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Chapter 257 of the Acts of 2008 Provider Information and Dialogue Session: Adult Long Term Care

Chapter 257 of the Acts of 2008 Provider Information and Dialogue Session: Adult Long Term Care February 29, 2011 www.mass.gov/hhs/chapter257 eohhspospolicyoffice@state.ma.us. Agenda. Chapter 257 of the Acts of 2008 Overview of Adult Long Term Care Services

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Chapter 257 of the Acts of 2008 Provider Information and Dialogue Session: Adult Long Term Care

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  1. Chapter 257 of the Acts of 2008 Provider Information and Dialogue Session: Adult Long Term Care February 29, 2011 www.mass.gov/hhs/chapter257 eohhspospolicyoffice@state.ma.us

  2. Agenda • Chapter 257 of the Acts of 2008 • Overview of Adult Long Term Care Services • Definition and Overview of Programs • Procurement Approach • Review of Pricing Analysis and Methodologies • Data and Initial Review • Trends and Cost Drivers • Pricing Structure • Timeline and Key Milestones

  3. Chapter 257 of the Acts of 2008 Regulates Pricing for the POS System • Chapter 257 places authority for determination of Purchase of Service reimbursement rates with the Secretary Of Health and Human Services under MGL 118G. The Division of Health Care Finance and Policy provides staffing and support for the development of Chapter 257 pricing. • Chapter 257 requires that the following criteria be considered when setting and reviewing human service reimbursement rates: • Reasonable costs incurred by efficiently and economically operated providers • Reasonable costs to providers of any existing or new governmental mandate • Changes in costs associated with the delivery of services (e.g. inflation) • Substantial geographical differences in the costs of service delivery • Many current rates within the POS system may not reflect consideration of these factors. • Chapter 9 of the Acts of 2011 establishes new deadlines for implementing POS rate regulation as well as requires that related procurements not go forward until after the rate setting process is completed.

  4. In implementing Chapter 257, EOHHS will leverage three POS Reform Strategies to improve services and client outcomes POS Reform POS Reform Strategy 1. Create Service Classes 2. Develop Rational Rates 3. Reform Contracting • Develop service class structure defined by outcomes • Enhance POS taxonomy database • Align activity codes to service classes Maximize Statutory Requirement Service Value + • # of contracts shared across departments • # contracts w/ performance features • Use of Master Agreements • Overall POS governance structure Immediate Term 1/1/12 40% of system ~$880M Enabling 1/1/13 30% of system ~$660M Minimize 1/1/14 30% of system ~$660M Integrated data management systems Improved reporting • # POS contracts for similar services • Use of cost reimbursement contracts - Contract consolidation across agencies Rates to be reviewed every two years Increased Administrative Efficiency Simplification and improved coordination of administrative processes for agencies and providers More resources directed toward client activities Near Term Improved Client Outcomes Rational resource base and stronger provider system More clients served w/ higher quality services Long Term Improved quality management Improved client outcomes

  5. The Cost Analysis and Rate Setting Effort has Several Objectives and Challenges Pricing Analysis, Rate Development, Approval, and Hearing Process Objectives and Benefits • Development of uniform analysis for standard pricing of common services • Rate setting under Chapter 257 will enable: • Predictable, reimbursement models that reduce unexplainable variation in rates among comparable, economically operated providers • Incorporation of inflation adjusted prospective pricing methodologies • Standard and regulated approach to assessing the impact of new service requirements into reimbursement rates • Transition from “cost reimbursement” to “unit rate” Challenges • Ambitious implementation timeline • Data availability and integrity (complete/correct) • Unexplained historical variation in reimbursement rates resulting from long-term contracts and individual negotiations between purchasers and providers • Constrained financial resources for implementation, especially where pricing analysis warrants overall increases in reimbursement rates • Cross system collaboration and communication • Coordination of procurement with rate development activities Data Sources Identified or Developed Provider Consultation Cost Analysis & Rate Methods Development Provider Consultation Review/ Approval: Departments, Secretariat, and Admin & Finance Public Comment and Hearing Possible Revision / Promulgation

  6. Providers Purchasing Department Purchasing Department Purchasing Department Purchasing Department Purchasing Department Purchasing Department In Many Cases, Contract Reform is Necessary to Implement Chapter 257 Today Vision for FY15 Providers • Secretariat or DepartmentMaster • Agreements • By Service Class • DHCFP rate schedules • Panel of qualified providers • Departments purchase via rate agreements Dept Dept Dept Dept Dept Dept Dept • Thousands of individually negotiated contracts • Multiple contracts within and across departments with the same providers. • Services with core similarities purchased individually by agencies and regions • Low capacity for rate management, cross-agency coordination, performance assessment • Reduced contract complexity and redundancy • Greater amendment flexibility for providers and agencies • Greater opportunity for provider engagement • Streamlined, centrally-managed procurement cycles managed

  7. Agenda Chapter 257 of the Acts of 2008 Overview of Adult Long Term Care Services Definition and Overview of Programs Procurement Approach Review of Pricing Analysis and Methodologies Data and Initial Review Trends and Cost Drivers Pricing Structure Timeline and Key Milestones

  8. Adult Long Term Care Service Class Service Class Definition: Programs that provide individuals a place of overnight housing for a long-term period of time in a specialized residential facility with necessary daily living, physical, social, clinical and/or medical support. Transition to a less restrictive setting, while ideal, is not a common goal for individuals receiving services in these settings.

  9. Master Agreements simplify management of the POS system for providers and departments. • Benefits to Providers: • Single bidding cycle for similar services • Bid once – engage many times under a single bid • Standard reporting formats • Rate transparency • Potential to engage with new purchasing Departments • Benefits to EOHHS Departments • Reduced procurement burden • Potential to expand pool of providers • Enable statewide coordination • Eliminate multiple procurements for the same service

  10. Adult Long Term Care Procurement Plan • DDS will issue an RFR on behalf of itself, MRC, and MCB and will result in a multi-department Master Agreement. This decision was based in part on the following issues: • DDS currently contracts with 145 provider organizations and is due to re-procure the system. • 73% of MCB providers and 91% of its spending overlap with MRC and DDS. • 61% of MRC providers and 78% of its spending overlap with MCB and DDS. • DDS will issue this RFR in early 2013 once Chapter 257 rates are adopted with a target effective date of July 1, 2013 for contracts.

  11. Agenda Chapter 257 of the Acts 2008 Overview of Adult Long Term Care Services Definition and Overview of Programs Procurement Approach Review of Pricing Analysis and Methodologies Data and Initial Review Trends and Cost Drivers Pricing Structure Timeline and Key Milestones

  12. Adult Long Term Care Services:Data Sources • DDS Contract Data from Fiscal Year 2011 and EIM claims units provided. The data represents a wide mix of program models and levels of participant need. • Salary data from Bureau of Labor Statistics, Salary.com, and other applicable sources. • MRC gathered data on current programs. • Facility/Occupancy Cost Survey –issued February 28, 2012. • UFR, if needed to enrich data analysis of specific cost elements.

  13. Provider Occupancy Survey • The Purchasing Departments, EOHHS, and DHCFP designed an online survey to gain a better understanding of the features of facilities and their cost that could affect the development of standard pricing of physical space for human service providers that provide long-term residential care. • To complete this survey, please collaborate with staff familiar with both fiscal and programmatic aspects of your organization in order to provide the most accurate answers. • If your organization provides services to multiple residential sites: • Please answer all questions for each of your site locations • Please complete this survey by Friday, March 23, 2012

  14. Adult Long Term Care Services: Observations from Initial Review of Data • MRC programs trend along a higher unit cost curve than DDS programs • DDS data reflects contract cost prior to application of offsets • MRC data is inclusive of off-sets, therefore differential is likely to be more marked

  15. Unit Cost Data Distribution: DDS vs. MRC • MRC average unit cost greater that DDS • MRC has a wider range of unit cost; DDS more concentrated DDS Unit Cost Data Distribution MRC Unit Cost Data Distribution

  16. Cost Summary Analysis: DDS Data • Staffing costs, along with related tax & fringe expenses, average over 60% of total per-site spending • Non-specialized direct care (DC1, DC2 & DC3) account for the majority of staffing costs. • Supervisory/management, clinical/medical and support staffing account for a smaller portion of staffing costs • Combined, expenses related to occupancy, administrative costs and other program costs account for less than 30% of total per-site spending

  17. Major Cost Driver - Staffing • There is a high level of correlation between the staff-per-unit and the daily rate • R2 value is .8324 • Tightly packed cluster between $125 and $175 • Tax and Fringe was not as strong an influence – more unaccounted variability Unit cost reflects the cost of a bed day within a unique site.

  18. Non-Specialized Direct Care Staffing • Non-specialized direct care unit costs are related to the daily rate, though not as significantly as overall staffing costs • Non-specialized direct care refers to a weighted blend of Case Worker/Manager, DC Program Staff Supervisor, DC1, DC2 and DC3 staff. • R2 is .4889

  19. Transportation Cost • Transportation costs do not explain much variation in rates • R2 is .1086 • Transportation costs include Staff Mileage/Travel, Client Transportation, Vehicle Expenses, and Vehicle Depreciation.

  20. Occupancy Cost • Variation in Occupancy costs explain some of the variation in unit cost but the relationship is modest. • R2 is .4073

  21. Regional Variation • Statistical tests* have been conducted to examine the effect of regional location on the following cost elements: • Total reported per bed-day unit cost • Occupancy unit cost • Direct Care unit cost • Transportation unit cost No significant differences were observed. * (Analysis of Variance- ANOVA)

  22. Draft Pricing Structure • Rates per bed day, as under current system • Rates for an array of program models that flow along a continuum of level reflected in varying staffing patterns • Program size

  23. Draft Pricing Structure: Specialty andAdd-on Services • Acknowledge the opportunity for extraordinary individual needs, such as the rare instance when a program serves a single individual • Add-ons allow for variations in models not reflected in the standard rates • Can be temporary, as needed • Types of add-ons: • Nursing • Additional Direct Care Staff • Clinical • Specialized vehicles • Day services • Others?

  24. Draft Pricing Structure (cont’d) • Model Budget • Uses articulated assumptions for staff FTEs based on purchaser recommendation • Employs standard benchmarks for price elements, e.g., salaries, T&F %, occupancy, food, transportation • Includes a relief factor applied to DC staff FTEs • Cost Adjustment Factor (CAF) applied • Utilization factor <100% typically applied

  25. Agenda Chapter 257 of the Acts of 2008 Overview of Adult Long Term Care Services Definition and Overview of Programs Procurement Approach Review of Pricing Analysis and Methodologies Data and Initial Review Trends and Cost Drivers Pricing Structure Timeline and Key Milestones

  26. Updated Implementation Timeline and Key Milestones for Adult Long Term Care July 1 • Department Service Design Finalized: All service components, staffing ratios, staff qualifications, other program inputs have been decided by the purchasing department. • Provider Sessions: For each rate setting project, EOHHS conducts an average of 3 provider input sessions prior to Executive Sign-Off and the Public Hearing Process to allow for greater depth in understanding core program components, cost drivers, and procurement considerations. • Executive Sign-Off: Commissioner and C257 Executive Committee sign-off on draft rates and implementation plan. • EO485 Submitted to ANF: Draft rate regulation to ANF; Will better align the rate regulation proposal with budget planning. • Public Hearing: DHCFP and purchasing departments consider testimony in advance of rate adoption. • Procurement Process: The procurement will be issued after the rates have been adopted. • Rates Effective: Where possible, reimbursement under regulated rates will align with beginning of SFY to minimize mid-year contract amendments for both purchasing Departments and providers.

  27. Questions/Feedback eohhspospolicyoffice@state.ma.us Or Visit the Chapter 257 Website: www.mass.gov/hhs/chapter257

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