TO REFORM AND FINANCE LONG-TERM CARE SERVICES THROUGH A CONSUMER-CENTERED SYSTEM OF COORDINATED SERVICES AND INTEGRATED CARE
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Introduced
By: Representatives Costantino, Ginaitt, Mumford, George, and Sherlock
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Date
Introduced: May 29, 2002 |
WHEREAS, The
Governor and the General Assembly find and declare that many Rhode Islanders
will be consumers of long-term care services at some point in their lives. In
the last twenty years, the number of those in need of long-term care services
rose substantially, and is expected to increase further over the next decade.
The quality of life of these Rhode Islanders is, and will continue to be,
affected greatly by the capacity of the long-term care system to provide access
to the full array of services and supports required to meet their health care
needs and maintain their independence; and
WHEREAS, It
is in the interest of all Rhode Islanders, therefore, to endorse and fund
statewide efforts to build a fiscally sound, dynamic long-term care system that
supports: consumer independence and choice; the delivery of high quality,
coordinated services; the financial integrity of all participants-purchasers,
payers, providers and consumers; and the responsible and efficient allocation
of all available public and private resources; and
WHEREAS, The
Governor and the General Assembly find further that any such efforts must
advance the following objectives: greater coordination of services and high
quality service options in order to enable consumers to access the full
complement of services necessary to maintain their independence and meet their
varied and complex needs in as seamless a manner as possible; more flexibility
in the methods used to finance services in order to increase system capacity
and stability, encourage innovation and service excellence, and reward the
responsible utilization of available resources; easy access to a reliable,
integrated information network in order to assist consumers in directing their
own care, providers in delivering appropriate services, purchasers and payers
in analyzing system inputs and to assist all participants in evaluating health
care outcomes; and more varied options for assuring access and service quality
in order to ensure the system has the capacity to respond effectively to the
challenges posed by the growing increase in consumer demand and the rapid
change in the scope and kind of available services; and
WHEREAS, The
Governor and the General Assembly recognize that realizing these objectives
will require a level of change that can only be achieved and sustained by
participants in the system who have a stake in ensuring it is improved. It was
with this mind that, in 1996, they invited the directors of the departments of
human services, elderly affairs, health, and mental health, retardation, and
hospitals, to join together with various stakeholders and develop strategies to
expand the system's service capacity. This process yielded a set of policy
reform initiatives that provide the model for a consumer-centered system of
coordinated services and integrated care; and
WHEREAS, The
Governor and General Assembly find and declare that establishing such a model
system in Rhode Island will: provide a system of integrated care that expands
the capacity of the long-term care system as a whole to support consumer choice
and independence; enable consumers to access coordinated services, tailored to
meet their unique health care and support services needed; assure quality
outcomes will be assured by using certification standards, performance measures
and incentives and rewards that promote service excellence and generate the
information consumers need to make reasoned choices about their health care;
and improve the system's overall stability by reinvesting the benefits that
accrue from the more efficient utilization of services to enhance the capacity
of each of its component parts; and
WHEREAS, The
Governor and the General Assembly recognize that to fully realize the
objectives of reform, affirmative actions are also necessary to change the
process for financing and regulating the supply and quality of services. We
recognize further that all participants in this process of change must be held
accountable, and that decisions must be informed by clear measurements and
data; and
WHEREAS, The
Governor and General Assembly recognize that attaining system-wide reform of
the magnitude set forth herein will require significant changes in the
organization, financing and delivery of services that must be implemented
incrementally, over time. We also recognize that immediate action is essential
to ensure that certain segments, and ultimately the existing system itself, are
capable of withstanding a growing list of cross pressures that threaten its
stability and long-term financial viability; now, therefore be it
RESOLVED,
That the General Assembly of the State of Rhode Island and Providence
Plantations hereby resolves to commit a sufficient sum of general revenue each
year, for a period of no less than five years, to support the initiatives that
will enhance the system's capacity to achieve the objectives of reform. Each
year, the minimum sum appropriated shall be no less than the savings in
expenditures resulting from any charge in service utilization patterns and the
implementation of system reforms. Annual reports submitted by the departments
shall include estimates of the investments necessary to provide stability to
the existing system and establish the infrastructure and programs required to
achieve system-wide reform. This additional funding shall be allocated and
apportioned between institutional and community-based services as follows: in
the first year, ninety percent (90%) shall be apportioned to institutional
providers and services, and ten percent (10%) to community-based services and
providers. In each successive year, the percentage apportioned to institutional
services and providers shall be reduced by ten percent (10%) with the
institutional services and providers shall be reduced by ten percent (10%) with
the remainder being apportioned to community-based services and providers; and
be it further
RESOLVED,
That the department of human services is the single state agency designated, in
compliance with federal law, to administer the Rhode Island Medicaid program.
In this capacity, the department is the entity responsible for, and is hereby
directed and authorized to, develop and submit any requests for waivers,
demonstration projects, and state plan amendments that may be considered
necessary and appropriate to support the general purposes of this statute. Such
requests shall be made in consultation with any affected departments and, to
the extent feasible, any consumer group, advisory body, or other entity
designated for such purposes; and be it further
RESOLVED,
That the departments of human services, elderly affairs, health, and mental
health, retardation, and hospitals are authorized to promulgate any regulations
necessary to implement the provisions of this statute; and be it further
RESOLVED,
That by no later than March 1, 2003, the departments of human services, elderly
affairs, health, and mental health, retardation, and hospitals shall continue
their partnership with consumers and stakeholders in the community and submit a
joint Strategic Plan of Action for Long-Term Care System Reform for the review
and approval of the Governor and General Assembly, or an entity designated for
such purposes. The Strategic Plan shall be developed in an open and accountable
process that provides the opportunity for public input and shall include a
proposal for the continued financing and implementation of the reform
initiatives deemed necessary to further enhance the scope, quality and
availability of the long-term care services and supports consumers' needs; and
be it further
RESOLVED,
The following additional steps shall be taken to continue the process of
long-term care system reform:
(1) The
department of human services shall lead a system-wide effort to ensure that the
long-term care financing and reimbursement process supports the development and
maintenance of an adequate supply of quality services based on acuity, quality
incentives, outcomes, and consumer satisfaction with innovative use of all
funding. As the first part of this multi-year effort, a proposal shall be
submitted as part of the Strategic Plan of Action that seeks to pay providers
of non-institutional state-financed services, including, but not limited to,
those paid for through Medicare, at rates not less than a market-based
benchmark, and reviewed on a biennial basis by the Legislative Commission on
Health Care Oversight.
(2) The
department of health shall lead a comprehensive review of the process now in
place, which regulate the supply and quality of services including, but not
limited to, any procedures and performance standards designed to promote healthy
outcomes. Said review shall evaluate whether the existing regulatory processes
are adequate and equitable, supportive of the proposed changes in service
financing and reimbursement methods, and complementary to reform objectives and
initiatives more generally. The findings and recommendations from this review
shall be used as the basis for a proposal, to be developed by all interested
parties, as part of the Strategic Plan of Action. The proposal shall identify
the changes in existing regulatory process, and any alternative strategies
necessary to promote access to high quality services and supports in a
consumer-centered integrated care system.
(3) The
departments of human services, elderly affairs, health, and mental health,
retardation, and hospitals shall also develop a joint proposal to establish a
readily accessible integrated information network, and a strategy thereof, for
the management, collection and dissemination of accurate information, from
multiple sources, that encompasses quality indices, service, delivery,
demographic and financial data, as well as measures of provider performance,
consumer satisfaction and health care outcomes. Said proposal shall also be
developed in consultation with various stakeholders as a part of the Strategic
Plan of Action; and be it further
RESOLVED,
That the Governor and the General Assembly direct that the proposals developed
heretofore as part of a Strategic Plan of Action for Long-Term Care System
Reform shall be submitted to the Governor and the General Assembly for review
and approval, or entity designated for such purposes, by no later than March 1,
2003; and be it further
RESOLVED,
That except as provided expressly herein, no provision of this resolution shall
be construed to limit or otherwise restrict the departments of human services,
elderly affairs, health, and mental health, retardation, and hospitals from
fulfilling any statutory requirement or complying with any regulation deemed
otherwise valid; and be it further
RESOLVED,
That the Secretary of State be and he is hereby authorized and directed to
transmit a duly certified copy of this resolution to Governor Lincoln Almond,
the Department of Human Services, the Department of Elderly Affairs, the
Department of Health, the Department of Mental Health, Retardation and
Hospitals, and the Legislative Commission on Health Care Oversight.