Posts Tagged ‘CMS’

Announcing the first ONC-Authorized Testing and Certification Bodies for EHRs

September 1st, 2010

ONC-ATCBs (Authorized Testing and Certification Bodies) for EHRs Accounced

The Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology (ONC) within the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) is pleased to announce the first ONC-Authorized Testing and Certification Bodies (ATCBs) for electronic health record (EHR) technology. 

Certification by an ATCB will signify to eligible professionals, hospitals, and critical access hospitals that an EHR technology has the capabilities necessary to support their efforts to meet the goals and objectives of meaningful use.

With today’s announcement, there are now organizations ready and able to begin certifying EHR technology.

To find out more, please visit http://healthit.hhs.gov/ATCBs. 

The following organizations have been selected as ONC-Authorized Testing and Certification Bodies (ATCBs):

The Certification Commission for Health Information Technology (CCHIT), Chicago, Ill. and the Drummond Group Inc. (DGI), Austin, Texas, were named today by the Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology (ONC) as the first technology review bodies that have been authorized to test and certify electronic health record (EHR) systems for compliance with the standards and certification criteria that were issued by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services earlier this year.

Announcement of these ONC-Authorized Testing and Certification Bodies (ONC-ATCBs) means that EHR vendors can now begin to have their products certified as meeting criteria to support meaningful use, a key step in the national initiative to encourage adoption and effective use of EHRs by America’s health care providers.

“Less than two months following the issuance of final meaningful use rules, we have approved our initial ONC-ATCB certifiers.  EHR vendors can begin immediately to get their products certified.” said David Blumenthal, M.D., national coordinator for Health Information Technology.  This is a crucial step because it ensures that certified EHR products will be available to support the achievement of the required meaningful use objectives, that these products will be aligned with one another on key standards, and that doctors and hospitals can invest with confidence in these certified systems.”

Applications for additional ONC-ATCBs are also under review.

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Medicare and Medicaid Electronic Health Record EHR Incentive Programs

August 4th, 2010

CMS EHR Incentive Programs Website Updated for Medicare and Medicaid

Get up-to-date and accurate information about the Medicare and Medicaid EHR incentive programs from CMS at http://www.cms.gov/EHRIncentiveprograms/. Visit the website to get specifics about the program and download our new tip sheets.

Tip Sheets for Eligible Professionals:

  • Medicare EHR Incentive Payments for Eligible Professionals

This tip sheet describes which types of individual practitioners can participate in the Medicare EHR incentive program. It provides user friendly information about incentive payment amounts and describes how they are calculated for fee for service and Medicare advantage providers. It also describes payment adjustments beginning in 2015 for EPs who are not meaningful users of certified EHR technology.

  • Medicare EHR Incentive Program, PQRI and E-Prescribing Comparison

Learn what opportunities are available to Medicare Eligible Professionals to receive incentive payments for participating in important Medicare initiatives. This fact sheet provides information on eligibility, timeframes, and maximum payments for each program.

Now available on the CMS EHR Incentive Programs website http://www.cms.gov/EHRIncentivePrograms.  Select the Medicare Eligible Professional tab on the left, and then scroll to “Downloads.”

Tip Sheets for Hospitals:

  • EHR Incentive Program for Medicare Hospitals

Learn which Medicare hospitals are eligible for incentive payments. (See the separate tip sheet for Critical Access Hospitals below.) This sheet provides user friendly information about the factors which impact incentive payment amounts and provides sample payment calculations.

  • EHR Incentive Program for Critical Access Hospitals

How are Medicare incentive payments calculated for CAHs? When can they be earned? Learn more in this informative discussion of the calculation of incentive payments. Sample calculations are provided. This sheet also provides information on how reimbursement will be reduced for CAHs which have not demonstrated meaningful use of certified EHR technology by 2015.

Now available on the CMS EHR Incentive Programs website http://www.cms.gov/EHRIncentivePrograms.  Select the Hospitals tab on the left, and then scroll to “Downloads.”

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Secretary Sebelius Announces Final Rules To Support ‘Meaningful Use’ of Electronic Health Records

July 14th, 2010

Final Rules To Support Meaningful Use of Electronic Health Records

WASHINGTON – U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius today announced final rules to help improve Americans’ health, increase safety and reduce health care costs through expanded use of electronic health records (EHR).

“For years, health policy leaders on both sides of the aisle have urged adoption of electronic health records throughout our health care system to improve quality of care and ultimately lower costs,” Secretary Sebelius said.  “Today, with the leadership of the President and the Congress, we are making that goal a reality.”

Under the Health Information Technology for Economic and Clinical Health (HITECH) Act of 2009, eligible health care professionals and hospitals can qualify for Medicare and Medicaid incentive payments when they adopt certified EHR technology and use it to achieve specified objectives.  One of the two regulations announced today defines the “meaningful use” objectives that providers must meet to qualify for the bonus payments, and the other regulation identifies the technical capabilities required for certified EHR technology. 

Announcement of today’s regulations marks the completion of multiple steps laying the groundwork for the incentive payments program.  With “meaningful use” definitions in place, EHR system vendors can ensure that their systems deliver the required capabilities, providers can be assured that the system they acquire will support achievement of “meaningful use” objectives, and a concentrated five-year national initiative to adopt and use electronic records in health care can begin.

“This is a turning point for electronic health records in America, and for improved quality and effectiveness in health care,” said David Blumenthal, M.D., National Coordinator for Health Information Technology.  “In delivering on the goals that Congress called for, we have sought to provide the leadership and coordination that are essential for a large, technology-based enterprise.  At the same time, we have sought and received extensive input from the health care community, and we have drawn on their experience and wisdom to produce objectives that are both ambitious and achievable.”

Two companion final rules were announced today.  One regulation, issued by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), defines the minimum requirements that providers must meet through their use of certified EHR technology in order to qualify for the payments.  The other rule, issued by the Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology (ONC), identifies the standards and certification criteria for the certification of EHR technology, so eligible professionals and hospitals may be assured that the systems they adopt are capable of performing the required functions.

As much as $27 billion may be expended in incentive payments over ten years.  Eligible professionals may receive as much as $44,000 under Medicare and $63,750 under Medicaid, and hospitals may receive millions of dollars for implementation and meaningful use of certified EHRs under both Medicare and Medicaid.

The CMS rule announced today makes final a proposed rule issued on Jan, 13, 2010.  The final rule includes modifications that address stakeholder concerns while retaining the intent and structure of the incentive programs.  In particular, while the proposed rule called on eligible professionals to meet 25 requirements (23 for hospitals) in their use of EHRs, the final rules divides the requirements into a “core” group of requirements that must be met, plus an additional “menu” of procedures from which providers may choose.  This “two track” approach ensures that the most basic elements of meaningful EHR use will be met by all providers qualifying for incentive payments, while at the same time allowing latitude in other areas to reflect providers’ needs and their individual path to full EHR use.

“CMS received more than 2,000 comments on our proposed rule,” said Marilyn Tavenner, Principal Deputy Administrator of CMS.  “Many comments were from those who will be most immediately affected by EHR technology – health care providers and patients.  We carefully considered every comment and the final meaningful use rules incorporate changes that are designed to make the requirements achievable while meeting the goals of the HITECH Act.”

Requirements for meaningful use incentive payments will be implemented over a multi-year period, phasing in additional requirements that will raise the bar for performance on IT and quality objectives in later years.  The final CMS rule specifies initial criteria that eligible professionals (EPs) and eligible hospitals, including critical access hospitals (CAHs), must meet.  The rule also includes the formula for the calculation of the incentive payment amounts; a schedule for payment adjustments under Medicare for covered professional services and inpatient hospital services provided by EPs, eligible hospitals and CAHs that fail to demonstrate meaningful use of certified EHR technology by 2015; and other program participation requirements.

Key changes in the final CMS rule include:

  • Greater flexibility with respect to eligible professionals and hospitals in meeting and reporting certain objectives for demonstrating meaningful use.  The final rule divides the objectives into a “core” group of required objectives and a “menu set” of procedures from which providers may choose any five to defer in 2011-2012.  This gives providers latitude to pick their own path toward full EHR implementation and meaningful use.
  • An objective of providing condition-specific patient education resources for both EPs and eligible hospitals and the objective of recording advance directives for eligible hospitals, in line with recommendations from the Health Information Technology Policy Committee.
  • A definition of a hospital-based EP as one who performs substantially all of his or her services in an inpatient hospital setting or emergency room only, which  conforms to the Continuing Extension Act of 2010
  • CAHs within the definition of acute care hospital for the purpose of incentive program eligibility under Medicaid.

CMS’ and ONC’s final rules complement two other recently issued HHS rules.  On June 24, 2010, ONC published a final rule establishing a temporary certification program for health information technology. And on July 8, 2010 the Office for Civil Rights announced a proposed rule that would strengthen and expand privacy, security, and enforcement protections under the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996.

As part of this process, HHS is establishing a nationwide network of Regional Extension Centers to assist providers in adopting and using in a meaningful way certified EHR technology.

“Health care is finally making the technology advances that other sectors of our economy began to undertake years ago,” Dr. Blumenthal said.  “These changes will be challenging for clinicians and hospitals, but the time has come to act.  Adoption and meaningful use of EHRs will help providers deliver better and more effective care, and the benefits for patients and providers alike will grow rapidly over time.”

A CMS/ONC fact sheet on the rules is available at http://www.cms.gov/EHRIncentivePrograms/ 

Technical fact sheets on CMS’s final rule are available at http://www.cms.gov/EHRIncentivePrograms/

A technical fact sheet on ONC’s standards and certification criteria final rule is available at http://healthit.hhs.gov/standardsandcertification.

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President Obama Announces Recovery Act Awards to Community Health Centers in More Than 30 States

December 10th, 2009

President Obama Announces Recovery Act Awards to Build, Renovate Community Health Centers in More Than 30 States

Program to Create Jobs in Low-Income Communities, Help CHCs Serve More Than 500,000 Additional Patients

WASHINGTON – Today President Obama announced nearly $600 million in American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (Recovery Act) awards to support major construction and renovation projects at 85 community health centers nationwide and help networks of health centers adopt Electronic Health Records (EHR) and other Health Information Technology (HIT) systems.  The awards are expected to not only create new job opportunities in construction and health care, but also help provide care for more than half a million additional patients in underserved communities.  The President also announced a new demonstration initiative to support the delivery of advanced primary care to Medicare beneficiaries through community health centers.

“Together, these three initiatives – funding for construction, technology and a medical home demonstration project – won’t just save more money, and create more jobs, they’ll give more people the peace of mind of knowing that health care will be there for them and their families when they need it,” said President Obama.  “Ultimately, that’s what health reform is really about.”

“One of the first investments we made through the Recovery Act was in supporting our nation’s community health centers – and today we build on that progress by funding new construction and improvement projects at more than 80 facilities nationwide,” said Vice President Biden.  “This is what the Recovery Act is all about – providing immediate assistance for hard-hit families, improving our nation’s infrastructure and creating new opportunities for stable, well-paid work.”

To qualify for funding, a health facility must be a Federally Qualified “Community” Health Center.  Grants of $508.5 million will be provided through the Facility Investment Program (FIP) program to address pressing health center facility needs. Also, as much as $88 million will be available to help Health Center Controlled Networks improve operational effectiveness and clinical quality in health centers by providing management, financial, technology and clinical support services.

The new Recovery Act funds are the latest in a series of grants awarded to community health centers, which deliver preventive and primary care services at more than 7,500 service delivery sites around the country to patients regardless of their ability to pay.  Health centers serve more than 17 million patients, about 40 percent of whom have no health insurance.

Both programs will be administered by the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA), an agency of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS).

President Obama directed the Department of Health and Human Services to implement a demonstration initiative designed to evaluate the impact of the advanced primary care practice model on access, quality and cost of care provided to Medicare beneficiaries served by community health centers.

This model, known as the “medical home,” promotes accessible, continuous, and coordinated family-centered care.  Developed and administered by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS), the demonstration will last three years.  CMS anticipates that up to 500 health centers will participate.

“Because community health centers already provide comprehensive health care to people who face the greatest barriers to accessing care, these demonstration projects have the potential to support and improve the care delivered not only to Medicare beneficiaries, but also to others who rely on community health centers for primary care,” said HHS Secretary Kathleen G. Sebelius.

HRSA has received a total of $2 billion through the Recovery Act to expand health care services to low-income and uninsured individuals through its health center program. To date, nearly $1.9 billion of these funds have been awarded to community-based organizations across the country.

FIP grants are listed below.  They were awarded through a competitive process:

Name of Health Center City State Award Amount
Health Services Inc. Montgomery Ala. $11,231,000
Seldovia Village Tribe Seldovia Alaska $2,258,091
Alaska Island Community Services Wrangell Alaska $3,736,490
North Country Healthcare Inc. Flagstaff Ariz. $7,433,776
Canyonlands Community Health Care Page Ariz. $1,840,695
Clinica Sierra Vista Bakersfield Calif. $4,008,251
Solano County Health & Social Services Dept. Fairfield Calif. $2,194,196
South Central Family Health Center Los Angeles Calif. $953,743
Contra Costa County Health Services Dept. Martinez Calif. $12,000,000
Golden Valley Health Center Merced Calif. $9,573,010
Petaluma Health Center Inc. Petaluma Calif. $8,906,986
Clinica De Salud Del Valle De Salinas Salinas Calif. $2,327,857
Santa Clara Valley Health And Hospital System San Jose Calif. $2,643,343
San Mateo County Health Services Agency San Mateo Calif. $1,765,876
Centro De Salud De La Comunidad San Ysidro San Ysidro Calif. $9,754,515
Vista Community Clinic Vista Calif. $11,473,212
Charter Oak Health Center Inc. Hartford Conn. $10,000,000
Community Health Services Inc. Hartford Conn. $6,160,675
Unity Health Care Inc. Washington D.C. $12,000,000
Suncoast Community Health Centers Inc. Riverview Fla. $3,767,091
Project Health Inc. Sumterville Fla. $5,222,774
Tampa Family Health Centers Inc. Tampa Fla. $2,903,145
Palmetto Health Council Inc. Atlanta Ga. $6,317,838
Southwest Georgia Health Care Inc. Richland Ga. $1,208,700
Kokua Kalihi Valley Comprehensive Family Services Honolulu Hawaii $1,500,000
Lawndale Christian Health Center Chicago Ill. $10,000,000
Greater Elgin Family Care Center Elgin Ill. $2,452,172
PCC Community Wellness Center Oak Park Ill. $4,053,042
Crusaders Central Clinic Association Rockford Ill. $5,342,337
Healthnet Inc. Indianapolis Ind. $10,426,357
Primary Health Care Inc. Des Moines Iowa $2,615,429
Bucksport Regional Health Center Bucksport Maine $2,459,420
Sacopee Valley Health Center Parsonsfield Maine $802,951
Choptank Community Health System Inc. Denton Md. $1,085,542
Dorchester House Multi-Service Center Dorchester Mass. $7,024,029
East Boston Neighborhood Health Center East Boston Mass. $12,000,000
Healthfirst Family Care Center Inc. Fall River Mass. $12,000,000
Community Health Connections Inc. Fitchburg Mass. $10,732,754
Lowell Community Health Center Lowell Mass. $9,351,067
Mattapan Community Health Center Mattapan Mass. $11,550,000
Greater New Bedford Community Health Center New Bedford Mass. $5,331,145
Whittier Street Health Committee Inc. Roxbury Mass. $12,000,000
Baldwin Family Health Care Inc Baldwin Mich. $3,000,000
Intercare Community Health Network Bangor Mich. $8,500,000
Cedar Riverside Peoples Center Minneapolis Minn. $2,113,595
Central Mississippi Civic Improvement Jackson Miss. $3,881,043
Nevada Rural Health Centers Inc. Carson City Nev. $11,253,351
Avis Goodwin Community Health Center Dover N.H. $4,957,300
Ammonoosuc Community Health Services Inc. Littleton N.H. $2,641,157
Lamprey Health Care Newmarket N.H. $2,150,250
Zufall Health Center Inc. Dover N.J. $3,920,442
Ocean Health Initiatives Inc. Lakewood N.J. $4,753,399
Newark City Health and Human Services Newark N.J. $4,996,563
Newark Community Health Centers Inc. Newark N.J. $6,453,000
La Familia Medical Center Santa Fe N.M. $1,216,338
Montefiore Medical Center Bronx N.Y. $795,000
Urban Health Plan Inc. Bronx N.Y. $12,000,000
Family Health Network of Central New York Inc. Cortland N.Y. $1,400,387
Community Healthcare Network New York N.Y. $1,365,788
Family Healthcare Center Fargo N.D. $6,666,583
Capital Park Family Health Center Columbus Ohio $4,417,688
Muskingum Valley Health Centers Inc. McConnelsville Ohio $5,997,980
Butler County Community Health Consortium Inc. Middletown Ohio $4,669,197
Healthsource of Ohio Inc. Milford Ohio $9,764,690
Great Salt Plains Health Center Inc. Cherokee Okla. $2,828,647
Oklahoma Community Health Services Inc. Oklahoma City Okla. $11,985,000
Central City Concern Portland Ore. $8,950,000
Cornerstone Care Burgettstown Pa. $2,574,643
Keystone Rural Health Center Chambersburg Pa. $11,515,000
Southeast Lancaster Health Services Lancaster Pa. $3,250,000
Esperanza Health Center Philadelphia Pa. $6,552,799
Greater Philadelphia Health Action Inc. Philadelphia Pa. $3,937,796
Squirrel Hill Health Center Pittsburgh Pa. $792,700
Salud Integral En La Montana Inc. Naranjito P.R. $8,752,140
Rincon Rural Health Initiative Project Inc Rincon P.R $5,915,227
Little River Medical Center Inc. Little River S.C. $5,523,205
Beaufort-Jasper Comprehensive Health Services Inc. Ridgeland S.C. $7,912,493
Brownsville Community Health Center Brownsville Texas $7,500,000
Project Vida Health Center El Paso Texas $6,000,422
Su Clinica Familiar Harlingen Texas $7,500,000
El Centro Del Barrio Inc. San Antonio Texas $11,051,134
Heart of Texas Community Health Center Inc. Waco Texas $5,296,239
Blue Ridge Medical Center Inc. Arrington Va. $5,000,000
Community Health Center of Burlington Inc. Burlington Vt. $10,964,476
La Clinica/South Columbia Rural Health Pasco Wash. $7,425,870
Total:  $508,549,051

FACT SHEET

Community Health Centers and the Recovery Act

Health centers deliver preventive and primary care services at more than 7,500 service delivery sites around the country to patients regardless of their ability to pay; charges for services are set according to income.  Health centers serve more than 17 million patients, about 38 percent of whom have no health insurance.

Three sets of health center awards have already been funded through Recovery Act appropriations on the following dates:

  • On March 2, President Obama announced grants worth $155 million to establish 126 new health center sites.  Those grants will provide access to essential preventive and primary health care for more than 750,000 people in 39 states and two territories.
  • On March 27, HHS also awarded $338 Million in Increased Demand for Services grants for health centers. Health centers are using these funds to provide care to more than 2 million additional patients over the next two years, including approximately 1 million uninsured people. In addition, over the next two years, health centers will use the funds to create and retain approximately 6,400 health center jobs.
  • On June 29, First Lady Michelle Obama announced the release of $851 million in Recovery Act grants to upgrade over 1,500 health center sites and open their doors to more patients.  More than 650 centers will use the funds for health information technology (HIT) systems, and nearly 400 health centers will adopt and expand the use of electronic health records.

The Facility Investment Program awards announced today are the fourth set of health center grants provided through the Recovery Act.

Facility Investment Program (FIP) Grants

The Obama Administration announced $508.5 million awarded in Facility Investment Program grants to community health centers nationwide to address the pressing needs of health center facilities and expanded their capacities to serve an additional 500,000 patients.  The funds were made available by the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (Recovery Act).  The Facility Investment Program (FIP) grants support major construction and renovation at our nation’s health centers.  These funds will help health centers build new facilities, modernize current sites and create employment opportunities in underserved communities.

Recipients of FIP funds are expected to commit grant funds and complete the proposed projects within two years. The grants will cover two types of projects:

1. Alteration/renovation: This project type includes work required to modernize, improve or change the interior arrangements or other physical characteristics of an existing facility, and purchase/install equipment. Alterations and renovations make existing space usable for another purpose. This type of project does not increase square footage.

2. Construction (new site or expansion of existing site): This project type includes—(i) adding a new structure to an existing site that increases the total square footage of the facility; and (ii) permanently affixing structure (e.g., modular units, prefabricated buildings) to real property (i.e., land).

FIP grants, along with the entire health center program, are administered by the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA), a component of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

Health Center Controlled Networks (HCCN)

The Obama Administration announced the availability of $88 million in grants to help networks of health centers adopt Electronic Health Records (EHR) and other Health Information Technology (HIT) systems.  The funds are part of the $1.5 billion allotted to the Health Resources and Services Administration, a component of the Department of Health and Human Services, by the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (Recovery Act) for construction, renovation, equipment, and the acquisition of HIT systems for health center programs.

The Health Center Controlled Networks (HCCN) grant program was developed in 1994 to support the creation, development, and operation of electronic networks, controlled by groups of collaborating health centers, to improve health center operations. The networks are controlled by and operate on behalf of HRSA-supported health centers.  Each network comprises at least three collaborating organizations.

HCCNs integrate core business functions among their individual health center members, who may be anywhere in the country, but are often in the same state or region.  The core business functions these networks share are: administrative, clinical, managed care, fiscal, or health information systems.

Networks provide these functions at or below marketplace cost to their members.  In launching a network, members assess their respective environments and existing infrastructure to determine the most appropriate mix of business functions to share.  The networks seek to:

  • increase access for the low-income, uninsured population they predominantly serve;
  • enhanced the efficiency of their operations; or
  • create a higher level of performance and value.

Networks that receive HCCN funds are given great flexibility in determining their activities.  Each network is unique, depending on its state or regional environment, marketplace, collaborators, needs and interests.

HRSA awarded $36 million in grants to support the operations of 53 Health Center Controlled Networks in fiscal year 2009.

Medicare Federally Qualified Health Center Advanced Primary Care Practice Demonstration Initiative

Today, President Obama directed the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) to implement a demonstration initiative to support federal qualified health centers in delivering advanced primary care to Medicare beneficiaries.  HHS’ agencies, Health Resources and Services Administration and the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, will work together to conduct this 3-year demonstration and anticipate that 500 federally qualified health centers will participate.

Advanced Primary Care Model

The Advanced Primary Care model, also known as the patient-centered medical home, promotes targeted, accessible, continuous, and coordinated family-centered care.  The demonstration is designed to evaluate the impact of the advanced primary care practice model on access, quality and cost of care provided to Medicare beneficiaries served by federal qualified health centers.

Federally Qualified Health Centers (FQHC)

FQHCs provide comprehensive primary and preventive health care for medically underserved populations who face the greatest economic and geographic barriers to accessing care.  Overseen by the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA), the Health Center program is a national network of more than 1,100 community, migrant, homeless and public housing health center grantees. These organizations provide health care at more than 7,500 clinical sites, ranging from large medical facilities to mobile vans.  In 2008, health centers served more than 17 million medically underserved people.  FQHCs provide an environment to demonstrate the benefits of medical homes can offer to Medicare beneficiaries.

New Medicare Demonstration

The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) and HRSA will develop the demonstration, which would include a solicitation of applications from FQHC grantees.  To participate, FQHC grantees will need to demonstrate that their clinic sites have the capacity to deliver continuous and coordinated care across providers and settings, including improving access to care by expanding service hours, facilitating and following up on referrals, and managing medications prescribed by different physicians.   FQHC clinic sites selected to participate in the demonstration will receive a monthly care management fee for each Medicare fee-for-service beneficiary they enroll into the demonstration, in addition to payment for any other covered Medicare services they provide.

Research Design

This demonstration will evaluate whether federal qualified health centers that deliver advanced primary care improve access and quality, promote appropriate use of services, and reduce health care costs.  The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services will begin soliciting applications in spring 2010, aiming to begin implementation of the 3-year demonstration initiative in January 2011.  CMS will conduct an independent evaluation of this demonstration.

** This release has been corrected.

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CMS CHIPRA Dental State Health Official Letter

October 7th, 2009

CMS Issues State Letter for Dental Coverage in CHIP

DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH & HUMAN SERVICES
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services
7500 Security Boulevard, Mail Stop S2-26-12
Baltimore, Maryland 21244-1850
Center for Medicaid and State Operations
SHO #09-012
CHIPRA # 7
October 7, 2009

RE: Dental Coverage in CHIP

Dear State Health Official (full letter on the CMS site):
The Children’s Health Insurance Program Reauthorization Act of 2009 (CHIPRA), Public Law 111-3, reauthorizes the Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP) under title XXI of the Social Security Act (the Act). CHIPRA ensures that States are able to continue their existing CHIP programs and provides funding to expand health insurance coverage to additional low-income uninsured children including children already eligible for CHIP or Medicaid but not enrolled. The purpose of this letter is to provide general guidance on some of the provisions in section 501 of CHIPRA, including the dental benefit provisions and the State option to provide dental-only supplemental coverage, pending the issuance of regulations.

Required Dental Services

Section 2103(c)(5) of the Act, as added by section 501 of CHIPRA, requires that “child health assistance provided to a targeted low-income child shall include coverage of dental services necessary to prevent disease and promote oral health, restore oral structures to health and function, and treat emergency conditions.” This requirement applies to all child health assistance coverage described in section 2103 and is effective October 1, 2009.

Medicaid Expansions

States that provide title XXI coverage to children through a Medicaid expansion program are required to provide Early and Periodic Screening, Diagnostic and Treatment (EPSDT) services, as defined in section 1905(r) of the Act. The dental services provided under a Medicaid expansion program through EPSDT will be considered to meet the requirements of this provision.

Separate CHIP Programs

States that provide coverage in a separate CHIP program may choose between two methods of providing the dental services as required by section 2103(c)(5) of the Act. The State may define the services in the dental benefit package and demonstrate that the package includes all of the services required by the statute. In so doing, the State should specify the periodicity schedule with which preventative and restorative services, such as cleanings and fillings, would be provided, as well as whether these services are sufficient to prevent further disease, as required by section 2103(c)(5). This applies to State-defined benefit packages and dental benchmark packages as described below.
Alternatively, the State may provide a dental benefit package that is equivalent to one of the three dental benchmark packages described in the CHIPRA statute. Under the statute, there is no option in new section 2103(c)(5) of the Act for proving actuarial equivalence or modifying the benefit package. States may, however, cover benefits in addition to the dental benchmark plan consistent with the standards in section 2103(c)(5).

In order to fully describe a State dental benefit package under a separate CHIP program, and ensure that the benefits are sufficient to meet the statutory requirements, a State should describe both the types of covered benefits and the covered amount or duration of those benefits. The amount or duration should also be expressed through identification of the periodicity schedule that the State will use in its program. The periodicity schedule sets the frequency by which certain services should be provided and will be covered. We encourage States to rely on nationally recognized standards, including Medicaid dental periodicity guidelines used for children under EPSDT or the guidelines from the American Academy of Pediatric Dentistry (AAPD). The link to AAPD’s periodicity guidelines can be found at: http://www.aapd.org/media/Policies_Guidelines/G_Periodicity.pdf.

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