CMS NEWS
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
November 13, 2018
Contact: CMS Media
Relations
(202) 690-6145 | CMS Media Inquiries
CMS Announces New Medicaid Demonstration Opportunity to Expand
Mental Health Treatment Services
CMS letter to State Medicaid Directors outlines new opportunities for states to receive payment for residential treatment services
Today, the Centers for
Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) sent a letter to State Medicaid
Directors that outlines both existing and new opportunities for states to
design innovative service delivery systems for adults with serious mental
illness (SMI) and children with serious emotional disturbance (SED). The
letter includes a new opportunity for states to receive authority to pay for
short-term residential treatment services in an institution for mental
disease (IMD) for these patients. CMS believes these opportunities offer
states the flexibility to make significant improvements on access to quality
behavioral health care.
Medicaid is the single
largest payer of behavioral health services, including mental health and
substance use services in the U.S. By one estimate, more than a quarter of adults with a serious
mental illness rely on Medicaid. Approximately 10.4 million adults in the
United States had an SMI in 2016, but only 65 percent received mental health
services in that year. Serious mental health conditions can have detrimental
impacts on the lives of individuals with SMI or SED and their families and
caregivers. Since these conditions often arise in adolescence or early
adulthood and often go untreated for many years, individuals with SMI or SED
are less likely to finish high school and attain higher education, disrupting
education and employment goals.
“More treatment
options for serious mental illness are needed, and that includes more
inpatient and residential options. As with the SUD waivers, we will strongly
emphasize that inpatient treatment is just one part of what needs to be a
complete continuum of care, and participating states will be expected to take
action to improve community-based mental health care,” said Health and Human
Services Secretary Alex Azar. “There are effective methods for treating the
seriously mentally ill in the outpatient setting, which have a strong track
record of success and which this administration supports. We can support both
inpatient and outpatient investments at the same time. Both tools are
necessary, and both are too hard to access today.”
CMS currently offers
states the flexibility to pursue similar demonstration projects under Section
1115 (a) of the Social Security Act, regarding substance use disorders
(SUDs), including opioid use disorder. To date, CMS has approved this
authority in 17 states, where it is already improving outcomes for
beneficiaries. For example, early results in Virginia show a 39 percent
decrease in opioid-related emergency room visits, and a 31 percent decrease
in substance-use related ER visits overall after implementation of the
demonstration. With this new opportunity, CMS will be able to offer a pathway
forward to the 12 states who have already expressed interest in expanding
access to community and residential treatment services for the full continuum
of mental health and substance use disorders. About a quarter of individuals
with SMI have a co-occurring SUD.
States participating in
the SMI/SED demonstration opportunity will be expected to commit to taking a
number of actions to improve community-based mental health care. These
commitments to improving community-based care are linked to a set of goals
for the SMI/SED demonstration opportunity and will include actions or
milestones to ensure good quality of care in IMDs, to improve connections to
community-based care following stays in acute care settings, to ensure a
continuum of care is available to address more chronic, on-going mental
health care needs of beneficiaries with SMI or SED, to provide a full array
of crisis stabilization services, and to engage beneficiaries with SMI or SED
in treatment as soon as possible. States are encouraged to build on the
opportunities for innovative service delivery reforms discussed in the first
part of this letter and summarized below in order to achieve these milestones
and goals.
Through this demonstration
opportunity, federal Medicaid reimbursement for services will be limited to
beneficiaries who are short-term residents in IMDs primarily to receive
mental health treatment. CMS will not approve a demonstration project unless
the project is expected to be budget neutral to the federal
government.
States will also be
expected to report information detailing actions taken to achieve the
milestones and goals of these demonstrations as well as data and performance
measures identified by CMS as key indicators of progress toward meeting the
goals of this initiative.
In addition to the 1115
demonstration opportunity the letter also describes strategies under existing
authorities to support innovative service delivery systems for adults with
SMI and children with SED, that address the following issues:
CMS is announcing this new
demonstration opportunity following the publication of the Medicaid Managed Care proposed rule. States
identified key concerns in the 2016 final rules limitation regarding 15-day
length of stay for managed care beneficiaries in an IMD. CMS did not propose
any changes to this requirement at this time; however, CMS is asking for
comment from states for data that could support a revision to this policy.
Meanwhile, this new demonstration opportunity will give interested states the
ability to seek federal authority to have greater flexibility to pay for
residential treatment services in an IMD as part of broader delivery system
improvements.
For more information,
please visit: https://www.medicaid.gov/federal-policy-guidance/downloads/smd18011.pdf.
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Tuesday, November 13, 2018
CMS Announces New Medicaid Demonstration Opportunity to Expand Mental Health Treatment Services
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