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Healthy KidsConnect and January 1, 2010 Medical Policy Changes

Oregon Department of Human Services. Healthy KidsConnect and January 1, 2010 Medical Policy Changes. This Training Covers January 1, 2010 Medical Policy Changes. Noncitizen requirement changes Citizenship/Identity documentation requirements for CHIP American Recovery and Reinvestment Act.

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Healthy KidsConnect and January 1, 2010 Medical Policy Changes

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  1. Oregon Department of Human Services Healthy KidsConnectand January 1, 2010 Medical Policy Changes

  2. This Training Covers January 1, 2010 Medical Policy Changes • Noncitizen requirement changes • Citizenship/Identity documentation requirements for CHIP • American Recovery and Reinvestment Act

  3. Changes for January 1, 2010 • Healthy KidsConnect overview and eligibility • OPHP’s (Office of Private Health Partnerships) role in Healthy KidsConnect • DHS/AAA worker’s role in Healthy KidsConnect

  4. January 2010Changes for Noncitizen Children • Several new groups of noncitizen children now meet the noncitizen requirement • Includes immigrants and non-immigrants • To be eligible, noncitizen children under age 19 must fit specific classifications set forth by the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA)

  5. Expanded Noncitizen Requirement for Children • Example of new groups of immigrants include: • Children who are Permanently Residing Under Color of Law • An individual who is a child of a U.S. citizen whose visa petition has been approved and who has a pending application for adjustment of status

  6. Expanded Noncitizen Requirements for Children Continued • Several classes of non-immigrants are also included in the new groups. Examples of non-immigrants are: • A child of an individual with special immigrant status under section 101(a)(27) of the INA • A fiancé of a citizen, as permitted under section 101(a)(15)(K) of the INA

  7. Noncitizen Children • Children meeting the new noncitizen requirements are potentially eligible for OHP Plus program benefits. • A one time report will be sent of current CAWEM children. • Workers will need to review each child’s noncitizen status and, if eligible, convert to OHP Plus effective January 1, 2010.

  8. New NCS Need/Resource Code • There is a new N/R item that will be used on any person who is not an LPR or REF and meets the noncitizen requirement • The N/R item is NCSand the date will be C • N/R NCSC • The new NCS need/resource item should be available January 15

  9. Noncitizen Children Turning 19 • Children who turn 19 during their eligibility period: • A monthly report will be available of NCS and LPR children turning age 19. • Children who turn 19 and do not meet the noncitizen requirement for adults, but are determined eligible for MAA/MAF, OSIPM or OPU will have a benefit package reduction to CAWEM. • A 10 day notice is still required.

  10. Noncitizen Documentation Requirements • All noncitizens, regardless of age, need to provide documentation of their status • The document provided could depend on how they were admitted into the US (court papers, I-94, etc.) • The document provided will indicate what section of law the noncitizen was admitted under or what class of admission they are considered to be by INA

  11. Documentation Requirements • For all noncitizens, if documentation of the noncitizen’s status is not available when initially determining benefits, we can open medical and pend the client to provide the documentation if both of the following are true: • The client knows what their status is and if needed, what section of law they were admitted under and • The declared status meets the noncitizen requirement

  12. CIP & CIE Coding for noncitizens • In February, the CIP and CIE need/resource items will be available for noncitizens, too • If the client does not provide noncitizen documentation, the CM computer system will automatically send a 10-day close notice and end the noncitizen’s medical • Just like citizens, when the medical ends, the computer will add the CID case descriptor

  13. New SAVE Verification Requirement SAVE must be checked: • At each certification to verify the status of the noncitizen client • Whenever a change in status is reported • This is a new federal requirement.

  14. Noncitizen Chart • There are more than 90 specific classifications within the non-immigrant group • The noncitizen worker guide NC-1 has been updated in the Family Services Manual • Compare the noncitizen’s documentation to the chart and determine whether they meet the noncitizen requirement

  15. Iraq and Afghanistan Refugees • Effective December 19, 2009 Afghan and Iraqi SIV (special immigrants) who came to the United States with a temporary refugee status will now get full Medicaid or CHIP at the end of the 6-8 months refugee period, if otherwise eligible for a Medicaid program or CHIP.

  16. New CHIP CitizenshipDocumentationRequirement • CHIP now requires Citizenship and Identity documentation to be viewed and citizenship fields updated in the Person Alias/Update screen • Citizenship and Identity verification for CHIP will follow our current Medicaid policy and procedures • CIP and CIE need/resource items now apply to CHIP children, too

  17. Citizenship/Identity Example New applicant, DOR 01/05/2010 children ages 4 & 8 (three in the need group) • Two month income average is $2015 • Person Alias/Update screen viewed for citizenship/identity; no verification is coded • All other eligibility requirements have been met except citizenship; the children were not born in Oregon What are the workers next steps?

  18. Citizenship/Identity Example Continued • Pend for citizenship verification • Code both children with a CIP C/D and CIP N/R • Open medical benefits for both children • Based on income the 4 year old will be OP6 and the 8 year old will be CHP

  19. American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA) The ARRA Making Work Pay tax credit is now $33.00 • This exclusion amount applies to all DHS medical program clients who have earned income • Exclude $33.00 from earned income for each month of income used. Only one exclusion per person with earned income per month

  20. Simplified Making Work Pay Credit Process • Clients receiving SSI, SSD, SSB Railroad retirement, Veterans disability and veterans pension payments who also have earned income will receive the same tax credit amount • Clients with multiple jobs receive only one exclusion • Self employed clients also qualify

  21. ARRA • This change to the ARRA applies to new applicants or those at redetermination in January • Ongoing clients who received the ARRA exclusion prior to January will not need any updating until their next redetermination

  22. An Overview of Healthy KidsConnect (HKC)

  23. Healthy Kids The goal of Healthy Kids is to provide outreach and enrollment efforts so that all children under age 19 are covered by medical insurance in the state of Oregon with: • Medicare • Medicaid Healthy KidsConnect is part of Healthy Kids • CHIP • Healthy KidsConnect (HKC)

  24. Healthy KidsConnect (HKC) Overview • New way of issuing benefits • Benefits include a subsidy for health insurance premiums • Subsidy amount depends on the family’s income • DMAP does not issue HKC benefits • HKC eligibility is based on CHIP eligibility

  25. DHS in Partnership with OPHP DHS/AAA workers and the Office of Private Health Partnerships (OPHP) are partners in the Healthy KidsConnect (HKC) process for children

  26. Office of Private Health Partnerships (OPHP) • OPHP is part of the Family Health Insurance Assistance Program (FHIAP) • DHS staff will process initial eligibility for HKC applicants and code CM case • HKC eligibility is very similar to CHIP, but with a higher income limit • The CM system does an automatic referral to OPHP

  27. Office of Private Health Partnerships (OPHP) Role • OPHP will establish and maintain contracts with health insurance carriers to provide coverage similar to OHP Plus • OPHP will be responsible for issuing subsidies and reimbursements • Once referred to OPHP, the family has 45 days to be enrolled and receive an HKC subsidy or reimbursement

  28. Healthy KidsConnect Overview • HKC offers families a way to access health insurance for: • Non-CAWEM children under age 19, and • Ineligible for any other DHS medical program, and • Income is at 201% or above, and • Must be uninsured to qualify (just like CHIP)

  29. HKC Income Standard Healthy KidsConnect has two income ranges: • At or above 201% up to 301%, and • Income at 301% and above • The standard chart now has a 301% column

  30. New 301% Standard • HKC benefits depend on the family’s income • Families with income at or above 301% do not qualify for HKC subsidies • 301% and above families can access HKC insurance, but must pay the full premium cost

  31. Healthy KidsConnect Categories Category 1: For families with income at or above 201% up to 301% FPL who don’t have insurance available through an employer HKC will offer health insurance that can be purchased for children through the Office of Private Health Partnership

  32. Healthy KidsConnect Categories Continued Category 1 = a subsidy program based on the client’s income level • Income from 201% through 250% FPL will have approximately 90% of the insurance premium paid by OPHP • Income from 251% through 300% FPL will have approximately 80% of the insurance premium paid by OPHP

  33. Healthy KidsConnect Categories Continued Category 2: For families with income at 201% up to 301% FPL when the parent has Employer Sponsored Insurance (ESI) available for their children through an employer, but the children are not covered Category 2 = A portion of the family’s premium payment is reimbursed

  34. Healthy KidsConnect Categories Continued Employer Sponsored Insurance Reimbursement Income from 201% through 250% FPL • will have approximately 90% insurance premium reimbursement by OPHP Income from 251% through 300% FPL • will have approximately 80% insurance premium reimbursement by OPHP

  35. Healthy KidsConnect Categories Continued Category 3: For families with income at or above 301% FPL This is a full pay category. The client will be required to pay the full premium amount to receive coverage for their children

  36. Category 3, cont. • Self-employed families who do not meet the $10,000 business entity income test are also category 3 clients • The client will be required to pay the full premium amount to receive HKC insurance coverage for their children

  37. Eligibility Process for Healthy KidsConnect (HKC)

  38. Healthy KidsConnect Process • When an applicant requests medical benefits only and no companion case exists, the application can be sent to OHP Statewide Processing Center (5503) for processing • Applications with an adult age 60 or above who are requesting medical will be sent to the local SPD/AAA office

  39. Healthy KidsConnect Process Continued The DHS/AAA branch worker will: • Screen for MAA, MAF, EXT, OSIPM, OHP, CEM and CEC medical programs following current process • Income at 201% or above screen application for HKC

  40. Healthy KidsConnect Eligibility Continued HKC Eligibility is the same as CHIP with higher income limits • Children under age 19 • No TPL now or in the last 2 months (the 2 months can be waived) • No resource limit

  41. Healthy KidsConnect Eligibility Continued HKC eligibility continued • Cannot be CAWEM and be eligible for HKC • Must document citizenship and noncitizen status • Use current and previous month income • Can use budget month income when not eligible using two month average (can also float budget month using current policy)

  42. Healthy KidsConnect Eligibility Continued Date of request (DOR) • Follow current date of request process when determining HKC eligibility • Give 45 days from the date of request to complete the pend and eligibility determination process • If a redetermination BED code the case

  43. Denials • Once the pend process is complete if the client does not meet eligibility requirements for any DHS medical program… • Example: Income is 225% and client has TPL • ….the worker must send both a close or denial notice and a DHS 462A notice for the ineligible child Reminder: TPL received in the last two months can be waived in some situations

  44. HKC Referrals • Two kinds of referrals to OPHP • HKC children are referred who qualify for CHIP but have income at 201% or above up to 301%. They are eligible for HKC subsidies or reimbursements. − They are assigned a 12-month redetermination period. • Children are referred who qualify for CHIP but have income at 301% or above. They must pay entire HKC insurance premium ─ They are not assigned a redetermination period.

  45. HKC Referral Process Once it is determined an applicant is approved for a referral to get HKC insurance: • either update an existing CM case or • open a new CM case (HKC cases can be combined with other programs)

  46. HKC Referral Process Transfer the case online and shuttle/mail application to OHP Statewide Processing Center (5503) An HKC cover letter should be attached to applications being transferred to 5503 Do not fax application to 5503 – this will cause problems with 5503’s imaging process

  47. KCA Code – at 201% up to 301% When it is determined a client is approved for an HKC subsidy referral to OPHP, the KCA (KidsConnect Approved) coding is used: • For families with income at 201% up to 301% KCA is a person-specific C/D and N/R that tells the CM system to send the HKC referral to OPHP • The N/R date is used to give the client the 45 days + 10 days notice to complete the process with OPHP

  48. KCA Date KCA (KidsConnect approved for at 201% up to 301% FPL) The N/R date is determined by: • The 45th day from the referral approval date • If the 45th day is on or before the 15th code that month, if after the 15th code the next month

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