Protecting Homeless Medicaid Beneficiaries under Managed Care
Even when eligible homeless people succeed in enrolling in Medicaid,
they often have difficulty obtaining services provided through managed
care plans. States are enrolling homeless Medicaid beneficiaries into
managed care plans without the benefit of cost and utilization data,
practice guidelines, or access and quality standards specifically for
this population. The National Health Care for the Homeless Council recommends
that State Medicaid programs take the following actions to protect unstably
housed people who are enrolled in managed care plans:
- Identify homeless enrollees; adapt eligibility determination
processes to accommodate them:
- Determine housing status at initial enrollment
and on a regular basis thereafter, record housing status in state
and managed care information systems, and use residential instability
as a marker for increased health risk to trigger the provision
of specialized health and social services.
- Assure receipt of enrollment and recertification information by
homeless beneficiaries that addresses their distinct needs and
is conveyed in language which they can understand.
- Default enroll homeless beneficiaries only in plans
that include experienced homeless providers with a
working knowledge of the health problems and life circumstances
of individuals who are homeless.
- Ensure expedited disenrollment from managed care plans if
people experiencing homelessness choose to switch to a plan offering
more appropriate services, or elect the option of obtain-ing
Medicaid services from federally qualified health centers.
- Tailor services to the distinct needs of people experiencing
homelessness:
- Involve homeless beneficiaries and their advocates in
the design, implementation, and evaluation of Medicaid managed
care programs.
- Conduct face-to-face health and social assessments of
homeless managed care enrollees shortly after enrollment.
- Establish linkages to integrated health and social
services through HCH projects and other providers
offering comprehensive, coordinated, and culturally appropriate
care.
- Provide an appropriate range of “wrap-around” services including
outreach, transportation, case management, 24-hour acute and
subacute recuperative care in a residential facility, and social
and housing services.
- Deliver services at accessible locations such
as soup kitchens, drop-in centers, and shelters where people
experiencing homelessness feel comfortable and are willing to
receive care.
- Cover and facilitate use of out-of-network services, if
appropriate health and social services are not available to homeless
beneficiaries within the managed care plan’s provider network.
- Assure responsible oversight and financing:
- Conduct targeted quality assurance and improvement
activities that focus on homeless beneficiaries.
- Develop fiscally responsible payment methodologies for
service provided to homeless beneficiaries, using cost and service
utilization data specific to people experiencing homelessness
as the basis for computing reimbursement rates.
For more information, see:
Center for Health Services Research and Policy, The George Washington
University Medical Center. Sample Purchasing Specifications Medicaid
Managed Care For Individuals Who Are Homeless. June, 2000: www.gwu.edu/~chsrp/ [Select
Sample Purchasing Specifications to see sample managed care contract
language.]
Wunsch, David. Can Managed Care Work for Homeless People? Guidance
for State Medicaid Programs. Care for the Homeless, New York,
NY. September 1998: www.nhchc.org/guidance.html.
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