|
FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
August 18, 2022
Contact:
CMS Media Relations
CMS Media Inquiries
As American Families
Prepare for Back-to-School, Biden-Harris Administration Strengthens
Access to High-Quality, Comprehensive Health Care for Children
In support of President
Biden’s effort to address the nation’s mental health crisis, HHS issues
guidance to states on ways to expand mental health care for children,
and proposes requirements for states to report certain health care
quality measures for children and adults.
Today,
the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), through the
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), announced three key
actions to strengthen and expand access to high-quality, comprehensive
health care for children across the country. These actions are part of HHS’ ongoing efforts to support
President Joe Biden’s call to address the nation’s mental health
crisis, including its impact on children.
HHS
issued a new guidance document reminding states of their mandate to
cover behavioral health services for children in Medicaid, and urged
states to leverage every resource to strengthen mental health care for
children. HHS is issuing a second guidance document that urges states
to expand school-based health care for children, including mental
health care. As part of the third action, HHS issued a proposed rule
that, for the first time ever, would require states to report certain
quality measures to strengthen Medicaid and the Children’s Health Insurance
Program (CHIP) to ensure that the millions of children and families
enrolled in these programs have access to the highest quality of care.
The
two guidance documents and the proposed rule follow two recent Biden-Harris Administration efforts
to address the youth mental health crisis by strengthening mental
health services for children. In July, HHS Secretary Xavier Becerra and
Education Secretary Miguel Cardona sent a letter to governors calling on them to
invest more in mental health services for students. In March, Secretary
Becerra and Secretary Cardona launched a joint-department effort to
expand school-based health services, ensuring children have access to
the health services and supports necessary to build resilience and
promote wellbeing. The joint-department efforts are a direct action
stemming from President Biden’s call following the State of the Union to
develop guidance to schools that will help them leverage Medicaid to
provide mental health support for students in our school.
“As
we begin the school year, a top priority of the Biden Administration is
to ensure all children have access to the full range of care and
support they need to stay healthy and thrive – including mental health
services,” said HHS Secretary Becerra, who has been traveling across
the country as part of the HHS National Tour to Strengthen Mental
Health. “For the millions of children who are covered by Medicaid and
CHIP, this means working with states to ensure they are pulling every
lever to strengthen and expand comprehensive access to mental health
care for children.”
The
nation is facing an unprecedented mental health crisis, particularly
among children. Even before the pandemic, rates of depression, anxiety
and suicidal thoughts were on the rise, with up to one in five children ages 3 to
17 in the U.S. having a mental, emotional, developmental, or behavioral
disorder. The pandemic only exacerbated these issues, with increased isolation
and disrupted learning, relationships, and routines. More than 40 percent of high school students
struggle with persistent feelings of sadness or hopelessness, and more than half of parents and caregivers
are concerned about the mental well-being of their children.
“Children’s
use of health services – from primary and preventive care to childhood
vaccinations, dental care, and mental health services – has dropped
alarmingly during the COVID-19 public health emergency,” said CMS
Administrator Chiquita Brooks-LaSure. “We need to reverse that trend
now and expand access to care for eligible children and families. State
partners and schools are key to helping children of all backgrounds
learn, grow, and thrive.”
Medicaid
and CHIP are a lifeline for families across the country. Together, they
provide 51% of our nation’s children and youth – more than 40 million
children – access to quality, affordable health care. For children who
are covered by Medicaid and CHIP, HHS’s actions today will strengthen
and expand health care services for them as they head back to school.
Details about these actions are below.
- An informational bulletin from CMS: “Leveraging
Medicaid, CHIP, and Other Federal Programs in the Delivery of Behavioral
Health Services for Children and Youth.” In this guidance document to states, CMS is
reinforcing Early and Periodic Screening, Diagnostic, and
Treatment (EPSDT) statutory mandates for children’s health
coverage, in particular mental health coverage. The EPSDT benefit
is a requirement for all states and provides comprehensive and
preventive health care services, including mental health services,
for most children under age 21 who are enrolled in Medicaid. CMS
is urging state agencies and stakeholders to use every possible
tool offered by Medicaid and CHIP, alone or in tandem with funding
from other federal programs, to provide high-quality behavioral
health services to eligible children and youth. The guidance
includes strategies to improve prevention, early identification,
and treatment; expand provider capacity; and increase the
integration of behavioral health and primary care. This guidance
represents one of many steps CMS will take to strengthen
behavioral health services for children in the Medicaid program.
- An informational bulletin from CMS:
“School-based Health Services in Medicaid: Funding, Documentation,
and Expanding Services.” In this guidance document to states, CMS is
prompting states to work with schools to deliver on-site health
care services to children enrolled in the Medicaid program –
covering nine essential policy areas related to benefits and
payment. Providing essential health care in schools, including
mental health services, better positions providers to reach
children and youth where they are to get them the care they need.
Medicaid covers many services that may be provided through
schools, including immunizations, health screenings, oral health
care, substance use disorder treatment, and mental health care.
This guidance represents one of several steps CMS is taking to
support access to Medicaid school-based health services –
including actions it will take to implement provisions of the
Bipartisan Safer Communities Act – and to promote the availability
of Medicaid-covered services, including mental health treatment,
in schools.
- The Mandatory Medicaid and CHIP Core Set
Reporting proposed rule. This proposed rule, which includes a Core Set
of Children’s Health Care Quality Measures for Medicaid and CHIP,
details proposed mandatory reporting requirements that would
standardize quality measures across Medicaid and CHIP for children
nationally – helping to promote health equity, and strengthen the
quality of Medicaid and CHIP services across the country. The
Child and Adult Core Sets include a range of measures key to
determining how well Medicaid and CHIP meet their mission of
providing affordable, high-quality, person-centered health care
coverage to low-income people, including children and families.
The proposed rule will mandate reporting of the Core Set for
children, and behavioral health quality measures for adults. In
doing so, the Core Set can help CMS and stakeholders evaluate
Medicaid and CHIP across the 54 programs run by states and
territories. Specifically, the mandatory Core Sets would evaluate
how Medicaid and CHIP coverage is meeting the needs of individuals
and communities, including where health disparities persist, and
how the quality of care can be improved. This proposed rule would
also mandate national reporting of behavioral health metrics for
adults, and details quality metrics for the Medicaid “health home”
model.
Read
CMS’ guidance: “Leveraging Medicaid, CHIP, and Other Federal Programs
in the Delivery of Behavioral Health Services for Children and Youth”
informational bulletin on Medicaid.gov.
Read
CMS’ guidance: “School-based Health Services in Medicaid: Funding,
Documentation, and Expanding Services” informational bulletin on Medicaid.gov.
To
learn more about the proposed rule for mandatory annual state reporting
of the Core Set of Children’s Health Care Quality Measures for Medicaid
and CHIP, the behavioral health measures on the Core Set of Adult
Health Care Quality Measures for Medicaid, and the Core Sets of Health
Home Quality Measures for Medicaid, please visit the Federal Register.
About
HHS’ National Tour to Strengthen Mental Health
Following
the President’s State of the Union in March, Secretary Becerra kicked
off the HHS National Tour to Strengthen Mental Health
to address the behavioral health challenges –including substance use,
youth mental health, and suicide – that have been exacerbated by the
COVID-19 pandemic and gun violence in our schools and communities.
Since kicking off the tour, Secretary Becerra and HHS leaders have been
traveling across the country to hear directly from Americans about the
mental health challenges they are facing and engage with local leaders
to strengthen the mental health and crisis care system in our
communities.
###
Get CMS news at cms.gov/newsroom, sign up for CMS news via email and follow CMS on
Twitter @CMSgov
|
No comments:
Post a Comment