By Amy Baxter | March
6, 2018
Private duty and home health care providers have
weighed in on a recent proposal to include non-skilled in-home supports in
Medicare Advantage plans in 2019, with some providers calling it a “precursor”
to expanding home care services to all Medicare patients.
The proposal, which was announced by the Centers
for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) on Feb. 1, would potentially add
private duty home care as a supplemental benefit to these plans. Industry
stakeholders had a chance to weigh in on the proposal during on open
comment period that closed March 5.
More than 1,200 comments were submitted in response to
the overall Medicare Advantage proposal, but not all have been posted online
and not all addressed the home care provision. However, several home care and
home health providers weighed in, pointing out numerous questions still to be
answered, but also expressing support for the policy shift.
Louisville-based Almost Family (Nasdaq: AFAM)
and Lafayette-based LHC Group (Nasdaq: LHCG) stated they strongly support
“expanding access to quality in home services through personal care services
for MA and eventually all Medicare patients.” LHC Group and Almost Family
are currently undergoing a merger; the deal is expected to close in April
2018.
MA plans currently cover about one-third of all
Medicare patients and enrollment is expected to hit between 60%
and 70% of all Medicare patients between 2030 and 2040. Almost Family has been
very active and vocal when it comes to recent regulatory proposals impacting
the home care industry, even proposing its own new payment system for
home health last year.
Almost Family also noted that the MA benefits
expansions should be added to traditional Medicare in the future, but that such
a move would require more transparency from providers.
Remaining
questions
While industry support is clear, there are
several remaining questions about how private duty home care providers could
become involved in MA in 2019.
One anonymous comment asks: “Will Medicare
Advantage plans be required to use only Medicare-certified home health agencies
to provide the non-skilled home care services under the proposed supplemental
benefit?”
According to Peter Ross, CEO of Senior Helpers,
one of the nation’s largest private duty home care franchise companies,
providers likely won’t need to be a Medicare-certified provider. Ross, who also sits on the Healthcare Leadership
Council (HLC), based this interpretation on the available documents and
conversations with the health care leaders and officials.
“All our franchises can participate in any
program,” Ross told Home Health Care News. “We take Medicaid, VA. So far as I
have see, there is no Medicare number needed, which is nice because we don’t
have a Medicare provider number. We’ve seen that’s not the case, and what they
are really saying so far is something all our locations can easily adopt.”
When the announcement was made, other providers
immediately started looking to their current partners across the health care
system to see how home care benefits could be added to plans, and even if they
didn’t submit an official comment to CMS, they have been discussing the
implications of the proposal. Frisco, Texas-based Addus HomeCare (Nasdaq:
ADUS), one of the largest providers of personal care in the nation, is among
these.
“Through the transition over the past few years
to managed Medicaid in a majority of our markets, we have developed strong
relationships with our managed care partners, and our teams are already having
conversations with them about this opportunity,” Addus CEO Dirk Allison said
Tuesday on a call discussing the company’s fourth-quarter and full-year 2017
earnings. “While it is too early to tell what the potential impact could be for
Addus, this is another positive step toward expanding the availability of our
service in a value-based market.”
Louisville-based ResCare is another large
provider of personal care, and it too views the Medicare Advantage proposal
favorably.
“It would be a huge opportunity,” ResCare CEO
Jon Rousseau told HHCN last week. “I think it’s real reinforcement that
non-medical models of care really provide a lot of value and help keep people
out of the hospital and in their homes, where they want to be.”
CMS will likely review the comments on its
policy proposals before issuing a final rule later this year.
https://homehealthcarenews.com/2018/03/providers-urge-cms-to-enact-medicare-advantage-home-care-proposal/
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