2022 -- H 7758

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LC004974

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     STATE OF RHODE ISLAND

IN GENERAL ASSEMBLY

JANUARY SESSION, A.D. 2022

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A N   A C T

RELATING TO HUMAN SERVICES -- MEDICAL ASSISTANCE

     

     Introduced By: Representatives Henries, Morales, Potter, Cortvriend, and Cassar

     Date Introduced: March 02, 2022

     Referred To: House Finance

     It is enacted by the General Assembly as follows:

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     SECTION 1. The general assembly finds and declares the following:

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     (1) Medicaid covers approximately 1 in 4 Rhode Islanders, including: 1 in 5 adults, 3 in 8

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children, 3 in 5 nursing home residents, 4 in 9 individuals with disabilities, and 1 in 5 Medicare

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beneficiaries.

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     (2) Prior to 1994, Rhode Island managed its own Medicaid programs; directly reimbursing

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health care providers by paying “fee-for-service (FFS).”

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     (3) Currently, the state pays about one billion seven hundred million dollars

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($1,700,000,000) to three (3) private health insurance companies, Neighborhood Health Plan of

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Rhode Island, Tufts Health Plan and United Health care Community Plan (“Managed Care

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Organizations - MCOs”), to “manage” Medicaid benefits for about ninety percent (90%) of all

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Rhode Island Medicaid recipients approx. three hundred thousand (300,000); the other ten percent

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(10%) remains FFS.

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     (4) MCOs are not actual health care providers - they are middlemen who take set per person

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per month fees from the state, pass some of that money to actual health care providers, and keep

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the rest as MCO profit.

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     (5) MCOs increase their profits by limiting health care goods and services for Medicaid

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patients.

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     (6) Theoretically, MCOs are supposed to help states control Medicaid costs and improve

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access and health care outcomes; however, there is no significant evidence of this.

 

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     (7) Peer-reviewed research, including two (2) separate literature reviews done in 2012 and

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2020, concluded: "While there are incidences of success, research evaluating managed-care

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programs show that these initial hopes [for improved costs, access and outcomes] were largely

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unfounded.”

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     (8) Since 2009, every annual Single Audit Report by the Rhode Island Office of the Auditor

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General has found that the state lacks adequate oversight of MCOs.

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     (9) In 2009, Connecticut conducted an audit which found it was overpaying its three (3)

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MCOs (United Health care Group, Aetna, and Community Health Network of Connecticut) nearly

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fifty million dollars ($50,000,000) per year.

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     (10) In 2012, Connecticut returned to a state-run fee-for-service Medicaid program and

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subsequently saved hundreds of millions of dollars and achieved the lowest Medicaid cost increases

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in the country and improved access to care.

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     (11) In 2015, the RI Auditor General found that Rhode Island overpaid MCOs more than

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two hundred million dollars ($200,000,000) and could not recoup overpayments until 2017.

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     (12) In 2015, Governor Raimondo began efforts to “Reinvent Medicaid” that led to

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increased Medicaid privatization, including the UHIP/RI Bridges project and MCO five (5) year

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contracts.

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     (13) In the Fiscal Year 2017, Fiscal Year 2018, and Fiscal Year 2019 Single Audit Reports,

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the RI Auditor General bluntly concluded, "The State lacks effective auditing and monitoring of

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MCO financial activity.”

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     (14) In its latest Fiscal Year 2020 Single Audit Report, the Auditor General notes that

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EOHHS failures to collect adequate information from MCOs has had the “effect” of, “Inaccurate

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reimbursements to MCOs for contract services provided to Medicaid enrollees.”

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     (15) The federal Center for Medicaid and CHIP Services (CMCS) determined that in 2019,

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Rhode Island spent the second highest amount per capita for Medicaid patients out of all states and

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had a, “High overall level of data quality concern.”

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     (16) The RI Executive Office of Health and Human Services (EOHHS) has not taken

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sufficient actions to address problems with MCO oversight, for example:

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     (i) Until 2021, EOHHS made RI 1 of only six (6) states with MCO contracts that had not

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required MCOs to spend at least eighty-five percent (85%) of their Medicaid revenues on covered

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services and quality improvement (i.e., have a Medical Loss Ratio, MLR, of 85%);

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     (ii) Unlike thirty (30) other states, EOHHS failed to require MCOs to remit to the state

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Medicaid program excess capitation revenues not adequately applied to the costs of medical

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services;

 

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     (iii) EOHHS failed to file annual Medicaid reports; publishing FY 2019 data in a report

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dated May 2021; and

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     (iv) EOHHS failed to ensure that FY2020 MCO quarterly reports were made in a

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“Financial Data Reporting System,” as set forth in a response to criticisms raised by the RI Auditor

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General.

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     (17) Other states that more recently adopted Medicaid MCO managed care, such as Iowa

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and Kansas, have suffered cuts in health care, far less than expected savings, and sacrificed

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oversight and transparency.

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     (18) During the COVID-19 pandemic, RI Medicaid enrollments increased about twelve

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percent (12%) as people lost their jobs and health insurance.

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     (19) During the pandemic, MCO private insurance companies earned record profits while

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health care providers such as hospitals suffered severe financial losses from deferred elective

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medical procedures.

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     (20) RI EOHHS wants to continue to help private MCO insurance companies by giving a

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set per person per month fee to health care providers so that health care providers assume “full risk

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capitation.”

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     (21) Rhode Island is the only state in the country that has an “Office of Health Insurance

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Commissioner” whose top listed priority is to, “Guard the solvency of health insurers.”

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     (22) Private health insurance companies have more government funding and support than

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any other type of business in Rhode Island.

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     (23) The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) has issued guidance intended

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to help states monitor and audit Medicaid and Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP)

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managed care plans to address spread pricing and appropriately incorporate administrative costs of

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the Pharmacy Benefit Managers (PBMs) when calculating their medical loss ratio (MLR).

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     (24) States that chose to establish minimum MCO MLRs with requirements to return

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monies may recoup millions of Medicaid dollars from plans that failed to meet the State-set

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minimum MLR thresholds.

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     (25) Given the one billion seven hundred million taxpayer dollars ($1,700,000,000) given

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to MCOs and the current lack of adequate monitoring and oversight, the costs of audits set forth by

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this legislation are justified and necessary.

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     SECTION 2. Chapter 40-8 of the General Laws entitled "Medical Assistance" is hereby

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amended by adding thereto the following section:

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     40-8-33. Medicaid programs audit, assessment and improvement.

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     (a) The Rhode Island auditor general, in consultation with the Rhode Island executive

 

LC004974 - Page 3 of 5

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office of health and human services (EOHHS), shall hire and supervise an outside contractor or

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contractors to audit the state's managed care organizations (MCOs) in order to determine whether

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managed care organizations (MCOs) are providing savings, access and outcomes that are better

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than what could be obtained under a fee-for-service program managed by the state;

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     (b) RI MCOs shall provide information necessary to conduct this audit, as well as all legally

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required audits, in a timely manner;

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     (c) Failure of MCOs to provide such information in a timely manner shall permit the state

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to seek penalties and terminate the MCO Medicaid contract;

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     (d) EOHHS staff and outside contractors working on the audit shall not have relevant

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financial connections to MCOs or the outcome of the audit;

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     (e) The Rhode Island auditor general shall present the results of the audit to the public and

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general assembly within six (6) months after the passage of this section;

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     (f) If the audit concludes that a fee-for-service state-run Medicaid program could provide

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better savings, access and outcomes than the current managed care system, EOHHS and the Rhode

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Island auditor general shall develop a plan for the state to transition to a state-run fee-for-service

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program within two (2) years from the date of this section's passage.

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     (g) EOHHS contracts with MCOs shall include terms that:

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     (1) Allow the state to transition to a fee-for-service state-run Medicaid program within two

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(2) years of the date of this section's passage;

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     (2) Require MCOs to meet a Medical Loss Ratio (MLR) of greater than ninety percent

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(90%), net of primary benefit manager (PBM) costs related to spread pricing;

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     (3) Require MCOs to remit to the state Medicaid program excess capitation revenues that

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fail to meet the ninety percent (90%) MLR; and

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     (4) Set forth penalties for failure to meet contract terms.

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     (h) The attorney general shall have authority to pursue civil and criminal remedies against

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MCOs to enforce state contractual obligations and other legal requirements.

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     SECTION 3. This act shall take effect upon passage.

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EXPLANATION

BY THE LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL

OF

A N   A C T

RELATING TO HUMAN SERVICES -- MEDICAL ASSISTANCE

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     This act would require the auditor general to oversee an audit of Medicaid programs

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administered by managed care organizations. The auditor general would report findings to the

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general assembly and the director of the executive office of health and human services (EOHHS)

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within six (6) months of passage. The director of EOHHS would provide the general assembly with

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a plan within two (2) years of passage to end privatized managed care and transition to a fee-for-

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service state-run program if the audit demonstrates the plan would result in savings and better

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access and health care outcomes.

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     This act would take effect upon passage.

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