Curtains to open on Medicaid managed care


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  • | 12:00 p.m. August 1, 2013
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More than two years after Florida lawmakers passed a controversial plan to transform the Medicaid system, it's showtime.

As of today, about 9,300 central Florida residents who need long-term care — the vast majority of them seniors — will become the first participants in a statewide move to enroll almost all Medicaid beneficiaries in HMOs and other types of managed-care plans.

The transformation will not happen quickly: Region by region, low-income people gradualy move into the managed-care system during the rest of this year and throughout most of 2014, with the changes first affecting people who need long-term care and later the broader Medicaid population. 

After years of debate, planning and gaining federal approval, today is a pivotal day in a Medicaid system that serves more than 3 million Floridians.

"We're almost not believing it's here,'' said Liz Dudek, secretary of the Agency for Health Care Administration, which oversees the Medicaid program.

Dudek, Medicaid Director Justin Senior and state Elder Affairs Secretary Charles Corley will take part in a launch event in the Brevard County community of Rockledge. The first phase of the changes will affect long-term care beneficiaries in Brevard, Orange, Seminole and Osceola counties.

Broadly, the goal is to use managed care to provide services that will help as many seniors as possible stay in their homes or communities, rather than going into nursing facilities. But the changes have been controversial — and remain so as the state moves forward.

Jack McRay, advocacy manager for AARP Florida, said Wednesday the four-county region in central Florida will be the "guinea pig" for long-term care changes that his organization has questioned.

He said AARP wanted the state to conduct a pilot program before starting the shift to a statewide managed-care system for seniors, but was rebuffed by lawmakers.

"We want reform to succeed, but we have many doubts about it,'' McRay said.

Republican lawmakers and Gov. Rick Scott approved the move to the managed-care system in 2011, but federal officials did not sign off on the changes until this year.

After long arguing that Medicaid is fragmented, plagued by fraud and too expensive, GOP leaders say managed care will better coordinate services for beneficiaries while also helping control costs.

Making the changes, however, has required a massive amount of planning. The administration has contracted with managed-care plans in 11 separate regions of the state to provide long-term care services and is in the midst of a similar contracting process for plans that will serve the broader Medicaid population.

Another example of a major planning issue has been the state's use of what is known as "choice counseling" to help long-term care beneficiaries choose managed-care plans. The process is critical, at least in part, because managed-care plans can offer different benefits. The choice-counseling process has included home visits to help seniors, Dudek said.

The administration has contracted with varying numbers of managed-care plans in the 11 regions of the state. That includes four plans — American Eldercare, Coventry Health Plan, Sunshine State Health Plan and UnitedHealthcare of Florida — in the Central Florida region where the program will start Thursday.

In the coming months, AHCA will expand the program to other regions. On Sept. 1, the program will start in a region of southwest Florida and in a region that includes Palm Beach County and the Treasure Coast. On Nov. 1, it will move into the Big Bend area of north Florida and to Broward County.

The long-term care changes are expected to be in effect statewide on March 1 and the administration will then turn to enrolling the broader Medicaid population in managed-care plans.

 

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