Transcript Document

School-Based Medicaid Programs
Mississippi Department of Education
Lea Ann McElroy, Director
Bureau of Health Services
Former Surgeon General Dr.
Antonio Novello
“Health and education go hand in
hand: one cannot exist without the
other. To believe any differently is to
hamper progress. Just as our children
have a right to receive the best
education available, they have a right
to be healthy. As parents, legislators,
and educators, it is up to us to see
that this becomes a reality.”
Healthy Children Ready to Learn: An Essential Collaboration Between Health and
Education, 1992
Is
student
health
the missing
link in
school
improvement?
The State of School Health in
Mississippi
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Asthma
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Diabetes
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#2 state in the nation for Type II diabetes
Obesity

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#1 reason for school absenteeism
#1 state in the nation for obesity rates
Medications

More than 3.5 million schoolchildren take
medication at school
MASLOW’S HEIRARCHY AND COORDINATED
SCHOOL HEALTH
Health Education
Motivated and
Learning
Physical Education
Health Services
Nutrition Services
Sense of Positive
Self-Esteem
Sense of Belonging and
Counseling, Psychological
and Social Services
Healthy School Environment
Importance
Sense of Being Loved
and
Appreciated
Free of Fear and In A Safe place
Physical Health
Health Promotion for Staff
Family/Community
Involvement
Coordinated School Health Program
Health Education
Family and
Community
Involvement
Physical
Education
Health Services
Health
Promotion
for Staff
Nutrition
Services
Healthy School
Environment
Health Education
Working together for the health of our
children!
MDE
Student
Health
Medicaid
What is Mississippi Cool Kids
(EPSDT)?

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A FREE health care program for Mississippi’s
children ages birth through 21 who are
eligible for Medicaid
A way for children to get medical exams,
checkups, follow-up treatment, and special
care they need to make sure they enjoy the
benefits of good health
What is Mississippi Cool Kids
(EPSDT)?

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Annual exam for children/youth ages 2 – 21
Mandatory periodic screening services include:
 Comprehensive physical exam
 Developmental assessment
 Oral health assessment
 Vision and hearing screens
 Adolescent counseling
 Referral if necessary
We’re Number 1!

Mississippi is leading the way as the first
state to offer EPSDT services through
school nurses!

That means that with a Registered Nurse (RN) in a
school-based clinic, a school can become a Medicaid
Provider for EPSDT services, and file for
reimbursement from Medicaid for each approved
screening. Eligible population would determine level of
sustainability.
EPSDT Program Objective


Establish well qualified RN’s to provide
school based EPSDT services to every
eligible child
Finance the RN’s cost to the school in
whole or in part thru the provision of
EPSDT services
What do we want you to do?
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District/school administration will support
program
District will establish clinic in a school site with
qualified RN
School will include parental permission slips in
school registration process and develop and
implement a defined process to compile parental
permission slips for RN
School will provide informative meetings for
school faculty and parents
What will we do for you?


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Provide assistance with Medicaid provider
enrollment application
Provide template permission slips;
communication materials for parents;
contracts and other written material
Provide template PowerPoint
presentations for faculty, teacher and
parent presentations
What will we do for you?
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Provide periodic training
Provide day-to-day administrative support
Provide help/assistance for Screen Plus
software
What does the EPSDT School Nurse
really do?
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Consent forms
Verify Medicaid numbers
Periodicity schedule/schedules
appointments
Screens children (1 hour per screening on
average)
Files paperwork/submits claims
Follow up/referral
Is the program making a difference?
Parental Follow-up Rates
2002-2006
rin
al
ys
is
U
gb
/H
ct
H
en
ta
l
D
ea
ri n
g
H
Vi
si
on
100%
90%
80%
70%
60%
50%
40%
30%
20%
10%
0%
The Business of EPSDT
Time is Money!
Time for screenings + Dollars =
Sustained Program
# Medicaid
Average
Total
Children Screened Payment/Screen Payment
250
$70.00
$17,500
350
$70.00
$24,500
500
$70.00
$35,000
Teamwork is critical to success!
Teamwork = WIN-WIN!
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Improved classroom behavior
Improved academic performance
Reduced absenteeism **
Onsite access to healthcare for students and
faculty
Coordinated effort for improved health education
Additional funding for coordinated school health
**Reduced absenteeism means…
(2007-2008 figures)

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Statewide Enrollment: 493,302
ADA Statewide: 470,879
Statewide Attendance: 95%
$4,574 per student based on fully funded
MAEP
Statewide schools leaving $102,562,802
on table (not taking into consideration local contribution)
**Reduced absenteeism means…
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School District: 3,000 Students
Each 1% attendance improvement =
$137,220
What is School-Based Administrative
Claiming (SBAC)?

A federally funded program administered by the
Division of Medicaid in coordination with MDE

A program that allows school districts to be
reimbursed for some of their costs associated
with school-based health and outreach activities
which are not claimable under the Medicaid
School Health-Related Services program or other
Medicaid “fee-for-service” programs
What is School-Based Administrative
Claiming (SBAC)?

In general, the types of school-based health and
outreach activities funded under SBAC are:


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Referral of students/families for Medicaid eligibility
determinations
Provision of health care information and referral
Coordination and monitoring of health services
Interagency coordination
How does it work?
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
Roster of participating employees
Time samples – Random Moment
Samples (RMS)
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Cost data

Reimbursement!
School-Based Administrative
Claiming and the Office of Healthy
Schools

Bringing the process “in-house” and
eliminating the third-party administrator
School
MDE
DOM
School-Based Administrative
Claiming and the Office of Healthy
Schools

Designing a web-based reporting system
to automate the process
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Processing claims in a timely manner

Consistency and accountability
School-Based Administrative
Claiming Program Guide
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Overview of SBAC
Implementing SBAC
Staff Activities Included Under SBAC
Time Study Participants
The Time Study Process
Training for SBAC
Time Study Results and the Cost
Allocation Process
Preparing an Invoice for Medicaid
Payment
Monitoring and Quality Assurance
SBAC Training Modules
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Three Levels
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RMS Participant
SBAC District Coordinator
MDE SBAC Specialist
Training is designed incrementally, based on the
knowledge needed for the level of participation
Each level has a relationship to the entire
process
Each level is dependent on the other
Level 1 – RMS Participant
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What is Medicaid?
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What is SBAC?
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What is a RMS?
Who can be sampled?
Why must I do this?
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Who/what is covered?
What is EPSDT/Mississippi Cool Kids?
What do I have to do?
How do I fill out the form?
True/False test
Level 2 – SBAC District Coordinator
and District Business Manager
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Most essential functions
Mainly computer manipulation
Quality control
Assurance that deadlines are met
Audit compliance piece
Level 2 – SBAC District Coordinator
Major Steps (Employee Roster)
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Generate initial roster
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Document participant training by deadline
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Remove untrained participants by deadline
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Submit trained roster by deadline
Level 2 – SBAC District Coordinator
Major Steps (RMS forms)
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Track participants’ receipt, completion, and
return of RMS forms during the quarter
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Verify a percentage of RMS forms
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Submit completed RMS forms by deadline
Level 2 – District Business Manager
Major Steps
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Submit cost data by deadline

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Roster participant salaries
Other cost data
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Create invoice
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Certify invoice for payment
SBAC Web-Based Reporting System
User Control Panel/Functions
Employee Roster
RMS Participant Training
Early Success!
“The training this morning was really
helpful. In light of this extremely busy
time for financial people, it was really
awesome to see that so much time and effort was
put into making this process as painless and as
user friendly as possible!”
“I think this new system is going to be
GREAT!!! It is obvious the amount of time and
effort that has gone into making this successful!!
It all seems very organized and easy to use!!”
Early Success!
“Thanks for your help! We only have
four people left to do their training and
our roster has only been up for two days.
This is much easier than trying to train people in
person.”
“I have migrated my SBAC employees. It was so
easy. Thanks for the great job y’all do in making
things easier.”
What is the School Health-Related
Services Program?

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Designed to identify children who have a
learning problem because of a medical
problem which requires special services
Services include:
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Speech/language therapy and evaluations
Occupational therapy and evaluations
Physical therapy and evaluations
Psychological evaluations
Psychotherapy services
Speech/Language Services
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Services for speech, hearing and language
disorders means diagnostic screening,
preventive or corrective services provided
by or under the direction of a speech
pathologist for which a patient is referred
by a physician .
Services must be provided by a speech
pathologist licensed in the State of
Mississippi.
Speech/Language Services

The individual must also meet Federal regulation
licensure requirements:

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Has a certificate of clinical competence from the
American Speech-Language Hearing Association
(ASHA)
Has completed the equivalent educational
requirements and work experience necessary for
the certificate; or
Has completed the academic program and is
acquiring supervised work experience to qualify
for the certificate
What we’re doing to help!


07-08SY - Pilot program to test a webbased system for reporting speech therapy
claims
08-09SY – Roll out system to all interested
schools currently billing for speech therapy
Proposed Policy for Expenditure of
Medicaid Funds

School districts shall spend no less than ninety percent
(90%) of the revenue from school-based Medicaid programs
on health-related services, including but not limited to,
personnel, supplies, equipment, and/or curriculum, available
to all students as part of an eight-component coordinated
school health program. These funds should supplement, not
replace, other funds available for the same purpose.

The purpose of this policy is to ensure that maximum funds
be expended to meet the health needs of all students, ensure
adequate health and physical education, instill healthy
nutritional choices, and contribute to the academic
achievement of students.
Sources & Uses of Funds
Contact Information
MS Dept. of Education
Lea Ann McElroy, Director
Bureau of Health Services
601-359-3189
[email protected]