KD, TG, ZM, LP, CH, and BD, who are now served by the Texas Medicaid program. Accordingly, the Rates, if implemented, will cause imminent and irreparable harm to the children of Texas, the most vulnerable of Medicaid beneficiaries. 25. Defendants have promulgated the Rates without complying with, and in direct violation of, multiple Texas statutes and regulations. First, Defendants have promulgated the Rates in violation of 1 TAC §§355.8021, 355.8441, and 355.8085. Second, Defendants have promulgated the Rates without conducting the economic impact analysis or regulatory flexibility analysis required by TEX. Gov'T CODE §2006.002. Third, Defendants have not prepared the local employment impact statement required by TEX. Gov'T CODE §2001.022(a). Fourth, Defendants have not published the notice required by 1 TAC §355.201(e) and (f). In addition, Defendants have not complied with TEX. Gov'T CODE §2001.023(a), which requires that a state agency promulgating a new rule must provide information about the costs and benefits of the new rule, as well as all other statements required by law. 26. Defendants' actions also violate their statutory duty to maximize the Medicaid finance system. TEX. Gov'T CODE §531.02113 requires Defendants to maximize the Medicaid finance system by, among other things: a) creating incentives for providers to use preventive care; b) increasing and retaining providers to maintain an adequate provider network; c) encouraging the improvement of the quality of care; and d) insuring that the system accurately 8 343 reflects the costs borne by the providers. If implemented, the Rates will have exactly the opposite impact on the Texas Medicaid system because they will create disincentives for preventive care, dramatically decrease the number of providers, impair the quality of care, and fail to accurately reflect the costs borne by the providers. If allowed to go into effect, the promulgated Rates, or other Pediatric Services rates implemented in violation of applicable law, will cause immediate and irreparable damage to each of the Plaintiffs, other children receiving Pediatric Services under the Texas Medicaid program, and other Texas Medicaid providers. 27. Defendants' actions additionally deny KD, TG, ZM, LP, CH, BD, and other Texas Medicaid beneficiaries the access to providers and services required by applicable Texas statutes and regulations. HHSC's regulations require that each MCO must "ensure the reasonable availability of specialists for all covered services requiring specialty care." 1 TAC §353.411(a)(5). Furthermore, each contract between an MCO and the state must provide for a "sufficient number of. .. specialty pediatric providers of home and community-based services" and provide that "health care services will be accessible to recipients through the [MCO's] provider network to a comparable extent that health care services would be available to recipients under a fee-for-service or primary care case management model of Medicaid managed care." TEX. Gov'T CODE §533.005(a)(21). The Rates will eliminate the sole provider of Medicaid Pediatric Services available to KD, TG, ZM, LP, CH, and BD, as well as numerous other Medicaid providers, thus denying those children and thousands of other children access to critical Medicaid services mandated by state law. Accordingly, the proposed Rates will prevent the access to services and providers required by Texas law. 28. Finally, Defendants' efforts to implement the Rates violate the due course of law provision of the Texas Constitution Art. I, §19. If implemented, the Rates will deprive KD, TG, 9 344 ZM, LP, CH, and BD of mandated and necessary services and destroy the economic viability of the Provider Plaintiffs. The Rates are arbitrary, capricious, and not based on fact. The Rates cannot arguably be rationally related to a legitimate governmental interest. When considered as a whole, the actual, real-world effect of the Rates as applied to Plaintiffs cannot arguably be rationally related to a government interest. Finally, the Rates are so burdensome as to be oppressive in light of any governmental interest. The Rates therefore deny Plaintiffs, citizens of Texas, the right not to be deprived "of life, liberty, property, privileges or immunities ... except by the due course of the law of the land." Tex. Const. art. I, § 19. V. CLAIMS AGAINST DEFENDANTS A. Declaratory Relief 29. Plaintiffs reallege and incorporate herein by reference paragraphs 1-28 above. 30. Plaintiffs' legal rights, status, and legal relations are affected by the Rates and Defendants' actions in promulgating the Rates. Pursuant to Chapter 37 of the Texas Civil Practice & Remedies Code, Plaintiffs seek a judgment declaring that the Rates are invalid, void, and of no force or effect because (1) Defendants have promulgated the Rates in violation of applicable Texas law, (2) Commissioner Traylor's actions in promulgating the rates are ultra vires, and (3) the Rates violate the due course oflaw provision of the Texas Constitution. 31. In addition, the Rates and their threatened application interfere with or impair, or threaten to interfere with or impair, Plaintiffs' legal rights or privileges. Plaintiffs therefore seek a declaratory judgment pursuant to TEX. Gov'T CODE §2001.038 declaring that the Rates are invalid, void, and of no force or effect because (1) Defendants have promulgated the Rates in violation of applicable Texas law, (2) Commissioner Traylor's actions in promulgating the Rates 10 345 are ultra vires, and (3) the Rates violate the due course of law prov1s10n of the Texas Constitution. 32. Plaintiffs request that the Court award them their reasonable and necessary attorneys' fees and costs incurred herein as allowed by TEX. Crv. PRAC. & REM. CODE §37.009 and other applicable law. B. Request for Temporary and Permanent Injunctive Relief 33. Plaintiffs reallege and incorporate herein by reference paragraphs 1-32 above. 34. As set forth above, the actions of Commissioner Traylor are ultra vires in that his actions taken in promulgating the Rates are outside his statutory and legal authority, and HHSC's actions are in violation of applicable Texas law. Because Defendants have acted and are acting without legal authority, this Court can and must enjoin Commissioner Traylor and HHSC from taking any further actions to implement the Rates. Plaintiffs believe, moreover, that Defendants, if they are prevented from implementing the Rates, intend to implement new reimbursement rates for Pediatric Services and other physical, occupational, and speech therapy services under the Texas Medicaid program without complying with the requirements of applicable statutes and regulations, including without limitation, TEX. Gov'T CODE §§ 531.02113, 533.005(a)(21), 2001.022(a), 2001.023(a), and 2006.002, and 1 TAC§§ 353.41 l(a)(5), 355.201(e), (f), 355.8021, 355.8085, and 355.8441. 35. Plaintiffs will suffer imminent, irreparable harm without court intervention and have no adequate remedy at law if Defendants are not immediately enjoined from (1) taking any action to implement the Rates and (2) taking any action to implement any other new reimbursement rates for physical, occupational, or speech therapy services under the Texas Medicaid program without complying with the requirements of applicable Texas statutes and 11 346 regulations, including without limitation TEX. Gov'T CODE §§ 531.02113, 533.005(a)(21), 2001.022(a), 2001.023(a), and 2006.002, and 1 TAC§§ 353.411(a)(5), 355.201(e), (f), 355.8021, 355.8085, and 355.8441. 36. If not so enjoined, Commissioner Traylor will continue to take actions outside his legal authority, and HHSC will continue to take actions in violation of applicable Texas law. If Defendants are not enjoined as requested, KD, TG, ZM, LP, CH, BD, and thousands of other Texas children receiving Pediatric Services under the Texas Medicaid program will be deprived of those critical services. Defendants' actions will cause multiple Texas Medicaid providers to go out of business and/or stop providing Medicaid services. Those actions will, in addition, create disincentives for Medicaid providers to use preventive care, decrease the quality of care provided to Medicaid recipients in Texas, and prevent Texas Medicaid beneficiaries from receiving critical services. If allowed to go into effect, the Rates, or other reimbursement rates for physical, occupational, or speech therapy services under the Texas Medicaid program implemented without complying with Texas law, will cause immediate and irreparable damage to each of the Plaintiffs, other children receiving Pediatric Services under the Texas Medicaid program, and other Texas Medicaid providers. 37. Plaintiffs are willing to post the necessary reasonable bond to facilitate the injunctive relief requested. Plaintiffs believe that a bond in a nominal amount would be appropriate. 38. The only adequate, effective and complete relief for Plaintiffs is for the Court to grant injunctive relief immediately restraining and prohibiting Commissioner Traylor and HHSC and their agents, servants, employees, independent contractors, attorneys, representatives, and those persons or entities in active concert or participation with them from (1) taking any action to 12 347 implement the Rates and (2) taking any action to implement any other reimbursement rates for physical, occupational, and speech therapy services under the Texas Medicaid program without complying with the requirements of applicable statutes and regulations, including without limitation TEX. Gov'T CODE §§ 531.02113, 533.005(a)(21), 2001.022(a), 2001.023(a), and 2006.002, and 1 TAC §§ 353.411(a)(5), 355.201(e), (f), 355.8021, 355.8085, and 355.8441 (the "Injunctive Relief). 39. Pursuant to Texas Rules of Civil Procedure 680 et. seq., and Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code §65.001 et. seq., and in order to preserve the status quo during the pendency of this action, Plaintiffs request (1) a temporary restraining order granting the requested Injunctive Relief, (2) alternatively, a temporary injunction hearing and an order requiring Defendants to appear at such hearing and show cause why a temporary injunction should not be issued, (3) upon hearing, a temporary injunction granting the requested Injunctive Relief, and (4) upon final hearing, a permanent injunction granting the requested Injunctive Relief. 40. Plaintiffs are willing to post the necessary reasonable bond to facilitate the injunctive relief requested. Plaintiffs believe that a bond in a nominal amount would be appropriate. 41. Plaintiffs incorporate herein by reference the affidavits of Diana D., Karen G., Guadalupe P., and Sally L. attached as Exhibits B through E, respectively to Plaintiffs' Original Petition and Application for Injunctive Relief previously filed herein, 1 and the affidavits of Michael Reiswig on behalf of Care Options for Kids, Joshua Adams on behalf of Atlas, and J. 1 To protect the privacy of the children named as Plaintiffs, the original affidavits of their next friends attached to such petition and filed in the records of the Court were redacted to eliminate identifying information, such as the next friends' last names and addresses. Non-redacted copies of such affidavits are available and will be provided to the Court and Defendants if deemed appropriate by the Court. 13 348 Adam Wilcox on behalf of Pathfinder, attached as Exhibits A-1 through A-3, respectively, to this Petition. VI. CONCLUSION & PRAYER WHEREFORE, PREMISES CONSIDERED, Plaintiffs respectfully request that they be granted: (a) the declaratory relief as set forth above; (b) the injunctive relief as set forth above; (c) their reasonable and necessary attorneys' fees and expenses; and (d) all other relief to which they may be justly entitled. Respectfully submitted, By: ATTORNEYS FOR PLAINTIFFS 14 349 CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE I hereby certify that the foregoing document has been delivered to the following counsel ofrecords on this, the 81h day of September 2015 by fax and e-mail: Eugene A. Clayborn Andrew Lutostanski Assistant Attorney General Office of the Attorney General of Texas P.O. Box 12548, Capitol Station Austin, Texas 78711-2548 Facsimile: (512) 457-4614 15 350 G Texas Government Code § 531.021. Administration of Medicaid (a) The commission is the state agency designated to administer federal Medicaid funds. (b) The commission shall: (1) plan and direct Medicaid in each agency that operates a portion of Medicaid , including the management of the Medicaid managed care system and the development, procurement, management, and monitoring of contracts necessary to implement the Medicaid managed care system; and (2) establish requirements for and define the scope of the ongoing evaluation of the Medicaid managed care system conducted in conjunction with the Department of State Health Services under Section 108.0065, Health and Safety Code. (b-1) The executive commissioner shall adopt reasonable rules and standards governing the determination of fees, charges, and rates for Medicaid payments. (c) The executive commissioner in the adoption of reasonable rules and standards under Subsection (b-1) shall include financial performance standards that, in the event of a proposed rate reduction, provide private ICF-IID facilities and home and community-based services providers with flexibility in determining how to use Medicaid payments to provide services in the most cost-effective manner while continuing to meet the state and federal requirements of Medicaid. (d) In adopting rules and standards required by Subsection (b-1), the executive commissioner may provide for payment of fees, charges, and rates in accordance with: (1) formulas, procedures, or methodologies prescribed by the commission's rules; (2) applicable state or federal law, policies, rules, regulations, or guidelines; (3) economic conditions that substantially and materially affect provider participation in Medicaid , as determined by the executive commissioner; or (4) available levels of appropriated state and federal funds. (e) Notwithstanding any other provision of Chapter 32, Human Resources Code, Chapter 533, or this chapter, the commission may adjust the fees, charges, and rates paid to Medicaid providers as necessary to achieve the objectives of Medicaid in a manner consistent with the considerations described by Subsection (d). (f) In adopting rates for Medicaid payments under Subsection (b-1), the executive commissioner may adopt reimbursement rates for appropriate nursing services provided to recipients with certain health conditions if those services are determined to provide a cost-effective alternative to hospitalization. A physician must certify that the nursing services are medically appropriate for the recipient for those services to qualify for reimbursement under this subsection. (g) In adopting rates for Medicaid payments under Subsection (b-1), the executive commissioner may adopt cost-effective reimbursement rates for group appointments with Medicaid providers for certain diseases and medical conditions specified by rules of the executive commissioner. § 531.02113. Optimization of Medicaid Funding The commission shall ensure that the Medicaid finance system is optimized to: (1) maximize the state's receipt of federal funds; (2) create incentives for providers to use preventive care; (3) increase and retain providers in the system to maintain an adequate provider network; (4) more accurately reflect the costs borne by providers; and (5) encourage the improvement of the quality of care. § 2001.038. Declaratory Judgment (a) The validity or applicability of a rule, including an emergency rule adopted under Section 2001.034, may be determined in an action for declaratory judgment if it is alleged that the rule or its threatened application interferes with or impairs, or threatens to interfere with or impair, a legal right or privilege of the plaintiff. * * * Texas Human Resources Code § 32.021. Administration of the Program (a) The commission is the single state agency designated to administer the medical assistance program provided in this chapter in accordance with 42 U.S.C. Section 1396a(a)(5). Subject to applicable federal law, the commission may delegate the operation of a part of the medical assistance program to another state agency. Notwithstanding any delegation, the commission retains ultimate authority over the medical assistance program. (a-1) To the extent the commission delegates the operation of a part of the medical assistance program to another state agency, or to the extent that state law assigns a function of the medical assistance program to another health and human services agency operating under the commission’s oversight, a reference in this chapter to the commission with respect to that part of the medical assistance program means the state agency to which the operation of that part is delegated or assigned. (b) The commission shall enter into agreements with any federal agency designated by federal law to administer medical assistance when the commission determines the agreements to be compatible with the state's participation in the medical assistance program and within the limits of appropriated funds. The commission shall cooperate with federal agencies designated by federal law to administer medical assistance in any reasonable manner necessary to qualify for federal funds. (c) The executive commissioner shall establish methods of administration and adopt necessary rules for the proper and efficient operation of the medical assistance program. * * * § 32.028. Fees, Charges, and Rates (a) The executive commissioner shall adopt reasonable rules and standards governing the determination of fees, charges, and rates for medical assistance payments. (b) The fee, charge, or rate for a professional service is the usual and customary fee, charge, or rate that prevails in the community. (c) The fee, charge, or rate for other medical assistance is the usual and customary fee, charge, or rate that prevails in the community unless the payment is limited by state or federal law. * * * § 32.0281. Rules and Notice Relating to Payment Rates (a) The executive commissioner shall by rule describe the process used to determine payment rates for medical assistance and shall notify providers, consumers, the Legislative Budget Board, and the Governor's Office of Budget, Planning, and Policy of that process. (b) The executive commissioner shall adopt rules relating to payment rates that include: (1) a description of the process used to determine payment rates; (2) a description of each cost of living index used in calculating inflation rates and the procedure for determining the level of inflation used in the executive commissioner's calculations; (3) the criteria for desk audits; (4) the procedure for notifying providers of exclusions and adjustments to reported expenses, if notification is requested; and (5) a method of adjusting rates if new legislation, regulations, or economic factors affect costs. (c) The commission shall include in the Title XIX State Medicaid Plan submitted to the federal government for approval the procedures for making available to the public the data and methodology used in establishing payment rates. (d) The procedures for adopting rules under this section shall be governed by Chapter 2001, Government Code. (e) An interested party may appeal an action taken by the commission under this section, and an appeal of such action shall be governed by the procedures for a contested case hearing under Chapter 2001, Government Code. The filing of an appeal under this section shall not stay the implementation of payment rates adopted by the executive commissioner in accordance with commission rules. § 32.0282. Public Hearing on Rates (a) The commission shall hold a public hearing to allow interested persons to present comments relating to proposed payment rates for medical assistance. (b) The commission shall provide notice of each hearing to the public. 1 TEXAS ADMINISTRATIVE CODE § 355.201 Establishment and Adjustment of Reimbursement Rates by the Health and Human Services Commission * * * (b) Purpose. This section implements the provisions of §531.021(d) and (e), Government Code and applies to all programs that provide medical assistance and to all reimbursement methodologies prescribed under this chapter. (c) Establishment of fees, rates, and charges. The Commission establishes fees, rates, and charges to be paid for medical assistance in accordance with: (1) the formulas, procedures, or methodologies prescribed in this chapter; (2) the requirements of applicable state and federal law, policies, rules, regulations, or guidelines, including: (A) legislative or Congressional enactments that change state or federal laws in a manner that affects such fees, rates, and charges; (B) changes in federal regulations, and policies that affect such fees, rates, and charges; and (C) judicial orders, opinions, or interpretations regarding state or federal law that affect such fees, rates, and charges; (3) the consideration of economic factors that, in the Commission's determination: (A) have or may have a significant and measurable effect on provider participation; or (B) have or may have a significant and measurable effect on providers' ability to deliver services in accordance with state and federal law; and (4) levels of appropriated state and federal funds or state or federal laws or enactments that limit, restrict, or condition the availability of appropriated funds for medical assistance. (d) Adjustment of fees, rates, and charges. Notwithstanding any other provision of this chapter, the Commission may adjust fees, rates, and charges paid for medical assistance if: (1) state or federal law is enacted, amended, judicially interpreted, or implemented to: (A) require the Commission to increase or reduce a fee, rate, or charge paid to a provider for medical assistance; (B) change the amount, scope, or type of allowable or unallowable costs for providers of medical assistance that are required to report costs to the Commission or a health and human services agency for purposes of establishing a reimbursement rate for medical assistance; (C) require all providers within a program or category of providers to incur additional costs to provide medical assistance, other than unallowable costs, that are not currently recognized in the reimbursement methodology established by the Commission for the program; or (D) restrict, limit, or condition the availability of appropriated funds to the Commission for payment or reimbursement of medical assistance; (2) economic conditions that prevail among all providers within a specific program or category of providers and: (A) result in a demonstrable increase in the cost of providing services beyond amounts recognized in the Commission's established reimbursement methodology; or (B) require providers within a program or category of providers to incur costs, other than unallowable costs, that are not currently recognized in the reimbursement methodology established by the Commission for the program. (e) Notice of adjustment of fees, rates, and charges. If the Commission adjusts fees, rates, or charges under this section, the Commission or its designee will publish notice of the proposed adjustment at the earliest feasible date but not later than 10 state working days before the effective date of the adjustment. If the adjustment is required by the enactment or amendment of state or federal law, such notice may be published before the effective date of such enactment or amendment, but the adjustment to fees, rates, or charges will not take effect before the effective date of the enactment or amendment. The notice must be published either by publication on the Commission's Internet web site or in the Texas Register. In addition, the Commission may issue written or electronic communication to providers, if economically feasible. (f) Contents of notice. The notice required under subsection (e) of this section will include the following: (1) a description of the specific increase or reduction of fees, rates, and charges; (2) the date on which such adjustment will take effect; (3) a description of the legal and factual bases for the adjustment; (4) a description of the specific requirements of the rate setting methodology established under this chapter that cannot effectively be implemented as a result of the adjustment; (5) instructions for interested parties to submit written comments to the Commission regarding the proposed adjustment; and (6) the date, time, and location of a public hearing in accordance with §32.0282, Human Resources Code. § 355.8021 Reimbursement Methodology for Home Health Services and Durable Medical Equipment, Prosthetics, Orthotics and Supplies (a) Reimbursement methodology for services provided by a home health agency. (1) Except for durable medical equipment, prosthetics, orthotics and supplies (DMEPOS), authorized home health services provided for eligible Medicaid recipients are reimbursed the lesser of: (A) the amount billed to Medicaid by the agency; or (B) the fee established for the specific authorized home health service and published in the Medicaid fee schedules. (2) HHSC will update the fee schedules for Medicaid-reimbursable therapy, nursing, and aide services provided by a home health agency as needed. (A) HHSC bases the fee schedules on: an analysis of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services fees for similar services; Medicaid fees paid by other states; a survey of costs reported by Medicaid home health agencies; the Medicare Low Utilization Payment Adjustment (LUPA) fees; previous Medicaid payments for Medicaid- reimbursable therapy, nursing, and aide services; or some combination thereof. Reimbursement information for therapy, nursing and aide services provided through the Early and Periodic Screening, Diagnosis and Treatment (EPSDT) program, known in Texas as Texas Health Steps, is defined in §355.8441 of this subchapter (relating to Reimbursement Methodologies for Early and Periodic Screening, Diagnosis and Treatment (EPSDT) Services). (B) HHSC may conduct periodic rate reviews that will include, but not be limited to, payments for as well as the costs associated with providing these Medicaid-reimbursable therapy, nursing, and aide services. HHSC may seek input from contracted home health services providers and other interested parties in performing this review. * * * H 42 U.S.C. § 1396a (30)(A) provide such methods and procedures relating to the utilization of, and the payment for, care and services available under the plan (including but not limited to utilization review plans as provided for in section 1396b(i)(4) of this title) as may be necessary to safeguard against unnecessary utilization of such care and services and to assure that payments are consistent with efficiency, economy, and quality of care and are sufficient to enlist enough providers so that care and services are available under the plan at least to the extent that such care and services are available to the general population in the geographic area; 42 U.S.C. § 1396c If the Secretary, after reasonable notice and opportunity for hearing to the State agency administering or supervising the administration of the State plan approved under this subchapter, finds-- (1) that the plan has been so changed that it no longer complies with the provisions of section 1396a of this title; or (2) that in the administration of the plan there is a failure to comply substantially with any such provision; the Secretary shall notify such State agency that further payments will not be made to the State (or, in his discretion, that payments will be limited to categories under or parts of the State plan not affected by such failure), until the Secretary is satisfied that there will no longer be any such failure to comply. Until he is so satisfied he shall make no further payments to such State (or shall limit payments to categories under or parts of the State plan not affected by such failure).