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ARTICLE 9 AS AMENDED |
RELATING TO MEDICAL ASSISTANCE
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SECTION 1. Section 23-17-38.1 of the General Laws in Chapter 23-17 entitled "Licensing |
of Healthcare Facilities" is hereby amended to read as follows: |
23-17-38.1. Hospitals — Licensing fee. |
(a) There is imposed a hospital licensing fee for state fiscal year 2022 against each hospital |
in the state. The hospital licensing fee is equal to five and six hundred fifty-six thousandths percent |
(5.656%) of the net patient-services revenue of every hospital for the hospital’s first fiscal year |
ending on or after January 1, 2020, except that the license fee for all hospitals located in Washington |
County, Rhode Island shall be discounted by thirty-seven percent (37%). The discount for |
Washington County hospitals is subject to approval by the Secretary of the U.S. Department of |
Health and Human Services of a state plan amendment submitted by the executive office of health |
and human services for the purpose of pursuing a waiver of the uniformity requirement for the |
hospital license fee. This licensing fee shall be administered and collected by the tax administrator, |
division of taxation within the department of revenue, and all the administration, collection, and |
other provisions of chapter 51 of title 44 shall apply. Every hospital shall pay the licensing fee to |
the tax administrator on or before July 13, 2022, and payments shall be made by electronic transfer |
of monies to the general treasurer and deposited to the general fund. Every hospital shall, on or |
before June 15, 2022, make a return to the tax administrator containing the correct computation of |
net patient-services revenue for the hospital fiscal year ending September 30, 2020, and the |
licensing fee due upon that amount. All returns shall be signed by the hospital’s authorized |
representative, subject to the pains and penalties of perjury. |
(b)(a) There is also imposed a hospital licensing fee for state fiscal year 2023 against each |
hospital in the state. The hospital licensing fee is equal to five and forty-two hundredths percent |
(5.42%) of the net patient-services revenue of every hospital for the hospital’s first fiscal year |
ending on or after January 1, 2021, except that the license fee for all hospitals located in Washington |
County, Rhode Island shall be discounted by thirty-seven percent (37%). The discount for |
Washington County hospitals is subject to approval by the Secretary of the U.S. Department of |
Health and Human Services of a state plan amendment submitted by the executive office of health |
and human services for the purpose of pursuing a waiver of the uniformity requirement for the |
hospital license fee. This licensing fee shall be administered and collected by the tax administrator, |
division of taxation within the department of revenue, and all the administration, collection, and |
other provisions of chapter 51 of title 44 shall apply. Every hospital shall pay the licensing fee to |
the tax administrator on or before June 30, 2023, and payments shall be made by electronic transfer |
of monies to the general treasurer and deposited to the general fund. Every hospital shall, on or |
before May 25, 2023, make a return to the tax administrator containing the correct computation of |
net patient-services revenue for the hospital fiscal year ending September 30, 2021, and the |
licensing fee due upon that amount. All returns shall be signed by the hospital’s authorized |
representative, subject to the pains and penalties of perjury. |
(c)(b) There is also imposed a hospital licensing fee described in subsections (d)(c) through |
(g)(f) for state fiscal years 2024 and 2025 against net patient-services revenue of every non- |
government owned hospital as defined herein for the hospital’s first fiscal year ending on or after |
January 1, 2022. The hospital licensing fee shall have three (3) tiers with differing fees based on |
inpatient and outpatient net patient-services revenue. The executive office of health and human |
services, in consultation with the tax administrator, shall identify the hospitals in each tier, subject |
to the definitions in this section, by July 15, 2023, and shall notify each hospital of its tier by August |
1, 2023. |
(d)(c) Tier 1 is composed of hospitals that do not meet the description of either Tier 2 or |
Tier 3. |
(1) The inpatient hospital licensing fee for Tier 1 is equal to thirteen and twelve hundredths |
percent (13.12%) of the inpatient net patient-services revenue derived from inpatient net patient- |
services revenue of every Tier 1 hospital. |
(2) The outpatient hospital licensing fee for Tier 1 is equal to thirteen and thirty hundredths |
percent (13.30%) of the net patient-services revenue derived from outpatient net patient-services |
revenue of every Tier 1 hospital. |
(e)(d) Tier 2 is composed of high Medicaid/uninsured cost hospitals and independent |
hospitals. |
(1) The inpatient hospital licensing fee for Tier 2 is equal to two and sixty-three hundredths |
percent (2.63%) of the inpatient net patient-services revenue derived from inpatient net patient- |
services revenue of every Tier 2 hospital. |
(2) The outpatient hospital licensing fee for Tier 2 is equal to two and sixty-six hundredths |
percent (2.66%) of the outpatient net patient-services revenue derived from outpatient net patient- |
services revenue of every Tier 2 hospital. |
(f)(e) Tier 3 is composed of hospitals that are Medicare-designated low-volume hospitals |
and rehabilitative hospitals. |
(1) The inpatient hospital licensing fee for Tier 3 is equal to one and thirty-one hundredths |
percent (1.31%) of the inpatient net patient-services revenue derived from inpatient net patient- |
services revenue of every Tier 3 hospital. |
(2) The outpatient hospital licensing fee for Tier 3 is equal to one and thirty-three |
hundredths percent (1.33%) of the outpatient net patient-services revenue derived from outpatient |
net patient-services revenue of every Tier 3 hospital. |
(g)(f) There is also imposed a hospital licensing fee for state fiscal year 2024 against state- |
government owned and operated hospitals in the state as defined herein. The hospital licensing fee |
is equal to five and twenty-five hundredths percent (5.25%) of the net patient-services revenue of |
every hospital for the hospital’s first fiscal year ending on or after January 1, 2022. There is also |
imposed a hospital licensing fee for state fiscal year 2025 against state-government owned and |
operated hospitals in the state as defined herein equal to five and twenty-five hundredths percent |
(5.25%) of the net patient-services revenue of every hospital for the hospital’s first fiscal year |
ending on or after January 1, 2023. |
(h)(g) The hospital licensing fee described in subsections (c)(b) through (g)(f) is subject to |
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services approval of a request to waive the requirement |
that healthcare-related taxes be imposed uniformly as contained in 42 C.F.R. § 433.68(d). |
(i)(h) This hospital licensing fee shall be administered and collected by the tax |
administrator, division of taxation within the department of revenue, and all the administration, |
collection, and other provisions of chapter 51 of title 44 shall apply. Every hospital shall pay the |
licensing fee to the tax administrator before June 30 of each fiscal year, and payments shall be made |
by electronic transfer of monies to the tax administrator and deposited to the general fund. Every |
hospital shall, on or before August 1, 2023, make a return to the tax administrator containing the |
correct computation of inpatient and outpatient net patient-services revenue for the hospital fiscal |
year ending in 2022, and the licensing fee due upon that amount. All returns shall be signed by the |
hospital’s authorized representative, subject to the pains and penalties of perjury. |
(j)(i) For purposes of this section the following words and phrases have the following |
meanings: |
(1) “Gross patient-services revenue” means the gross revenue related to patient care |
services. |
(2) “High Medicaid/uninsured cost hospital” means a hospital for which the hospital’s total |
uncompensated care, as calculated pursuant to § 40-8.3-2(4), divided by the hospital’s total net |
patient-services revenues, is equal to six percent (6.0%) or greater. |
(3) “Hospital” means the actual facilities and buildings in existence in Rhode Island, |
licensed pursuant to § 23-17-1 et seq. on June 30, 2010, and thereafter any premises included on |
that license, regardless of changes in licensure status pursuant to chapter 17.14 of this title (hospital |
conversions) and § 23-17-6(b) (change in effective control), that provides short-term acute inpatient |
and/or outpatient care to persons who require definitive diagnosis and treatment for injury, illness, |
disabilities, or pregnancy. Notwithstanding the preceding language, the negotiated Medicaid |
managed care payment rates for a court-approved purchaser that acquires a hospital through |
receivership, special mastership, or other similar state insolvency proceedings (which court- |
approved purchaser is issued a hospital license after January 1, 2013) shall be based upon the newly |
negotiated rates between the court-approved purchaser and the health plan, and such rates shall be |
effective as of the date that the court-approved purchaser and the health plan execute the initial |
agreement containing the newly negotiated rate. The rate-setting methodology for inpatient hospital |
payments and outpatient hospital payments set forth in §§ 40-8-13.4(b) and 40-8-13.4(b)(2), |
respectively, shall thereafter apply to negotiated increases for each annual twelve-month (12) |
period as of July 1 following the completion of the first full year of the court-approved purchaser’s |
initial Medicaid managed care contract. |
(4) “Independent hospitals” means a hospital not part of a multi-hospital system. |
(5) “Inpatient net patient-services revenue” means the charges related to inpatient care |
services less (i) Charges attributable to charity care; (ii) Bad debt expenses; and (iii) Contractual |
allowances. |
(6) “Medicare-designated low-volume hospital” means a hospital that qualifies under 42 |
C.F.R. 412.101(b)(2) for additional Medicare payments to qualifying hospitals for the higher |
incremental costs associated with a low volume of discharges. |
(7) “Net patient-services revenue” means the charges related to patient care services less |
(i) Charges attributable to charity care; (ii) Bad debt expenses; and (iii) Contractual allowances. |
(8) “Non-government owned hospitals” means a hospital not owned and operated by the |
state of Rhode Island. |
(9) “Outpatient net patient-services revenue” means the charges related to outpatient care |
services less (i) Charges attributable to charity care; (ii) Bad debt expenses; and (iii) Contractual |
allowances. |
(10) “Rehabilitative hospital” means Rehabilitation Hospital Center licensed by the Rhode |
Island department of health. |
(11) “State-government owned and operated hospitals” means a hospital facility licensed |
by the Rhode Island department of health, owned and operated by the state of Rhode Island. |
(k)(j) The tax administrator in consultation with the executive office of health and human |
services shall make and promulgate any rules, regulations, and procedures not inconsistent with |
state law and fiscal procedures that he or she deems necessary for the proper administration of this |
section and to carry out the provisions, policy, and purposes of this section. |
(l)(k) The licensing fee imposed by subsection (a) shall apply to hospitals as defined herein |
that are duly licensed on July 1, 2021 2022, and shall be in addition to the inspection fee imposed |
by § 23-17-38 and to any licensing fees previously imposed in accordance with this section. |
(m) The licensing fee imposed by subsection (b) shall apply to hospitals as defined herein |
that are duly licensed on July 1, 2022, and shall be in addition to the inspection fee imposed by § |
23-17-38 and to any licensing fees previously imposed in accordance with this section. |
(n)(l) The licensing fees imposed by subsections (c)(b) through (g)(f) shall apply to |
hospitals as defined herein that are duly licensed on July 1, 2023, and shall be in addition to the |
inspection fee imposed by § 23-17-38 and to any licensing fees previously imposed in accordance |
with this section. |
SECTION 2. Section 35-17-1 of the General Laws in Chapter 35-17 entitled "Medical |
Assistance and Public Assistance Caseload Estimating Conferences" is hereby amended to read as |
follows: |
35-17-1. Purpose and membership. |
(a) In order to provide for a more stable and accurate method of financial planning and |
budgeting, it is hereby declared the intention of the legislature that there be a procedure for the |
determination of official estimates of anticipated medical assistance expenditures and public |
assistance caseloads, upon which the executive budget shall be based and for which appropriations |
by the general assembly shall be made. |
(b) The state budget officer, the house fiscal advisor, and the senate fiscal advisor shall |
meet in regularly scheduled caseload estimating conferences (C.E.C.). These conferences shall be |
open public meetings. |
(c) The chairpersonship of each regularly scheduled C.E.C. will rotate among the state |
budget officer, the house fiscal advisor, and the senate fiscal advisor, hereinafter referred to as |
principals. The schedule shall be arranged so that no chairperson shall preside over two (2) |
successive regularly scheduled conferences on the same subject. |
(d) Representatives of all state agencies are to participate in all conferences for which their |
input is germane. |
(e) The department of human services shall provide monthly data to the members of the |
caseload estimating conference by the fifteenth day of the following month. Monthly data shall |
include, but is not limited to, actual caseloads and expenditures for the following case assistance |
programs: Rhode Island Works, SSI state program, general public assistance, and child care. For |
individuals eligible to receive the payment under § 40-6-27(a)(1)(vi), the report shall include the |
number of individuals enrolled in a managed care plan receiving long-term-care services and |
supports and the number receiving fee-for-service benefits. The executive office of health and |
human services shall report relevant caseload information and expenditures for the following |
medical assistance categories: hospitals, long-term care, managed care, pharmacy, and other |
medical services. In the category of managed care, caseload information and expenditures for the |
following populations shall be separately identified and reported: children with disabilities, |
children in foster care, and children receiving adoption assistance and RIte Share enrollees under § |
40-8.4-12(j). The information shall include the number of Medicaid recipients whose estate may |
be subject to a recovery and the anticipated amount to be collected from those subject to recovery, |
the total recoveries collected each month and number of estates attached to the collections and each |
month, the number of open cases and the number of cases that have been open longer than three |
months. |
(f) Beginning July 1, 2021, the department of behavioral healthcare, developmental |
disabilities and hospitals shall provide monthly data to the members of the caseload estimating |
conference by the fifteenth twenty-fifth day of the following month. Monthly data shall include, |
but is not limited to, actual caseloads and expenditures for the private community developmental |
disabilities services program. Information shall include, but not be limited to: the number of cases |
and expenditures from the beginning of the fiscal year at the beginning of the prior month; cases |
added and denied during the prior month; expenditures made; and the number of cases and |
expenditures at the end of the month. The information concerning cases added and denied shall |
include summary information and profiles of the service-demand request for eligible adults meeting |
the state statutory definition for services from the division of developmental disabilities as |
determined by the division, including age, Medicaid eligibility and agency selection placement with |
a list of the services provided, and the reasons for the determinations of ineligibility for those cases |
denied. The department shall also provide, monthly, the number of individuals in a shared-living |
arrangement and how many may have returned to a twenty-four-hour (24) residential placement in |
that month. The department shall also report, monthly, any and all information for the consent |
decree that has been submitted to the federal court as well as the number of unduplicated individuals |
employed; the place of employment; and the number of hours working. The department shall also |
provide the amount of funding allocated to individuals above the assigned resource levels; the |
number of individuals and the assigned resource level; and the reasons for the approved additional |
resources. The department will also collect and forward to the house fiscal advisor, the senate fiscal |
advisor, and the state budget officer, by November 1 of each year, the annual cost reports for each |
community-based provider for the prior fiscal year. The department shall also provide the amount |
of patient liability to be collected and the amount collected as well as the number of individuals |
who have a financial obligation. The department will also provide a list of community-based |
providers awarded an advanced payment for residential and community-based day programs; the |
address for each property; and the value of the advancement. If the property is sold, the department |
must report the final sale, including the purchaser, the value of the sale, and the name of the agency |
that operated the facility. If residential property, the department must provide the number of |
individuals residing in the home at the time of sale and identify the type of residential placement |
that the individual(s) will be moving to. The department must report if the property will continue |
to be licensed as a residential facility. The department will also report any newly licensed twenty- |
four-hour (24) group home; the provider operating the facility; and the number of individuals |
residing in the facility. Prior to December 1, 2017, the department will provide the authorizations |
for community-based and day programs, including the unique number of individuals eligible to |
receive the services and at the end of each month the unique number of individuals who participated |
in the programs and claims processed. |
(g) The executive office of health and human services shall provide direct assistance to the |
department of behavioral healthcare, developmental disabilities and hospitals to facilitate |
compliance with the monthly reporting requirements in addition to preparation for the caseload |
estimating conferences. |
SECTION 3. Section 40-8-19 of the General Laws in Chapter 40-8 entitled "Medical |
Assistance" is hereby amended to read as follows: |
40-8-19. Rates of payment to nursing facilities. |
(a) Rate reform. |
(1) The rates to be paid by the state to nursing facilities licensed pursuant to chapter 17 of |
title 23, and certified to participate in Title XIX of the Social Security Act for services rendered to |
Medicaid-eligible residents, shall be reasonable and adequate to meet the costs that must be |
incurred by efficiently and economically operated facilities in accordance with 42 U.S.C. § |
1396a(a)(13). The executive office of health and human services (“executive office”) shall |
promulgate or modify the principles of reimbursement for nursing facilities in effect as of July 1, |
2011, to be consistent with the provisions of this section and Title XIX, 42 U.S.C. § 1396 et seq., |
of the Social Security Act. |
(2) The executive office shall review the current methodology for providing Medicaid |
payments to nursing facilities, including other long-term-care services providers, and is authorized |
to modify the principles of reimbursement to replace the current cost-based methodology rates with |
rates based on a price-based methodology to be paid to all facilities with recognition of the acuity |
of patients and the relative Medicaid occupancy, and to include the following elements to be |
developed by the executive office: |
(i) A direct-care rate adjusted for resident acuity; |
(ii) An indirect-care and other direct-care rate comprised of a base per diem for all facilities; |
(iii) Revision of rates as necessary based on increases in direct and indirect costs beginning |
October 2024 utilizing data from the most recent finalized year of facility cost report. The per diem |
rate components deferred in subsections (a)(2)(i) and (a)(2)(ii) of this section shall be adjusted |
accordingly to reflect changes in direct and indirect care costs since the previous rate review; |
(iv) Application of a fair-rental value system; |
(v) Application of a pass-through system; and |
(vi) Adjustment of rates by the change in a recognized national nursing home inflation |
index to be applied on October 1 of each year, beginning October 1, 2012. This adjustment will not |
occur on October 1, 2013, October 1, 2014, or October 1, 2015, but will occur on April 1, 2015. |
The adjustment of rates will also not occur on October 1, 2017, October 1, 2018, October 1, 2019, |
and October 2022. Effective July 1, 2018, rates paid to nursing facilities from the rates approved |
by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services and in effect on October 1, 2017, both fee-for- |
service and managed care, will be increased by one and one-half percent (1.5%) and further |
increased by one percent (1%) on October 1, 2018, and further increased by one percent (1%) on |
October 1, 2019. Effective October 1, 2022, rates paid to nursing facilities from the rates approved |
by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services and in effect on October 1, 2021, both fee-for- |
service and managed care, will be increased by three percent (3%). In addition to the annual nursing |
home inflation index adjustment, there shall be a base rate staffing adjustment of one-half percent |
(0.5%) on October 1, 2021, one percent (1.0%) on October 1, 2022, and one and one-half percent |
(1.5%) on October 1, 2023. The inflation index shall be applied without regard for the transition |
factors in subsections (b)(1) and (b)(2). For purposes of October 1, 2016, adjustment only, any rate |
increase that results from application of the inflation index to subsections (a)(2)(i) and (a)(2)(ii) |
shall be dedicated to increase compensation for direct-care workers in the following manner: Not |
less than 85% of this aggregate amount shall be expended to fund an increase in wages, benefits, |
or related employer costs of direct-care staff of nursing homes. For purposes of this section, direct- |
care staff shall include registered nurses (RNs), licensed practical nurses (LPNs), certified nursing |
assistants (CNAs), certified medical technicians, housekeeping staff, laundry staff, dietary staff, or |
other similar employees providing direct-care services; provided, however, that this definition of |
direct-care staff shall not include: (i) RNs and LPNs who are classified as “exempt employees” |
under the federal Fair Labor Standards Act (29 U.S.C. § 201 et seq.); or (ii) CNAs, certified medical |
technicians, RNs, or LPNs who are contracted, or subcontracted, through a third-party vendor or |
staffing agency. By July 31, 2017, nursing facilities shall submit to the secretary, or designee, a |
certification that they have complied with the provisions of this subsection (a)(2)(vi) with respect |
to the inflation index applied on October 1, 2016. Any facility that does not comply with the terms |
of such certification shall be subjected to a clawback, paid by the nursing facility to the state, in the |
amount of increased reimbursement subject to this provision that was not expended in compliance |
with that certification. |
(3) Commencing on October 1, 2021, eighty percent (80%) of any rate increase that results |
from application of the inflation index to subsections (a)(2)(i) and (a)(2)(ii) of this section shall be |
dedicated to increase compensation for all eligible direct-care workers in the following manner on |
October 1, of each year. |
(i) For purposes of this subsection, compensation increases shall include base salary or |
hourly wage increases, benefits, other compensation, and associated payroll tax increases for |
eligible direct-care workers. This application of the inflation index shall apply for Medicaid |
reimbursement in nursing facilities for both managed care and fee-for-service. For purposes of this |
subsection, direct-care staff shall include registered nurses (RNs), licensed practical nurses (LPNs), |
certified nursing assistants (CNAs), certified medication technicians, licensed physical therapists, |
licensed occupational therapists, licensed speech-language pathologists, mental health workers |
who are also certified nurse assistants, physical therapist assistants, housekeeping staff, laundry |
staff, dietary staff, or other similar employees providing direct-care services; provided, however |
that this definition of direct-care staff shall not include: |
(A) RNs and LPNs who are classified as “exempt employees” under the federal Fair Labor |
Standards Act (29 U.S.C. § 201 et seq.); or |
(B) CNAs, certified medication technicians, RNs, or LPNs who are contracted or |
subcontracted through a third-party vendor or staffing agency. |
(4)(i) By July 31, 2021, and July 31 of each year thereafter, nursing facilities shall submit |
to the secretary or designee a certification that they have complied with the provisions of subsection |
(a)(3) of this section with respect to the inflation index applied on October 1. The executive office |
of health and human services (EOHHS) shall create the certification form nursing facilities must |
complete with information on how each individual eligible employee’s compensation increased, |
including information regarding hourly wages prior to the increase and after the compensation |
increase, hours paid after the compensation increase, and associated increased payroll taxes. A |
collective bargaining agreement can be used in lieu of the certification form for represented |
employees. All data reported on the compliance form is subject to review and audit by EOHHS. |
The audits may include field or desk audits, and facilities may be required to provide additional |
supporting documents including, but not limited to, payroll records. |
(ii) Any facility that does not comply with the terms of certification shall be subjected to a |
clawback and twenty-five percent (25%) penalty of the unspent or impermissibly spent funds, paid |
by the nursing facility to the state, in the amount of increased reimbursement subject to this |
provision that was not expended in compliance with that certification. |
(iii) In any calendar year where no inflationary index is applied, eighty percent (80%) of |
the base rate staffing adjustment in that calendar year pursuant to subsection (a)(2)(vi) of this |
section shall be dedicated to increase compensation for all eligible direct-care workers in the |
manner referenced in subsections (a)(3)(i), (a)(3)(i)(A), and (a)(3)(i)(B) of this section. |
(b) Transition to full implementation of rate reform. For no less than four (4) years after |
the initial application of the price-based methodology described in subsection (a)(2) to payment |
rates, the executive office of health and human services shall implement a transition plan to |
moderate the impact of the rate reform on individual nursing facilities. The transition shall include |
the following components: |
(1) No nursing facility shall receive reimbursement for direct-care costs that is less than |
the rate of reimbursement for direct-care costs received under the methodology in effect at the time |
of passage of this act; for the year beginning October 1, 2017, the reimbursement for direct-care |
costs under this provision will be phased out in twenty-five-percent (25%) increments each year |
until October 1, 2021, when the reimbursement will no longer be in effect; and |
(2) No facility shall lose or gain more than five dollars ($5.00) in its total, per diem rate the |
first year of the transition. An adjustment to the per diem loss or gain may be phased out by twenty- |
five percent (25%) each year; except, however, for the years beginning October 1, 2015, there shall |
be no adjustment to the per diem gain or loss, but the phase out shall resume thereafter; and |
(3) The transition plan and/or period may be modified upon full implementation of facility |
per diem rate increases for quality of care-related measures. Said modifications shall be submitted |
in a report to the general assembly at least six (6) months prior to implementation. |
(4) Notwithstanding any law to the contrary, for the twelve-month (12) period beginning |
July 1, 2015, Medicaid payment rates for nursing facilities established pursuant to this section shall |
not exceed ninety-eight percent (98%) of the rates in effect on April 1, 2015. Consistent with the |
other provisions of this chapter, nothing in this provision shall require the executive office to restore |
the rates to those in effect on April 1, 2015, at the end of this twelve-month (12) period. |
SECTION 4. Sections 40-8.3-2 and 40-8.3-3 of the General Laws in Chapter 40-8.3 entitled |
"Uncompensated Care" are hereby amended to read as follows: |
40-8.3-2. Definitions. |
As used in this chapter: |
(1) “Base year” means, for the purpose of calculating a disproportionate share payment for |
any fiscal year ending after September 30, 2022 2023, the period from October 1, 2020 2021, |
through September 30, 2021 2022, and for any fiscal year ending after September 30, 2023 2024, |
the period from October 1, 2021 2022, through September 30, 2022 2023. |
(2) “Medicaid inpatient utilization rate for a hospital” means a fraction (expressed as a |
percentage), the numerator of which is the hospital’s number of inpatient days during the base year |
attributable to patients who were eligible for medical assistance during the base year and the |
denominator of which is the total number of the hospital’s inpatient days in the base year. |
(3) “Participating hospital” means any nongovernment and nonpsychiatric hospital that: |
(i) Was licensed as a hospital in accordance with chapter 17 of title 23 during the base year |
and shall mean the actual facilities and buildings in existence in Rhode Island, licensed pursuant to |
§ 23-17-1 et seq. on June 30, 2010, and thereafter any premises included on that license, regardless |
of changes in licensure status pursuant to chapter 17.14 of title 23 (hospital conversions) and § 23- |
17-6(b) (change in effective control), that provides short-term, acute inpatient and/or outpatient |
care to persons who require definitive diagnosis and treatment for injury, illness, disabilities, or |
pregnancy. Notwithstanding the preceding language, the negotiated Medicaid managed care |
payment rates for a court-approved purchaser that acquires a hospital through receivership, special |
mastership, or other similar state insolvency proceedings (which court-approved purchaser is issued |
a hospital license after January 1, 2013), shall be based upon the newly negotiated rates between |
the court-approved purchaser and the health plan, and the rates shall be effective as of the date that |
the court-approved purchaser and the health plan execute the initial agreement containing the newly |
negotiated rate. The rate-setting methodology for inpatient hospital payments and outpatient |
hospital payments set forth in §§ 40-8-13.4(b)(1)(ii)(C) and 40-8-13.4(b)(2), respectively, shall |
thereafter apply to negotiated increases for each annual twelve-month (12) period as of July 1 |
following the completion of the first full year of the court-approved purchaser’s initial Medicaid |
managed care contract; |
(ii) Achieved a medical assistance inpatient utilization rate of at least one percent (1%) |
during the base year; and |
(iii) Continues to be licensed as a hospital in accordance with chapter 17 of title 23 during |
the payment year. |
(4) “Uncompensated-care costs” means, as to any hospital, the sum of: (i) The cost incurred |
by the hospital during the base year for inpatient or outpatient services attributable to charity care |
(free care and bad debts) for which the patient has no health insurance or other third-party coverage |
less payments, if any, received directly from such patients; and (ii) The cost incurred by the hospital |
during the base year for inpatient or outpatient services attributable to Medicaid beneficiaries less |
any Medicaid reimbursement received therefor; multiplied by the uncompensated-care index.; and |
(iii) the sum of subsections (4)(i) and (4)(ii) of this section shall be offset by the estimated hospital’s |
commercial equivalent rates state directed payment for the current SFY in which the |
disproportionate share hospital (DSH) payment is made. The sum of subsections (4)(i), (4)(ii), and |
(4)(iii) of this section shall be multiplied by the uncompensated care index. |
(5) “Uncompensated-care index” means the annual percentage increase for hospitals |
established pursuant to § 27-19-14 [repealed] for each year after the base year, up to and including |
the payment year; provided, however, that the uncompensated-care index for the payment year |
ending September 30, 2007, shall be deemed to be five and thirty-eight hundredths percent (5.38%), |
and that the uncompensated-care index for the payment year ending September 30, 2008, shall be |
deemed to be five and forty-seven hundredths percent (5.47%), and that the uncompensated-care |
index for the payment year ending September 30, 2009, shall be deemed to be five and thirty-eight |
hundredths percent (5.38%), and that the uncompensated-care index for the payment years ending |
September 30, 2010, September 30, 2011, September 30, 2012, September 30, 2013, September |
30, 2014, September 30, 2015, September 30, 2016, September 30, 2017, September 30, 2018, |
September 30, 2019, September 30, 2020, September 30, 2021, September 30, 2022, September |
30, 2023, and September 30, 2024, and September 30, 2025, shall be deemed to be five and thirty |
hundredths percent (5.30%). |
40-8.3-3. Implementation. |
(a) For federal fiscal year 2022, commencing on October 1, 2021, and ending September |
30, 2022, the executive office of health and human services shall submit to the Secretary of the |
United States Department of Health and Human Services a state plan amendment to the Rhode |
Island Medicaid DSH Plan to provide: |
(1) That the DSH Plan to all participating hospitals, not to exceed an aggregate limit of |
$145.1 million, shall be allocated by the executive office of health and human services to the Pool |
D component of the DSH Plan; and |
(2) That the Pool D allotment shall be distributed among the participating hospitals in direct |
proportion to the individual participating hospital’s uncompensated-care costs for the base year, |
inflated by the uncompensated-care index to the total uncompensated-care costs for the base year |
inflated by the uncompensated-care index for all participating hospitals. The disproportionate share |
payments shall be made on or before June 30, 2022, and are expressly conditioned upon approval |
on or before July 5, 2022, by the Secretary of the United States Department of Health and Human |
Services, or his or her authorized representative, of all Medicaid state plan amendments necessary |
to secure for the state the benefit of federal financial participation in federal fiscal year 2022 for |
the disproportionate share payments. |
(b)(a) For federal fiscal year 2023, commencing on October 1, 2022, and ending September |
30, 2023, the executive office of health and human services shall submit to the Secretary of the |
United States Department of Health and Human Services a state plan amendment to the Rhode |
Island Medicaid DSH Plan to provide: |
(1) That the DSH Plan to all participating hospitals, not to exceed an aggregate limit of |
$159.0 million, shall be allocated by the executive office of health and human services to the Pool |
D component of the DSH Plan; and |
(2) That the Pool D allotment shall be distributed among the participating hospitals in direct |
proportion to the individual participating hospital’s uncompensated-care costs for the base year, |
inflated by the uncompensated-care index to the total uncompensated-care costs for the base year |
inflated by the uncompensated-care index for all participating hospitals. The disproportionate share |
payments shall be made on or before June 15, 2023, and are expressly conditioned upon approval |
on or before June 23, 2023, by the Secretary of the United States Department of Health and Human |
Services, or his or her authorized representative, of all Medicaid state plan amendments necessary |
to secure for the state the benefit of federal financial participation in federal fiscal year 2023 for |
the disproportionate share payments. |
(c)(b) For federal fiscal year 2024, commencing on October 1, 2023, and ending September |
30, 2024, the executive office of health and human services shall submit to the Secretary of the |
United States Department of Health and Human Services a state plan amendment to the Rhode |
Island Medicaid DSH Plan to provide: |
(1) That the DSH Plan to all participating hospitals, not to exceed an aggregate limit of |
$14.8 million, shall be allocated by the executive office of health and human services to the Pool |
D component of the DSH Plan; and |
(2) That the Pool D allotment shall be distributed among the participating hospitals in direct |
proportion to the individual participating hospital’s uncompensated-care costs for the base year, |
inflated by the uncompensated-care index to the total uncompensated-care costs for the base year |
inflated by the uncompensated-care index for all participating hospitals. The disproportionate share |
payments shall be made on or before June 15 30, 2024, and are expressly conditioned upon approval |
on or before June 23, 2024, by the Secretary of the United States Department of Health and Human |
Services, or his or her authorized representative, of all Medicaid state plan amendments necessary |
to secure for the state the benefit of federal financial participation in federal fiscal year 2024 for |
the disproportionate share payments. |
(c) For federal fiscal year 2025, commencing on October 1, 2024, and ending September |
30, 2025, the executive office of health and human services shall submit to the Secretary of the |
United States Department of Health and Human Services a state plan amendment to the Rhode |
Island Medicaid DSH plan to provide: |
(1) The creation of Pool C which allots no more than nineteen million nine hundred |
thousand dollars ($19,900,000) to Medicaid eligible government-owned hospitals; |
(2) That the DSH plan to all participating hospitals, not to exceed an aggregate limit of |
$34.7 million, shall be allocated by the executive office of health and human services to the Pool |
C and D components of the DSH plan; |
(3) That the Pool D allotment shall be distributed among the participating hospitals in direct |
proportion to the individual participating hospital’s uncompensated-care costs for the base year, |
inflated by the uncompensated-care index to the total uncompensated-care costs for the base year |
inflated by the uncompensated-care index of all participating hospitals. The disproportionate share |
payments shall be made on or before June 30, 2025, and are expressly conditioned upon approval |
on or before June 23, 2025, by the Secretary of the United States Department of Health and Human |
Services, or their authorized representative, of all Medicaid state plan amendments necessary to |
secure for the state the benefit of federal financial participatingparticipation in federal fiscal year |
2025 for the disproportionate share payments; and |
(4) That the Pool C allotment shall be distributed among the participating hospitals in direct |
proportion to the individual participating hospital's uncompensated-care costs for the base year, |
inflated by the uncompensated-care index to the total uncompensated-care cost for the base year |
inflated by the uncompensated-care index of all participating hospitals. The disproportionate share |
payments shall be made on or before June 30, 2025, and are expressly conditioned upon approval |
on or before June 23, 2025, by the Secretary of the United States Department of Health and Human |
Services, or their authorized representative, of all Medicaid state plan amendments necessary to |
secure for the state the benefit of federal financial participatingparticipation in federal fiscal year |
2025 for the disproportionate share payments;. |
(d) No provision is made pursuant to this chapter for disproportionate-share hospital |
payments to participating hospitals for uncompensated-care costs related to graduate medical |
education programs. |
(e) The executive office of health and human services is directed, on at least a monthly |
basis, to collect patient-level uninsured information, including, but not limited to, demographics, |
services rendered, and reason for uninsured status from all hospitals licensed in Rhode Island. |
(f) [Deleted by P.L. 2019, ch. 88, art. 13, § 6.] |
SECTION 5. Rhode Island Medicaid Reform Act of 2008 Resolution. |
WHEREAS, The General Assembly enacted Chapter 12.4 of Title 42 entitled “The Rhode |
Island Medicaid Reform Act of 2008”; and |
WHEREAS, A legislative enactment is required pursuant to Rhode Island General Laws |
section 42-12.4-1, et seq.; and |
WHEREAS, Rhode Island General Laws section 42-7.2-5(3)(i) provides that the secretary |
of the executive office of health and human Services is responsible for the review and coordination |
of any Medicaid section 1115 demonstration waiver requests and renewals as well as any initiatives |
and proposals requiring amendments to the Medicaid state plan or category II or III changes as |
described in the demonstration, “with potential to affect the scope, amount, or duration of publicly- |
funded health care services, provider payments or reimbursements, or access to or the availability |
of benefits and services provided by Rhode Island general and public laws”; and |
WHEREAS, In pursuit of a more cost-effective consumer choice system of care that is |
fiscally sound and sustainable, the secretary requests legislative approval of the following proposals |
to amend the demonstration; and |
WHEREAS, Implementation of adjustments may require amendments to the Rhode |
Island’s Medicaid state plan and/or section 1115 waiver under the terms and conditions of the |
demonstration. Further, adoption of new or amended rules, regulations and procedures may also be |
required: |
(a) Nursing Facility Payment Technical Correction. The executive office of health and |
human services will clarify that the “other direct care” component of the nursing facility per diem |
may be revised as necessary based on increases from the most recently finalized year of the cost |
report used in the State’s rate review. |
(b) DSH Uncompensated Care Calculation. The executive office of health and human |
services proposes to seek approval from the federal centers for Medicare and Medicaid services to |
evaluate the impact of the recently enacted hospital directed payments for payments as a percentage |
of commercial equivalent rates in the calculation of base year uncompensated care used for |
disproportionate share hospital payments. |
(c) Provider Reimbursement Rates. The secretary of the executive office of health and |
human services is authorized to pursue and implement any waiver amendments, state plan |
amendments, and/or changes to the applicable department’s rules, regulations, and procedures |
required to implement updates to Medicaid provider reimbursement rates consisting of rate |
increases equal one hundred (100) percent of the increases recommended in the Social and Human |
Service Programs Review Final Report produced by the office of the health insurance |
commissioner pursuant to Rhode Island General Laws section 42-14.5-3(t)(2)(x) and including any |
revisions to these recommendations noted by the executive office of health and human services in |
its FY 2025 budget submission. This shall further include the recommendation that these rate |
updates shall be effective on October 1, 2024. This will also include a thirty percent (30%) increase |
to rates paid for skilled professional services provided by home care agencies omitted from the |
Commissioner’s report. |
(d) HealthSource RI Automatic Enrollment. The executive office of health and human |
services and HealthSource RI may establish and operate a program for automatically enrolling |
qualified individuals who lose Medicaid coverage into Qualified Health Plans ("QHP"). |
HealthSource RI may use funds available through the American Rescue Plan Act, funds collected |
pursuant to R.I. Gen. Laws § 42-157-4(a), or funds otherwise appropriated by the Rhode Island |
General Assembly to HealthSource RI to pay the first month’s premium for individuals who qualify |
for this program. HealthSource RI may use the information available in the state’s integrated |
eligibility system, known as “RI Bridges,” to authorize advance payments of the premium tax |
credit, as defined by 45 C.F.R. § 155.20, on behalf of applicable tax filers. The executive office of |
health and human services and HealthSource RI may terminate this program if the federal |
requirements provide that an individual whose household income is expected to be no greater than |
one hundred fifty percent (150%) of the federal poverty level is required to contribute an amount |
greater than zero (0) for purposes of calculating the premium assistance amount, as defined in 26 |
U.S.C. § 36B(b)(3)(A). HealthSource RI, in consultation with the executive office of health and |
human services, may promulgate regulations establishing the scope and parameters of this program. |
(e) Nursing Facility Payment – RUG to PDPM. The secretary of the executive office of |
health and human services is authorized to pursue and implement any waiver amendments, state |
plan amendments, and/or changes to the department’s rules, regulations, and procedures to switch |
nursing facility payment from the Resource Utilization Group (RUG) to the Patient-Driven |
Payment Model (PDPM) payment system and to make technical corrections to modernize nursing |
facility payment.” |
(f) ORS CNOM. The secretary of the executive office of health and human services is |
authorized to pursue and implement any waiver amendments, state plan amendments, and/or |
changes to the department’s rules, regulations, and procedures to increase eligibility to 400 percent |
of poverty of the federal benefit care for SSI for Medicaid-funded services through the Department |
of Human Services’ Office of Rehabilitation Services. |
(g) Adult Dental Services to Managed Care. The secretary of the executive office of health |
and human services is authorized to pursue and implement any waiver amendments, state plan |
amendments, and/or changes to the department’s rules, regulations, and procedures to authorize the |
expansion of the RIte Smiles managed care program to adults and additional services. The change |
would be in effect January 1, 2025. |
(h) Ambulatory Dental Rates. The secretary of the executive office of health and human |
services is authorized to pursue and implement any waiver amendments, state plan amendments, |
and/or changes to the department’s rules, regulations, and procedures to set Medicaid |
reimbursements rates for dental procedures performed in an ambulatory surgical center at 95 |
percent of the total payment listed on the Medicare Part B Hospital Outpatient Prospective Payment |
System (OOPS) (OPPS) as of January July 1, 2024. Beginning January July 1, 2025, the |
reimbursement rates will be annually updated to reflect 95 percent of the Medicare Part B OOPS |
OPPS rate. |
(i) Chiropractic Rates. The secretary of the executive office of health and human services |
is authorized to pursue and implement any waiver amendments, state plan amendments, and/or |
changes to the department’s rules, regulations, and procedures to pay chiropractic rates. |
(j) Hospital Care Transitions Initiative. The secretary of the executive office of health and |
human services is authorized to pursue and implement any waiver amendments, state plan |
amendments, and/or changes to the department’s rules, regulations, and procedures to leverage |
Medicaid for the Hospital Care Transitions Initiative at any time during or after the formal waiver |
approval process, limited to the state appropriation. |
(k) PACE Rates. The Secretary of the Executive Office secretary of the executive office |
of health and human services is authorized to pursue and implement a state plan amendment |
modifying the rate-setting methodology for Program of All Inclusive Care for the Elderly (PACE). |
Under the current State Plan, the change in a single market basket is used to adjust the rates in non- |
rebasing years. The Executive Office executive office proposes to revise this methodology to |
incorporate Medicaid program changes, fee schedule changes, and mix changes during years that |
do not include a full rebasing of the rates. This change will increase reimbursement parity and |
ensure that legislatively mandated fee schedule adjustments that apply to Medicaid FFS and |
Medicaid Managed Care are reflected in the rates paid to PACE. |
(l) Consolidated Appropriations Act of 2023, Section 5121 Compliance. The secretary of |
the executive office of health and human services is authorized to pursue and implement any waiver |
amendments, state plan amendments, and/or changes to the applicable department’s rules, |
regulations, and procedures required to provide federally mandatory Medicaid services to |
Medicaid-eligible individuals under age 21 and individuals under 26 eligible for Medicaid under |
the former foster care children group in the thirty (30) days prior to their release from incarceration. |
(m) Expansion of Qualified Individuals Program. The secretary of the executive office of |
health and human services is authorized to pursue and implement any waiver amendments, state |
plan amendments, and/or changes to the applicable department's rules, regulations, and procedures |
required to implement income disregards for the Qualified Individuals Medicare Savings Program |
to increase eligibility up to one hundred and eighty-five percent (185%) of FPL, effective January |
1, 2025. In the event that all necessary federal funding is not available, EOHHS shall prioritize |
eligibility at the lowest income levels such that no state funds are required. |
Now, therefore, be it: |
RESOLVED, That the General Assembly hereby approves the proposals stated above in |
the recitals; and be it further; |
RESOLVED, That the secretary of the executive office of health and human services is |
authorized to pursue and implement any waiver amendments, state plan amendments, and/or |
changes to the applicable department’s rules, regulations and procedures approved herein and as |
authorized by Rhode Island General Laws section 42-12.4; and be it further; |
RESOLVED, That this Joint Resolution shall take effect on July 1, 2024. |
SECTION 6. This article shall take effect upon passage, except for Section 5 which shall |
take effect as of July 1, 2024. |