- TXT
-
PDF
(PDF provides a complete and accurate display of this text.)
Tip
?
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office]
115th Congress } { Report
HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
2d Session } { 115-727
======================================================================
MEDICAID HEALTH HOME ACT
_______
June 12, 2018.--Committed to the Committee of the Whole House on the
State of the Union and ordered to be printed
_______
Mr. Walden, from the Committee on Energy and Commerce, submitted the
following
R E P O R T
[To accompany H.R. 5810]
[Including cost estimate of the Congressional Budget Office]
The Committee on Energy and Commerce, to whom was referred
the bill (H.R. 5810) to amend title XIX of the Social Security
Act to provide for an extension of the enhanced FMAP for
certain Medicaid health homes for individuals with substance
use disorders, having considered the same, report favorably
thereon with amendments and recommend that the bill as amended
do pass.
CONTENTS
Page
Purpose and Summary.............................................. 3
Background and Need for Legislation.............................. 3
Committee Action................................................. 6
Committee Votes.................................................. 7
Oversight Findings and Recommendations........................... 7
New Budget Authority, Entitlement Authority, and Tax Expenditures 7
Congressional Budget Office Estimate............................. 7
Federal Mandates Statement....................................... 29
Statement of General Performance Goals and Objectives............ 29
Duplication of Federal Programs.................................. 29
Committee Cost Estimate.......................................... 29
Earmark, Limited Tax Benefits, and Limited Tariff Benefits....... 30
Disclosure of Directed Rule Makings.............................. 30
Advisory Committee Statement..................................... 30
Applicability to Legislative Branch.............................. 30
Section-by-Section Analysis of the Legislation................... 30
Changes in Existing Law Made by the Bill, as Reported............ 31
The amendments are as follows:
Strike all after the enacting clause and insert the
following:
SECTION 1. SHORT TITLE.
This Act may be cited as the ``Medicaid Health Homes for Opioid-Use-
Disorder Medicaid Enrollees Encouraged Act'' or the ``Medicaid Health
HOME Act''.
SEC. 2. EXTENSION OF ENHANCED FMAP FOR CERTAIN HEALTH HOMES FOR
INDIVIDUALS WITH SUBSTANCE USE DISORDERS.
Section 1945 of the Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. 1396w-4) is
amended--
(1) in subsection (c)--
(A) in paragraph (1), by inserting ``subject to
paragraph (4),'' after ``except that,''; and
(B) by adding at the end the following new paragraph:
``(4) Special rule relating to substance use disorder health
homes.--
``(A) In general.--In the case of a State with an
SUD-focused State plan amendment approved by the
Secretary on or after October 1, 2018, the Secretary
may, at the request of the State, extend the
application of the Federal medical assistance
percentage described in paragraph (1) to payments for
the provision of health home services to SUD-eligible
individuals under such State plan amendment, in
addition to the first 8 fiscal year quarters the State
plan amendment is in effect, for the subsequent 2
fiscal year quarters that the State plan amendment is
in effect. Nothing in this section shall be construed
as prohibiting a State with a State plan amendment that
is approved under this section and that is not an SUD-
focused State plan amendment from additionally having
approved on or after such date an SUD-focused State
plan amendment under this section, including for
purposes of application of this paragraph.
``(B) Report requirements.--In the case of a State
with an SUD-focused State plan amendment for which the
application of the Federal medical assistance
percentage has been extended under subparagraph (A),
such State shall, at the end of the period of such
State plan amendment, submit to the Secretary a report
on the following, with respect to SUD-eligible
individuals provided health home services under such
State plan amendment:
``(i) The quality of health care provided to
such individuals, with a focus on outcomes
relevant to the recovery of each such
individual.
``(ii) The access of such individuals to
health care.
``(iii) The total expenditures of such
individuals for health care.
For purposes of this subparagraph, the
Secretary shall specify all applicable measures
for determining quality, access, and
expenditures.
``(C) Best practices.--Not later than October 1,
2020, the Secretary shall make publicly available on
the Internet website of the Centers for Medicare &
Medicaid Services best practices for designing and
implementing an SUD-focused State plan amendment, based
on the experiences of States that have State plan
amendments approved under this section that include
SUD-eligible individuals.
``(D) Definitions.--For purposes of this paragraph:
``(i) SUD-eligible individuals.--The term
`SUD-eligible individual' means, with respect
to a State, an individual who satisfies all of
the following:
``(I) The individual is an eligible
individual with chronic conditions.
``(II) The individual is an
individual with a substance use
disorder.
``(III) The individual has not
previously received health home
services under any other State plan
amendment approved for the State under
this section by the Secretary.
``(ii) SUD-focused state plan amendment.--The
term `SUD-focused State plan amendment' means a
State plan amendment under this section that is
designed to provide health home services
primarily to SUD-eligible individuals.''.
SEC. 3. REQUIREMENT FOR STATE MEDICAID PLANS TO PROVIDE COVERAGE FOR
MEDICATION-ASSISTED TREATMENT.
(a) Requirement for State Medicaid Plans to Provide Coverage for
Medication-assisted Treatment.--Section 1902(a)(10)(A) of the Social
Security Act (42 U.S.C. 1396a(a)(10)(A)) is amended, in the matter
preceding clause (i), by striking ``and (28)'' and inserting ``(28),
and (29)''.
(b) Inclusion of Medication-assisted Treatment as Medical
Assistance.--Section 1905(a) of the Social Security Act (42 U.S.C.
1396d(a)) is amended--
(1) in paragraph (28), by striking ``and'' at the end;
(2) by redesignating paragraph (29) as paragraph (30); and
(3) by inserting after paragraph (28) the following new
paragraph:
``(29) subject to paragraph (2) of subsection (ee), for the
period beginning October 1, 2020, and ending September 30,
2025, medication-assisted treatment (as defined in paragraph
(1) of such subsection); and''.
(c) Medication-assisted Treatment Defined; Waivers.--Section 1905 of
the Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. 1396d) is amended by adding at the
end the following new subsection:
``(ee) Medication-assisted Treatment.--
``(1) Definition.--For purposes of subsection (a)(29), the
term `medication-assisted treatment'--
``(A) means all drugs approved under section 505 of
the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (21 U.S.C.
355), including methadone, and all biological products
licensed under section 351 of the Public Health Service
Act (42 U.S.C. 262) to treat opioid use disorders; and
``(B) includes, with respect to the provision of such
drugs and biological products, counseling services and
behavioral therapy.
``(2) Exception.--The provisions of paragraph (29) of
subsection (a) shall not apply with respect to a State for the
period specified in such paragraph, if before the beginning of
such period the State certifies to the satisfaction of the
Secretary that implementing such provisions statewide for all
individuals eligible to enroll in the State plan (or waiver of
the State plan) would not be feasible by reason of a shortage
of qualified providers of medication-assisted treatment, or
facilities providing such treatment, that will contract with
the State or a managed care entity with which the State has a
contract under section 1903(m) or under section 1905(t)(3).''.
(d) Effective Date.--
(1) In general.--Subject to paragraph (2), the amendments
made by this section shall apply with respect to medical
assistance provided on or after October 1, 2020, and before
October 1, 2025.
(2) Exception for state legislation.--In the case of a State
plan under title XIX of the Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. 1396
et seq.) that the Secretary of Health and Human Services
determines requires State legislation in order for the
respective plan to meet any requirement imposed by the
amendments made by this section, the respective plan shall not
be regarded as failing to comply with the requirements of such
title solely on the basis of its failure to meet such an
additional requirement before the first day of the first
calendar quarter beginning after the close of the first regular
session of the State legislature that begins after the date of
the enactment of this Act. For purposes of the previous
sentence, in the case of a State that has a 2-year legislative
session, each year of the session shall be considered to be a
separate regular session of the State legislature.
Amend the title so as to read:
A bill to amend title XIX of the Social Security Act to
provide for an extension of the enhanced FMAP for certain
Medicaid health homes for individuals with substance use
disorders, and to require States to include under their State
Medicaid plans coverage for medication-assisted treatment.
Purpose and Summary
H.R. 5810 was introduced on May 15, 2018, by Rep. Leonard
Lance (R-NJ). The bill improves the state option for Medicaid
health homes under current law that improves the coordination
of, and access to, care for Medicaid beneficiaries with
substance use disorder. The bill extends the enhanced matching
rate for qualified activities from eight quarters to ten
quarters.
Background and Need for Legislation
Deaths due to overdoses of opioids and other drugs have
ravaged American communities. According to the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), on average, 1,000 people
are treated for opioid misuse in emergency departments per day,
an average of 115 Americans die per day, and opioid-related
overdoses have increased steadily since 1999.\1\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. ``Drug Overdose
Death Data.'' December 19, 2017. Available at https://www.cdc.gov/
drugoverdose/data/statedeaths.html.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
While the impacts to Americans' health outcomes are
staggering, the opioid crisis has negatively impacted society
in numerous ways. The Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention note that life expectancy dropped in 2015 and 2106
and that one of the reasons was an increase in unintentional
injuries, a category that includes drug overdoses.\2\ The
opioid crisis has also resulted in a contraction in the labor
force by almost 1 million workers in the years between 1999 and
2015, which resulted in a loss of $702 billion in real
output.\3\ In 2015, the total economic burden of the opioid
epidemic was estimated to be $504 billion.\4\ While all states
were negatively impacted, there is geographic variation in the
burden. West Virginia had the greatest loss per person ($4,378)
and Nebraska had the lowest loss per person ($394).\4\ One
recent analysis found that the annual cost for private sector
employers for treating opioid addiction and overdoses has
increased more than eight-fold since 2004, and more than one in
five persons aged 55 to 64 had at least one opioid prescription
in 2016.\5\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\Dowell, D., Arias E., Kochanek K. et al. ``Contribution of
Opioid-Involved Poisoning to the Change in Life Expectancy in the
United States, 2000-2015.'' JAMA, September 2017. Available at https://
jamanetwork.com/journals/jama/fullarticle/2654372
\3\American Action Forum. ``The Labor Force and Output Consequences
of the Opioid Crisis.'' March 27, 2018. Available at https://
www.americanactionforum.org/research/labor-force-output-consequences-
opioid-crisis/
\4\American Enterprise Institute. ``The Geographic Variation in the
Cost of the Opioid Crisis''. Available at https://www.aei.org/wp-
content/uploads/2018/03/Geographic_Variation_in_Cost_
of_Opioid_Crisis.pdf
\5\Kaiser Family Foundation, ``A Look at How the Opioid Crisis Has
Affected People with Employer Coverage,'' April 2018. Available online
at: https://www.kff.org/health-costs/press-release/analysis-cost-of-
treating-opioid-addiction-rose-rapidly-for-large-employers-as-the-
number-of-prescriptions-has-declined/
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Medicaid is the largest source of federal funding for
behavioral health services--mental health and substance use
disorder services--with nearly $71 billion in projected 2017
spending.\6\ As the Medicaid and CHIP Payment and Access
Commission (MACPAC) stated in 2017, ``the opioid epidemic,
which has reached most communities across the U.S.,
disproportionately affects Medicaid beneficiaries.''\7\ Of the
two million non-elderly Americans with opioid addiction,
Medicaid provides health coverage for an estimated 38 percent
of this population, which is the largest percentage of any
insurer type.\8\ Medicaid provides care to 4 in 10 adults with
opioid use disorder and compared to other insurance types,
provides a significantly higher percentage of inpatient and
outpatient substance use disorder treatment.\9\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\6\Government Accountability Office, ``Medicaid: States Fund
Services for Adults in Institutions for Mental Disease Using a Variety
of Strategies,'' GAO-17-652, August 2017. Available at https://
www.gao.gov/assets/690/686456.pdf
\7\Medicaid and CHIP Payment and Access Commission, ``Medicaid and
the Opioid Epidemic,'' Chapter 2 in June 2017 Report to Congress on
Medicaid and CHIP. Available at: https://www.macpac.gov/wp-content/
uploads/2017/06/Medicaid-and-the-Opioid-Epidemic.pdf
\8\Kaiser Family Foundation. ``Medicaid's Role in Addressing the
Opioid Epidemic.'' Available at https://www.kff.org/infographic/
medicaids-role-in-addressing-opioid-epidemic/
\9\Kaiser Family Foundation. ``Medicaid's Role in Addressing the
Opioid Epidemic.'' Available at https://www.kff.org/infographic/
medicaids-role-in-addressing-opioid-epidemic/
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
MACPAC found that ``Medicaid beneficiaries are prescribed
pain relievers at higher rates than those with other sources of
insurance. They also have a higher risk of overdose and other
negative outcomes, from both prescription opioids and illegal
opioids such as heroin and illicitly manufactured
fentanyl.''\10\ Not only are the number of Medicaid
beneficiaries with opioid misuse disproportionately high, so
too are the number of overdoses. Studies from North Carolina
and Washington indicate high rates of opioid-related deaths for
the Medicaid population (33 percent and 45 percent,
respectively).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\10\Medicaid and CHIP Payment and Access Commission, ``Medicaid and
the Opioid Epidemic,'' Chapter 2 in June 2017 Report to Congress on
Medicaid and CHIP. Available at: https://www.macpac.gov/wp-content/
uploads/2017/06/Medicaid-and-the-Opioid-Epidemic.pdf
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
For treatment, Medicaid has several pharmacy and medical
benefits for treating opioid use disorder that vary by state. A
primary pharmaceutical treatment offered to patients with
opioid abuse and/or substance use disorder is medication-
assisted treatment (MAT). The Substance Abuse and Mental Health
Services Administration (SAMHSA) describes MAT as ``the use of
FDA-approved medications, in combination with counseling and
behavioral therapies, to provide a ``whole-patient'' approach
to the treatment of substance use disorders.''\11\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\11\See SAMHSA website. Available at: https://www.samhsa.gov/
medication-assisted-treatment
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Non-pharmaceutical treatment of opioid use disorder in
Medicaid occurs in inpatient, outpatient, residential, and
community-based settings. MACPAC's 2017 analysis found that
``Medicaid is responding to the opioid crisis by covering
treatment, innovating in the delivery of care, and working with
other state agencies to reduce misuse of prescription
opioids.''\12\ State Medicaid programs adopt strategies and
design their programs to meet the needs of their Medicaid
beneficiaries resulting in variations in covered treatment
services and settings. It is important state Medicaid programs
provide a continuum of care to serve the needs of Medicaid
beneficiaries.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\12\Medicaid and CHIP Payment and Access Commission, ``Medicaid and
the Opioid Epidemic,'' Chapter 2 in June 2017 Report to Congress on
Medicaid and CHIP. Available at: https://www.macpac.gov/wp-content/
uploads/2017/06/Medicaid-and-the-Opioid-Epidemic.pdf
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
However, as MACPAC noted, ``there are gaps in the continuum
of care, and states vary in the extent to which they cover
needed treatment.''\13\ One of the barriers to appropriate
treatment consistently identified by Medicaid directors and
health policy experts is a statutory prohibition on federal
Medicaid matching funds for paying for care for certain
Medicaid beneficiaries in Institutions for Mental Diseases
(IMD). As MACPAC has explained, ``the Medicaid IMD exclusion
acts a barrier for individuals with an opioid use disorder to
receive residential treatment, which, depending on an
individual's treatment plan, may be the most appropriate
setting for care.''\14\ Given these and other findings, there
continues to be an opportunity for Congress and state Medicaid
programs to work to improve access to timely, high-quality
treatment across the continuum of care.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\13\Medicaid and CHIP Payment and Access Commission, ``Medicaid and
the Opioid Epidemic,'' Chapter 2 in June 2017 Report to Congress on
Medicaid and CHIP. Available at: https://www.macpac.gov/wp-content/
uploads/2017/06/Medicaid-and-the-Opioid-Epidemic.pdf
\14\Medicaid and CHIP Payment and Access Commission, ``Medicaid and
the Opioid Epidemic,'' Chapter 2 in June 2017 Report to Congress on
Medicaid and CHIP. Available at: https://www.macpac.gov/wp-content/
uploads/2017/06/Medicaid-and-the-Opioid-Epidemic.pdf
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Section 2703 of P.L. 111-148, enacted section 1945 of the
Social Security Act (SSA), providing states the option to offer
a Medicaid ``health home'' service. This option enables states
to design programs to integrate services and coordinate care
for specific groups of Medicaid enrollees with complex or
chronic physical or behavioral health needs.
Under section 1945, effective as of January 1, 2011, each
state may amend its Medicaid state plan to adopt the health
home option. The Medicaid requirements of ``statewideness'' and
``comparability'' are waived under section 1945, which means
states may implement health home programs that target specific
groups of enrollees or that are limited to one or more regions
of a state.
States that elect to provide health home services may
provide the services targeting individuals with qualifying
``chronic conditions,'' which include mental health conditions,
substance use disorder (SUD), asthma, diabetes, heart disease,
and obesity. States may target health home services to one or
more of these listed conditions or, with Centers for Medicare
and Medicaid Services (CMS) approval, to other chronic
conditions designated by the state. A state may implement
different health home programs for different target groups.
States are provided an enhanced federal matching rate for
expenditures on health home services that is equal to 90
percent during the first eight fiscal year quarters that a
health home state plan amendment is in effect. Thereafter, the
federal matching rate is the state's regular federal medical
assistance percentage (FMAP) rate, which is federal
government's share of a state's expenditures for most Medicaid
services.
As of April 2018, according to CMS, 22 states and the
District of Columbia had a total of 34 approved Medicaid health
home programs. Twenty approved health home programs focused on
serious mental illness or serious emotional disturbance;
however, only four approved health home programs focused on
SUD. For example, in Vermont, SUD health homes have shown
improvements in patient satisfaction, decreased use of
emergency department services, and expanded access to MAT.\15\
These results are promising and will be sustainable beyond the
health home waiver.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\15\Rawson, RA. ``Vermont Hub-and-Spoke Model of Care for Opioid
Use Disorders: An Evaluation.'' December 2017. Available at http://
www.healthvermont.gov/media/newsroom/hub-and-spoke-evaluation-shows-
significant-impact-january-22-2018
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Committee Action
On April 11 and 12, 2018, the Subcommittee on Health held a
hearing on the discussion draft entitled ``Incentives to Create
Medicaid Health Homes to Treat Substance Use Disorder.'' The
Subcommittee received testimony from:
Kimberly Brandt, Principal Deputy
Administrator for Operations, Centers for Medicare and
Medicaid Services, U.S. Department of Health and Human
Services;
Michael Botticelli, Executive Director,
Grayken Center for Addiction, Boston Medical Center;
Toby Douglas, Senior Vice President,
Medicaid Solutions, Centene Corporation;
David Guth, Chief Executive Officer,
Centerstone;
John Kravitz, Chief Information Officer,
Geisinger Health System; and,
Sam Srivastava, Chief Executive Officer,
Magellan Health.
On April 25, 2018, the Subcommittee on Health met in open
markup session and forwarded the discussion draft, without
amendment, to the full Committee by a voice vote. On May 17,
2018, the full Committee on Energy and Commerce met in open
markup session and ordered H.R. 5810, as amended, favorably
reported to the House by a voice vote. H.R. 5810 is similar to
the discussion draft forwarded by the Subcommittee.
Committee Votes
Clause 3(b) of rule XIII requires the Committee to list the
record votes on the motion to report legislation and amendments
thereto. There were no record votes taken in connection with
ordering H.R. 5810 reported.
Oversight Findings and Recommendations
Pursuant to clause 2(b)(1) of rule X and clause 3(c)(1) of
rule XIII, the Committee held a hearing and made findings that
are reflected in this report.
New Budget Authority, Entitlement Authority, and Tax Expenditures
Pursuant to clause 3(c)(2) of rule XIII, the Committee
finds that H.R. 5810 would result in no new or increased budget
authority, entitlement authority, or tax expenditures or
revenues.
Congressional Budget Office Estimate
Pursuant to clause 3(c)(3) of rule XIII, the following is
the cost estimate provided by the Congressional Budget Office
pursuant to section 402 of the Congressional Budget Act of
1974:
U.S. Congress,
Congressional Budget Office,
Washington, DC, June 6, 2018.
Hon. Greg Walden,
Chairman, Committee on Energy and Commerce,
House of Representatives, Washington, DC.
Dear Mr. Chairman: The Congressional Budget Office has
prepared the enclosed document with cost estimates for the
opioid-related legislation ordered to be reported on May 9 and
May 17, 2018.
If you wish further details on this estimate, we will be
pleased to provide them. The CBO staff contacts are Tom Bradley
and Chad Chirico.
Sincerely,
Mark P. Hadley
(For Keith Hall, Director).
Enclosure.
Opioid Legislation
Summary: On May 9 and May 17, 2018, the House Committee on
Energy and Commerce ordered 59 bills to be reported related to
the nation's response to the opioid epidemic. Generally, the
bills would:
Provide grants to facilities and providers
that treat people with substance use disorders,
Direct various agencies within the
Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) to
explore nonopioid approaches to treating pain and to
educate providers about those alternatives,
Modify requirements under Medicaid and
Medicare for prescribing controlled substances,
Expand Medicaid coverage for substance abuse
treatment, and
Direct the Food and Drug Administration
(FDA) to modify its oversight of opioid drugs and other
medications that are used to manage pain.
Because of the large number of related bills ordered
reported by the Committee, CBO is publishing a single
comprehensive document that includes estimates for each piece
of legislation.
CBO estimates that enacting 20 of the bills would affect
direct spending, and 2 of the bills would affect revenues;
therefore, pay-as-you-go procedures apply for those bills.
CBO estimates that enacting H.R. 4998, the Health Insurance
for Former Foster Youth Act, would increase net direct spending
by more than $2.5 billion and on-budget deficits by more than
$5 billion in at least one of the four consecutive 10-year
periods beginning in 2029. None of the remaining 58 bills
included in this estimate would increase net direct spending by
more than $2.5 billion or on-budget deficits by more than $5
billion in any of the four consecutive 10-year periods
beginning in 2029.
One of the bills reviewed for this document, H.R. 5795,
would impose both intergovernmental and private-sector mandates
as defined in the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act (UMRA). CBO
estimates that the costs of those mandates on public and
private entities would fall below the thresholds in UMRA ($80
million and $160 million, respectively, in 2018, adjusted
annually for inflation). Five bills, H.R. 5228, H.R. 5333, H.R.
5554, H.R. 5687, and H.R. 5811, would impose private-sector
mandates as defined in UMRA. CBO estimates that the costs of
the mandates in three of the bills (H.R. 5333, H.R. 5554, and
H.R. 5811) would not exceed the UMRA threshold for private
entities. Because CBO is uncertain how federal agencies would
implement new authority granted in the other two bills, H.R.
5228 and H.R. 5687, CBO cannot determine whether the costs of
those mandates would exceed the UMRA threshold.
Estimated cost to the Federal Government: The estimates in
this document do not include the effects of interactions among
the bills. If all 59 bills were combined and enacted as one
piece of legislation, the budgetary effects would be different
from the sum of the estimates in this document, although CBO
expects that any such differences would be small. The costs of
this legislation fall within budget functions 550 (health), 570
(Medicare), 750 (administration of justice), and 800, general
government).
Basis of estimate: For this estimate, CBO assumes that all
of the legislation will be enacted late in 2018 and that
authorized and estimated amounts will be appropriated each
year. Outlays for discretionary programs are estimated based on
historical spending patterns for similar programs.
Uncertainty
CBO aims to produce estimates that generally reflect the
middle of a range of the most likely budgetary outcomes that
would result if the legislation was enacted. Because data on
the utilization of mental health and substance abuse treatment
under Medicaid and Medicare is scarce, CBO cannot precisely
predict how patients or providers would respond to some policy
changes or what budgetary effects would result. In addition,
several of the bills would give the Department of Health and
Human Services (HHS) considerable latitude in designing and
implementing policies. Budgetary effects could differ from
those provided in CBO's analyses depending on those decisions.
Direct spending and revenues
Table 1 lists the 22 bills of the 59 ordered to be reported
that would affect direct spending or revenues.
TABLE 1.--ESTIMATED CHANGES IN MANDATORY SPENDING AND REVENUES
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
By fiscal year, in millions of dollars--
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024 2025 2026 2027 2028 2019-2023 2019-2028
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
INCREASES OR DECREASES (-) IN DIRECT SPENDING
Legislation Primarily Affecting
Medicaid:
H.R. 1925, At-Risk Youth 0 * 5 5 5 10 10 10 10 10 10 25 75
Medicaid Protection Act of
2017......................
H.R. 4998, Health Insurance 0 0 0 0 0 * 10 21 33 46 61 * 171
for Former Foster Youth
Act.......................
H.R. 5477, Rural 0 13 35 58 68 83 27 9 3 3 3 256 301
Development of Opioid
Capacity Services Act.....
H.R. 5583, a bill to amend 0 * * * * * * * * * * * *
title XI of the Social
Security Act to require
States to annually report
on certain adult health
quality measures, and for
other purposes............
H.R. 5797, IMD CARE Act.... 0 38 158 251 265 279 0 0 0 0 0 991 991
H.R. 5799, Medicaid DRUG 0 * * 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 2 5
Improvement Acta..........
H.R. 5801 Medicaid 0 * * * * * * * * * * * *
Providers Are Required To
Note Experiences in Record
Systems to Help In-Need
Patients (PARTNERSHIP)
Acta......................
H.R. 5808, Medicaid 0 * -1 -1 -1 -1 -2 -2 -2 -2 -2 -4 -13
Pharmaceutical Home Act of
2018a.....................
H.R. 5810, Medicaid Health 0 94 58 62 56 52 48 43 38 32 25 323 509
HOME Act..................
Legislation Primarily Affecting
Medicare:
H.R. 3528, Every 0 0 0 -24 -35 -33 -30 -33 -32 -31 -32 -92 -250
Prescription Conveyed
Securely Act..............
H.R. 4841, Standardizing 0 0 0 * * * * * * * * * *
Electronic Prior
Authorization for Safe
Prescribing Act of 2018...
H.R. 5603, Access to 0 2 * * * 1 1 1 2 2 2 3 11
Telehealth Services for
Opioid Use Disorders Act..
H.R. 5605, Advancing High 0 0 0 15 26 24 23 23 10 1 * 65 122
Quality Treatment for
Opioid Use Disorders in
Medicare Act..............
H.R. 5675, a bill to amend 0 0 0 -6 -7 -7 -7 -8 -9 -9 -11 -20 -64
title XVIII of the Social
Security Act to require
prescription drug plan
sponsors under the
Medicare program to
establish drug management
programs for at-risk
beneficiaries.............
H.R. 5684, Protecting 0 0 0 * * * * * * * * * *
Seniors From Opioid Abuse
Act.......................
H.R. 5796, Responsible 0 10 25 50 10 5 0 0 0 0 0 100 100
Education Achieves Care
and Healthy Outcomes for
Users' Treatment Act of
2018......................
H.R. 5798, Opioid Screening 0 0 * 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 2 5
and Chronic Pain
Management Alternatives
for Seniors Act...........
H.R. 5804, Post-Surgical 0 0 25 30 25 20 10 5 0 0 0 100 115
Injections as an Opioid
Alternative Acta..........
H.R. 5809, Postoperative 0 0 0 0 10 15 20 25 30 35 45 25 180
Opioid Prevention Act of
2018......................
Legislation Primarily Affecting
the Food and Drug
Administration:
H.R. 5333, Over-the-Counter 0 0 * * * * * * * * * * *
Monograph Safety,
Innovation, and Reform Act
of 2018a..................
INCREASES OR DECREASES (-) IN REVENUESb
H.R. 5752, Stop Illicit 0 * * * * * * * * * * * *
Drug Importation Act of
2018......................
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Annual amounts may not sum to totals because of rounding. * = between -$500,000 and $500,000. Budget authority is equivalent to outlays.
aThis bill also would affect spending subject to appropriation.
bOne additional bill, H.R. 5228, the Stop Counterfeit Drugs by Regulating and Enhancing Enforcement Now Act, would have a negligible effect on revenues.
Legislation Primarily Affecting Medicaid. The following
nine bills would affect direct spending for the Medicaid
program.
H.R. 1925, the At-Risk Youth Medicaid Protection Act of
2017, would require states to suspend, rather than terminate,
Medicaid eligibility for juvenile enrollees (generally under 21
years of age) who become inmates of public correctional
institutions. States also would have to redetermine those
enrollees' Medicaid eligibility before their release and
restore their coverage upon release if they qualify for the
program. States would be required to process Medicaid
applications submitted by or on behalf of juveniles in public
correctional institutions who were not enrolled in Medicaid
before becoming inmates and ensure that Medicaid coverage is
provided when they are released if they are found to be
eligible. On the basis of an analysis of juvenile incarceration
trends and of the per enrollee spending for Medicaid foster
care children, who have a similar health profile to
incarcerated juveniles, CBO estimates that implementing the
bill would cost $75 million over the 2019-2028 period.
H.R. 4998, the Health Insurance for Former Foster Youth
Act, would require states to provide Medicaid coverage to
adults up to age 25 who had aged out of foster care in any
state. Under current law, such coverage is mandatory only if
the former foster care youth has aged out in the state in which
the individual applies for coverage. The policy also would
apply to former foster children who had been in foster care
upon turning 14 years of age but subsequently left foster care
to enter into a legal guardianship with a kinship caregiver.
The provisions would take effect respect for foster youth who
turn 18 on or after January 1, 2023. On the basis of spending
for Medicaid foster care children and data from the Census
Bureau regarding annual migration rates between states, CBO
estimates that implementing the bill would cost $171 million
over the 2019-2028 period.
H.R. 5477, the Rural Development of Opioid Capacity
Services Act, would direct the Secretary of HHS to conduct a
five-year demonstration to increase the number and ability of
providers participating in Medicaid to provide treatment for
substance use disorders. On the basis of an analysis of federal
and state spending for treatment of substance use disorders and
the prevalence of such disorders, CBO estimates that enacting
the bill would increase direct spending by $301 million over
the 2019-2028 period.
H.R. 5583, a bill to amend title XI of the Social Security
Act to require States to annually report on certain adult
health quality measures, and for other purposes, would require
states to include behavioral health indicators in their annual
reports on the quality of care under Medicaid. Although the
bill would add a requirement for states, CBO estimates that its
enactment would not have a significant budgetary effect because
most states have systems in place for reporting such measures
to the federal government.
H.R. 5797, the IMD CARE Act, would expand Medicaid coverage
for people with opioid use disorder who are in institutions for
mental disease (IMDs) for up to 30 days per year. Under a
current-law policy known as the IMD exclusion, the federal
government generally does not make matching payments to state
Medicaid programs for most services provided by IMDs to adults
between the ages of 21 and 64. Recent administrative changes
have made federal financing for IMDs available in limited
circumstances, but the statutory prohibition remains in place.
CBO analyzed several data sets, primarily those collected by
the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration
(SAMHSA), to estimate current federal spending under Medicaid
for IMD services and to estimate spending under H.R. 5797.
Using that analysis, CBO estimates that enacting H.R. 5797
would increase direct spending by $991 million over the 2019-
2028 period.
H.R. 5799, the Medicaid DRUG Improvement Act, would require
state Medicaid programs to implement additional reviews of
opioid prescriptions, monitor concurrent prescribing of opioids
and certain other drugs, and monitor use of antipsychotic drugs
by children. CBO estimates that the bill would increase direct
spending by $5 million over the 2019-2028 period to cover the
administrative costs of complying with those requirements. On
the basis of stakeholder feedback, CBO expects that the bill
would not have a significant effect on Medicaid spending for
prescription drugs because many of the bill's requirements
would duplicate current efforts to curb opioid and
antipsychotic drug use. (If enacted, H.R. 5799 also would
affect spending subject to appropriation; CBO has not completed
an estimate of that amount.)
H.R. 5801, the Medicaid Providers Are Required To Note
Experiences in Record Systems to Help-In-Need Patients
(PARTNERSHIP) Act, would require providers who are permitted to
prescribe controlled substances and who participate in Medicaid
to query prescription drug monitoring programs (PDMPs) before
prescribing controlled substances to Medicaid patients. PDMPs
are statewide electronic databases that collect data on
controlled substances dispensed in the state. The bill also
would require PDMPs to comply with certain data and system
criteria, and it would provide additional federal matching
funds to certain states to help cover administrative costs. On
the basis of a literature review and stakeholder feedback, CBO
estimates that the net budgetary effect of enacting H.R. 5801
would be insignificant. Costs for states to come into
compliance with the systems and administrative requirements
would be roughly offset by savings from small reductions in the
number of controlled substances paid for by Medicaid under the
proposal. (If enacted, H.R. 5801 also would affect spending
subject to appropriation; CBO has not completed an estimate of
that amount.)
H.R. 5808, the Medicaid Pharmaceutical Home Act of 2018,
would require state Medicaid programs to operate pharmacy
programs that would identify people at high risk of abusing
controlled substances and require those patients to use a
limited number of providers and pharmacies. Although nearly all
state Medicaid programs currently meet such a requirement, a
small number of high-risk Medicaid beneficiaries are not now
monitored. Based on an analysis of information about similar
state and federal programs, CBO estimates that net Medicaid
spending under the bill would decrease by $13 million over the
2019-2028 period. That amount represents a small increase in
administrative costs and a small reduction in the number of
controlled substances paid for by Medicaid under the proposal.
(If enacted, H.R. 5808 also would affect spending subject to
appropriation; CBO has not completed an estimate of that
amount.)
H.R. 5810, the Medicaid Health HOME Act, would allow states
to receive six months of enhanced federal Medicaid funding for
programs that coordinate care for people with substance use
disorders. Based on enrollment and spending data from states
that currently participate in Medicaid's Health Homes program,
CBO estimates that the expansion would cost approximately $469
million over the 2019-2028 period. The bill also would require
states to cover all FDA-approved drugs used in medication-
assisted treatment for five years, although states could seek a
waiver from that requirement. (Medication-assisted treatment
combines behavioral therapy and pharmaceutical treatment for
substance use disorders.) Under current law, states already
cover most FDA-approved drugs used in such programs in some
capacity, although a few exclude methadone dispensed by opioid
treatment programs. CBO estimates that a small share of those
states would begin to cover methadone if this bill was enacted
at a federal cost of about $39 million over the 2019-2028
period. In sum, CBO estimates that the enacting H.R. 5810 would
increase direct spending by $509 million over the 2019-2028
period.
Legislation Primarily Affecting Medicare. The following ten
bills would affect direct spending for the Medicare program.
H.R. 3528, the Every Prescription Conveyed Securely Act,
would require prescriptions for controlled substances covered
under Medicare Part D to be transmitted electronically,
starting on January 1, 2021. Based on CBO's analysis of
prescription drug spending, spending for controlled substances
is a small share of total drug spending. CBO also assumes a
small share of those prescriptions would not be filled because
they are not converted to an electronic format. Therefore, CBO
expects that enacting H.R. 3528 would reduce the number of
prescriptions filled and estimates that Medicare spending be
reduced by $250 million over the 2019-2028 period.
H.R. 4841, the Standardizing Electronic Prior Authorization
for Safe Prescribing Act of 2018, would require health care
professionals to submit prior authorization requests
electronically, starting on January 1, 2021, for drugs covered
under Medicare Part D. Taking into account that many
prescribers already use electronic methods to submit such
requests, CBO estimates that enacting H.R. 4841 would not
significantly affect direct spending for Part D.
H.R. 5603, the Access to Telehealth Services for Opioid Use
Disorders Act, would permit the Secretary of HHS to lift
current geographic and other restrictions on coverage of
telehealth services under Medicare for treatment of substance
use disorders or co-occurring mental health disorders. Under
the bill, the Secretary of HHS would be directed to encourage
other payers to coordinate payments for opioid use disorder
treatments and to evaluate the extent to which the
demonstration reduces hospitalizations, increases the use of
medication-assisted treatments, and improves the health
outcomes of individuals with opioid use disorders during and
after the demonstration. Based on current use of Medicare
telehealth services for treatment of substance use disorders,
CBO estimates that expanding that coverage would increase
direct spending by $11 million over the 2019-2028 period.
H.R. 5605, the Advancing High Quality Treatment for Opioid
Use Disorders in Medicare Act, would establish a five-year
demonstration program to increase access to treatment for
opioid use disorder. The demonstration would provide incentive
payments and funding for care management services based on
criteria such as patient engagement, use of evidence-based
treatments, and treatment length and intensity. Under the bill,
the Secretary of HHS would be directed to encourage other
payers to coordinate payments for opioid use disorder
treatments and to evaluate the extent to which the
demonstration reduces hospitalizations, increases the use of
medication-assisted treatments, and improves the health
outcomes of individuals with opioid use disorders during and
after the demonstration. Based on historical utilization of
opioid use disorder treatments and projected spending on
incentive payments and care management fees, CBO estimates that
increased use of treatment services and the demonstration's
incentive payments would increase direct spending by $122
million over the 2019-2028 period.
H.R. 5675, a bill to amend title XVIII of the Social
Security Act to require prescription drug plan sponsors under
the Medicare program to establish drug management programs for
at-risk beneficiaries, would require Part D prescription drug
plans to provide drug management programs for Medicare
beneficiaries who are at risk for prescription drug abuse.
(Under current law, Part D plans are permitted but not required
to establish such programs as of 2019.) Based on an analysis of
the number of plans currently providing those programs, CBO
estimates that enacting H.R. 5675 would lower federal spending
by $64 million over the 2019-2028 period by reducing the number
of prescriptions filled and Medicare's payments for controlled
substances.
H.R. 5684, the Protecting Seniors From Opiod Abuse Act,
would expand medication therapy management programs under
Medicare Part D to include beneficiaries who are at risk for
prescription drug abuse. Because relatively few beneficiaries
would be affected by this bill, CBO estimates that its
enactment would not significantly affect direct spending for
Part D.
H.R. 5796, the Responsible Education Achieves Care and
Healthy Outcomes for Users' Treatment Act of 2018, would allow
the Secretary of HHS to award grants to certain organizations
that provide technical assistance and education to high-volume
prescribers of opioids. The bill would appropriate $100 million
for fiscal year 2019. Based on historical spending patterns for
similar activities, CBO estimates that implementing H.R. 5796
would cost $100 million over the 2019-2028 period.
H.R. 5798, the Opioid Screening and Chronic Pain Management
Alternatives for Seniors Act, would add an assessment of
current opioid prescriptions and screening for opioid use
disorder to the Welcome to Medicare Initial Preventive Physical
Examination. Based on historical use of the examinations and
pain management alternatives, CBO expects that enacting the
bill would increase use of pain management services and
estimates that direct spending would increase by $5 million
over the 2019-2028 period.
H.R. 5804, the Post-Surgical Injections as an Opioid
Alternative Act, would freeze the Medicare payment rate for
certain analgesic injections provided in ambulatory surgical
centers (ASCs). (For injections identified by specific billing
codes, Medicare would pay the 2016 rate, which is higher than
the current rate, during the 2020-2024 period.) Based on
current utilization in the ASC setting, CBO estimates that
enacting the legislation would increase direct spending by
about $115 million over the 2019-2028 period. (If enacted, H.R.
5804 also would affect spending subject to appropriation; see
Table 3.)
H.R. 5809, the Postoperative Opioid Prevention Act of 2018,
would create an additional payment under Medicare for nonopioid
analgesics. Under current law, certain new drugs and devices
may receive an additional payment--separate from the bundled
payment for a surgical procedure--in outpatient hospital
departments and ambulatory surgical centers. The bill would
allow nonopioid analgesics to qualify for a five-year period of
additional payments. Based on its assessment of current
spending for analgesics and on the probability of new nonopioid
analgesics coming to market, CBO estimates that H.R. 5809 would
increase direct spending by about $180 million over the 2019-
2028 period.
Legislation Primarily Affecting the Food and Drug
Administration. One bill related to the FDA would affect direct
spending.
H.R. 5333, the Over-the-Counter Monograph Safety,
Innovation, and Reform Act of 2018, would change the way that
the FDA regulates the marketing of over-the-counter (OTC)
medicines, and it would authorize that agency to grant 18
months of exclusive market protection for certain qualifying
OTC drugs, thus delaying the entry of other versions of the
same qualifying OTC product. Medicaid currently provides some
coverage for OTC medicines, but only if a medicine is the least
costly alternative in its drug class. On the basis of
stakeholder feedback, CBO expects that delaying the
availability of additional OTC versions of a drug would not
significantly affect the average net price paid by Medicaid. As
a result, CBO estimates that enacting H.R. 5333 would have a
negligible effect on the federal budget. (If enacted, H.R. 5333
also would affect spending subject to appropriation; see Table
3.)
Legislation with Revenue Effects. Two bills would affect
revenues. However, CBO estimates that one bill, H.R. 5228, the
Stop Counterfeit Drugs by Regulating and Enhancing Enforcement
Now Act, would have only a negligible effect.
H.R. 5752, the Stop Illicit Drug Importation Act of 2018,
would amend the Federal, Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (FDCA) to
strengthen the FDA's seizure powers and enhance its authority
to detain, refuse, seize, or destroy illegal products offered
for import. The legislation would subject more people to
debarment under the FDCA and thus increase the potential for
violations, and subsequently, the assessment of civil
penalties, which are recorded in the budget as revenues. CBO
estimates that those collections would result in an
insignificant increase in revenues. Because H.R. 5752 would
prohibit the importation of drugs that are in the process of
being scheduled, it also could reduce amounts collected in
customs duties. CBO anticipates that the result would be a
negligible decrease in revenues. With those results taken
together, CBO estimates, enacting H.R. 5752 would generate an
insignificant net increase in revenues over the 2019-2028
period.
Spending subject to appropriation
For this document, CBO has grouped bills with spending that
would be subject to appropriation into four general categories:
Bills that would have no budgetary effect,
Bills with provisions that would authorize
specified amounts to be appropriated (see Table 2),
Bills with provisions for which CBO has
estimated an authorization of appropriations (see Table
3), and
Bills with provisions that would affect
spending subject to appropriation for which CBO has not
yet completed an estimate.
No Budgetary Effect. CBO estimates that 6 of the 59 bills
would have no effect on direct spending, revenues, or spending
subject to appropriation.
H.R. 3192, the CHIP Mental Health Parity Act, would require
all Children's Health Insurance Program (CHIP) plans to cover
mental health and substance abuse treatment. In addition,
states would not be allowed to impose financial or utilization
limits on mental health treatment that are lower than limits
placed on physical health treatment. Based on information from
the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, CBO estimates
that enacting the bill would have no budgetary effect because
all CHIP enrollees are already in plans that meet those
requirements.
H.R. 3331, a bill to amend title XI of the Social Security
Act to promote testing of incentive payments for behavioral
health providers for adoption and use of certified electronic
health record technology, would give the Center for Medicare
and Medicaid Innovation (CMMI) explicit authorization to test a
program offering incentive payments to behavioral health
providers that adopt and use certified electronic health record
technology. Because it is already clear to CMMI that it has
that authority, CBO estimates that enacting the legislation
would not affect federal spending.
H.R. 5202, the Ensuring Patient Access to Substance Use
Disorder Treatments Act of 2018, would clarify permission for
pharmacists to deliver controlled substances to providers under
certain circumstances. Because this provision would codify
current practice, CBO estimates that H.R. 5202 would not affect
direct spending or revenues during the 2019-2028 period.
H.R. 5685, the Medicare Opioid Safety Education Act of
2018, would require the Secretary of HHS to include information
on opioid use, pain management, and nonopioid pain management
treatments in future editions of Medicare & You, the program's
handbook for beneficiaries, starting on January 1, 2019.
Because H.R. 5685 would add information to an existing
administrative document, CBO estimates that enacting the bill
would have no budgetary effect.
H.R. 5686, the Medicare Clear Health Options in Care for
Enrollees Act of 2018, would require prescription drug plans
that provide coverage under Medicare Part D to furnish
information to beneficiaries about the risks of opioid use and
the availability of alternative treatments for pain. CBO
estimates that enacting the bill would not affect direct
spending because the required activities would not impose
significant administrative costs.
H.R. 5716, the Commit to Opioid Medical Prescriber
Accountability and Safety for Seniors Act, would require the
Secretary of HHS on an annual basis to identify high
prescribers of opioids and furnish them with information about
proper prescribing methods. Because HHS already has the
capacity to meet those requirements, CBO estimates that
enacting that provision would not impose additional
administrative costs on the agency.
Specified Authorizations. Table 2 lists the ten bills that
would authorize specified amounts to be appropriated over the
2019-2023 period. Spending from those authorized amounts would
be subject to appropriation.
TABLE 2.--ESTIMATED SPENDING SUBJECT TO APPROPRIATION FOR BILLS WITH SPECIFIED AUTHORIZATIONS
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
By fiscal year, in millions of dollars--
----------------------------------------------------------
2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2019-2023
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
INCREASES IN SPENDING SUBJECT TO APPROPRIATION
H.R. 4684, Ensuring Access to Quality Sober Living
Act:
Authorization Level.............................. 0 3 0 0 0 0 3
Estimated Outlays................................ 0 1 2 * * * 3
H.R. 5102, Substance Use Disorder Workforce Loan
Repayment Act of 2018:
Authorization Level.............................. 0 25 25 25 25 25 125
Estimated Outlays................................ 0 9 19 23 25 25 100
H.R. 5176, Preventing Overdoses While in Emergency
Rooms Act of 2018:
Authorization Level.............................. 0 50 0 0 0 0 50
Estimated Outlays................................ 0 16 26 6 2 1 50
H.R. 5197, Alternatives to Opioids (ALTO) in the
Emergency Department Act:
Authorization Level.............................. 0 10 10 10 0 0 30
Estimated Outlays................................ 0 3 8 10 7 2 30
H.R. 5261, Treatment, Education, and Community Help
to Combat Addiction Act of 2018:
Authorization Level.............................. 0 4 4 4 4 4 20
Estimated Outlays................................ 0 1 3 4 4 4 16
H.R. 5327, Comprehensive Opioid Recovery Centers Act
of 2018:
Authorization Level.............................. 0 10 10 10 10 10 50
Estimated Outlays................................ 0 3 8 10 10 10 41
H.R. 5329, Poison Center Network Enhancement Act of
2018:
Authorization Level.............................. 0 30 30 30 30 30 151
Estimated Outlays................................ 0 12 25 29 29 29 125
H.R. 5353, Eliminating Opioid-Related Infectious
Diseases Act of 2018:
Authorization Level.............................. 0 40 40 40 40 40 200
Estimated Outlays................................ 0 15 34 38 39 40 166
H.R. 5580, Surveillance and Testing of Opioids to
Prevent Fentanyl Deaths Act of 2018:
Authorization Level.............................. 30 30 30 30 30 0 120
Estimated Outlays................................ 0 11 25 29 29 19 113
H.R. 5587, Peer Support Communities of Recovery Act:
Authorization Level.............................. 0 15 15 15 15 15 75
Estimated Outlays................................ 0 5 13 14 15 15 62
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Annual amounts may not sum to totals because of rounding. * = between zero and $500,000.
H.R. 4684, the Ensuring Access to Quality Sober Living Act,
would direct the Secretary of HHS to develop and disseminate
best practices for organizations that operate housing designed
for people recovering from substance use disorders. The bill
would authorize a total of $3 million over the 2019-2021 period
for that purpose. Based on historical spending patterns for
similar activities, CBO estimates that implementing H.R. 4684
would cost $3 million over the 2019-2023 period.
H.R. 5102, the Substance Use Disorder Workforce Loan
Repayment Act of 2018, would establish a loan repayment program
for mental health professionals who practice in areas with few
mental health providers or with high rates of death from
overdose and would authorize $25 million per year over the
2019-2028 period for that purpose. Based on historical spending
patterns for similar activities, CBO estimates that
implementing H.R. 5102 would cost $100 million over the 2019-
2023 period; the remaining amounts would be spent in years
after 2023.
H.R. 5176, the Preventing Overdoses While in Emergency
Rooms Act of 2018, would require the Secretary of HHS to
develop protocols and a grant program for health care providers
to address the needs of people who survive a drug overdose, and
it would authorize $50 million in 2019 for that purpose. Based
on historical spending patterns for similar activities, CBO
estimates that implementing H.R. 5176 would cost $50 million
over the 2019-2023 period.
H.R. 5197, the Alternatives to Opioids (ALTO) in the
Emergency Department Act, would direct the Secretary of HHS to
carry out a demonstration program for hospitals and emergency
departments to develop alternative protocols for pain
management that limit the use of opioids and would authorize
$10 million annually in grants for fiscal years 2019 through
2021. Based on historical spending patterns for similar
programs, CBO estimates that implementing H.R. 5197 would cost
$30 million over the 2019-2023 period.
H.R. 5261, the Treatment, Education, and Community Help to
Combat Addiction Act of 2018, would direct the Secretary of
HHS to designate regional centers of excellence to improve the
training of health professionals who treat substance use
disorders. The bill would authorize $4 million annually for
grants to those programs over the 2019-2023 period. Based on
historical spending patterns for similar activities, CBO
estimates that implementing H.R. 5261 would cost $16 million
over the 2019-2023 period; the remaining amounts would be spent
in years after 2023.
H.R. 5327, the Comprehensive Opioid Recovery Centers Act of
2018, would direct the Secretary of HHS to award grants to at
least 10 providers that offer treatment services for people
with opioid use disorder, and it would authorize $10 million
per year over the 2019-2023 period for that purpose. Based on
historical spending patterns for similar activities, CBO
estimates that implementing H.R. 5327 would cost $41 million
over the 2019-2023 period; the remaining amounts would be spent
in years after 2023.
H.R. 5329, the Poison Center Network Enhancement Act of
2018, would reauthorize the poison control center toll-free
number, national media campaign, and grant program under the
Public Health Service Act. Among other actions, H.R. 5329 would
increase the share of poison control center funding that could
be provided by federal grants. The bill would authorize a total
of about $30 million per year over the 2019-2023 period. Based
on historical spending patterns for similar activities, CBO
estimates that implementing H.R. 5329 would cost $125 million
over the 2019-2023 period; the remaining amounts would be spent
in years after 2023.
H.R 5353, the Eliminating Opioid Related Infectious
Diseases Act of 2018, would amend Public Health Service Act by
broadening the focus of surveillance and education programs
from preventing and treating hepatitis C virus to preventing
and treating infections associated with injection drug use. It
would authorize $40 million per year over 2019-2023 period for
that purpose. Based on historical spending patterns for similar
activities, CBO estimates that implementing H.R. 5353 would
cost $166 million over the 2019-2023 period; the remaining
amounts would be spent in years after 2023.
H.R. 5580, the Surveillance and Testing of Opioids to
Prevent Fentanyl Deaths Act of 2018, would establish a grant
program for public health laboratories that conduct testing for
fentanyl and other synthetic opioids. It also would direct the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to expand its drug
surveillance program, with a particular focus on collecting
data on fentanyl. The bill would authorize a total of $30
million per year over the 2018-2022 period for those
activities. Based on historical spending patterns for similar
activities, CBO estimates that implementing H.R. 5580 would
cost $113 million over the 2019-2023 period; the remaining
amounts would be spent in years after 2023.
H.R. 5587, Peer Support Communities of Recovery Act, would
direct the Secretary of HHS to award grants to nonprofit
organizations that support community-based, peer-delivered
support, including technical support for the establishment of
recovery community organizations, independent, nonprofit groups
led by people in recovery and their families. The bill would
authorize $15 million per year for the 2019-2023 period. Based
on historical spending patterns for similar activities, CBO
estimates that implementing H.R. 5587 would cost $62 million
over the 2019-2023 period; the remaining amounts would be spent
in years after 2023.
Estimated Authorizations. Table 3 shows CBO's estimates of
the appropriations that would be necessary to implement 19 of
the bills. Spending would be subject to appropriation of those
amounts.
H.R. 449, the Synthetic Drug Awareness Act of 2018, would
require the Surgeon General to report to the Congress on the
health effects of synthetic psychoactive drugs on children
between the ages of 12 and 18. Based on spending patterns for
similar activities, CBO estimates that implementing H.R. 449
would cost approximately $1 million over the 2019-2023 period.
H.R. 4005, the Medicaid Reentry Act, would direct the
Secretary of HHS to convene a group of stakeholders to develop
and report to the Congress on best practices for addressing
issues related to health care faced by those returning from
incarceration to their communities. The bill also would require
the Secretary to issue a letter to state Medicaid directors
about relevant demonstration projects. Based on an analysis of
anticipated workload, CBO estimates that implementing H.R. 4005
would cost less than $500,000 over the 2018-2023 period.
H.R. 4275, the Empowering Pharmacists in the Fight Against
Opioid Abuse Act, would require the Secretary of HHS to develop
and disseminate materials for training pharmacists, health care
practitioners, and the public about the circumstances under
which a pharmacist may decline to fill a prescription. Based on
historical spending patterns for similar activities, CBO
estimates that costs to the federal government for the
development and distribution of those materials would not be
significant.
TABLE 3.--ESTIMATED SPENDING SUBJECT TO APPROPRIATION FOR BILLS WITH ESTIMATED AUTHORIZATIONS
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
By fiscal year, in millions of dollars--
-------------------------------------------------------------
2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2019-2023
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
INCREASES IN SPENDING SUBJECT TO APPROPRIATION
H.R. 449, Synthetic Drug Awareness Act of 2018:
Estimated Authorization Level................. 0 * * * 0 0 1
Estimated Outlays............................. 0 * * * 0 0 1
H.R. 4005, Medicaid Reentry Act:
Estimated Authorization Level................. * * 0 0 0 0 *
Estimated Outlays............................. * * 0 0 0 0 *
H.R. 4275, Empowering Pharmacists in the Fight
Against Opioid Abuse Act:
Estimated Authorization Level................. 0 * * * * * *
Estimated Outlays............................. 0 * * * * * *
H.R. 5009, Jessie's Law:
Estimated Authorization Level................. 0 * * * * * *
Estimated Outlays............................. 0 * * * * * *
H.R. 5041, Safe Disposal of Unused Medication Act:
Estimated Authorization Level................. 0 * * * * * *
Estimated Outlays............................. 0 * * * * * *
H.R. 5272, Reinforcing Evidence-Based Standards
Under Law in Treating Substance Abuse Act of
2018:
Estimated Authorization Level................. 0 1 1 1 1 1 4
Estimated Outlays............................. 0 1 1 1 1 1 4
H.R. 5333, Over-the-Counter Monograph Safety,
Innovation, and Reform Act of 2018:a
Food and Drug Administration:
Collections from fees:
Estimated Authorization Level......... 0 -22 -22 -26 -35 -42 -147
Estimated Outlays..................... 0 -22 -22 -26 -35 -42 -147
Spending of fees:
Estimated Authorization Level......... 0 22 22 26 35 42 147
Estimated Outlays..................... 0 6 17 30 44 41 137
Net effect on FDA:
Estimated Authorization Level......... 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Estimated Outlays..................... 0 -17 -6 4 9 * -10
Government Accountability Office:
Estimated Authorization Level............. 0 0 0 0 0 * *
Estimated Outlays......................... 0 0 0 0 0 * *
Total, H.R. 5333:
Estimated Authorization Level............. 0 0 0 0 0 * *
Estimated Outlays......................... 0 -17 -6 4 9 * -10
H.R. 5473, Better Pain Management Through Better
Data Act of 2018:
Estimated Authorization Level................. 0 * * * * 0 1
Estimated Outlays............................. 0 * * * * * 1
H.R. 5483, Special Registration for Telemedicine
Clarification Act of 2018:
Estimated Authorization Level................. 0 * * * * * *
Estimated Outlays............................. 0 * * * * * *
H.R. 5554, Animal Drug and Animal Generic Drug
User Fee Amendments of 2018:
Collections from fees:
Animal drug fees.......................... 0 -30 -31 -32 -33 -34 -159
Generic animal drug fees.................. 0 -18 -19 -19 -20 -21 -97
Total, Estimated Authorization Level.. 0 -49 -50 -51 -53 -55 -257
Total, Estimated Outlays.............. 0 -40 -50 -51 -53 -55 -257
Spending of fees:
Animal drug fees.......................... 0 30 31 32 33 34 159
Generic animal drug fees.................. 0 18 19 19 20 21 97
Total, Estimated Authorization Level.. 0 49 50 51 53 55 257
Total, Estimated Outlays.............. 0 39 47 51 52 54 243
Net changes in fees:
Estimated Authorization Level............. 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Estimated Outlays......................... 0 -10 -3 * * * -14
Other effects:
Estimated Authorization Level............. 0 3 1 1 1 1 6
Estimated Outlays......................... 0 2 1 1 1 1 6
Total, H.R. 5554:
Estimated Authorization Level............. 0 3 1 1 1 1 6
Estimated Outlays......................... 0 -8 -2 1 * * -8
H.R. 5582, Abuse Deterrent Access Act of 2018:
Estimated Authorization Level................. 0 0 * 0 0 0 *
Estimated Outlays............................. 0 0 * 0 0 0 *
H.R. 5590, Opioid Addiction Action Plan Act:
Estimated Authorization Level................. * * * * * * 2
Estimated Outlays............................. * * * * * * 2
H.R. 5687, Securing Opioids and Unused Narcotics
with Deliberate Disposal and Packaging Act of
2018:
Estimated Authorization Level................. 0 * * * * * *
Estimated Outlays............................. 0 * * * * * *
H.R. 5715, Strengthening Partnerships to Prevent
Opioid Abuse Act:
Estimated Authorization Level................. 0 2 2 2 2 2 9
Estimated Outlays............................. 0 2 2 2 2 2 9
H.R. 5789, a bill to require the Secretary of
Health and Human Services to issue guidance to
improve care for infants with neonatal abstinence
syndrome and their mothers, and to require the
Comptroller General of the United States to
conduct a study on gaps in Medicaid coverage for
pregnant and postpartum women with substance use
disorder:
Estimated Authorization Level................. 0 2 0 0 0 0 2
Estimated Outlays............................. 0 2 0 0 0 0 2
H.R. 5795, Overdose Prevention and Patient Safety
Act:
Estimated Authorization Level................. 0 1 0 0 0 0 1
Estimated Outlays............................. 0 1 0 0 0 0 1
H.R. 5800, Medicaid IMD ADDITIONAL INFO Act:
Estimated Authorization Level................. 0 1 0 0 0 0 1
Estimated Outlays............................. 0 * * 0 0 0 1
H.R. 5804, Post-Surgical Injections as an Opioid
Alternative Act:a
Estimated Authorization Level................. 0 0 0 0 1 1 1
Estimated Outlays............................. 0 0 0 0 1 1 1
H.R. 5811, a bill to amend the Federal Food, Drug,
and Cosmetic Act with respect to postapproval
study requirements for certain controlled
substances, and for other purposes:
Estimated Authorization Level................. 0 * * * * * *
Estimated Outlays............................. 0 * * * * * *
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Annual amounts may not sum to totals because of rounding. * = between -$500,000 and $500,000.
aThis bill also would affect mandatory spending (see Table 1).
H.R. 5009, Jessie's Law, would require HHS, in
collaboration with outside experts, to develop best practices
for displaying information about opioid use disorder in a
patient's medical record. HHS also would be required to develop
and disseminate written materials annually to health care
providers about what disclosures could be made while still
complying with federal laws that govern health care privacy.
Based on spending patterns for similar activities, CBO
estimates that implementing H.R. 5009 would have an
insignificant effect on spending over the 2019-2023 period.
H.R. 5041, the Safe Disposal of Unused Medication Act,
would require hospice programs to have written policies and
procedures for the disposal of controlled substances after a
patient's death. Certain licensed employees of hospice programs
would be permitted to assist in the disposal of controlled
substances that were lawfully dispensed. Using information from
the Department of Justice (DOJ), CBO estimates that
implementing the bill would cost less than $500,000 over the
2019-2023 period.
H.R. 5272, the Reinforcing Evidence-Based Standards Under
Law in Treating Substance Abuse Act of 2018, would require the
newly established National Mental Health and Substance Use
Policy Laboratory to issue guidance to applicants for SAMHSA
grants that support evidence-based practices. Using information
from HHS about the historical cost of similar activities, CBO
estimates that enacting this bill would cost approximately $4
million over the 2019-2023 period.
H.R. 5333, the Over-the-Counter Monograph Safety,
Innovation, and Reform Act of 2018, would change the FDA's
oversight of the commercial marketing of OTC medicines and
authorize the collection and spending of fees through 2023 to
cover the costs of expediting the FDA's administrative
procedures for certain regulatory activities relating to OTC
products. Under H.R. 5333, CBO estimates, the FDA would assess
about $147 million in fees over the 2019-2023 period that could
be collected and made available for obligation only to the
extent and in the amounts provided in advance in appropriation
acts. Because the FDA could spend those fees, CBO estimates
that the estimated budget authority for collections and
spending would offset each other exactly in each year, although
CBO expects that spending initially would lag behind
collections. Assuming appropriation action consistent with the
bill, CBO estimates that implementing H.R. 5333 would reduce
net discretionary outlays by $10 million over the 2019-2023
period, primarily because of that lag. The bill also would
require the Government Accountability Office to study exclusive
market protections for certain qualifying OTC drugs authorized
by the bill--a provision that CBO estimates would cost less
than $500,000. (If enacted, H.R. 5333 also would affect
mandatory spending; see Table 1.)
H.R. 5473, the Better Pain Management Through Better Data
Act of 2018, would require that the FDA conduct a public
meeting and issue guidance to industry addressing data
collection and labeling for medical products that reduce pain
while enabling the reduction, replacement, or avoidance of oral
opioids. Using information from the agency, CBO estimates that
implementing H.R. 5473 would cost about $1 million over the
2019-2023 period.
H.R. 5483, the Special Registration for Telemedicine
Clarification Act of 2018, would direct DOJ, within one year of
the bill's enactment, to issue regulations concerning the
practice of telemedicine (for remote diagnosis and treatment of
patients). Using information from DOJ, CBO estimates that
implementing the bill would cost less than $500,000 over the
2019-2023 period.
H.R. 5554, the Animal Drug and Animal Generic Drug User Fee
Amendments of 2018, would authorize the FDA to collect and
spend fees to cover the cost of expedited approval for the
development and marketing of certain drugs for use in animals.
The legislation would extend through fiscal year 2023, and make
several changes to, the FDA's existing approval processes and
fee programs for brand-name and generic veterinary drugs, which
expire at the end of fiscal year 2018. CBO estimates that
implementing H.R. 5554 would reduce net discretionary outlays
by $8 million over the 2019-2023 period, primarily because the
spending of fees lags somewhat behind their collection.
Fees authorized under the bill would supplement funds
appropriated to cover the FDA's cost of reviewing certain
applications and investigational submissions for brand-name and
generic drugs for use in animals. Those fees could be collected
and made available for obligation only to the extent and in the
amounts provided in advance in appropriation acts. Under H.R.
5554, CBO estimates, the FDA would assess about $257 million in
fees over the 2019-2023 period. Because the FDA could spend
those funds, CBO estimates that budget authority for
collections and spending would offset each other exactly in
each year. CBO estimates that the delay between collecting and
spending fees under the reauthorized programs would reduce net
discretionary outlays by $14 million over the 2019-2023 period,
assuming appropriation actions consistent with the bill.
Enacting H.R. 5554 would increase the FDA's workload
because the legislation would expand eligibility for
conditional approval for certain drugs. The agency's
administrative costs also would increase because of regulatory
activities required by a provision concerning petitions for
additives intended for use in animal food. H.R. 5554 also would
require the FDA to publish guidance or produce regulations on a
range of topics, transmit a report to the Congress, and hold
public meetings. CBO expects that the costs associated with
those activities would not be covered by fees, and it estimates
that implementing such provisions would cost $6 million over
the 2019-2023 period.
H.R. 5582, the Abuse Deterrent Access Act of 2018, would
require the Secretary of HHS to report to the Congress on
existing barriers to access to ``abuse-deterrent opioid
formulations'' by Medicare Part C and D beneficiaries. Such
formulations make the drugs more difficult to dissolve for
injection, for example, and thus can impede their abuse.
Assuming the availability of appropriated funds and based on
historical spending patterns for similar activities, CBO
estimates that implementing the legislation would cost less
than $500,000 over the 2019-2023 period.
H.R. 5590, the Opioid Addiction Action Plan Act, would
require the Secretary of HHS to develop an action plan by
January 1, 2019, for increasing access to medication-assisted
treatment among Medicare and Medicaid enrollees. The bill also
would require HHS to convene a stakeholder meeting and issue a
request for information within three months of enactment, and
to submit a report to the Congress by June 1, 2019. Based on
historical spending patterns for similar activities, CBO
estimates that implementing H.R. 5590 would cost approximately
$2 million over the 2019-2023 period.
H.R. 5687, the Securing Opioids and Unused Narcotics with
Deliberate Disposal and Packaging Act of 2018, would permit the
FDA to require certain packaging and disposal technologies,
controls, or measures to mitigate the risk of abuse and misuse
of drugs. Based on information from the FDA, CBO estimates that
implementing H.R. 5687 would not significantly affect spending
over the 2019-2023 period. This bill would also require that
the GAO study the effectiveness and use of packaging
technologies for controlled substances--a provision that CBO
estimates would cost less than $500,000.
H.R. 5715, the Strengthening Partnerships to Prevent Opioid
Abuse Act, would require the Secretary of HHS to establish a
secure Internet portal to allow HHS, Medicare Advantage plans,
and Medicare Part D plans to exchange information about fraud,
waste, and abuse among providers and suppliers no later than
two years after enactment. H.R. 5715 also would require
organizations with Medicare Advantage contracts to submit
information on investigations related to providers suspected of
prescribing large volumes of opioids through a process
established by the Secretary no later than January 2021. Based
on historical spending patterns for similar activities, CBO
estimates that implementing H.R. 5715 would cost approximately
$9 million over the 2019-2023 period.
H.R. 5789, a bill to require the Secretary of Health and
Human Services to issue guidance to improve care for infants
with neonatal abstinence syndrome and their mothers, and to
require the Comptroller General of the United States to conduct
a study on gaps in Medicaid coverage for pregnant and
postpartum women with substance use disorder, would direct the
Secretary of HHS to issue guidance to states on best practices
under Medicaid and CHIP for treating infants with neonatal
abstinence syndrome. H.R. 5789 also would direct the Government
Accountability Office to study Medicaid coverage for pregnant
and postpartum women with substance use disorders. Based on
information from HHS and historical spending patterns for
similar activities, CBO estimates that enacting H.R. 5789 would
cost approximately $2 million over the 2019-2023 period.
H.R. 5795, the Overdose Prevention and Patient Safety Act,
would amend the Public Health Service Act so that requirements
pertaining to the confidentiality and disclosure of medical
records relating to substance use disorders align with the
provisions of the Health Insurance Portability and
Accountability Act of 1996. The bill would require the Office
of the Secretary of HHS to issue regulations prohibiting
discrimination based on data disclosed from such medical
records, to issue regulations requiring covered entities to
provide written notice of privacy practices, and to develop
model training programs and materials for health care providers
and patients and their families. Based on spending patterns for
similar activities, CBO estimates that implementing H.R. 5795
would cost approximately $1 million over the 2019-2023 period.
H.R. 5800, Medicaid IMD ADDITIONAL INFO Act, would direct
the Medicaid and CHIP Payment and Access Commission to study
institutions for mental diseases in a representative sample of
states. Based on information from the commission about the cost
of similar work, CBO estimates that implementing H.R. 5800
would cost about $1 million over the 2019-2023 period.
H.R. 5804, the Post-Surgical Injections as an Opioid
Alternative Act, would freeze the Medicare payment rate for
certain analgesic injections provided in ambulatory surgical
centers. The bill also would mandate two studies of Medicare
coding and payments arising from enactment of this legislation.
Based on the cost of similar activities, CBO estimates that
those reports would cost $1 million over the 2019-2023 period.
(If enacted, H.R. 5804 also would affect mandatory spending;
see Table 1.)
H.R. 5811, a bill to amend the Federal Food, Drug, and
Cosmetic Act with respect to postapproval study requirements
for certain controlled substances, and for other purposes,
would allow the FDA to require that pharmaceutical
manufacturers study certain drugs after they are approved to
assess any potential reduction in those drugs' effectiveness
for the conditions of use prescribed, recommended, or suggested
in labeling. CBO anticipates that implementing H.R. 5811 would
not significantly affect the FDA's costs over the 2019-2023
period.
Other Authorizations. The following nine bills would
increase authorization levels, but CBO has not completed
estimates of amounts. All authorizations would be subject to
future appropriation action.
H.R. 4284, Indexing Narcotics, Fentanyl, and
Opioids Act of 2017
H.R. 5002, Advancing Cutting Edge Research
Act
H.R. 5228, Stop Counterfeit Drugs by
Regulating and Enhancing Enforcement Now Act (see Table
1 for an estimate of the revenue effects of H.R. 5228)
H.R. 5752, Stop Illicit Drug Importation Act
of 2018 (see Table 1 for an estimate of the revenue
effects of H.R. 5752)
H.R. 5799, Medicaid DRUG Improvement Act
(see Table 1 for an estimate of the direct spending
effects of H.R. 5799)
H.R. 5801, Medicaid Providers and
Pharmacists Are Required to Note Experiences in Record
Systems to Help In-Need Patients (PARTNERSHIP) Act (see
Table 1 for an estimate of the direct spending effects
of H.R. 5801)
H.R. 5806, 21st Century Tools for Pain and
Addiction Treatments Act
H.R. 5808, Medicaid Pharmaceutical Home Act
of 2018 (see Table 1 for an estimate of the direct
spending effects of H.R. 5808)
H.R. 5812, Creating Opportunities that
Necessitate New and Enhanced Connections That Improve
Opioid Navigation Strategies Act (CONNECTIONS) Act
Pay-As-You-Go considerations: The Statutory Pay-As-You-Go
Act of 2010 establishes budget-reporting and enforcement
procedures for legislation affecting direct spending or
revenues. Twenty-two of the bills discussed in this document
contain direct spending or revenues and are subject to pay-as-
you-go procedures. Details about the amount of direct spending
and revenues in those bills can be found in Table 1.
Increase in long-term direct spending and deficits: CBO
estimates that enacting H.R. 4998, the Health Insurance for
Former Foster Youth Act, would increase net direct spending by
more than $2.5 billion and on-budget deficits by more than $5
billion in at least one of the four consecutive 10-year periods
beginning in 2029.
CBO estimates that none of the remaining 58 bills included
in this estimate would increase net direct spending by more
than $2.5 billion or on-budget deficits by more than $5 billion
in any of the four consecutive 10-year periods beginning in
2029.
Mandates: One of the 59 bills included in this document,
H.R. 5795, would impose both intergovernmental and private-
sector mandates as defined in UMRA. CBO estimates that the
costs of that bill's mandates on public and private entities
would fall below UMRA's thresholds ($80 million and $160
million, respectively, for public- and private-sector entities
in 2018, adjusted annually for inflation).
In addition, five bills would impose private-sector
mandates as defined in UMRA. CBO estimates that the costs of
the mandates in three of those bills (H.R. 5333, H.R. 5554, and
H.R. 5811) would fall below the UMRA threshold. Because CBO
does not know how federal agencies would implement new
authority granted in the other two of those five bills, H.R.
5228 and 5687, CBO cannot determine whether the costs of their
mandates would exceed the threshold.
For large entitlement grant programs, including Medicaid
and CHIP, UMRA defines an increase in the stringency of
conditions on states or localities as an intergovernmental
mandate if the affected governments lack authority to offset
those costs while continuing to provide required services.
Because states possess significant flexibility to alter their
responsibilities within Medicaid and CHIP, the requirements
imposed by various bills in the markup on state administration
of those programs would not constitute mandates as defined in
UMRA.
Mandates Affecting Public and Private Entities
H.R. 5795, the Overdose Prevention and Patient Safety Act,
would impose intergovernmental and private-sector mandates by
requiring entities that provide treatment for substance use
disorders to notify patients of their privacy rights and also
to notify patients in the event that the confidentiality of
their records is breached. In certain circumstances, H.R. 5795
also would prohibit public and private entities from denying
entry to treatment on the basis of information in patient
health records. Those requirements would either supplant or
narrowly expand responsibilities under existing law, and
compliance with them would not impose significant additional
costs. CBO estimates that the costs of the mandates would fall
below the annual thresholds established in UMRA.
Mandates Affecting Private Entities
Five bills included in this document would impose private-
sector mandates:
H.R. 5228, the Stop Counterfeit Drugs by Regulating and
Enhancing Enforcement Now Act, would require drug distributors
to cease distributing any drug that the Secretary of HHS
determines might present an imminent or substantial hazard to
public health. CBO cannot determine what drugs could be subject
to such an order nor can it determine how private entities
would respond. Consequently, CBO cannot determine whether the
aggregate cost of the mandate would exceed the annual threshold
for private-sector mandates.
H.R. 5333, the Over-the-Counter Monograph Safety,
Innovation, and Reform Act of 2018, would require developers
and manufacturers of OTC drugs to pay certain fees to the FDA.
CBO estimates that about $30 million would be collected each
year, on average, for a total of $147 million over the 2019-
2023 period. Those amounts would not exceed the annual
threshold for private-sector mandates in any year during that
period.
H.R. 5554, the Animal Drug and Animal Generic Drug User Fee
Amendments of 2018, would require developers and manufacturers
of brand-name and generic veterinary drugs to pay application,
product, establishment, and sponsor fees to the FDA. CBO
estimates that about $51 million would be collected annually,
on average, for a total of $257 million over the 2019-2023
period. Those amounts would not exceed the annual threshold for
private-sector mandates in any year during that period.
H.R. 5687, the Securing Opioids and Unused Narcotics with
Deliberate Disposal and Packaging Act of 2018, would permit the
Secretary of HHS to require drug developers and manufacturers
to implement new packaging and disposal technology for certain
drugs. Based on information from the agency, CBO expects that
the Secretary would use the new regulatory authority provided
in the bill; however, it is uncertain how or when those
requirements would be implemented. Consequently, CBO cannot
determine whether the aggregate cost of the mandate would
exceed the annual threshold for private entities.
H.R. 5811, a bill to amend the Federal Food, Drug, and
Cosmetic Act with respect to postapproval study requirements
for certain controlled substances, and for other purposes,
would expand an existing mandate that requires drug developers
to conduct postapproval studies or clinical trials for certain
drugs. Under current law, in certain instances, the FDA can
require studies or clinical trials after a drug has been
approved. H.R. 5811 would permit the FDA to use that authority
if the reduction in a drug's effectiveness meant that its
benefits no longer outweighed its costs. CBO estimates that the
incremental cost of the mandate would fall below the annual
threshold established in UMRA because of the small number of
drugs affected and the narrow expansion of the authority that
exists under current law.
None of the remaining 53 bills included in this document
would impose an intergovernmental or private-sector mandate.
Previous CBO estimate: On June 6, 2018, CBO issued an
estimate for seven opioid-related bills ordered reported by the
House Committee on Ways and Means on May 16, 2018. Two of those
bills contain provisions that are identical or similar to the
legislation ordered reported by the Committee on Energy and
Commerce, and for those provisions, CBO's estimates are the
same.
In particular, five bills listed in this estimate contain
provisions that are identical or similar to those in several
sections of H.R. 5773, the Preventing Addiction for Susceptible
Seniors Act of 2018:
H.R. 5675, which would require prescription drug
plans to implement drug management programs, is identical to
section 2 of H.R. 5773.
H.R. 4841, regarding electronic prior
authorization for prescriptions under Medicare's Part D, is
similar to section 3 of H.R. 5773.
H.R. 5715, which would mandate the creation of a
new Internet portal to allow various stakeholders to exchange
information, is identical to section 4 of H.R. 5773.
H.R. 5684, which would expand medication therapy
management, is the same as section 5 of H.R. 5773.
H.R. 5716, regarding prescriber notification, is
identical to section 6 of H.R. 5773.
In addition, in this estimate, a provision related to
Medicare beneficiary education in H.R. 5686, the Medicare Clear
Health Options in Care for Enrollees Act of 2018, is the same
as a provision in section 2 of H.R. 5775, the Providing
Reliable Options for Patients and Educational Resources Act of
2018, in CBO's estimate for the Committee on Ways and Means.
Estimate prepared by: Federal Costs: Rebecca Yip (Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention), Mark Grabowicz (Drug
Enforcement Agency), Julia Christensen, Ellen Werble (Food and
Drug Administration), Emily King, Andrea Noda, Lisa Ramirez-
Branum, Robert Stewart (Medicaid and Children's Health
Insurance Program), Philippa Haven, Lara Robillard, Colin Yee,
Rebecca Yip (Medicare), Philippa Haven (National Institutes of
Health), Alice Burns, Andrea Noda (Office of the Secretary of
the Department of Health and Human Services), Philippa Haven,
Lori Housman, Emily King (Substance Abuse and Mental Health
Services Administration, Health Resources and Services
Administration); Federal Revenues: Jacob Fabian, Peter Huether,
and Cecilia Pastrone; Fact Checking: Zachary Byrum and Kate
Kelly; Mandates: Andrew Laughlin.
Estimate reviewed by: Tom Bradley, Chief Health Systems and
Medicare Cost Estimates Unit; Chad M. Chirico, Chief Low-Income
Health Programs and Prescription Drugs Cost Estimates Unit;
Sarah Masi, Special Assistant for Health; Susan Willie, Chief,
Mandates Unit; Leo Lex, Deputy Assistant Director for Budget
Analysis; Theresa A. Gullo, Assistant Director for Budget
Analysis.
Federal Mandates Statement
The Committee adopts as its own the estimate of Federal
mandates prepared by the Director of the Congressional Budget
Office pursuant to section 423 of the Unfunded Mandates Reform
Act.
Statement of General Performance Goals and Objectives
Pursuant to clause 3(c)(4) of rule XIII, the general
performance goal or objective of this legislation is to improve
the state option for Medicaid health homes under current law,
which improves the coordination of, and access to care for
Medicaid beneficiaries with substance use disorder.
Duplication of Federal Programs
Pursuant to clause 3(c)(5) of rule XIII, no provision of
H.R. 5810 is known to be duplicative of another Federal
program, including any program that was included in a report to
Congress pursuant to section 21 of Public Law 111-139 or the
most recent Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance.
Committee Cost Estimate
Pursuant to clause 3(d)(1) of rule XIII, the Committee
adopts as its own the cost estimate prepared by the Director of
the Congressional Budget Office pursuant to section 402 of the
Congressional Budget Act of 1974.
Earmark, Limited Tax Benefits, and Limited Tariff Benefits
Pursuant to clause 9(e), 9(f), and 9(g) of rule XXI, the
Committee finds that H.R. 5810 contains no earmarks, limited
tax benefits, or limited tariff benefits.
Disclosure of Directed Rule Makings
Pursuant to section 3(i) of H. Res. 5, the Committee finds
that H.R. 5810 contains no directed rule makings.
Advisory Committee Statement
No advisory committees within the meaning of section 5(b)
of the Federal Advisory Committee Act were created by this
legislation.
Applicability to Legislative Branch
The Committee finds that the legislation does not relate to
the terms and conditions of employment or access to public
services or accommodations within the meaning of section
102(b)(3) of the Congressional Accountability Act.
Section-by-Section Analysis of the Legislation
Section 1. Short title
Section 1 provides that the Act may be cited as the
``Medicaid Health Homes for Opioid-Use-Disorder Medicaid
Enrollees Encouraged Act'' or the ``Medicaid Health HOME Act.''
Section 2. Extension of enhanced FMAP for certain health homes for
individuals with Substance Use Disorders (SUD)
Section 2 amends section 1945 of the SSA to allow the
Secretary of Health and Human Services (HHS) to extend the
enhanced federal matching rate for health home services at the
request of a state with an ``SUD-focused state plan amendment''
approved on or after October 1, 2018, for payments for the
provision of health home services under a SUD-focused state
plan amendment to ``SUD-eligible individuals.'' Specifically,
the enhanced federal matching rate is extended for the
subsequent two fiscal year quarters that the state plan
amendment is in effect, such that the total period of enhanced
federal matching rate for which the state qualifies is equal to
ten quarters.
Section 2 does not prohibit states that currently have
approved health home state plan amendments that are not SUD-
focused from also seeking approval of a SUD-focused state plan
amendment.
An ``SUD-eligible individual'' is defined as a person who
(1) is eligible for health home services by virtue of having
chronic conditions; (2) has a SUD; and (3) has not previously
received health home services under any other health home state
plan amendment approved by the HHS Secretary. An ``SUD-focused
state plan amendment'' is defined as a state plan amendment
designed to provide health home services primarily to SUD-
eligible individuals.
Section 2 requires that each state that has received an
additional two quarters of enhanced federal matching for a SUD-
focused state plan amendment must submit to the HHS Secretary,
at the end of the period of the state plan amendment, a report
addressing (1) the quality of health care provided to
individuals served under the state plan amendment; (2) access
to care for these individuals; and (3) the total expenditures
of such individuals for care.
Section 2 requires that the HHS Secretary publish on the
CMS website, not later than October 1, 2020, best practices for
designing and implementing a SUD-focused state plan amendment.
Section 3. Requirement for State Medicaid plans to provide coverage for
Medication-Assisted Treatment
Section 3 adds a new requirement for fiscal years 2020 to
2025 that requires States to cover all forms of Medication-
Assisted Treatment (MAT), which is defined as all drugs
approved under section 505 of the Federal Food, Drug, and
Cosmetic Act, including methadone, and all biological products
licensed under section 351 of the Public Health Service Act (42
U.S.C. 262) to treat opioid use disorders in conjunction with
counseling services and behavioral therapy.
Section 3 includes an exemption for certain states. States
are not required to cover all forms of MAT if, before the
beginning of such period, the State certifies to the
satisfaction of the HHS Secretary that implementing such
provisions statewide for all individuals eligible to enroll in
the State plan (or waiver of the State plan) would not be
possible by reason of a shortage of qualified providers of
medication-assisted treatment, or facilities providing such
treatment, that will contract with the state or a managed care
entity.
Changes in Existing Law Made by the Bill, as Reported
In compliance with clause 3(e) of rule XIII of the Rules of
the House of Representatives, changes in existing law made by
the bill, as reported, are shown as follows (existing law
proposed to be omitted is enclosed in black brackets, new
matter is printed in italic, and existing law in which no
change is proposed is shown in roman):
SOCIAL SECURITY ACT
* * * * * * *
TITLE XIX--GRANTS TO STATES FOR MEDICAL ASSISTANCE PROGRAMS
* * * * * * *
STATE PLANS FOR MEDICAL ASSISTANCE
Sec. 1902. (a) A State plan for medical assistance must--
(1) provide that it shall be in effect in all
political subdivisions of the State, and, if
administered by them, be mandatory upon them;
(2) provide for financial participation by the State
equal to not less than 40 per centum of the non-Federal
share of the expenditures under the plan with respect
to which payments under section 1903 are authorized by
this title; and, effective July 1, 1969, provide for
financial participation by the State equal to all of
such non-Federal share or provide for distribution of
funds from Federal or State sources, for carrying out
the State plan, on an equalization or other basis which
will assure that the lack of adequate funds from local
sources will not result in lowering the amount,
duration, scope, or quality of care and services
available under the plan;
(3) provide for granting an opportunity for a fair
hearing before the State agency to any individual whose
claim for medical assistance under the plan is denied
or is not acted upon with reasonable promptness;
(4) provide (A) such methods of administration
(including methods relating to the establishment and
maintenance of personnel standards on a merit basis,
except that the Secretary shall exercise no authority
with respect to the selection, tenure of office, and
compensation of any individual employed in accordance
with such methods, and including provision for
utilization of professional medical personnel in the
administration and, where administered locally,
supervision of administration of the plan) as are found
by the Secretary to be necessary for the proper and
efficient operation of the plan, (B) for the training
and effective use of paid subprofessional staff, with
particular emphasis on the full-time or part-time
employment of recipients and other persons of low
income, as community service aides, in the
administration of the plan and for the use of nonpaid
or partially paid volunteers in a social service
volunteer program in providing services to applicants
and recipients and in assisting any advisory committees
established by the State agency, (C) that each State or
local officer, employee, or independent contractor who
is responsible for the expenditure of substantial
amounts of funds under the State plan, each individual
who formerly was such an officer, employee, or
contractor, and each partner of such an officer,
employee, or contractor shall be prohibited from
committing any act, in relation to any activity under
the plan, the commission of which, in connection with
any activity concerning the United States Government,
by an officer or employee of the United States
Government, an individual who was such an officer or
employee, or a partner of such an officer or employee
is prohibited by section 207 or 208 of title 18, United
States Code, and (D) that each State or local officer,
employee, or independent contractor who is responsible
for selecting, awarding, or otherwise obtaining items
and services under the State plan shall be subject to
safeguards against conflicts of interest that are at
least as stringent as the safeguards that apply under
section 27 of the Office of Federal Procurement Policy
Act (41 U.S.C. 423) to persons described in subsection
(a)(2) of such section of that Act;
(5) either provide for the establishment or
designation of a single State agency to administer or
to supervise the administration of the plan; or provide
for the establishment or designation of a single State
agency to administer or to supervise the administration
of the plan, except that the determination of
eligibility for medical assistance under the plan shall
be made by the State or local agency administering the
State plan approved under title I or XVI (insofar as it
relates to the aged) if the State is eligible to
participate in the State plan program established under
title XVI, or by the agency or agencies administering
the supplemental security income program established
under title XVI or the State plan approved under part A
of title IV if the State is not eligible to participate
in the State plan program established under title XVI;
(6) provide that the State agency will make such
reports, in such form and containing such information,
as the Secretary may from time to time require, and
comply with such provisions as the Secretary may from
time to time find necessary to assure the correctness
and verification of such reports;
(7) provide--
(A) safeguards which restrict the use or
disclosure of information concerning applicants
and recipients to purposes directly connected
with--
(i) the administration of the plan;
and
(ii) the exchange of information
necessary to certify or verify the
certification of eligibility of
children for free or reduced price
breakfasts under the Child Nutrition
Act of 1966 and free or reduced price
lunches under the Richard B. Russell
National School Lunch Act, in
accordance with section 9(b) of that
Act, using data standards and formats
established by the State agency; and
(B) that, notwithstanding the Express Lane
option under subsection (e)(13), the State may
enter into an agreement with the State agency
administering the school lunch program
established under the Richard B. Russell
National School Lunch Act under which the State
shall establish procedures to ensure that--
(i) a child receiving medical
assistance under the State plan under
this title whose family income does not
exceed 133 percent of the poverty line
(as defined in section 673(2) of the
Community Services Block Grant Act,
including any revision required by such
section), as determined without regard
to any expense, block, or other income
disregard, applicable to a family of
the size involved, may be certified as
eligible for free lunches under the
Richard B. Russell National School
Lunch Act and free breakfasts under the
Child Nutrition Act of 1966 without
further application; and
(ii) the State agencies responsible
for administering the State plan under
this title, and for carrying out the
school lunch program established under
the Richard B. Russell National School
Lunch Act (42 U.S.C. 1751 et seq.) or
the school breakfast program
established by section 4 of the Child
Nutrition Act of 1966 (42 U.S.C. 1773),
cooperate in carrying out paragraphs
(3)(F) and (15) of section 9(b) of that
Act;
(8) provide that all individuals wishing to make
application for medical assistance under the plan shall
have opportunity to do so, and that such assistance
shall be furnished with reasonable promptness to all
eligible individuals;
(9) provide--
(A) that the State health agency, or other
appropriate State medical agency (whichever is
utilized by the Secretary for the purpose
specified in the first sentence of section
1864(a)), shall be responsible for establishing
and maintaining health standards for private or
public institutions in which recipients of
medical assistance under the plan may receive
care or services,
(B) for the establishment or designation of a
State authority or authorities which shall be
responsible for establishing and maintaining
standards, other than those relating to health,
for such institutions,
(C) that any laboratory services paid for
under such plan must be provided by a
laboratory which meets the applicable
requirements of section 1861(e)(9) or
paragraphs (16) and (17) of section 1861(s),
or, in the case of a laboratory which is in a
rural health clinic, of section 1861(aa)(2)(G),
and
(D) that the State maintain a consumer-
oriented website providing useful information
to consumers regarding all skilled nursing
facilities and all nursing facilities in the
State, including for each facility, Form 2567
State inspection reports (or a successor form),
complaint investigation reports, the facility's
plan of correction, and such other information
that the State or the Secretary considers
useful in assisting the public to assess the
quality of long term care options and the
quality of care provided by individual
facilities;
(10) provide--
(A)for making medical assistance available,
including at least the care and services listed
in paragraphs (1) through (5), (17), (21), [and
(28)] (28), and (29) of section 1905(a), to--
(i) all individuals--
(I) who are receiving aid or
assistance under any plan of
the State approved under title
I, X, XIV, or XVI, or part A or
part E of title IV (including
individuals eligible under this
title by reason of section
402(a)(37), 406(h), or 473(b),
or considered by the State to
be receiving such aid as
authorized under section
482(e)(6)),
(II)(aa) with respect to whom
supplemental security income
benefits are being paid under
title XVI (or were being paid
as of the date of the enactment
of section 211(a) of the
Personal Responsibility and
Work Opportunity Reconciliation
Act of 1996 (P.L. 104-193) and
would continue to be paid but
for the enactment of that
section), (bb) who are
qualified severely impaired
individuals (as defined in
section 1905(q)), or (cc) who
are under 21 years of age and
with respect to whom
supplemental security income
benefits would be paid under
title XVI if subparagraphs (A)
and (B) of section 1611(c)(7)
were applied without regard to
the phrase ``the first day of
the month following'',
(III) who are qualified
pregnant women or children as
defined in section 1905(n),
(IV) who are described in
subparagraph (A) or (B) of
subsection (l)(1) and whose
family income does not exceed
the minimum income level the
State is required to establish
under subsection (l)(2)(A) for
such a family;
(V) who are qualified family
members as defined in section
1905(m)(1),
(VI) who are described in
subparagraph (C) of subsection
(l)(1) and whose family income
does not exceed the income
level the State is required to
establish under subsection
(l)(2)(B) for such a family,
(VII) who are described in
subparagraph (D) of subsection
(l)(1) and whose family income
does not exceed the income
level the State is required to
establish under subsection
(l)(2)(C) for such a family;
(VIII) beginning January 1,
2014, who are under 65 years of
age, not pregnant, not entitled
to, or enrolled for, benefits
under part A of title XVIII, or
enrolled for benefits under
part B of title XVIII, and are
not described in a previous
subclause of this clause, and
whose income (as determined
under subsection (e)(14)) does
not exceed 133 percent of the
poverty line (as defined in
section 2110(c)(5)) applicable
to a family of the size
involved, subject to subsection
(k); or
(IX) who--
(aa) are under 26
years of age;
(bb) are not
described in or
enrolled under any of
subclauses (I) through
(VII) of this clause or
are described in any of
such subclauses but
have income that
exceeds the level of
income applicable under
the State plan for
eligibility to enroll
for medical assistance
under such subclause;
(cc) were in foster
care under the
responsibility of the
State on the date of
attaining 18 years of
age or such higher age
as the State has
elected under section
475(8)(B)(iii); and
(dd) were enrolled in
the State plan under
this title or under a
waiver of the plan
while in such foster
care;
(ii) at the option of the State, to
any group or groups of individuals
described in section 1905(a) (or, in
the case of individuals described in
section 1905(a)(i), to any reasonable
categories of such individuals) who are
not individuals described in clause (i)
of this subparagraph but--
(I) who meet the income and
resources requirements of the
appropriate State plan
described in clause (i) or the
supplemental security income
program (as the case may be),
(II) who would meet the
income and resources
requirements of the appropriate
State plan described in clause
(i) if their work-related child
care costs were paid from their
earnings rather than by a State
agency as a service
expenditure,
(III) who would be eligible
to receive aid under the
appropriate State plan
described in clause (i) if
coverage under such plan was as
broad as allowed under Federal
law,
(IV) with respect to whom
there is being paid, or who are
eligible, or would be eligible
if they were not in a medical
institution, to have paid with
respect to them, aid or
assistance under the
appropriate State plan
described in clause (i),
supplemental security income
benefits under title XVI, or a
State supplementary payment;
(V) who are in a medical
institution for a period of not
less than 30 consecutive days
(with eligibility by reason of
this subclause beginning on the
first day of such period), who
meet the resource requirements
of the appropriate State plan
described in clause (i) or the
supplemental security income
program, and whose income does
not exceed a separate income
standard established by the
State which is consistent with
the limit established under
section 1903(f)(4)(C),
(VI) who would be eligible
under the State plan under this
title if they were in a medical
institution, with respect to
whom there has been a
determination that but for the
provision of home or community-
based services described in
subsection (c), (d), or (e) of
section 1915 they would require
the level of care provided in a
hospital, nursing facility or
intermediate care facility for
the mentally retarded the cost
of which could be reimbursed
under the State plan, and who
will receive home or community-
based services pursuant to a
waiver granted by the Secretary
under subsection (c), (d), or
(e) of section 1915,
(VII) who would be eligible
under the State plan under this
title if they were in a medical
institution, who are terminally
ill, and who will receive
hospice care pursuant to a
voluntary election described in
section 1905(o);
(VIII) who is a child
described in section
1905(a)(i)--
(aa) for whom there
is in effect an
adoption assistance
agreement (other than
an agreement under part
E of title IV) between
the State and an
adoptive parent or
parents,
(bb) who the State
agency responsible for
adoption assistance has
determined cannot be
placed with adoptive
parents without medical
assistance because such
child has special needs
for medical or
rehabilitative care,
and
(cc) who was eligible
for medical assistance
under the State plan
prior to the adoption
assistance agreement
being entered into, or
who would have been
eligible for medical
assistance at such time
if the eligibility
standards and
methodologies of the
State's foster care
program under part E of
title IV were applied
rather than the
eligibility standards
and methodologies of
the State's aid to
families with dependent
children program under
part A of title IV;
(IX) who are described in
subsection (l)(1) and are not
described in clause (i)(IV),
clause (i)(VI), or clause
(i)(VII);
(X) who are described in
subsection (m)(1);
(XI) who receive only an
optional State supplementary
payment based on need and paid
on a regular basis, equal to
the difference between the
individual's countable income
and the income standard used to
determine eligibility for such
supplementary payment (with
countable income being the
income remaining after
deductions as established by
the State pursuant to standards
that may be more restrictive
than the standards for
supplementary security income
benefits under title XVI),
which are available to all
individuals in the State (but
which may be based on different
income standards by political
subdivision according to cost
of living differences), and
which are paid by a State that
does not have an agreement with
the Commissioner of Social
Security under section 1616 or
1634;
(XII) who are described in
subsection (z)(1) (relating to
certain TB-infected
individuals);
(XIII) who are in families
whose income is less than 250
percent of the income official
poverty line (as defined by the
Office of Management and
Budget, and revised annually in
accordance with section 673(2)
of the Omnibus Budget
Reconciliation Act of 1981)
applicable to a family of the
size involved, and who but for
earnings in excess of the limit
established under section
1905(q)(2)(B), would be
considered to be receiving
supplemental security income
(subject, notwithstanding
section 1916, to payment of
premiums or other cost-sharing
charges (set on a sliding scale
based on income) that the State
may determine);
(XIV) who are optional
targeted low-income children
described in section
1905(u)(2)(B);
(XV) who, but for earnings in
excess of the limit established
under section 1905(q)(2)(B),
would be considered to be
receiving supplemental security
income, who is at least 16, but
less than 65, years of age, and
whose assets, resources, and
earned or unearned income (or
both) do not exceed such
limitations (if any) as the
State may establish;
(XVI) who are employed
individuals with a medically
improved disability described
in section 1905(v)(1) and whose
assets, resources, and earned
or unearned income (or both) do
not exceed such limitations (if
any) as the State may
establish, but only if the
State provides medical
assistance to individuals
described in subclause (XV);
(XVII) who are independent
foster care adolescents (as
defined in section 1905(w)(1)),
or who are within any
reasonable categories of such
adolescents specified by the
State;
(XVIII) who are described in
subsection (aa) (relating to
certain breast or cervical
cancer patients);
(XIX) who are disabled
children described in
subsection (cc)(1);
(XX) beginning January 1,
2014, who are under 65 years of
age and are not described in or
enrolled under a previous
subclause of this clause, and
whose income (as determined
under subsection (e)(14))
exceeds 133 percent of the
poverty line (as defined in
section 2110(c)(5)) applicable
to a family of the size
involved but does not exceed
the highest income eligibility
level established under the
State plan or under a waiver of
the plan, subject to subsection
(hh);
(XXI) who are described in
subsection (ii) (relating to
individuals who meet certain
income standards); or
(XXII) who are eligible for
home and community-based
services under needs-based
criteria established under
paragraph (1)(A) of section
1915(i), or who are eligible
for home and community-based
services under paragraph (6) of
such section, and who will
receive home and community-
based services pursuant to a
State plan amendment under such
subsection;
(B) that the medical assistance made
available to any individual described in
subparagraph (A)--
(i) shall not be less in amount,
duration, or scope than the medical
assistance made available to any other
such individual, and
(ii) shall not be less in amount,
duration, or scope than the medical
assistance made available to
individuals not described in
subparagraph (A);
(C) that if medical assistance is included
for any group of individuals described in
section 1905(a) who are not described in
subparagraph (A) or (E), then--
(i) the plan must include a
description of (I) the criteria for
determining eligibility of individuals
in the group for such medical
assistance, (II) the amount, duration,
and scope of medical assistance made
available to individuals in the group,
and (III) the single standard to be
employed in determining income and
resource eligibility for all such
groups, and the methodology to be
employed in determining such
eligibility, which shall be no more
restrictive than the methodology which
would be employed under the
supplemental security income program in
the case of groups consisting of aged,
blind, or disabled individuals in a
State in which such program is in
effect, and which shall be no more
restrictive than the methodology which
would be employed under the appropriate
State plan (described in subparagraph
(A)(i)) to which such group is most
closely categorically related in the
case of other groups;
(ii) the plan must make available
medical assistance--
(I) to individuals under the
age of 18 who (but for income
and resources) would be
eligible for medical assistance
as an individual described in
subparagraph (A)(i), and
(II) to pregnant women,
during the course of their
pregnancy, who (but for income
and resources) would be
eligible for medical assistance
as an individual described in
subparagraph (A);
(iii) such medical assistance must
include (I) with respect to children
under 18 and individuals entitled to
institutional services, ambulatory
services, and (II) with respect to
pregnant women, prenatal care and
delivery services; and
(iv) if such medical assistance
includes services in institutions for
mental diseases or in an intermediate
care facility for the mentally retarded
(or both) for any such group, it also
must include for all groups covered at
least the care and services listed in
paragraphs (1) through (5) and (17) of
section 1905(a) or the care and
services listed in any 7 of the
paragraphs numbered (1) through (24) of
such section;
(D) for the inclusion of home health services
for any individual who, under the State plan,
is entitled to nursing facility services;
(E)(i) for making medical assistance
available for medicare cost-sharing (as defined
in section 1905(p)(3)) for qualified medicare
beneficiaries described in section 1905(p)(1);
(ii) for making medical assistance available
for payment of medicare cost-sharing described
in section 1905(p)(3)(A)(i) for qualified
disabled and working individuals described in
section 1905(s);
(iii) for making medical assistance available
for medicare cost sharing described in section
1905(p)(3)(A)(ii) subject to section
1905(p)(4), for individuals who would be
qualified medicare beneficiaries described in
section 1905(p)(1) but for the fact that their
income exceeds the income level established by
the State under section 1905(p)(2) but is less
than 110 percent in 1993 and 1994, and 120
percent in 1995 and years thereafter of the
official poverty line (referred to in such
section) for a family of the size involved; and
(iv) subject to sections 1933 and 1905(p)(4),
for making medical assistance available for
medicare cost-sharing described in section
1905(p)(3)(A)(ii) for individuals who would be
qualified medicare beneficiaries described in
section 1905(p)(1) but for the fact that their
income exceeds the income level established by
the State under section 1905(p)(2) and is at
least 120 percent, but less than 135 percent,
of the official poverty line (referred to in
such section) for a family of the size involved
and who are not otherwise eligible for medical
assistance under the State plan;
(F) at the option of a State, for making
medical assistance available for COBRA premiums
(as defined in subsection (u)(2)) for qualified
COBRA continuation beneficiaries described in
section 1902(u)(1); and
(G) that, in applying eligibility criteria of
the supplemental security income program under
title XVI for purposes of determining
eligibility for medical assistance under the
State plan of an individual who is not
receiving supplemental security income, the
State will disregard the provisions of
subsections (c) and (e) of section 1613;
except that (I) the making available of the services
described in paragraph (4), (14), or (16) of section
1905(a) to individuals meeting the age requirements
prescribed therein shall not, by reason of this
paragraph (10), require the making available of any
such services, or the making available of such services
of the same amount, duration, and scope, to individuals
of any other ages, (II) the making available of
supplementary medical insurance benefits under part B
of title XVIII to individuals eligible therefor (either
pursuant to an agreement entered into under section
1843 or by reason of the payment of premiums under such
title by the State agency on behalf of such
individuals), or provision for meeting part or all of
the cost of deductibles, cost sharing, or similar
charges under part B of title XVIII for individuals
eligible for benefits under such part, shall not, by
reason of this paragraph (10), require the making
available of any such benefits, or the making available
of services of the same amount, duration, and scope, to
any other individuals, (III) the making available of
medical assistance equal in amount, duration, and scope
to the medical assistance made available to individuals
described in clause (A) to any classification of
individuals approved by the Secretary with respect to
whom there is being paid, or who are eligible, or would
be eligible if they were not in a medical institution,
to have paid with respect to them, a State
supplementary payment shall not, by reason of this
paragraph (10), require the making available of any
such assistance, or the making available of such
assistance of the same amount, duration, and scope, to
any other individuals not described in clause (A), (IV)
the imposition of a deductible, cost sharing, or
similar charge for any item or service furnished to an
individual not eligible for the exemption under section
1916(a)(2) or (b)(2) shall not require the imposition
of a deductible, cost sharing, or similar charge for
the same item or service furnished to an individual who
is eligible for such exemption, (V) the making
available to pregnant women covered under the plan of
services relating to pregnancy (including prenatal,
delivery, and postpartum services) or to any other
condition which may complicate pregnancy shall not, by
reason of this paragraph (10), require the making
available of such services, or the making available of
such services of the same amount, duration, and scope,
to any other individuals, provided such services are
made available (in the same amount, duration, and
scope) to all pregnant women covered under the State
plan, (VI) with respect to the making available of
medical assistance for hospice care to terminally ill
individuals who have made a voluntary election
described in section 1905(o) to receive hospice care
instead of medical assistance for certain other
services, such assistance may not be made available in
an amount, duration, or scope less than that provided
under title XVIII, and the making available of such
assistance shall not, by reason of this paragraph (10),
require the making available of medical assistance for
hospice care to other individuals or the making
available of medical assistance for services waived by
such terminally ill individuals, (VII) the medical
assistance made available to an individual described in
subsection (l)(1)(A) who is eligible for medical
assistance only because of subparagraph (A)(i)(IV) or
(A)(ii)(IX) shall be limited to medical assistance for
services related to pregnancy (including prenatal,
delivery, postpartum, and family planning services) and
to other conditions which may complicate pregnancy,
(VIII) the medical assistance made available to a
qualified medicare beneficiary described in section
1905(p)(1) who is only entitled to medical assistance
because the individual is such a beneficiary shall be
limited to medical assistance for medicare cost-sharing
(described in section 1905(p)(3)), subject to the
provisions of subsection (n) and section 1916(b), (IX)
the making available of respiratory care services in
accordance with subsection (e)(9) shall not, by reason
of this paragraph (10), require the making available of
such services, or the making available of such services
of the same amount, duration, and scope, to any
individuals not included under subsection (e)(9)(A),
provided such services are made available (in the same
amount, duration, and scope) to all individuals
described in such subsection, (X) if the plan provides
for any fixed durational limit on medical assistance
for inpatient hospital services (whether or not such a
limit varies by medical condition or diagnosis), the
plan must establish exceptions to such a limit for
medically necessary inpatient hospital services
furnished with respect to individuals under one year of
age in a hospital defined under the State plan,
pursuant to section 1923(a)(1)(A), as a
disproportionate share hospital and subparagraph (B)
(relating to comparability) shall not be construed as
requiring such an exception for other individuals,
services, or hospitals, (XI) the making available of
medical assistance to cover the costs of premiums,
deductibles, coinsurance, and other cost-sharing
obligations for certain individuals for private health
coverage as described in section 1906 shall not, by
reason of paragraph (10), require the making available
of any such benefits or the making available of
services of the same amount, duration, and scope of
such private coverage to any other individuals, (XII)
the medical assistance made available to an individual
described in subsection (u)(1) who is eligible for
medical assistance only because of subparagraph (F)
shall be limited to medical assistance for COBRA
continuation premiums (as defined in subsection
(u)(2)), (XIII) the medical assistance made available
to an individual described in subsection (z)(1) who is
eligible for medical assistance only because of
subparagraph (A)(ii)(XII) shall be limited to medical
assistance for TB-related services (described in
subsection (z)(2)), (XIV) the medical assistance made
available to an individual described in subsection (aa)
who is eligible for medical assistance only because of
subparagraph (A)(10)(ii)(XVIII) shall be limited to
medical assistance provided during the period in which
such an individual requires treatment for breast or
cervical cancer (XV) the medical assistance made
available to an individual described in subparagraph
(A)(i)(VIII) shall be limited to medical assistance
described in subsection (k)(1), (XVI) the medical
assistance made available to an individual described in
subsection (ii) shall be limited to family planning
services and supplies described in section
1905(a)(4)(C) including medical diagnosis and treatment
services that are provided pursuant to a family
planning service in a family planning setting and
(XVII) if an individual is described in subclause (IX)
of subparagraph (A)(i) and is also described in
subclause (VIII) of that subparagraph, the medical
assistance shall be made available to the individual
through subclause (IX) instead of through subclause
(VIII);
(11)(A) provide for entering into cooperative
arrangements with the State agencies responsible for
administering or supervising the administration of
health services and vocational rehabilitation services
in the State looking toward maximum utilization of such
services in the provision of medical assistance under
the plan, (B) provide, to the extent prescribed by the
Secretary, for entering into agreements, with any
agency, institution, or organization receiving payments
under (or through an allotment under) title V, (i)
providing for utilizing such agency, institution, or
organization in furnishing care and services which are
available under such title or allotment and which are
included in the State plan approved under this section
(ii) making such provision as may be appropriate for
reimbursing such agency, institution, or organization
for the cost of any such care and services furnished
any individual for which payment would otherwise be
made to the State with respect to the individual under
section 1903, and (iii) providing for coordination of
information and education on pediatric vaccinations and
delivery of immunization services, and (C) provide for
coordination of the operations under this title,
including the provision of information and education on
pediatric vaccinations and the delivery of immunization
services, with the State's operations under the special
supplemental nutrition program for women, infants, and
children under section 17 of the Child Nutrition Act of
1966;
(12) provide that, in determining whether an
individual is blind, there shall be an examination by a
physician skilled in the diseases of the eye or by an
optometrist, whichever the individual may select;
(13) provide--
(A) for a public process for determination of
rates of payment under the plan for hospital
services, nursing facility services, and
services of intermediate care facilities for
the mentally retarded under which--
(i) proposed rates, the methodologies
underlying the establishment of such
rates, and justifications for the
proposed rates are published,
(ii) providers, beneficiaries and
their representatives, and other
concerned State residents are given a
reasonable opportunity for review and
comment on the proposed rates,
methodologies, and justifications,
(iii) final rates, the methodologies
underlying the establishment of such
rates, and justifications for such
final rates are published, and
(iv) in the case of hospitals, such
rates take into account (in a manner
consistent with section 1923) the
situation of hospitals which serve a
disproportionate number of low-income
patients with special needs;
(B) for payment for hospice care in amounts
no lower than the amounts, using the same
methodology, used under part A of title XVIII
and for payment of amounts under section
1905(o)(3); except that in the case of hospice
care which is furnished to an individual who is
a resident of a nursing facility or
intermediate care facility for the mentally
retarded, and who would be eligible under the
plan for nursing facility services or services
in an intermediate care facility for the
mentally retarded if he had not elected to
receive hospice care, there shall be paid an
additional amount, to take into account the
room and board furnished by the facility, equal
to at least 95 percent of the rate that would
have been paid by the State under the plan for
facility services in that facility for that
individual; and
(C) payment for primary care services (as
defined in subsection (jj)) furnished in 2013
and 2014 by a physician with a primary
specialty designation of family medicine,
general internal medicine, or pediatric
medicine at a rate not less than 100 percent of
the payment rate that applies to such services
and physician under part B of title XVIII (or,
if greater, the payment rate that would be
applicable under such part if the conversion
factor under section 1848(d) for the year
involved were the conversion factor under such
section for 2009);
(14) provide that enrollment fees, premiums, or
similar charges, and deductions, cost sharing, or
similar charges, may be imposed only as provided in
section 1916;
(15) provide for payment for services described in
clause (B) or (C) of section 1905(a)(2) under the plan
in accordance with subsection (bb);
(16) provide for inclusion, to the extent required by
regulations prescribed by the Secretary, of provisions
(conforming to such regulations) with respect to the
furnishing of medical assistance under the plan to
individuals who are residents of the State but are
absent therefrom;
(17) except as provided in subsections (e)(14),
(e)(15), (l)(3), (m)(3), and (m)(4), include reasonable
standards (which shall be comparable for all groups and
may, in accordance with standards prescribed by the
Secretary, differ with respect to income levels, but
only in the case of applicants or recipients of
assistance under the plan who are not receiving aid or
assistance under any plan of the State approved under
title I, X, XIV, or XVI, or part A of title IV, and
with respect to whom supplemental security income
benefits are not being paid under title XVI, based on
the variations between shelter costs in urban areas and
in rural areas) for determining eligibility for and the
extent of medical assistance under the plan which (A)
are consistent with the objectives of this title, (B)
provide for taking into account only such income and
resources as are, as determined in accordance with
standards prescribed by the Secretary, available to the
applicant or recipient and (in the case of any
applicant or recipient who would, except for income and
resources, be eligible for aid or assistance in the
form of money payments under any plan of the State
approved under title I, X, XIV, or XVI, or part A of
title IV, or to have paid with respect to him
supplemental security income benefits under title XVI)
as would not be disregarded (or set aside for future
needs) in determining his eligibility for such aid,
assistance, or benefits, (C) provide for reasonable
evaluation of any such income or resources, and (D) do
not take into account the financial responsibility of
any individual for any applicant or recipient of
assistance under the plan unless such applicant or
recipient is such individual's spouse or such
individual's child who is under age 21 or (with respect
to States eligible to participate in the State program
established under title XVI), is blind or permanently
and totally disabled, or is blind or disabled as
defined in section 1614 (with respect to States which
are not eligible to participate in such program); and
provide for flexibility in the application of such
standards with respect to income by taking into
account, except to the extent prescribed by the
Secretary, the costs (whether in the form of insurance
premiums, payments made to the State under section
1903(f)(2)(B), or otherwise and regardless of whether
such costs are reimbursed under another public program
of the State or political subdivision thereof) incurred
for medical care or for any other type of remedial care
recognized under State law;
(18) comply with the provisions of section 1917 with
respect to liens, adjustments and recoveries of medical
assistance correctly paid, transfers of assets, and
treatment of certain trusts;
(19) provide such safeguards as may be necessary to
assure that eligibility for care and services under the
plan will be determined, and such care and services
will be provided, in a manner consistent with
simplicity of administration and the best interests of
the recipients;
(20) if the State plan includes medical assistance in
behalf of individuals 65 years of age or older who are
patients in institutions for mental diseases--
(A) provide for having in effect such
agreements or other arrangements with State
authorities concerned with mental diseases,
and, where appropriate, with such institutions,
as may be necessary for carrying out the State
plan, including arrangements for joint planning
and for development of alternate methods of
care, arrangements providing assurance of
immediate readmittance to institutions where
needed for individuals under alternate plans of
care, and arrangements providing for access to
patients and facilities, for furnishing
information, and for making reports;
(B) provide for an individual plan for each
such patient to assure that the institutional
care provided to him is in his best interests,
including, to that end, assurances that there
will be initial and periodic review of his
medical and other needs, that he will be given
appropriate medical treatment within the
institution, and that there will be a periodic
determination of his need for continued
treatment in the institution; and
(C) provide for the development of alternate
plans of care, making maximum utilization of
available resources, for recipients 65 years of
age or older who would otherwise need care in
such institutions, including appropriate
medical treatment and other aid or assistance;
for services referred to in section
3(a)(4)(A)(i) and (ii) or section
1603(a)(4)(A)(i) and (ii) which are appropriate
for such recipients and for such patients; and
for methods of administration necessary to
assure that the responsibilities of the State
agency under the State plan with respect to
such recipients and such patients will be
effectively carried out;
(21) if the State plan includes medical assistance in
behalf of individuals 65 years of age or older who are
patients in public institutions for mental diseases,
show that the State is making satisfactory progress
toward developing and implementing a comprehensive
mental health program, including provision for
utilization of community mental health centers, nursing
facilities, and other alternatives to care in public
institutions for mental diseases;
(22) include descriptions of (A) the kinds and
numbers of professional medical personnel and
supporting staff that will be used in the
administration of the plan and of the responsibilities
they will have, (B) the standards, for private or
public institutions in which recipients of medical
assistance under the plan may receive care or services,
that will be utilized by the State authority or
authorities responsible for establishing and
maintaining such standards, (C) the cooperative
arrangements with State health agencies and State
vocational rehabilitation agencies entered into with a
view to maximum utilization of and coordination of the
provision of medical assistance with the services
administered or supervised by such agencies, and (D)
other standards and methods that the State will use to
assure that medical or remedial care and services
provided to recipients of medical assistance are of
high quality;
(23) provide that (A) any individual eligible for
medical assistance (including drugs) may obtain such
assistance from any institution, agency, community
pharmacy, or person, qualified to perform the service
or services required (including an organization which
provides such services, or arranges for their
availability, on a prepayment basis), who undertakes to
provide him such services, and (B) an enrollment of an
individual eligible for medical assistance in a primary
care case-management system (described in section
1915(b)(1)), a medicaid managed care organization, or a
similar entity shall not restrict the choice of the
qualified person from whom the individual may receive
services under section 1905(a)(4)(C), except as
provided in subsection (g) and in section 1915, except
that this paragraph shall not apply in the case of
Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands, and Guam, and except
that nothing in this paragraph shall be construed as
requiring a State to provide medical assistance for
such services furnished by a person or entity convicted
of a felony under Federal or State law for an offense
which the State agency determines is inconsistent with
the best interests of beneficiaries under the State
plan or by a provider or supplier to which a moratorium
under subsection (kk)(4) is applied during the period
of such moratorium';
(24) effective July 1, 1969, provide for consultative
services by health agencies and other appropriate
agencies of the State to hospitals, nursing facilities,
home health agencies, clinics, laboratories, and such
other institutions as the Secretary may specify in
order to assist them (A) to qualify for payments under
this Act, (B) to establish and maintain such fiscal
records as may be necessary for the proper and
efficient administration of this Act, and (C) to
provide information needed to determine payments due
under this Act on account of care and services
furnished to individuals;
(25) provide--
(A) that the State or local agency
administering such plan will take all
reasonable measures to ascertain the legal
liability of third parties (including health
insurers, self-insured plans, group health
plans (as defined in section 607(1) of the
Employee Retirement Income Security Act of
1974), service benefit plans, managed care
organizations, pharmacy benefit managers, or
other parties that are, by statute, contract,
or agreement, legally responsible for payment
of a claim for a health care item or service)
to pay for care and services available under
the plan, including--
(i) the collection of sufficient
information (as specified by the
Secretary in regulations) to enable the
State to pursue claims against such
third parties, with such information
being collected at the time of any
determination or redetermination of
eligibility for medical assistance, and
(ii) the submission to the Secretary
of a plan (subject to approval by the
Secretary) for pursuing claims against
such third parties, which plan shall be
integrated with, and be monitored as a
part of the Secretary's review of, the
State's mechanized claims processing
and information retrieval systems
required under section 1903(r);
(B) that in any case where such a legal
liability is found to exist after medical
assistance has been made available on behalf of
the individual and where the amount of
reimbursement the State can reasonably expect
to recover exceeds the costs of such recovery,
the State or local agency will seek
reimbursement for such assistance to the extent
of such legal liability;
(C) that in the case of an individual who is
entitled to medical assistance under the State
plan with respect to a service for which a
third party is liable for payment, the person
furnishing the service may not seek to collect
from the individual (or any financially
responsible relative or representative of that
individual) payment of an amount for that
service (i) if the total of the amount of the
liabilities of third parties for that service
is at least equal to the amount payable for
that service under the plan (disregarding
section 1916), or (ii) in an amount which
exceeds the lesser of (I) the amount which may
be collected under section 1916, or (II) the
amount by which the amount payable for that
service under the plan (disregarding section
1916) exceeds the total of the amount of the
liabilities of third parties for that service;
(D) that a person who furnishes services and
is participating under the plan may not refuse
to furnish services to an individual (who is
entitled to have payment made under the plan
for the services the person furnishes) because
of a third party's potential liability for
payment for the service;
(E) that in the case of preventive pediatric
care (including early and periodic screening
and diagnosis services under section
1905(a)(4)(B)) covered under the State plan,
the State shall--
(i) make payment for such service in
accordance with the usual payment
schedule under such plan for such
services without regard to the
liability of a third party for payment
for such services; and
(ii) seek reimbursement from such
third party in accordance with
subparagraph (B);
(F) that in the case of any services covered
under such plan which are provided to an
individual on whose behalf child support
enforcement is being carried out by the State
agency under part D of title IV of this Act,
the State shall--
(i) make payment for such service in
accordance with the usual payment
schedule under such plan for such
services without regard to any third-
party liability for payment for such
services, if such third-party liability
is derived (through insurance or
otherwise) from the parent whose
obligation to pay support is being
enforced by such agency, if payment has
not been made by such third party
within 30 days after such services are
furnished;
(ii) seek reimbursement from such
third party in accordance with
subparagraph (B);
(G) that the State prohibits any health
insurer (including a group health plan, as
defined in section 607(1) of the Employee
Retirement Income Security Act of 1974, a self-
insured plan, a service benefit plan, a managed
care organization, a pharmacy benefit manager,
or other party that is, by statute, contract,
or agreement, legally responsible for payment
of a claim for a health care item or service),
in enrolling an individual or in making any
payments for benefits to the individual or on
the individual's behalf, from taking into
account that the individual is eligible for or
is provided medical assistance under a plan
under this title for such State, or any other
State;
(H) that to the extent that payment has been
made under the State plan for medical
assistance in any case where a third party has
a legal liability to make payment for such
assistance, the State has in effect laws under
which, to the extent that payment has been made
under the State plan for medical assistance for
health care items or services furnished to an
individual, the State is considered to have
acquired the rights of such individual to
payment by any other party for such health care
items or services; and
(I) that the State shall provide assurances
satisfactory to the Secretary that the State
has in effect laws requiring health insurers,
including self-insured plans, group health
plans (as defined in section 607(1) of the
Employee Retirement Income Security Act of
1974), service benefit plans, managed care
organizations, pharmacy benefit managers, or
other parties that are, by statute, contract,
or agreement, legally responsible for payment
of a claim for a health care item or service,
as a condition of doing business in the State,
to--
(i) provide, with respect to
individuals who are eligible (and, at
State option, individuals who apply or
whose eligibility for medical
assistance is being evaluated in
accordance with section 1902(e)(13)(D))
for, or are provided, medical
assistance under a State plan (or under
a waiver of the plan) under this title
and child health assistance under title
XXI, upon the request of the State,
information to determine during what
period the individual or their spouses
or their dependents may be (or may have
been) covered by a health insurer and
the nature of the coverage that is or
was provided by the health insurer
(including the name, address, and
identifying number of the plan) in a
manner prescribed by the Secretary;
(ii) accept the State's right of
recovery and the assignment to the
State of any right of an individual or
other entity to payment from the party
for an item or service for which
payment has been made under the State
plan;
(iii) respond to any inquiry by the
State regarding a claim for payment for
any health care item or service that is
submitted not later than 3 years after
the date of the provision of such
health care item or service; and
(iv) agree not to deny a claim
submitted by the State solely on the
basis of the date of submission of the
claim, the type or format of the claim
form, or a failure to present proper
documentation at the point-of-sale that
is the basis of the claim, if--
(I) the claim is submitted by
the State within the 3-year
period beginning on the date on
which the item or service was
furnished; and
(II) any action by the State
to enforce its rights with
respect to such claim is
commenced within 6 years of the
State's submission of such
claim;
(26) if the State plan includes medical assistance
for inpatient mental hospital services, provide, with
respect to each patient receiving such services, for a
regular program of medical review (including medical
evaluation) of his need for such services, and for a
written plan of care;
(27) provide for agreements with every person or
institution providing services under the State plan
under which such person or institution agrees (A) to
keep such records as are necessary fully to disclose
the extent of the services provided to individuals
receiving assistance under the State plan, and (B) to
furnish the State agency or the Secretary with such
information, regarding any payments claimed by such
person or institution for providing services under the
State plan, as the State agency or the Secretary may
from time to time request;
(28) provide--
(A) that any nursing facility receiving
payments under such plan must satisfy all the
requirements of subsections (b) through (d) of
section 1919 as they apply to such facilities;
(B) for including in ``nursing facility
services'' at least the items and services
specified (or deemed to be specified) by the
Secretary under section 1919(f)(7) and making
available upon request a description of the
items and services so included;
(C) for procedures to make available to the
public the data and methodology used in
establishing payment rates for nursing
facilities under this title; and
(D) for compliance (by the date specified in
the respective sections) with the requirements
of--
(i) section 1919(e);
(ii) section 1919(g) (relating to
responsibility for survey and
certification of nursing facilities);
and
(iii) sections 1919(h)(2)(B) and
1919(h)(2)(D) (relating to
establishment and application of
remedies);
(29) include a State program which meets the
requirements set forth in section 1908, for the
licensing of administrators of nursing homes;
(30)(A) provide such methods and procedures relating
to the utilization of, and the payment for, care and
services available under the plan (including but not
limited to utilization review plans as provided for in
section 1903(i)(4)) as may be necessary to safeguard
against unnecessary utilization of such care and
services and to assure that payments are consistent
with efficiency, economy, and quality of care and are
sufficient to enlist enough providers so that care and
services are available under the plan at least to the
extent that such care and services are available to the
general population in the geographic area; and
(B) provide, under the program described in
subparagraph (A), that--
(i) each admission to a hospital,
intermediate care facility for the mentally
retarded, or hospital for mental diseases is
reviewed or screened in accordance with
criteria established by medical and other
professional personnel who are not themselves
directly responsible for the care of the
patient involved, and who do not have a
significant financial interest in any such
institution and are not, except in the case of
a hospital, employed by the institution
providing the care involved, and
(ii) the information developed from such
review or screening, along with the data
obtained from prior reviews of the necessity
for admission and continued stay of patients by
such professional personnel, shall be used as
the basis for establishing the size and
composition of the sample of admissions to be
subject to review and evaluation by such
personnel, and any such sample may be of any
size up to 100 percent of all admissions and
must be of sufficient size to serve the purpose
of (I) identifying the patterns of care being
provided and the changes occurring over time in
such patterns so that the need for modification
may be ascertained, and (II) subjecting
admissions to early or more extensive review
where information indicates that such
consideration is warranted to a hospital,
intermediate care facility for the mentally
retarded, or hospital for mental diseases;
(31) with respect to services in an intermediate care
facility for the mentally retarded (where the State
plan includes medical assistance for such services)
provide, with respect to each patient receiving such
services, for a written plan of care, prior to
admission to or authorization of benefits in such
facility, in accordance with regulations of the
Secretary, and for a regular program of independent
professional review (including medical evaluation)
which shall periodically review his need for such
services;
(32) provide that no payment under the plan for any
care or service provided to an individual shall be made
to anyone other than such individual or the person or
institution providing such care or service, under an
assignment or power of attorney or otherwise; except
that--
(A) in the case of any care or service
provided by a physician, dentist, or other
individual practitioner, such payment may be
made (i) to the employer of such physician,
dentist, or other practitioner if such
physician, dentist, or practitioner is required
as a condition of his employment to turn over
his fee for such care or service to his
employer, or (ii) (where the care or service
was provided in a hospital, clinic, or other
facility) to the facility in which the care or
service was provided if there is a contractual
arrangement between such physician, dentist, or
practitioner and such facility under which such
facility submits the bill for such care or
service;
(B) nothing in this paragraph shall be
construed (i) to prevent the making of such a
payment in accordance with an assignment from
the person or institution providing the care or
service involved if such assignment is made to
a governmental agency or entity or is
established by or pursuant to the order of a
court of competent jurisdiction, or (ii) to
preclude an agent of such person or institution
from receiving any such payment if (but only
if) such agent does so pursuant to an agency
agreement under which the compensation to be
paid to the agent for his services for or in
connection with the billing or collection of
payments due such person or institution under
the plan is unrelated (directly or indirectly)
to the amount of such payments or the billings
therefor, and is not dependent upon the actual
collection of any such payment;
(C) in the case of services furnished (during
a period that does not exceed 14 continuous
days in the case of an informal reciprocal
arrangement or 90 continuous days (or such
longer period as the Secretary may provide) in
the case of an arrangement involving per diem
or other fee-for-time compensation) by, or
incident to the services of, one physician to
the patients of another physician who submits
the claim for such services, payment shall be
made to the physician submitting the claim (as
if the services were furnished by, or incident
to, the physician's services), but only if the
claim identifies (in a manner specified by the
Secretary) the physician who furnished the
services; and
(D) in the case of payment for a childhood
vaccine administered before October 1, 1994, to
individuals entitled to medical assistance
under the State plan, the State plan may make
payment directly to the manufacturer of the
vaccine under a voluntary replacement program
agreed to by the State pursuant to which the
manufacturer (i) supplies doses of the vaccine
to providers administering the vaccine, (ii)
periodically replaces the supply of the
vaccine, and (iii) charges the State the
manufacturer's price to the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention for the vaccine so
administered (which price includes a reasonable
amount to cover shipping and the handling of
returns);
(33) provide--
(A) that the State health agency, or other
appropriate State medical agency, shall be
responsible for establishing a plan, consistent
with regulations prescribed by the Secretary,
for the review by appropriate professional
health personnel of the appropriateness and
quality of care and services furnished to
recipients of medical assistance under the plan
in order to provide guidance with respect
thereto in the administration of the plan to
the State agency established or designated
pursuant to paragraph (5) and, where
applicable, to the State agency described in
the second sentence of this subsection; and
(B) that, except as provided in section
1919(g), the State or local agency utilized by
the Secretary for the purpose specified in the
first sentence of section 1864(a), or, if such
agency is not the State agency which is
responsible for licensing health institutions,
the State agency responsible for such
licensing, will perform for the State agency
administering or supervising the administration
of the plan approved under this title the
function of determining whether institutions
and agencies meet the requirements for
participation in the program under such plan,
except that, if the Secretary has cause to
question the adequacy of such determinations,
the Secretary is authorized to validate State
determinations and, on that basis, make
independent and binding determinations
concerning the extent to which individual
institutions and agencies meet the requirements
for participation;
(34) provide that in the case of any individual who
has been determined to be eligible for medical
assistance under the plan, such assistance will be made
available to him for care and services included under
the plan and furnished in or after the third month
before the month in which he made application (or
application was made on his behalf in the case of a
deceased individual) for such assistance if such
individual was (or upon application would have been)
eligible for such assistance at the time such care and
services were furnished;
(35) provide that any disclosing entity (as defined
in section 1124(a)(2)) receiving payments under such
plan complies with the requirements of section 1124;
(36) provide that within 90 days following the
completion of each survey of any health care facility,
laboratory, agency, clinic, or organization, by the
appropriate State agency described in paragraph (9),
such agency shall (in accordance with regulations of
the Secretary) make public in readily available form
and place the pertinent findings of each such survey
relating to the compliance of each such health care
facility, laboratory, clinic, agency, or organization
with (A) the statutory conditions of participation
imposed under this title, and (B) the major additional
conditions which the Secretary finds necessary in the
interest of health and safety of individuals who are
furnished care or services by any such facility,
laboratory, clinic, agency, or organization;
(37) provide for claims payment procedures which (A)
ensure that 90 per centum of claims for payment (for
which no further written information or substantiation
is required in order to make payment) made for services
covered under the plan and furnished by health care
practitioners through individual or group practices or
through shared health facilities are paid within 30
days of the date of receipt of such claims and that 99
per centum of such claims are paid within 90 days of
the date of receipt of such claims, and (B) provide for
procedures of prepayment and postpayment claims review,
including review of appropriate data with respect to
the recipient and provider of a service and the nature
of the service for which payment is claimed, to ensure
the proper and efficient payment of claims and
management of the program;
(38) require that an entity (other than an individual
practitioner or a group of practitioners) that
furnishes, or arranges for the furnishing of, items or
services under the plan, shall supply (within such
period as may be specified in regulations by the
Secretary or by the single State agency which
administers or supervises the administration of the
plan) upon request specifically addressed to such
entity by the Secretary or such State agency, the
information described in section 1128(b)(9);
(39) provide that the State agency shall exclude any
specified individual or entity from participation in
the program under the State plan for the period
specified by the Secretary, when required by him to do
so pursuant to section 1128 or section 1128A, terminate
the participation of any individual or entity in such
program if (subject to such exceptions as are permitted
with respect to exclusion under sections 1128(c)(3)(B)
and 1128(d)(3)(B)) participation of such individual or
entity is terminated under title XVIII, any other State
plan under this title (or waiver of the plan), or any
State child health plan under title XXI (or waiver of
the plan) and such termination is included by the
Secretary in any database or similar system developed
pursuant to section 6401(b)(2) of the Patient
Protection and Affordable Care Act, and provide that no
payment may be made under the plan with respect to any
item or service furnished by such individual or entity
during such period;
(40) require each health services facility or
organization which receives payments under the plan and
of a type for which a uniform reporting system has been
established under section 1121(a) to make reports to
the Secretary of information described in such section
in accordance with the uniform reporting system
(established under such section) for that type of
facility or organization;
(41) provide, in accordance with subsection (kk)(8)
(as applicable), that whenever a provider of services
or any other person is terminated, suspended, or
otherwise sanctioned or prohibited from participating
under the State plan, the State agency shall promptly
notify the Secretary and, in the case of a physician
and notwithstanding paragraph (7), the State medical
licensing board of such action;
(42) provide that--
(A) the records of any entity participating
in the plan and providing services reimbursable
on a cost-related basis will be audited as the
Secretary determines to be necessary to insure
that proper payments are made under the plan;
and
(B) not later than December 31, 2010, the
State shall--
(i) establish a program under which
the State contracts (consistent with
State law and in the same manner as the
Secretary enters into contracts with
recovery audit contractors under
section 1893(h), subject to such
exceptions or requirements as the
Secretary may require for purposes of
this title or a particular State) with
1 or more recovery audit contractors
for the purpose of identifying
underpayments and overpayments and
recouping overpayments under the State
plan and under any waiver of the State
plan with respect to all services for
which payment is made to any entity
under such plan or waiver; and
(ii) provide assurances satisfactory
to the Secretary that--
(I) under such contracts,
payment shall be made to such a
contractor only from amounts
recovered;
(II) from such amounts
recovered, payment--
(aa) shall be made on
a contingent basis for
collecting
overpayments; and
(bb) may be made in
such amounts as the
State may specify for
identifying
underpayments;
(III) the State has an
adequate process for entities
to appeal any adverse
determination made by such
contractors; and
(IV) such program is carried
out in accordance with such
requirements as the Secretary
shall specify, including--
(aa) for purposes of
section 1903(a)(7),
that amounts expended
by the State to carry
out the program shall
be considered amounts
expended as necessary
for the proper and
efficient
administration of the
State plan or a waiver
of the plan;
(bb) that section
1903(d) shall apply to
amounts recovered under
the program; and
(cc) that the State
and any such
contractors under
contract with the State
shall coordinate such
recovery audit efforts
with other contractors
or entities performing
audits of entities
receiving payments
under the State plan or
waiver in the State,
including efforts with
Federal and State law
enforcement with
respect to the
Department of Justice,
including the Federal
Bureau of
Investigations, the
Inspector General of
the Department of
Health and Human
Services, and the State
medicaid fraud control
unit; and
(43) provide for--
(A) informing all persons in the State who
are under the age of 21 and who have been
determined to be eligible for medical
assistance including services described in
section 1905(a)(4)(B), of the availability of
early and periodic screening, diagnostic, and
treatment services as described in section
1905(r) and the need for age-appropriate
immunizations against vaccine-preventable
diseases,
(B) providing or arranging for the provision
of such screening services in all cases where
they are requested,
(C) arranging for (directly or through
referral to appropriate agencies,
organizations, or individuals) corrective
treatment the need for which is disclosed by
such child health screening services, and
(D) reporting to the Secretary (in a uniform
form and manner established by the Secretary,
by age group and by basis of eligibility for
medical assistance, and by not later than April
1 after the end of each fiscal year, beginning
with fiscal year 1990) the following
information relating to early and periodic
screening, diagnostic, and treatment services
provided under the plan during each fiscal
year:
(i) the number of children provided
child health screening services,
(ii) the number of children referred
for corrective treatment (the need for
which is disclosed by such child health
screening services),
(iii) the number of children
receiving dental services, and other
information relating to the provision
of dental services to such children
described in section 2108(e) and
(iv) the State's results in attaining
the participation goals set for the
State under section 1905(r);
(44) in each case for which payment for inpatient
hospital services, services in an intermediate care
facility for the mentally retarded, or inpatient mental
hospital services is made under the State plan--
(A) a physician (or, in the case of skilled
nursing facility services or intermediate care
facility services, a physician, or a nurse
practitioner or clinical nurse specialist who
is not an employee of the facility but is
working in collaboration with a physician)
certifies at the time of admission, or, if
later, the time the individual applies for
medical assistance under the State plan (and a
physician, a physician assistant under the
supervision of a physician, or, in the case of
skilled nursing facility services or
intermediate care facility services, a
physician, or a nurse practitioner or clinical
nurse specialist who is not an employee of the
facility but is working in collaboration with a
physician, recertifies, where such services are
furnished over a period of time, in such cases,
at least as often as required under section
1903(g)(6) (or, in the case of services that
are services provided in an intermediate care
facility for the mentally retarded, every
year), and accompanied by such supporting
material, appropriate to the case involved, as
may be provided in regulations of the
Secretary), that such services are or were
required to be given on an inpatient basis
because the individual needs or needed such
services, and
(B) such services were furnished under a plan
established and periodically reviewed and
evaluated by a physician, or, in the case of
skilled nursing facility services or
intermediate care facility services, a
physician, or a nurse practitioner or clinical
nurse specialist who is not an employee of the
facility but is working in collaboration with a
physician;
(45) provide for mandatory assignment of rights of
payment for medical support and other medical care owed
to recipients, in accordance with section 1912;
(46)(A) provide that information is requested and
exchanged for purposes of income and eligibility
verification in accordance with a State system which
meets the requirements of section 1137 of this Act; and
(B) provide, with respect to an individual declaring
to be a citizen or national of the United States for
purposes of establishing eligibility under this title,
that the State shall satisfy the requirements of--
(i) section 1903(x); or
(ii) subsection (ee);
(47) provide--
(A) at the option of the State, for making
ambulatory prenatal care available to pregnant
women during a presumptive eligibility period
in accordance with section 1920 and provide for
making medical assistance for items and
services described in subsection (a) of section
1920A available to children during a
presumptive eligibility period in accordance
with such section and provide for making
medical assistance available to individuals
described in subsection (a) of section 1920B
during a presumptive eligibility period in
accordance with such section and provide for
making medical assistance available to
individuals described in subsection (a) of
section 1920C during a presumptive eligibility
period in accordance with such section; and
(B) that any hospital that is a participating
provider under the State plan may elect to be a
qualified entity for purposes of determining,
on the basis of preliminary information,
whether any individual is eligible for medical
assistance under the State plan or under a
waiver of the plan for purposes of providing
the individual with medical assistance during a
presumptive eligibility period, in the same
manner, and subject to the same requirements,
as apply to the State options with respect to
populations described in section 1920, 1920A,
1920B, or 1920C (but without regard to whether
the State has elected to provide for a
presumptive eligibility period under any such
sections), subject to such guidance as the
Secretary shall establish;
(48) provide a method of making cards evidencing
eligibility for medical assistance available to an
eligible individual who does not reside in a permanent
dwelling or does not have a fixed home or mailing
address;
(49) provide that the State will provide information
and access to certain information respecting sanctions
taken against health care practitioners and providers
by State licensing authorities in accordance with
section 1921;
(50) provide, in accordance with subsection (q), for
a monthly personal needs allowance for certain
institutionalized individuals and couples;
(51) meet the requirements of section 1924 (relating
to protection of community spouses);
(52) meet the requirements of section 1925 (relating
to extension of eligibility for medical assistance);
(53) provide--
(A) for notifying in a timely manner all
individuals in the State who are determined to
be eligible for medical assistance and who are
pregnant women, breastfeeding or postpartum
women (as defined in section 17 of the Child
Nutrition Act of 1966), or children below the
age of 5, of the availability of benefits
furnished by the special supplemental nutrition
program under such section, and
(B) for referring any such individual to the
State agency responsible for administering such
program;
(54) in the case of a State plan that provides
medical assistance for covered outpatient drugs (as
defined in section 1927(k)), comply with the applicable
requirements of section 1927;
(55) provide for receipt and initial processing of
applications of individuals for medical assistance
under subsection (a)(10)(A)(i)(IV), (a)(10)(A)(i)(VI),
(a)(10)(A)(i)(VII), or (a)(10)(A)(ii)(IX)--
(A) at locations which are other than those
used for the receipt and processing of
applications for aid under part A of title IV
and which include facilities defined as
disproportionate share hospitals under section
1923(a)(1)(A) and Federally-qualified health
centers described in section 1905(1)(2)(B), and
(B) using applications which are other than
those used for applications for aid under such
part;
(56) provide, in accordance with subsection (s), for
adjusted payments for certain inpatient hospital
services;
(57) provide that each hospital, nursing facility,
provider of home health care or personal care services,
hospice program, or medicaid managed care organization
(as defined in section 1903(m)(1)(A)) receiving funds
under the plan shall comply with the requirements of
subsection (w);
(58) provide that the State, acting through a State
agency, association, or other private nonprofit entity,
develop a written description of the law of the State
(whether statutory or as recognized by the courts of
the State) concerning advance directives that would be
distributed by providers or organizations under the
requirements of subsection (w);
(59) maintain a list (updated not less often than
monthly, and containing each physician's unique
identifier provided under the system established under
subsection (x)) of all physicians who are certified to
participate under the State plan;
(60) provide that the State agency shall provide
assurances satisfactory to the Secretary that the State
has in effect the laws relating to medical child
support required under section 1908A;
(61) provide that the State must demonstrate that it
operates a medicaid fraud and abuse control unit
described in section 1903(q) that effectively carries
out the functions and requirements described in such
section, as determined in accordance with standards
established by the Secretary, unless the State
demonstrates to the satisfaction of the Secretary that
the effective operation of such a unit in the State
would not be cost-effective because minimal fraud
exists in connection with the provision of covered
services to eligible individuals under the State plan,
and that beneficiaries under the plan will be protected
from abuse and neglect in connection with the provision
of medical assistance under the plan without the
existence of such a unit;
(62) provide for a program for the distribution of
pediatric vaccines to program-registered providers for
the immunization of vaccine-eligible children in
accordance with section 1928;
(63) provide for administration and determinations of
eligibility with respect to individuals who are (or
seek to be) eligible for medical assistance based on
the application of section 1931;
(64) provide, not later than 1 year after the date of
the enactment of this paragraph, a mechanism to receive
reports from beneficiaries and others and compile data
concerning alleged instances of waste, fraud, and abuse
relating to the operation of this title;
(65) provide that the State shall issue provider
numbers for all suppliers of medical assistance
consisting of durable medical equipment, as defined in
section 1861(n), and the State shall not issue or renew
such a supplier number for any such supplier unless--
(A)(i) full and complete information as to
the identity of each person with an ownership
or control interest (as defined in section
1124(a)(3)) in the supplier or in any
subcontractor (as defined by the Secretary in
regulations) in which the supplier directly or
indirectly has a 5 percent or more ownership
interest; and
(ii) to the extent determined to be feasible
under regulations of the Secretary, the name of
any disclosing entity (as defined in section
1124(a)(2)) with respect to which a person with
such an ownership or control interest in the
supplier is a person with such an ownership or
control interest in the disclosing entity; and
(B) a surety bond in a form specified by the
Secretary under section 1834(a)(16)(B) and in
an amount that is not less than $50,000 or such
comparable surety bond as the Secretary may
permit under the second sentence of such
section;
(66) provide for making eligibility determinations
under section 1935(a);
(67) provide, with respect to services covered under
the State plan (but not under title XVIII) that are
furnished to a PACE program eligible individual
enrolled with a PACE provider by a provider
participating under the State plan that does not have a
contract or other agreement with the PACE provider that
establishes payment amounts for such services, that
such participating provider may not require the PACE
provider to pay the participating provider an amount
greater than the amount that would otherwise be payable
for the service to the participating provider under the
State plan for the State where the PACE provider is
located (in accordance with regulations issued by the
Secretary);
(68) provide that any entity that receives or makes
annual payments under the State plan of at least
$5,000,000, as a condition of receiving such payments,
shall--
(A) establish written policies for all
employees of the entity (including management),
and of any contractor or agent of the entity,
that provide detailed information about the
False Claims Act established under sections
3729 through 3733 of title 31, United States
Code, administrative remedies for false claims
and statements established under chapter 38 of
title 31, United States Code, any State laws
pertaining to civil or criminal penalties for
false claims and statements, and whistleblower
protections under such laws, with respect to
the role of such laws in preventing and
detecting fraud, waste, and abuse in Federal
health care programs (as defined in section
1128B(f));
(B) include as part of such written policies,
detailed provisions regarding the entity's
policies and procedures for detecting and
preventing fraud, waste, and abuse; and
(C) include in any employee handbook for the
entity, a specific discussion of the laws
described in subparagraph (A), the rights of
employees to be protected as whistleblowers,
and the entity's policies and procedures for
detecting and preventing fraud, waste, and
abuse;
(69) provide that the State must comply with any
requirements determined by the Secretary to be
necessary for carrying out the Medicaid Integrity
Program established under section 1936;
(70) at the option of the State and notwithstanding
paragraphs (1), (10)(B), and (23), provide for the
establishment of a non-emergency medical transportation
brokerage program in order to more cost-effectively
provide transportation for individuals eligible for
medical assistance under the State plan who need access
to medical care or services and have no other means of
transportation which--
(A) may include a wheelchair van, taxi,
stretcher car, bus passes and tickets, secured
transportation, and such other transportation
as the Secretary determines appropriate; and
(B) may be conducted under contract with a
broker who--
(i) is selected through a competitive
bidding process based on the State's
evaluation of the broker's experience,
performance, references, resources,
qualifications, and costs;
(ii) has oversight procedures to
monitor beneficiary access and
complaints and ensure that transport
personnel are licensed, qualified,
competent, and courteous;
(iii) is subject to regular auditing
and oversight by the State in order to
ensure the quality of the
transportation services provided and
the adequacy of beneficiary access to
medical care and services; and
(iv) complies with such requirements
related to prohibitions on referrals
and conflict of interest as the
Secretary shall establish (based on the
prohibitions on physician referrals
under section 1877 and such other
prohibitions and requirements as the
Secretary determines to be
appropriate);
(71) provide that the State will implement an asset
verification program as required under section 1940;
(72) provide that the State will not prevent a
Federally-qualified health center from entering into
contractual relationships with private practice dental
providers in the provision of Federally-qualified
health center services;
(73) in the case of any State in which 1 or more
Indian Health Programs or Urban Indian Organizations
furnishes health care services, provide for a process
under which the State seeks advice on a regular,
ongoing basis from designees of such Indian Health
Programs and Urban Indian Organizations on matters
relating to the application of this title that are
likely to have a direct effect on such Indian Health
Programs and Urban Indian Organizations and that--
(A) shall include solicitation of advice
prior to submission of any plan amendments,
waiver requests, and proposals for
demonstration projects likely to have a direct
effect on Indians, Indian Health Programs, or
Urban Indian Organizations; and
(B) may include appointment of an advisory
committee and of a designee of such Indian
Health Programs and Urban Indian Organizations
to the medical care advisory committee advising
the State on its State plan under this title;
(74) provide for maintenance of effort under the
State plan or under any waiver of the plan in
accordance with subsection (gg); and
(75) provide that, beginning January 2015, and
annually thereafter, the State shall submit a report to
the Secretary that contains--
(A) the total number of enrolled and newly
enrolled individuals in the State plan or under
a waiver of the plan for the fiscal year ending
on September 30 of the preceding calendar year,
disaggregated by population, including
children, parents, nonpregnant childless
adults, disabled individuals, elderly
individuals, and such other categories or sub-
categories of individuals eligible for medical
assistance under the State plan or under a
waiver of the plan as the Secretary may
require;
(B) a description, which may be specified by
population, of the outreach and enrollment
processes used by the State during such fiscal
year; and
(C) any other data reporting determined
necessary by the Secretary to monitor
enrollment and retention of individuals
eligible for medical assistance under the State
plan or under a waiver of the plan;
(76) provide that any data collected under the State
plan meets the requirements of section 3101 of the
Public Health Service Act;
(77) provide that the State shall comply with
provider and supplier screening, oversight, and
reporting requirements in accordance with subsection
(kk);
(78) provide that, not later than January 1, 2017, in
the case of a State that pursuant to its State plan or
waiver of the plan for medical assistance pays for
medical assistance on a fee-for-service basis, the
State shall require each provider furnishing items and
services to, or ordering, prescribing, referring, or
certifying eligibility for, services for individuals
eligible to receive medical assistance under such plan
to enroll with the State agency and provide to the
State agency the provider's identifying information,
including the name, specialty, date of birth, Social
Security number, national provider identifier (if
applicable), Federal taxpayer identification number,
and the State license or certification number of the
provider (if applicable);
(79) provide that any agent, clearinghouse, or other
alternate payee (as defined by the Secretary) that
submits claims on behalf of a health care provider must
register with the State and the Secretary in a form and
manner specified by the Secretary;
(80) provide that the State shall not provide any
payments for items or services provided under the State
plan or under a waiver to any financial institution or
entity located outside of the United States;
(81) provide for implementation of the payment models
specified by the Secretary under section 1115A(c) for
implementation on a nationwide basis unless the State
demonstrates to the satisfaction of the Secretary that
implementation would not be administratively feasible
or appropriate to the health care delivery system of
the State;
(82) provide that the State agency responsible for
administering the State plan under this title provides
assurances to the Secretary that the State agency is in
compliance with subparagraphs (A), (B), and (C) of
section 1128K(b)(2); and
(83) provide that, not later than January 1, 2017, in
the case of a State plan (or waiver of the plan) that
provides medical assistance on a fee-for-service basis
or through a primary care case-management system
described in section 1915(b)(1) (other than a primary
care case management entity (as defined by the
Secretary)), the State shall publish (and update on at
least an annual basis) on the public website of the
State agency administering the State plan, a directory
of the physicians described in subsection (mm) and, at
State option, other providers described in such
subsection that--
(A) includes--
(i) with respect to each such
physician or provider--
(I) the name of the physician
or provider;
(II) the specialty of the
physician or provider;
(III) the address at which
the physician or provider
provides services; and
(IV) the telephone number of
the physician or provider; and
(ii) with respect to any such
physician or provider participating in
such a primary care case-management
system, information regarding--
(I) whether the physician or
provider is accepting as new
patients individuals who
receive medical assistance
under this title; and
(II) the physician's or
provider's cultural and
linguistic capabilities,
including the languages spoken
by the physician or provider or
by the skilled medical
interpreter providing
interpretation services at the
physician's or provider's
office; and
(B) may include, at State option, with
respect to each such physician or provider--
(i) the Internet website of such
physician or provider; or
(ii) whether the physician or
provider is accepting as new patients
individuals who receive medical
assistance under this title.
Notwithstanding paragraph (5), if on January 1, 1965, and on
the date on which a State submits its plan for approval under
this title, the State agency which administered or supervised
the administration of the plan of such State approved under
title X (or title XVI, insofar as it relates to the blind) was
different from the State agency which administered or
supervised the administration of the State plan approved under
title I (or title XVI, insofar as it relates to the aged), the
State agency which administered or supervised the
administration of such plan approved under title X (or title
XVI, insofar as it relates to the blind) may be designated to
administer or supervise the administration of the portion of
the State plan for medical assistance which relates to blind
individuals and a different State agency may be established or
designated to administer or supervise the administration of the
rest of the State plan for medical assistance; and in such case
the part of the plan which each such agency administers, or the
administration of which each such agency supervises, shall be
regarded as a separate plan for purposes of this title (except
for purposes of paragraph (10)). The provisions of paragraphs
(9)(A), (31), and (33) and of section 1903(i)(4) shall not
apply to a religious nonmedical health care institution (as
defined in section 1861(ss)(1)).
For purposes of paragraph (10) any individual who, for the
month of August 1972, was eligible for or receiving aid or
assistance under a State plan approved under title I, X, XIV,
or XVI, or part A of title IV and who for such month was
entitled to monthly insurance benefits under title II shall for
purposes of this title only be deemed to be eligible for
financial aid or assistance for any month thereafter if such
individual would have been eligible for financial aid or
assistance for such month had the increase in monthly insurance
benefits under title II resulting from enactment of Public Law
92-336 not been applicable to such individual.
The requirement of clause (A) of paragraph (37) with respect to
a State plan may be waived by the Secretary if he finds that
the State has exercised good faith in trying to meet such
requirement. For purposes of this title, any child who meets
the requirements of paragraph (1) or (2) of section 473(b)
shall be deemed to be a dependent child as defined in section
406 and shall be deemed to be a recipient of aid to families
with dependent children under part A of title IV in the State
where such child resides. Notwithstanding paragraph (10)(B) or
any other provision of this subsection, a State plan shall
provide medical assistance with respect to an alien who is not
lawfully admitted for permanent residence or otherwise
permanently residing in the United States under color of law
only in accordance with section 1903(v).
(b) The Secretary shall approve any plan which fulfills the
conditions specified in subsection (a) of this section, except
that he shall not approve any plan which imposes, as a
condition of eligibility for medical assistance under the
plan--
(1) an age requirement of more than 65 years; or
(2) any residence requirement which excludes any
individual who resides in the State, regardless of
whether or not the residence is maintained permanently
or at a fixed address; or
(3) any citizenship requirement which excludes any
citizen of the United States.
(c) Notwithstanding subsection (b), the Secretary shall not
approve any State plan for medical assistance if the State
requires individuals described in subsection (l)(1) to apply
for assistance under the State program funded under part A of
title IV as a condition of applying for or receiving medical
assistance under this title.
(d) If a State contracts with an entity which meets the
requirements of section 1152, as determined by the Secretary,
or a utilization and quality control peer review organization
having a contract with the Secretary under part B of title XI
for the performance of medical or utilization review functions
(including quality review functions described in subsection
(a)(30)(C)) required under this title of a State plan with
respect to specific services or providers (or services or
providers in a geographic area of the State), such requirements
shall be deemed to be met for those services or providers (or
services or providers in that area) by delegation to such an
entity or organization under the contract of the State's
authority to conduct such review activities if the contract
provides for the performance of activities not inconsistent
with part B of title XI and provides for such assurances of
satisfactory performance by such an entity or organization as
the Secretary may prescribe.
(e)(1) Beginning April 1, 1990, for provisions relating to
the extension of eligibility for medical assistance for certain
families who have received aid pursuant to a State plan
approved under part A of title IV and have earned income, see
section 1925.
(2)(A) In the case of an individual who is enrolled with a
medicaid managed care organization (as defined in section
1903(m)(1)(A)), with a primary care case manager (as defined in
section 1905(t)), or with an eligible organization with a
contract under section 1876 and who would (but for this
paragraph) lose eligibility for benefits under this title
before the end of the minimum enrollment period (defined in
subparagraph (B)), the State plan may provide, notwithstanding
any other provision of this title, that the individual shall be
deemed to continue to be eligible for such benefits until the
end of such minimum period, but, except for benefits furnished
under section 1905(a)(4)(C), only with respect to such benefits
provided to the individual as an enrollee of such organization
or entity or by or through the case manager.
(B) For purposes of subparagraph (A), the term ``minimum
enrollment period'' means, with respect to an individual's
enrollment with an organization or entity under a State plan, a
period, established by the State, of not more than six months
beginning on the date the individual's enrollment with the
organization or entity becomes effective.
(3) At the option of the State, any individual who--
(A) is 18 years of age or younger and qualifies as a
disabled individual under section 1614(a);
(B) with respect to whom there has been a
determination by the State that--
(i) the individual requires a level of care
provided in a hospital, nursing facility, or
intermediate care facility for the mentally
retarded,
(ii) it is appropriate to provide such care
for the individual outside such an institution,
and
(iii) the estimated amount which would be
expended for medical assistance for the
individual for such care outside an institution
is not greater than the estimated amount which
would otherwise be expended for medical
assistance for the individual within an
appropriate institution; and
(C) if the individual were in a medical institution,
would be eligible for medical assistance under the
State plan under this title,
shall be deemed, for purposes of this title only, to be
an individual with respect to whom a supplemental
security income payment, or State supplemental payment,
respectively, is being paid under title XVI.
(4) A child born to a woman eligible for and receiving
medical assistance under a State plan on the date of the
child's birth shall be deemed to have applied for medical
assistance and to have been found eligible for such assistance
under such plan on the date of such birth and to remain
eligible for such assistance for a period of one year. During
the period in which a child is deemed under the preceding
sentence to be eligible for medical assistance, the medical
assistance eligibility identification number of the mother
shall also serve as the identification number of the child, and
all claims shall be submitted and paid under such number
(unless the State issues a separate identification number for
the child before such period expires). Notwithstanding the
preceding sentence, in the case of a child who is born in the
United States to an alien mother for whom medical assistance
for the delivery of the child is made available pursuant to
section 1903(v), the State immediately shall issue a separate
identification number for the child upon notification by the
facility at which such delivery occurred of the child's birth.
(5) A woman who, while pregnant, is eligible for, has applied
for, and has received medical assistance under the State plan,
shall continue to be eligible under the plan, as though she
were pregnant, for all pregnancy-related and postpartum medical
assistance under the plan, through the end of the month in
which the 60-day period (beginning on the last day of her
pregnancy) ends.
(6) In the case of a pregnant woman described in subsection
(a)(10) who, because of a change in income of the family of
which she is a member, would not otherwise continue to be
described in such subsection, the woman shall be deemed to
continue to be an individual described in subsection
(a)(10)(A)(i)(IV) and subsection (l)(1)(A) without regard to
such change of income through the end of the month in which the
60-day period (beginning on the last day of her pregnancy)
ends. The preceding sentence shall not apply in the case of a
woman who has been provided ambulatory prenatal care pursuant
to section 1920 during a presumptive eligibility period and is
then, in accordance with such section, determined to be
ineligible for medical assistance under the State plan.
(7) In the case of an infant or child described in
subparagraph (B), (C), or (D) of subsection (l)(1) or paragraph
(2) of section 1905(n)--
(A) who is receiving inpatient services for which
medical assistance is provided on the date the infant
or child attains the maximum age with respect to which
coverage is provided under the State plan for such
individuals, and
(B) who, but for attaining such age, would remain
eligible for medical assistance under such subsection,
the infant or child shall continue to be treated as an
individual described in such respective provision until the end
of the stay for which the inpatient services are furnished.
(8) If an individual is determined to be a qualified medicare
beneficiary (as defined in section 1905(p)(1)), such
determination shall apply to services furnished after the end
of the month in which the determination first occurs. For
purposes of payment to a State under section 1903(a), such
determination shall be considered to be valid for an individual
for a period of 12 months, except that a State may provide for
such determinations more frequently, but not more frequently
than once every 6 months for an individual.
(9)(A) At the option of the State, the plan may include as
medical assistance respiratory care services for any individual
who--
(i) is medically dependent on a ventilator for life
support at least six hours per day;
(ii) has been so dependent for at least 30
consecutive days (or the maximum number of days
authorized under the State plan, whichever is less) as
an inpatient;
(iii) but for the availability of respiratory care
services, would require respiratory care as an
inpatient in a hospital, nursing facility, or
intermediate care facility for the mentally retarded
and would be eligible to have payment made for such
inpatient care under the State plan;
(iv) has adequate social support services to be cared
for at home; and
(v) wishes to be cared for at home.
(B) The requirements of subparagraph (A)(ii) may be satisfied
by a continuous stay in one or more hospitals, nursing
facilities, or intermediate care facilities for the mentally
retarded.
(C) For purposes of this paragraph, respiratory care services
means services provided on a part-time basis in the home of the
individual by a respiratory therapist or other health care
professional trained in respiratory therapy (as determined by
the State), payment for which is not otherwise included within
other items and services furnished to such individual as
medical assistance under the plan.
(10)(A) The fact that an individual, child, or pregnant woman
may be denied aid under part A of title IV pursuant to section
402(a)(43) shall not be construed as denying (or permitting a
State to deny) medical assistance under this title to such
individual, child, or woman who is eligible for assistance
under this title on a basis other than the receipt of aid under
such part.
(B) If an individual, child, or pregnant woman is receiving
aid under part A of title IV and such aid is terminated
pursuant to section 402(a)(43), the State may not discontinue
medical assistance under this title for the individual, child,
or woman until the State has determined that the individual,
child, or woman is not eligible for assistance under this title
on a basis other than the receipt of aid under such part.
(11)(A) In the case of an individual who is enrolled with a
group health plan under section 1906 and who would (but for
this paragraph) lose eligibility for benefits under this title
before the end of the minimum enrollment period (defined in
subparagraph (B)), the State plan may provide, notwithstanding
any other provision of this title, that the individual shall be
deemed to continue to be eligible for such benefits until the
end of such minimum period, but only with respect to such
benefits provided to the individual as an enrollee of such
plan.
(B) For purposes of subparagraph (A), the term ``minimum
enrollment period'' means, with respect to an individual's
enrollment with a group health plan, a period established by
the State, of not more than 6 months beginning on the date the
individual's enrollment under the plan becomes effective.
(12) At the option of the State, the plan may provide that an
individual who is under an age specified by the State (not to
exceed 19 years of age) and who is determined to be eligible
for benefits under a State plan approved under this title under
subsection (a)(10)(A) shall remain eligible for those benefits
until the earlier of--
(A) the end of a period (not to exceed 12 months)
following the determination; or
(B) the time that the individual exceeds that age.
(13) Express Lane Option.--
(A) In general.--
(i) Option to use a finding from an express
lane agency.--At the option of the State, the
State plan may provide that in determining
eligibility under this title for a child (as
defined in subparagraph (G)), the State may
rely on a finding made within a reasonable
period (as determined by the State) from an
Express Lane agency (as defined in subparagraph
(F)) when it determines whether a child
satisfies one or more components of eligibility
for medical assistance under this title. The
State may rely on a finding from an Express
Lane agency notwithstanding sections
1902(a)(46)(B) and 1137(d) or any differences
in budget unit, disregard, deeming or other
methodology, if the following requirements are
met:
(I) Prohibition on determining
children ineligible for coverage.--If a
finding from an Express Lane agency
would result in a determination that a
child does not satisfy an eligibility
requirement for medical assistance
under this title and for child health
assistance under title XXI, the State
shall determine eligibility for
assistance using its regular
procedures.
(II) Notice requirement.--For any
child who is found eligible for medical
assistance under the State plan under
this title or child health assistance
under title XXI and who is subject to
premiums based on an Express Lane
agency's finding of such child's income
level, the State shall provide notice
that the child may qualify for lower
premium payments if evaluated by the
State using its regular policies and of
the procedures for requesting such an
evaluation.
(III) Compliance with screen and
enroll requirement.--The State shall
satisfy the requirements under
subparagraphs (A) and (B) of section
2102(b)(3) (relating to screen and
enroll) before enrolling a child in
child health assistance under title
XXI. At its option, the State may
fulfill such requirements in accordance
with either option provided under
subparagraph (C) of this paragraph.
(IV) Verification of citizenship or
nationality status.--The State shall
satisfy the requirements of section
1902(a)(46)(B) or 2105(c)(9), as
applicable for verifications of
citizenship or nationality status.
(V) Coding.--The State meets the
requirements of subparagraph (E).
(ii) Option to apply to renewals and
redeterminations.--The State may apply the
provisions of this paragraph when conducting
initial determinations of eligibility,
redeterminations of eligibility, or both, as
described in the State plan.
(B) Rules of construction.--Nothing in this paragraph
shall be construed--
(i) to limit or prohibit a State from taking
any actions otherwise permitted under this
title or title XXI in determining eligibility
for or enrolling children into medical
assistance under this title or child health
assistance under title XXI; or
(ii) to modify the limitations in section
1902(a)(5) concerning the agencies that may
make a determination of eligibility for medical
assistance under this title.
(C) Options for satisfying the screen and enroll
requirement.--
(i) In general.--With respect to a child
whose eligibility for medical assistance under
this title or for child health assistance under
title XXI has been evaluated by a State agency
using an income finding from an Express Lane
agency, a State may carry out its duties under
subparagraphs (A) and (B) of section 2102(b)(3)
(relating to screen and enroll) in accordance
with either clause (ii) or clause (iii).
(ii) Establishing a screening threshold.--
(I) In general.--Under this clause,
the State establishes a screening
threshold set as a percentage of the
Federal poverty level that exceeds the
highest income threshold applicable
under this title to the child by a
minimum of 30 percentage points or, at
State option, a higher number of
percentage points that reflects the
value (as determined by the State and
described in the State plan) of any
differences between income
methodologies used by the program
administered by the Express Lane agency
and the methodologies used by the State
in determining eligibility for medical
assistance under this title.
(II) Children with income not above
threshold.--If the income of a child
does not exceed the screening
threshold, the child is deemed to
satisfy the income eligibility criteria
for medical assistance under this title
regardless of whether such child would
otherwise satisfy such criteria.
(III) Children with income above
threshold.--If the income of a child
exceeds the screening threshold, the
child shall be considered to have an
income above the Medicaid applicable
income level described in section
2110(b)(4) and to satisfy the
requirement under section 2110(b)(1)(C)
(relating to the requirement that CHIP
matching funds be used only for
children not eligible for Medicaid). If
such a child is enrolled in child
health assistance under title XXI, the
State shall provide the parent,
guardian, or custodial relative with
the following:
(aa) Notice that the child
may be eligible to receive
medical assistance under the
State plan under this title if
evaluated for such assistance
under the State's regular
procedures and notice of the
process through which a parent,
guardian, or custodial relative
can request that the State
evaluate the child's
eligibility for medical
assistance under this title
using such regular procedures.
(bb) A description of
differences between the medical
assistance provided under this
title and child health
assistance under title XXI,
including differences in cost-
sharing requirements and
covered benefits.
(iii) Temporary enrollment in chip pending
screen and enroll.--
(I) In general.--Under this clause, a
State enrolls a child in child health
assistance under title XXI for a
temporary period if the child appears
eligible for such assistance based on
an income finding by an Express Lane
agency.
(II) Determination of eligibility.--
During such temporary enrollment
period, the State shall determine the
child's eligibility for child health
assistance under title XXI or for
medical assistance under this title in
accordance with this clause.
(III) Prompt follow up.--In making
such a determination, the State shall
take prompt action to determine whether
the child should be enrolled in medical
assistance under this title or child
health assistance under title XXI
pursuant to subparagraphs (A) and (B)
of section 2102(b)(3) (relating to
screen and enroll).
(IV) Requirement for simplified
determination.--In making such a
determination, the State shall use
procedures that, to the maximum
feasible extent, reduce the burden
imposed on the individual of such
determination. Such procedures may not
require the child's parent, guardian,
or custodial relative to provide or
verify information that already has
been provided to the State agency by an
Express Lane agency or another source
of information unless the State agency
has reason to believe the information
is erroneous.
(V) Availability of chip matching
funds during temporary enrollment
period.--Medical assistance for items
and services that are provided to a
child enrolled in title XXI during a
temporary enrollment period under this
clause shall be treated as child health
assistance under such title.
(D) Option for automatic enrollment.--
(i) In general.--The State may initiate and
determine eligibility for medical assistance
under the State Medicaid plan or for child
health assistance under the State CHIP plan
without a program application from, or on
behalf of, the child based on data obtained
from sources other than the child (or the
child's family), but a child can only be
automatically enrolled in the State Medicaid
plan or the State CHIP plan if the child or the
family affirmatively consents to being enrolled
through affirmation in writing, by telephone,
orally, through electronic signature, or
through any other means specified by the
Secretary or by signature on an Express Lane
agency application, if the requirement of
clause (ii) is met.
(ii) Information requirement.--The
requirement of this clause is that the State
informs the parent, guardian, or custodial
relative of the child of the services that will
be covered, appropriate methods for using such
services, premium or other cost sharing charges
(if any) that apply, medical support
obligations (under section 1912(a)) created by
enrollment (if applicable), and the actions the
parent, guardian, or relative must take to
maintain enrollment and renew coverage.
(E) Coding; application to enrollment error rates.--
(i) In general.--For purposes of subparagraph
(A)(iv), the requirement of this subparagraph
for a State is that the State agrees to--
(I) assign such codes as the
Secretary shall require to the children
who are enrolled in the State Medicaid
plan or the State CHIP plan through
reliance on a finding made by an
Express Lane agency for the duration of
the State's election under this
paragraph;
(II) annually provide the Secretary
with a statistically valid sample (that
is approved by Secretary) of the
children enrolled in such plans through
reliance on such a finding by
conducting a full Medicaid eligibility
review of the children identified for
such sample for purposes of determining
an eligibility error rate (as described
in clause (iv)) with respect to the
enrollment of such children (and shall
not include such children in any data
or samples used for purposes of
complying with a Medicaid Eligibility
Quality Control (MEQC) review or a
payment error rate measurement (PERM)
requirement);
(III) submit the error rate
determined under subclause (II) to the
Secretary;
(IV) if such error rate exceeds 3
percent for either of the first 2
fiscal years in which the State elects
to apply this paragraph, demonstrate to
the satisfaction of the Secretary the
specific corrective actions implemented
by the State to improve upon such error
rate; and
(V) if such error rate exceeds 3
percent for any fiscal year in which
the State elects to apply this
paragraph, a reduction in the amount
otherwise payable to the State under
section 1903(a) for quarters for that
fiscal year, equal to the total amount
of erroneous excess payments determined
for the fiscal year only with respect
to the children included in the sample
for the fiscal year that are in excess
of a 3 percent error rate with respect
to such children.
(ii) No punitive action based on error
rate.--The Secretary shall not apply the error
rate derived from the sample under clause (i)
to the entire population of children enrolled
in the State Medicaid plan or the State CHIP
plan through reliance on a finding made by an
Express Lane agency, or to the population of
children enrolled in such plans on the basis of
the State's regular procedures for determining
eligibility, or penalize the State on the basis
of such error rate in any manner other than the
reduction of payments provided for under clause
(i)(V).
(iii) Rule of construction.--Nothing in this
paragraph shall be construed as relieving a
State that elects to apply this paragraph from
being subject to a penalty under section
1903(u), for payments made under the State
Medicaid plan with respect to ineligible
individuals and families that are determined to
exceed the error rate permitted under that
section (as determined without regard to the
error rate determined under clause (i)(II)).
(iv) Error rate defined.--In this
subparagraph, the term ``error rate'' means the
rate of erroneous excess payments for medical
assistance (as defined in section
1903(u)(1)(D)) for the period involved, except
that such payments shall be limited to
individuals for which eligibility
determinations are made under this paragraph
and except that in applying this paragraph
under title XXI, there shall be substituted for
references to provisions of this title
corresponding provisions within title XXI.
(F) Express lane agency.--
(i) In general.--In this paragraph, the term
``Express Lane agency'' means a public agency
that--
(I) is determined by the State
Medicaid agency or the State CHIP
agency (as applicable) to be capable of
making the determinations of one or
more eligibility requirements described
in subparagraph (A)(i);
(II) is identified in the State
Medicaid plan or the State CHIP plan;
and
(III) notifies the child's family--
(aa) of the information which
shall be disclosed in
accordance with this paragraph;
(bb) that the information
disclosed will be used solely
for purposes of determining
eligibility for medical
assistance under the State
Medicaid plan or for child
health assistance under the
State CHIP plan; and
(cc) that the family may
elect to not have the
information disclosed for such
purposes; and
(IV) enters into, or is subject to,
an interagency agreement to limit the
disclosure and use of the information
disclosed.
(ii) Inclusion of specific public agencies
and indian tribes and tribal organizations.--
Such term includes the following:
(I) A public agency that determines
eligibility for assistance under any of
the following:
(aa) The temporary assistance
for needy families program
funded under part A of title
IV.
(bb) A State program funded
under part D of title IV.
(cc) The State Medicaid plan.
(dd) The State CHIP plan.
(ee) The Food and Nutrition
Act of 2008 (7 U.S.C. 2011 et
seq.).
(ff) The Head Start Act (42
U.S.C. 9801 et seq.).
(gg) The Richard B. Russell
National School Lunch Act (42
U.S.C. 1751 et seq.).
(hh) The Child Nutrition Act
of 1966 (42 U.S.C. 1771 et
seq.).
(ii) The Child Care and
Development Block Grant Act of
1990 (42 U.S.C. 9858 et seq.).
(jj) The Stewart B. McKinney
Homeless Assistance Act (42
U.S.C. 11301 et seq.).
(kk) The United States
Housing Act of 1937 (42 U.S.C.
1437 et seq.).
(ll) The Native American
Housing Assistance and Self-
Determination Act of 1996 (25
U.S.C. 4101 et seq.).
(II) A State-specified governmental
agency that has fiscal liability or
legal responsibility for the accuracy
of the eligibility determination
findings relied on by the State.
(III) A public agency that is subject
to an interagency agreement limiting
the disclosure and use of the
information disclosed for purposes of
determining eligibility under the State
Medicaid plan or the State CHIP plan.
(IV) The Indian Health Service, an
Indian Tribe, Tribal Organization, or
Urban Indian Organization (as defined
in section 1139(c)).
(iii) Exclusions.--Such term does not include
an agency that determines eligibility for a
program established under the Social Services
Block Grant established under title XX or a
private, for-profit organization.
(iv) Rules of construction.--Nothing in this
paragraph shall be construed as--
(I) exempting a State Medicaid agency
from complying with the requirements of
section 1902(a)(4) relating to merit-
based personnel standards for employees
of the State Medicaid agency and
safeguards against conflicts of
interest); or
(II) authorizing a State Medicaid
agency that elects to use Express Lane
agencies under this subparagraph to use
the Express Lane option to avoid
complying with such requirements for
purposes of making eligibility
determinations under the State Medicaid
plan.
(v) Additional definitions.--In this
paragraph:
(I) State.--The term ``State'' means
1 of the 50 States or the District of
Columbia.
(II) State chip agency.--The term
``State CHIP agency'' means the State
agency responsible for administering
the State CHIP plan.
(III) State chip plan.--The term
``State CHIP plan'' means the State
child health plan established under
title XXI and includes any waiver of
such plan.
(IV) State medicaid agency.--The term
``State Medicaid agency'' means the
State agency responsible for
administering the State Medicaid plan.
(V) State medicaid plan.--The term
``State Medicaid plan'' means the State
plan established under title XIX and
includes any waiver of such plan.
(G) Child defined.--For purposes of this paragraph,
the term ``child'' means an individual under 19 years
of age, or, at the option of a State, such higher age,
not to exceed 21 years of age, as the State may elect.
(H) State option to rely on state income tax data or
return.--At the option of the State, a finding from an
Express Lane agency may include gross income or
adjusted gross income shown by State income tax records
or returns.
(I) Application.--This paragraph shall not apply with
respect to eligibility determinations made after
September 30, 2027.
(14) Income determined using modified adjusted gross
income.--
(A) In general.--Notwithstanding subsection
(r) or any other provision of this title,
except as provided in subparagraph (D), for
purposes of determining income eligibility for
medical assistance under the State plan or
under any waiver of such plan and for any other
purpose applicable under the plan or waiver for
which a determination of income is required,
including with respect to the imposition of
premiums and cost-sharing, a State shall use
the modified adjusted gross income of an
individual and, in the case of an individual in
a family greater than 1, the household income
of such family. A State shall establish income
eligibility thresholds for populations to be
eligible for medical assistance under the State
plan or a waiver of the plan using modified
adjusted gross income and household income that
are not less than the effective income
eligibility levels that applied under the State
plan or waiver on the date of enactment of the
Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act. For
purposes of complying with the maintenance of
effort requirements under subsection (gg)
during the transition to modified adjusted
gross income and household income, a State
shall, working with the Secretary, establish an
equivalent income test that ensures individuals
eligible for medical assistance under the State
plan or under a waiver of the plan on the date
of enactment of the Patient Protection and
Affordable Care Act, do not lose coverage under
the State plan or under a waiver of the plan.
The Secretary may waive such provisions of this
title and title XXI as are necessary to ensure
that States establish income and eligibility
determination systems that protect
beneficiaries.
(B) No income or expense disregards.--Subject
to subparagraph (I), no type of expense, block,
or other income disregard shall be applied by a
State to determine income eligibility for
medical assistance under the State plan or
under any waiver of such plan or for any other
purpose applicable under the plan or waiver for
which a determination of income is required.
(C) No assets test.--A State shall not apply
any assets or resources test for purposes of
determining eligibility for medical assistance
under the State plan or under a waiver of the
plan.
(D) Exceptions.--
(i) Individuals eligible because of
other aid or assistance, elderly
individuals, medically needy
individuals, and individuals eligible
for medicare cost-sharing.--
Subparagraphs (A), (B), and (C) shall
not apply to the determination of
eligibility under the State plan or
under a waiver for medical assistance
for the following:
(I) Individuals who are
eligible for medical assistance
under the State plan or under a
waiver of the plan on a basis
that does not require a
determination of income by the
State agency administering the
State plan or waiver, including
as a result of eligibility for,
or receipt of, other Federal or
State aid or assistance,
individuals who are eligible on
the basis of receiving (or
being treated as if receiving)
supplemental security income
benefits under title XVI, and
individuals who are eligible as
a result of being or being
deemed to be a child in foster
care under the responsibility
of the State.
(II) Individuals who have
attained age 65.
(III) Individuals who qualify
for medical assistance under
the State plan or under any
waiver of such plan on the
basis of being blind or
disabled (or being treated as
being blind or disabled)
without regard to whether the
individual is eligible for
supplemental security income
benefits under title XVI on the
basis of being blind or
disabled and including an
individual who is eligible for
medical assistance on the basis
of section 1902(e)(3).
(IV) Individuals described in
subsection (a)(10)(C).
(V) Individuals described in
any clause of subsection
(a)(10)(E).
(ii) Express lane agency findings.--
In the case of a State that elects the
Express Lane option under paragraph
(13), notwithstanding subparagraphs
(A), (B), and (C), the State may rely
on a finding made by an Express Lane
agency in accordance with that
paragraph relating to the income of an
individual for purposes of determining
the individual's eligibility for
medical assistance under the State plan
or under a waiver of the plan.
(iii) Medicare prescription drug
subsidies determinations.--
Subparagraphs (A), (B), and (C) shall
not apply to any determinations of
eligibility for premium and cost-
sharing subsidies under and in
accordance with section 1860D-14 made
by the State pursuant to section
1935(a)(2).
(iv) Long-term care.--Subparagraphs
(A), (B), and (C) shall not apply to
any determinations of eligibility of
individuals for purposes of medical
assistance for nursing facility
services, a level of care in any
institution equivalent to that of
nursing facility services, home or
community-based services furnished
under a waiver or State plan amendment
under section 1915 or a waiver under
section 1115, and services described in
section 1917(c)(1)(C)(ii).
(v) Grandfather of current enrollees
until date of next regular
redetermination.--An individual who, on
January 1, 2014, is enrolled in the
State plan or under a waiver of the
plan and who would be determined
ineligible for medical assistance
solely because of the application of
the modified adjusted gross income or
household income standard described in
subparagraph (A), shall remain eligible
for medical assistance under the State
plan or waiver (and subject to the same
premiums and cost-sharing as applied to
the individual on that date) through
March 31, 2014, or the date on which
the individual's next regularly
scheduled redetermination of
eligibility is to occur, whichever is
later.
(E) Transition planning and oversight.--Each
State shall submit to the Secretary for the
Secretary's approval the income eligibility
thresholds proposed to be established using
modified adjusted gross income and household
income, the methodologies and procedures to be
used to determine income eligibility using
modified adjusted gross income and household
income and, if applicable, a State plan
amendment establishing an optional eligibility
category under subsection (a)(10)(A)(ii)(XX).
To the extent practicable, the State shall use
the same methodologies and procedures for
purposes of making such determinations as the
State used on the date of enactment of the
Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act. The
Secretary shall ensure that the income
eligibility thresholds proposed to be
established using modified adjusted gross
income and household income, including under
the eligibility category established under
subsection (a)(10)(A)(ii)(XX), and the
methodologies and procedures proposed to be
used to determine income eligibility, will not
result in children who would have been eligible
for medical assistance under the State plan or
under a waiver of the plan on the date of
enactment of the Patient Protection and
Affordable Care Act no longer being eligible
for such assistance.
(F) Limitation on secretarial authority.--The
Secretary shall not waive compliance with the
requirements of this paragraph except to the
extent necessary to permit a State to
coordinate eligibility requirements for dual
eligible individuals (as defined in section
1915(h)(2)(B)) under the State plan or under a
waiver of the plan and under title XVIII and
individuals who require the level of care
provided in a hospital, a nursing facility, or
an intermediate care facility for the mentally
retarded.
(G) Definitions of modified adjusted gross
income and household income.--In this
paragraph, the terms ``modified adjusted gross
income'' and ``household income'' have the
meanings given such terms in section 36B(d)(2)
of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986.
(H) Continued application of medicaid rules
regarding point-in-time income and sources of
income.--The requirement under this paragraph
for States to use modified adjusted gross
income and household income to determine income
eligibility for medical assistance under the
State plan or under any waiver of such plan and
for any other purpose applicable under the plan
or waiver for which a determination of income
is required shall not be construed as affecting
or limiting the application of--
(i) the requirement under this title
and under the State plan or a waiver of
the plan to determine an individual's
income as of the point in time at which
an application for medical assistance
under the State plan or a waiver of the
plan is processed; or
(ii) any rules established under this
title or under the State plan or a
waiver of the plan regarding sources of
countable income.
(I) Treatment of portion of modified adjusted
gross income.--For purposes of determining the
income eligibility of an individual for medical
assistance whose eligibility is determined
based on the application of modified adjusted
gross income under subparagraph (A), the State
shall--
(i) determine the dollar equivalent
of the difference between the upper
income limit on eligibility for such an
individual (expressed as a percentage
of the poverty line) and such upper
income limit increased by 5 percentage
points; and
(ii) notwithstanding the requirement
in subparagraph (A) with respect to use
of modified adjusted gross income,
utilize as the applicable income of
such individual, in determining such
income eligibility, an amount equal to
the modified adjusted gross income
applicable to such individual reduced
by such dollar equivalent amount.
(J) Exclusion of parent mentor compensation
from income determination.--Any nominal amount
received by an individual as compensation,
including a stipend, for participation as a
parent mentor (as defined in paragraph (5) of
section 2113(f)) in an activity or program
funded through a grant under such section shall
be disregarded for purposes of determining the
income eligibility of such individual for
medical assistance under the State plan or any
waiver of such plan.
(K) Treatment of certain lottery winnings and
income received as a lump sum.--
(i) In general.--In the case of an
individual who is the recipient of
qualified lottery winnings (pursuant to
lotteries occurring on or after January
1, 2018) or qualified lump sum income
(received on or after such date) and
whose eligibility for medical
assistance is determined based on the
application of modified adjusted gross
income under subparagraph (A), a State
shall, in determining such eligibility,
include such winnings or income (as
applicable) as income received--
(I) in the month in which
such winnings or income (as
applicable) is received if the
amount of such winnings or
income is less than $80,000;
(II) over a period of 2
months if the amount of such
winnings or income (as
applicable) is greater than or
equal to $80,000 but less than
$90,000;
(III) over a period of 3
months if the amount of such
winnings or income (as
applicable) is greater than or
equal to $90,000 but less than
$100,000; and
(IV) over a period of 3
months plus 1 additional month
for each increment of $10,000
of such winnings or income (as
applicable) received, not to
exceed a period of 120 months
(for winnings or income of
$1,260,000 or more), if the
amount of such winnings or
income is greater than or equal
to $100,000.
(ii) Counting in equal
installments.--For purposes of
subclauses (II), (III), and (IV) of
clause (i), winnings or income to which
such subclause applies shall be counted
in equal monthly installments over the
period of months specified under such
subclause.
(iii) Hardship exemption.--An
individual whose income, by application
of clause (i), exceeds the applicable
eligibility threshold established by
the State, shall continue to be
eligible for medical assistance to the
extent that the State determines, under
procedures established by the State (in
accordance with standards specified by
the Secretary), that the denial of
eligibility of the individual would
cause an undue medical or financial
hardship as determined on the basis of
criteria established by the Secretary.
(iv) Notifications and assistance
required in case of loss of
eligibility.--A State shall, with
respect to an individual who loses
eligibility for medical assistance
under the State plan (or a waiver of
such plan) by reason of clause (i)--
(I) before the date on which
the individual loses such
eligibility, inform the
individual--
(aa) of the
individual's
opportunity to enroll
in a qualified health
plan offered through an
Exchange established
under title I of the
Patient Protection and
Affordable Care Act
during the special
enrollment period
specified in section
9801(f)(3) of the
Internal Revenue Code
of 1986 (relating to
loss of Medicaid or
CHIP coverage); and
(bb) of the date on
which the individual
would no longer be
considered ineligible
by reason of clause (i)
to receive medical
assistance under the
State plan or under any
waiver of such plan and
be eligible to reapply
to receive such medical
assistance; and
(II) provide technical
assistance to the individual
seeking to enroll in such a
qualified health plan.
(v) Qualified lottery winnings
defined.--In this subparagraph, the
term ``qualified lottery winnings''
means winnings from a sweepstakes,
lottery, or pool described in paragraph
(3) of section 4402 of the Internal
Revenue Code of 1986 or a lottery
operated by a multistate or
multijurisdictional lottery
association, including amounts awarded
as a lump sum payment.
(vi) Qualified lump sum income
defined.--In this subparagraph, the
term ``qualified lump sum income''
means income that is received as a lump
sum from monetary winnings from
gambling (as defined by the Secretary
and including gambling activities
described in section 1955(b)(4) of
title 18, United States Code).
(15) Exclusion of compensation for participation in a
clinical trial for testing of treatments for a rare
disease or condition.--The first $2,000 received by an
individual (who has attained 19 years of age) as
compensation for participation in a clinical trial
meeting the requirements of section 1612(b)(26) shall
be disregarded for purposes of determining the income
eligibility of such individual for medical assistance
under the State plan or any waiver of such plan.
(f) Notwithstanding any other provision of this title, except
as provided in subsection (e) and section 1619(b)(3) and
section 1924, except with respect to qualified disabled and
working individuals (described in section 1905(s)), and except
with respect to qualified medicare beneficiaries, qualified
severely impaired individuals, and individuals described in
subsection (m)(1), no State not eligible to participate in the
State plan program established under title XVI shall be
required to provide medical assistance to any aged, blind, or
disabled individual (within the meaning of title XVI) for any
month unless such State would be (or would have been) required
to provide medical assistance to such individual for such month
had its plan for medical assistance approved under this title
and in effect on January 1, 1972, been in effect in such month,
except that for this purpose any such individual shall be
deemed eligible for medical assistance under such State plan if
(in addition to meeting such other requirements as are or may
be imposed under the State plan) the income of any such
individual as determined in accordance with section 1903(f)
(after deducting any supplemental security income payment and
State supplementary payment made with respect to such
individual, and incurred expenses for medical care as
recognized under State law regardless of whether such expenses
are reimbursed under another public program of the State or
political subdivision thereof) is not in excess of the standard
for medical assistance established under the State plan as in
effect on January 1, 1972. In States which provide medical
assistance to individuals pursuant to paragraph (10)(C) of
subsection (a) of this section, an individual who is eligible
for medical assistance by reason of the requirements of this
section concerning the deduction of incurred medical expenses
from income shall be considered an individual eligible for
medical assistance under paragraph (10)(A) of that subsection
if that individual is, or is eligible to be (1) an individual
with respect to whom there is payable a State supplementary
payment on the basis of which similarly situated individuals
are eligible to receive medical assistance equal in amount,
duration, and scope to that provided to individuals eligible
under paragraph (10)(A), or (2) an eligible individual or
eligible spouse, as defined in title XVI, with respect to whom
supplemental security income benefits are payable; otherwise
that individual shall be considered to be an individual
eligible for medical assistance under paragraph (10)(C) of that
subsection. In States which do not provide medical assistance
to individuals pursuant to paragraph (10)(C) of that
subsection, an individual who is eligible for medical
assistance by reason of the requirements of this section
concerning the deduction of incurred medical expenses from
income shall be considered an individual eligible for medical
assistance under paragraph (10)(A) of that subsection.
(g) In addition to any other sanction available to a State, a
State may provide for a reduction of any payment amount
otherwise due with respect to a person who furnishes services
under the plan in an amount equal to up to three times the
amount of any payment sought to be collected by that person in
violation of subsection (a)(25)(C).
(h) Nothing in this title (including subsections (a)(13) and
(a)(30) of this section) shall be construed as authorizing the
Secretary to limit the amount of payment that may be made under
a plan under this title for home and community care.
(i)(1) In addition to any other authority under State law,
where a State determines that a intermediate care facility for
the mentally retarded which is certified for participation
under its plan no longer substantially meets the requirements
for such a facility under this title and further determines
that the facility's deficiencies--
(A) immediately jeopardize the health and safety of
its patients, the State shall provide for the
termination of the facility's certification for
participation under the plan and may provide, or
(B) do not immediately jeopardize the health and
safety of its patients, the State may, in lieu of
providing for terminating the facility's certification
for participation under the plan, establish alternative
remedies if the State demonstrates to the Secretary's
satisfaction that the alternative remedies are
effective in deterring noncompliance and correcting
deficiencies, and may provide
that no payment will be made under the State plan with respect
to any individual admitted to such facility after a date
specified by the State.
(2) The State shall not make such a decision with respect to
a facility until the facility has had a reasonable opportunity,
following the initial determination that it no longer
substantially meets the requirements for such a facility under
this title, to correct its deficiencies, and, following this
period, has been given reasonable notice and opportunity for a
hearing.
(3) The State's decision to deny payment may be made
effective only after such notice to the public and to the
facility as may be provided for by the State, and its
effectiveness shall terminate (A) when the State finds that the
facility is in substantial compliance (or is making good faith
efforts to achieve substantial compliance) with the
requirements for such a facility under this title, or (B) in
the case described in paragraph (1)(B), with the end of the
eleventh month following the month such decision is made
effective, whichever occurs first. If a facility to which
clause (B) of the previous sentence applies still fails to
substantially meet the provisions of the respective section on
the date specified in such clause, the State shall terminate
such facility's certification for participation under the plan
effective with the first day of the first month following the
month specified in such clause.
(j) Notwithstanding any other requirement of this title, the
Secretary may waive or modify any requirement of this title
with respect to the medical assistance program in American
Samoa and the Northern Mariana Islands, other than a waiver of
the Federal medical assistance percentage, the limitation in
section 1108(f), or the requirement that payment may be made
for medical assistance only with respect to amounts expended by
American Samoa or the Northern Mariana Islands for care and
services described in a numbered paragraph of section 1905(a).
(k)(1) The medical assistance provided to an individual
described in subclause (VIII) of subsection (a)(10)(A)(i) shall
consist of benchmark coverage described in section 1937(b)(1)
or benchmark equivalent coverage described in section
1937(b)(2). Such medical assistance shall be provided subject
to the requirements of section 1937, without regard to whether
a State otherwise has elected the option to provide medical
assistance through coverage under that section, unless an
individual described in subclause (VIII) of subsection
(a)(10)(A)(i) is also an individual for whom, under
subparagraph (B) of section 1937(a)(2), the State may not
require enrollment in benchmark coverage described in
subsection (b)(1) of section 1937 or benchmark equivalent
coverage described in subsection (b)(2) of that section.
(2) Beginning with the first day of any fiscal year quarter
that begins on or after April 1, 2010, and before January 1,
2014, a State may elect through a State plan amendment to
provide medical assistance to individuals who would be
described in subclause (VIII) of subsection (a)(10)(A)(i) if
that subclause were effective before January 1, 2014. A State
may elect to phase-in the extension of eligibility for medical
assistance to such individuals based on income, so long as the
State does not extend such eligibility to individuals described
in such subclause with higher income before making individuals
described in such subclause with lower income eligible for
medical assistance.
(3) If an individual described in subclause (VIII) of
subsection (a)(10)(A)(i) is the parent of a child who is under
19 years of age (or such higher age as the State may have
elected) who is eligible for medical assistance under the State
plan or under a waiver of such plan (under that subclause or
under a State plan amendment under paragraph (2), the
individual may not be enrolled under the State plan unless the
individual's child is enrolled under the State plan or under a
waiver of the plan or is enrolled in other health insurance
coverage. For purposes of the preceding sentence, the term
``parent'' includes an individual treated as a caretaker
relative for purposes of carrying out section 1931.
(l)(1) Individuals described in this paragraph are--
(A) women during pregnancy (and during the 60-day
period beginning on the last day of the pregnancy),
(B) infants under one year of age,
(C) children who have attained one year of age but
have not attained 6 years of age, and
(D) children born after September 30, 1983 (or, at
the option of a State, after any earlier date), who
have attained 6 years of age but have not attained 19
years of age,
who are not described in any of subclauses (I) through (III) of
subsection (a)(10)(A)(i) and whose family income does not
exceed the income level established by the State under
paragraph (2) for a family size equal to the size of the
family, including the woman, infant, or child.
(2)(A)(i) For purposes of paragraph (1) with respect to
individuals described in subparagraph (A) or (B) of that
paragraph, the State shall establish an income level which is a
percentage (not less than the percentage provided under clause
(ii) and not more than 185 percent) of the income official
poverty line (as defined by the Office of Management and
Budget, and revised annually in accordance with section 673(2)
of the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1981) applicable to
a family of the size involved.
(ii) The percentage provided under this clause, with respect
to eligibility for medical assistance on or after--
(I) July 1, 1989, is 75 percent, or, if greater, the
percentage provided under clause (iii), and
(II) April 1, 1990, 133 percent, or, if greater, the
percentage provided under clause (iv).
(iii) In the case of a State which, as of the date of the
enactment of this clause, has elected to provide, and provides,
medical assistance to individuals described in this subsection
or has enacted legislation authorizing, or appropriating funds,
to provide such assistance to such individuals before July 1,
1989, the percentage provided under clause (ii)(I) shall not be
less than--
(I) the percentage specified by the State in an
amendment to its State plan (whether approved or not)
as of the date of the enactment of this clause, or
(II) if no such percentage is specified as of the
date of the enactment of this clause, the percentage
established under the State's authorizing legislation
or provided for under the State's appropriations;
but in no case shall this clause require the percentage
provided under clause (ii)(I) to exceed 100 percent.
(iv) In the case of a State which, as of the date of the
enactment of this clause, has established under clause (i), or
has enacted legislation authorizing, or appropriating funds, to
provide for, a percentage (of the income official poverty line)
that is greater than 133 percent, the percentage provided under
clause (ii) for medical assistance on or after April 1, 1990,
shall not be less than--
(I) the percentage specified by the State in an
amendment to its State plan (whether approved or not)
as of the date of the enactment of this clause, or
(II) if no such percentage is specified as of the
date of the enactment of this clause, the percentage
established under the State's authorizing legislation
or provided for under the State's appropriations.
(B) For purposes of paragraph (1) with respect to individuals
described in subparagraph (C) of such paragraph, the State
shall establish an income level which is equal to 133 percent
of the income official poverty line described in subparagraph
(A) applicable to a family of the size involved.
(C) For purposes of paragraph (1) with respect to individuals
described in subparagraph (D) of that paragraph, the State
shall establish an income level which is equal to 100 percent
(or, beginning January 1, 2014, 133 percent) of the income
official poverty line described in subparagraph (A) applicable
to a family of the size involved.
(3) Notwithstanding subsection (a)(17), for individuals who
are eligible for medical assistance because of subsection
(a)(10)(A)(i)(IV), (a)(10)(A)(i)(VI), (a)(10)(A)(i)(VII), or
(a)(10)(A)(ii)(IX)--
(A) application of a resource standard shall be at
the option of the State;
(B) any resource standard or methodology that is
applied with respect to an individual described in
subparagraph (A) of paragraph (1) may not be more
restrictive than the resource standard or methodology
that is applied under title XVI;
(C) any resource standard or methodology that is
applied with respect to an individual described in
subparagraph (B), (C), or (D) of paragraph (1) may not
be more restrictive than the corresponding methodology
that is applied under the State plan under part A of
title IV;
(D) the income standard to be applied is the
appropriate income standard established under paragraph
(2); and
(E) family income shall be determined in accordance
with the methodology employed under the State plan
under part A or E of title IV (except to the extent
such methodology is inconsistent with clause (D) of
subsection (a)(17)), and costs incurred for medical
care or for any other type of remedial care shall not
be taken into account.
Any different treatment provided under this paragraph for such
individuals shall not, because of subsection (a)(17), require
or permit such treatment for other individuals.
(4)(A) In the case of any State which is providing medical
assistance to its residents under a waiver granted under
section 1115, the Secretary shall require the State to provide
medical assistance for pregnant women and infants under age 1
described in subsection (a)(10)(A)(i)(IV) and for children
described in subsection (a)(10)(A)(i)(VI) or subsection
(a)(10)(A)(i)(VII) in the same manner as the State would be
required to provide such assistance for such individuals if the
State had in effect a plan approved under this title.
(B) In the case of a State which is not one of the 50 States
or the District of Columbia, the State need not meet the
requirement of subsection (a)(10)(A)(i)(IV), (a)(10)(A)(i)(VI),
or (a)(10)(A)(i)(VII) and, for purposes of paragraph (2)(A),
the State may substitute for the percentage provided under
clause (ii) of such paragraph any percentage.
(m)(1) Individuals described in this paragraph are
individuals--
(A) who are 65 years of age or older or are disabled
individuals (as determined under section 1614(a)(3)),
(B) whose income (as determined under section 1612
for purposes of the supplemental security income
program, except as provided in paragraph (2)(C)) does
not exceed an income level established by the State
consistent with paragraph (2)(A), and
(C) whose resources (as determined under section 1613
for purposes of the supplemental security income
program) do not exceed (except as provided in paragraph
(2)(B)) the maximum amount of resources that an
individual may have and obtain benefits under that
program.
(2)(A) The income level established under paragraph (1)(B)
may not exceed a percentage (not more than 100 percent) of the
official poverty line (as defined by the Office of Management
and Budget, and revised annually in accordance with section
673(2) of the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1981)
applicable to a family of the size involved.
(B) In the case of a State that provides medical assistance
to individuals not described in subsection (a)(10)(A) and at
the State's option, the State may use under paragraph (1)(C)
such resource level (which is higher than the level described
in that paragraph) as may be applicable with respect to
individuals described in paragraph (1)(A) who are not described
in subsection (a)(10)(A).
(C) The provisions of section 1905(p)(2)(D) shall apply to
determinations of income under this subsection in the same
manner as they apply to determinations of income under section
1905(p).
(3) Notwithstanding subsection (a)(17), for individuals
described in paragraph (1) who are covered under the State plan
by virtue of subsection (a)(10)(A)(ii)(X)--
(A) the income standard to be applied is the income
standard described in paragraph (1)(B), and
(B) except as provided in section 1612(b)(4)(B)(ii),
costs incurred for medical care or for any other type
of remedial care shall not be taken into account in
determining income.
Any different treatment provided under this paragraph for such
individuals shall not, because of subsection (a)(17), require
or permit such treatment for other individuals.
(4) Notwithstanding subsection (a)(17), for qualified
medicare beneficiaries described in section 1905(p)(1)--
(A) the income standard to be applied is the income
standard described in section 1905(p)(1)(B), and
(B) except as provided in section 1612(b)(4)(B)(ii),
costs incurred for medical care or for any other type
of remedial care shall not be taken into account in
determining income.
Any different treatment provided under this paragraph for such
individuals shall not, because of subsection (a)(17), require
or permit such treatment for other individuals.
(n)(1) In the case of medical assistance furnished under this
title for medicare cost-sharing respecting the furnishing of a
service or item to a qualified medicare beneficiary, the State
plan may provide payment in an amount with respect to the
service or item that results in the sum of such payment amount
and any amount of payment made under title XVIII with respect
to the service or item exceeding the amount that is otherwise
payable under the State plan for the item or service for
eligible individuals who are not qualified medicare
beneficiaries.
(2) In carrying out paragraph (1), a State is not required to
provide any payment for any expenses incurred relating to
payment for deductibles, coinsurance, or copayments for
medicare cost-sharing to the extent that payment under title
XVIII for the service would exceed the payment amount that
otherwise would be made under the State plan under this title
for such service if provided to an eligible recipient other
than a medicare beneficiary.
(3) In the case in which a State's payment for medicare cost-
sharing for a qualified medicare beneficiary with respect to an
item or service is reduced or eliminated through the
application of paragraph (2)--
(A) for purposes of applying any limitation under
title XVIII on the amount that the beneficiary may be
billed or charged for the service, the amount of
payment made under title XVIII plus the amount of
payment (if any) under the State plan shall be
considered to be payment in full for the service;
(B) the beneficiary shall not have any legal
liability to make payment to a provider or to an
organization described in section 1903(m)(1)(A) for the
service; and
(C) any lawful sanction that may be imposed upon a
provider or such an organization for excess charges
under this title or title XVIII shall apply to the
imposition of any charge imposed upon the individual in
such case.
This paragraph shall not be construed as preventing payment of
any medicare cost-sharing by a medicare supplemental policy or
an employer retiree health plan on behalf of an individual.
(o) Notwithstanding any provision of subsection (a) to the
contrary, a State plan under this title shall provide that any
supplemental security income benefits paid by reason of
subparagraph (E) or (G) of section 1611(e)(1) to an individual
who--
(1) is eligible for medical assistance under the
plan, and
(2) is in a hospital, skilled nursing facility, or
intermediate care facility at the time such benefits
are paid,
will be disregarded for purposes of determining the amount of
any post-eligibility contribution by the individual to the cost
of the care and services provided by the hospital, skilled
nursing facility, or intermediate care facility.
(p)(1) In addition to any other authority, a State may
exclude any individual or entity for purposes of participating
under the State plan under this title for any reason for which
the Secretary could exclude the individual or entity from
participation in a program under title XVIII under section
1128, 1128A, or 1866(b)(2).
(2) In order for a State to receive payments for medical
assistance under section 1903(a), with respect to payments the
State makes to a medicaid managed care organization (as defined
in section 1903(m)) or to an entity furnishing services under a
waiver approved under section 1915(b)(1), the State must
provide that it will exclude from participation, as such an
organization or entity, any organization or entity that--
(A) could be excluded under section 1128(b)(8)
(relating to owners and managing employees who have
been convicted of certain crimes or received other
sanctions),
(B) has, directly or indirectly, a substantial
contractual relationship (as defined by the Secretary)
with an individual or entity that is described in
section 1128(b)(8)(B), or
(C) employs or contracts with any individual or
entity that is excluded from participation under this
title under section 1128 or 1128A for the provision of
health care, utilization review, medical social work,
or administrative services or employs or contracts with
any entity for the provision (directly or indirectly)
through such an excluded individual or entity of such
services.
(3) As used in this subsection, the term ``exclude'' includes
the refusal to enter into or renew a participation agreement or
the termination of such an agreement.
(q)(1)(A) In order to meet the requirement of subsection
(a)(50), the State plan must provide that, in the case of an
institutionalized individual or couple described in
subparagraph (B), in determining the amount of the individual's
or couple's income to be applied monthly to payment for the
cost of care in an institution, there shall be deducted from
the monthly income (in addition to other allowances otherwise
provided under the State plan) a monthly personal needs
allowance--
(i) which is reasonable in amount for clothing and
other personal needs of the individual (or couple)
while in an institution, and
(ii) which is not less (and may be greater) than the
minimum monthly personal needs allowance described in
paragraph (2).
(B) In this subsection, the term ``institutionalized
individual or couple'' means an individual or married couple--
(i) who is an inpatient (or who are inpatients) in a
medical institution or nursing facility for which
payments are made under this title throughout a month,
and
(ii) who is or are determined to be eligible for
medical assistance under the State plan.
(2) The minimum monthly personal needs allowance described in
this paragraph is $30 for an institutionalized individual and
$60 for an institutionalized couple (if both are aged, blind,
or disabled, and their incomes are considered available to each
other in determining eligibility).
(r)(1)(A) For purposes of sections 1902(a)(17) and
1924(d)(1)(D) and for purposes of a waiver under section 1915,
with respect to the post-eligibility treatment of income of
individuals who are institutionalized or receiving home or
community-based services under such a waiver, the treatment
described in subparagraph (B) shall apply, there shall be
disregarded reparation payments made by the Federal Republic of
Germany, and there shall be taken into account amounts for
incurred expenses for medical or remedial care that are not
subject to payment by a third party, including--
(i) medicare and other health insurance premiums,
deductibles, or coinsurance, and
(ii) necessary medical or remedial care recognized
under State law but not covered under the State plan
under this title, subject to reasonable limits the
State may establish on the amount of these expenses.
(B)(i) In the case of a veteran who does not have a spouse or
a child, if the veteran--
(I) receives, after the veteran has been determined
to be eligible for medical assistance under the State
plan under this title, a veteran's pension in excess of
$90 per month, and
(II) resides in a State veterans home with respect to
which the Secretary of Veterans Affairs makes per diem
payments for nursing home care pursuant to section
1741(a) of title 38, United States Code,
any such pension payment, including any payment made due to the
need for aid and attendance, or for unreimbursed medical
expenses, that is in excess of $90 per month shall be counted
as income only for the purpose of applying such excess payment
to the State veterans home's cost of providing nursing home
care to the veteran.
(ii) The provisions of clause (i) shall apply with respect to
a surviving spouse of a veteran who does not have a child in
the same manner as they apply to a veteran described in such
clause.
(2)(A) The methodology to be employed in determining income
and resource eligibility for individuals under subsection
(a)(10)(A)(i)(III), (a)(10)(A)(i)(IV), (a)(10)(A)(i)(VI),
(a)(10)(A)(i)(VII), (a)(10)(A)(ii), (a)(10)(C)(i)(III), or (f)
or under section 1905(p) may be less restrictive, and shall be
no more restrictive, than the methodology--
(i) in the case of groups consisting of aged, blind,
or disabled individuals, under the supplemental
security income program under title XVI, or
(ii) in the case of other groups, under the State
plan most closely categorically related.
(B) For purposes of this subsection and subsection (a)(10),
methodology is considered to be ``no more restrictive'' if,
using the methodology, additional individuals may be eligible
for medical assistance and no individuals who are otherwise
eligible are made ineligible for such assistance.
(s) In order to meet the requirements of subsection (a)(55),
the State plan must provide that payments to hospitals under
the plan for inpatient hospital services furnished to infants
who have not attained the age of 1 year, and to children who
have not attained the age of 6 years and who receive such
services in a disproportionate share hospital described in
section 1923(b)(1), shall--
(1) if made on a prospective basis (whether per diem,
per case, or otherwise) provide for an outlier
adjustment in payment amounts for medically necessary
inpatient hospital services involving exceptionally
high costs or exceptionally long lengths of stay,
(2) not be limited by the imposition of day limits
with respect to the delivery of such services to such
individuals, and
(3) not be limited by the imposition of dollar limits
(other than such limits resulting from prospective
payments as adjusted pursuant to paragraph (1)) with
respect to the delivery of such services to any such
individual who has not attained their first birthday
(or in the case of such an individual who is an
inpatient on his first birthday until such individual
is discharged).
(t) Nothing in this title (including sections 1903(a) and
1905(a)) shall be construed as authorizing the Secretary to
deny or limit payments to a State for expenditures, for medical
assistance for items or services, attributable to taxes of
general applicability imposed with respect to the provision of
such items or services.
(u)(1) Individuals described in this paragraph are
individuals--
(A) who are entitled to elect COBRA continuation
coverage (as defined in paragraph (3)),
(B) whose income (as determined under section 1612
for purposes of the supplemental security income
program) does not exceed 100 percent of the official
poverty line (as defined by the Office of Management
and Budget, and revised annually in accordance with
section 673(2) of the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act
of 1981) applicable to a family of the size involved,
(C) whose resources (as determined under section 1613
for purposes of the supplemental security income
program) do not exceed twice the maximum amount of
resources that an individual may have and obtain
benefits under that program, and
(D) with respect to whose enrollment for COBRA
continuation coverage the State has determined that the
savings in expenditures under this title resulting from
such enrollment is likely to exceed the amount of
payments for COBRA premiums made.
(2) For purposes of subsection (a)(10)(F) and this
subsection, the term ``COBRA premiums'' means the applicable
premium imposed with respect to COBRA continuation coverage.
(3) In this subsection, the term ``COBRA continuation
coverage'' means coverage under a group health plan provided by
an employer with 75 or more employees provided pursuant to
title XXII of the Public Health Service Act, section 4980B of
the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, or title VI of the Employee
Retirement Income Security Act of 1974.
(4) Notwithstanding subsection (a)(17), for individuals
described in paragraph (1) who are covered under the State plan
by virtue of subsection (a)(10)(A)(ii)(XI)--
(A) the income standard to be applied is the income
standard described in paragraph (1)(B), and
(B) except as provided in section 1612(b)(4)(B)(ii),
costs incurred for medical care or for any other type
of remedial care shall not be taken into account in
determining income.
Any different treatment provided under this paragraph for such
individuals shall not, because of subsection (a)(10)(B) or
(a)(17), require or permit such treatment for other
individuals.
(v) A State plan may provide for the making of determinations
of disability or blindness for the purpose of determining
eligibility for medical assistance under the State plan by the
single State agency or its designee, and make medical
assistance available to individuals whom it finds to be blind
or disabled and who are determined otherwise eligible for such
assistance during the period of time prior to which a final
determination of disability or blindness is made by the Social
Security Administration with respect to such an individual. In
making such determinations, the State must apply the
definitions of disability and blindness found in section
1614(a) of the Social Security Act.
(w)(1) For purposes of subsection (a)(57) and sections
1903(m)(1)(A) and 1919(c)(2)(E), the requirement of this
subsection is that a provider or organization (as the case may
be) maintain written policies and procedures with respect to
all adult individuals receiving medical care by or through the
provider or organization--
(A) to provide written information to each such
individual concerning--
(i) an individual's rights under State law
(whether statutory or as recognized by the
courts of the State) to make decisions
concerning such medical care, including the
right to accept or refuse medical or surgical
treatment and the right to formulate advance
directives (as defined in paragraph (3)), and
(ii) the provider's or organization's written
policies respecting the implementation of such
rights;
(B) to document in the individual's medical record
whether or not the individual has executed an advance
directive;
(C) not to condition the provision of care or
otherwise discriminate against an individual based on
whether or not the individual has executed an advance
directive;
(D) to ensure compliance with requirements of State
law (whether statutory or as recognized by the courts
of the State) respecting advance directives; and
(E) to provide (individually or with others) for
education for staff and the community on issues
concerning advance directives.
Subparagraph (C) shall not be construed as requiring the
provision of care which conflicts with an advance directive.
(2) The written information described in paragraph (1)(A)
shall be provided to an adult individual--
(A) in the case of a hospital, at the time of the
individual's admission as an inpatient,
(B) in the case of a nursing facility, at the time of
the individual's admission as a resident,
(C) in the case of a provider of home health care or
personal care services, in advance of the individual
coming under the care of the provider,
(D) in the case of a hospice program, at the time of
initial receipt of hospice care by the individual from
the program, and
(E) in the case of a medicaid managed care
organization, at the time of enrollment of the
individual with the organization.
(3) Nothing in this section shall be construed to prohibit
the application of a State law which allows for an objection on
the basis of conscience for any health care provider or any
agent of such provider which as a matter of conscience cannot
implement an advance directive.
(4) In this subsection, the term ``advance directive'' means
a written instruction, such as a living will or durable power
of attorney for health care, recognized under State law
(whether statutory or as recognized by the courts of the State)
and relating to the provision of such care when the individual
is incapacitated.
(5) For construction relating to this subsection, see section
7 of the Assisted Suicide Funding Restriction Act of 1997
(relating to clarification respecting assisted suicide,
euthanasia, and mercy killing).
(x) The Secretary shall establish a system, for
implementation by not later than July 1, 1991, which provides
for a unique identifier for each physician who furnishes
services for which payment may be made under a State plan
approved under this title.
(y)(1) In addition to any other authority under State law,
where a State determines that a psychiatric hospital which is
certified for participation under its plan no longer meets the
requirements for a psychiatric hospital (referred to in section
1905(h)) and further finds that the hospital's deficiencies--
(A) immediately jeopardize the health and safety of
its patients, the State shall terminate the hospital's
participation under the State plan; or
(B) do not immediately jeopardize the health and
safety of its patients, the State may terminate the
hospital's participation under the State plan, or
provide that no payment will be made under the State
plan with respect to any individual admitted to such
hospital after the effective date of the finding, or
both.
(2) Except as provided in paragraph (3), if a psychiatric
hospital described in paragraph (1)(B) has not complied with
the requirements for a psychiatric hospital under this title--
(A) within 3 months after the date the hospital is
found to be out of compliance with such requirements,
the State shall provide that no payment will be made
under the State plan with respect to any individual
admitted to such hospital after the end of such 3-month
period, or
(B) within 6 months after the date the hospital is
found to be out of compliance with such requirements,
no Federal financial participation shall be provided
under section 1903(a) with respect to further services
provided in the hospital until the State finds that the
hospital is in compliance with the requirements of this
title.
(3) The Secretary may continue payments, over a period of not
longer than 6 months from the date the hospital is found to be
out of compliance with such requirements, if--
(A) the State finds that it is more appropriate to
take alternative action to assure compliance of the
hospital with the requirements than to terminate the
certification of the hospital,
(B) the State has submitted a plan and timetable for
corrective action to the Secretary for approval and the
Secretary approves the plan of corrective action, and
(C) the State agrees to repay to the Federal
Government payments received under this paragraph if
the corrective action is not taken in accordance with
the approved plan and timetable.
(z)(1) Individuals described in this paragraph are
individuals not described in subsection (a)(10)(A)(i)--
(A) who are infected with tuberculosis;
(B) whose income (as determined under the State plan
under this title with respect to disabled individuals)
does not exceed the maximum amount of income a disabled
individual described in subsection (a)(10)(A)(i) may
have and obtain medical assistance under the plan; and
(C) whose resources (as determined under the State
plan under this title with respect to disabled
individuals) do not exceed the maximum amount of
resources a disabled individual described in subsection
(a)(10)(A)(i) may have and obtain medical assistance
under the plan.
(2) For purposes of subsection (a)(10), the term ``TB-related
services'' means each of the following services relating to
treatment of infection with tuberculosis:
(A) Prescribed drugs.
(B) Physicians' services and services described in
section 1905(a)(2).
(C) Laboratory and X-ray services (including services
to confirm the presence of infection).
(D) Clinic services and Federally-qualified health
center services.
(E) Case management services (as defined in section
1915(g)(2)).
(F) Services (other than room and board) designed to
encourage completion of regimens of prescribed drugs by
outpatients, including services to observe directly the
intake of prescribed drugs.
(aa) Individuals described in this subsection are individuals
who--
(1) are not described in subsection (a)(10)(A)(i);
(2) have not attained age 65;
(3) have been screened for breast and cervical cancer
under the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
breast and cervical cancer early detection program
established under title XV of the Public Health Service
Act (42 U.S.C. 300k et seq.) in accordance with the
requirements of section 1504 of that Act (42 U.S.C.
300n) and need treatment for breast or cervical cancer;
and
(4) are not otherwise covered under creditable
coverage, as defined in section 2701(c) of the Public
Health Service Act (42 U.S.C. 300gg(c)), but applied
without regard to paragraph (1)(F) of such section.
(bb) Payment for Services Provided by Federally-Qualified
Health Centers and Rural Health Clinics.--
(1) In general.--Beginning with fiscal year 2001 with
respect to services furnished on or after January 1,
2001, and each succeeding fiscal year, the State plan
shall provide for payment for services described in
section 1905(a)(2)(C) furnished by a Federally-
qualified health center and services described in
section 1905(a)(2)(B) furnished by a rural health
clinic in accordance with the provisions of this
subsection.
(2) Fiscal year 2001.--Subject to paragraph (4), for
services furnished on and after January 1, 2001, during
fiscal year 2001, the State plan shall provide for
payment for such services in an amount (calculated on a
per visit basis) that is equal to 100 percent of the
average of the costs of the center or clinic of
furnishing such services during fiscal years 1999 and
2000 which are reasonable and related to the cost of
furnishing such services, or based on such other tests
of reasonableness as the Secretary prescribes in
regulations under section 1833(a)(3), or, in the case
of services to which such regulations do not apply, the
same methodology used under section 1833(a)(3),
adjusted to take into account any increase or decrease
in the scope of such services furnished by the center
or clinic during fiscal year 2001.
(3) Fiscal year 2002 and succeeding fiscal years.--
Subject to paragraph (4), for services furnished during
fiscal year 2002 or a succeeding fiscal year, the State
plan shall provide for payment for such services in an
amount (calculated on a per visit basis) that is equal
to the amount calculated for such services under this
subsection for the preceding fiscal year--
(A) increased by the percentage increase in
the MEI (as defined in section 1842(i)(3))
applicable to primary care services (as defined
in section 1842(i)(4)) for that fiscal year;
and
(B) adjusted to take into account any
increase or decrease in the scope of such
services furnished by the center or clinic
during that fiscal year.
(4) Establishment of initial year payment amount for
new centers or clinics.--In any case in which an entity
first qualifies as a Federally-qualified health center
or rural health clinic after fiscal year 2000, the
State plan shall provide for payment for services
described in section 1905(a)(2)(C) furnished by the
center or services described in section 1905(a)(2)(B)
furnished by the clinic in the first fiscal year in
which the center or clinic so qualifies in an amount
(calculated on a per visit basis) that is equal to 100
percent of the costs of furnishing such services during
such fiscal year based on the rates established under
this subsection for the fiscal year for other such
centers or clinics located in the same or adjacent area
with a similar case load or, in the absence of such a
center or clinic, in accordance with the regulations
and methodology referred to in paragraph (2) or based
on such other tests of reasonableness as the Secretary
may specify. For each fiscal year following the fiscal
year in which the entity first qualifies as a
Federally-qualified health center or rural health
clinic, the State plan shall provide for the payment
amount to be calculated in accordance with paragraph
(3).
(5) Administration in the case of managed care.--
(A) In general.--In the case of services
furnished by a Federally-qualified health
center or rural health clinic pursuant to a
contract between the center or clinic and a
managed care entity (as defined in section
1932(a)(1)(B)), the State plan shall provide
for payment to the center or clinic by the
State of a supplemental payment equal to the
amount (if any) by which the amount determined
under paragraphs (2), (3), and (4) of this
subsection exceeds the amount of the payments
provided under the contract.
(B) Payment schedule.--The supplemental
payment required under subparagraph (A) shall
be made pursuant to a payment schedule agreed
to by the State and the Federally-qualified
health center or rural health clinic, but in no
case less frequently than every 4 months.
(6) Alternative payment methodologies.--
Notwithstanding any other provision of this section,
the State plan may provide for payment in any fiscal
year to a Federally-qualified health center for
services described in section 1905(a)(2)(C) or to a
rural health clinic for services described in section
1905(a)(2)(B) in an amount which is determined under an
alternative payment methodology that--
(A) is agreed to by the State and the center
or clinic; and
(B) results in payment to the center or
clinic of an amount which is at least equal to
the amount otherwise required to be paid to the
center or clinic under this section.
(cc)(1) Individuals described in this paragraph are
individuals--
(A) who are children who have not attained 19 years
of age and are born--
(i) on or after January 1, 2001 (or, at the
option of a State, on or after an earlier
date), in the case of the second, third, and
fourth quarters of fiscal year 2007;
(ii) on or after October 1, 1995 (or, at the
option of a State, on or after an earlier
date), in the case of each quarter of fiscal
year 2008; and
(iii) after October 1, 1989, in the case of
each quarter of fiscal year 2009 and each
quarter of any fiscal year thereafter;
(B) who would be considered disabled under section
1614(a)(3)(C) (as determined under title XVI for
children but without regard to any income or asset
eligibility requirements that apply under such title
with respect to children); and
(C) whose family income does not exceed such income
level as the State establishes and does not exceed--
(i) 300 percent of the poverty line (as
defined in section 2110(c)(5)) applicable to a
family of the size involved; or
(ii) such higher percent of such poverty line
as a State may establish, except that--
(I) any medical assistance provided
to an individual whose family income
exceeds 300 percent of such poverty
line may only be provided with State
funds; and
(II) no Federal financial
participation shall be provided under
section 1903(a) for any medical
assistance provided to such an
individual.
(2)(A) If an employer of a parent of an individual described
in paragraph (1) offers family coverage under a group health
plan (as defined in section 2791(a) of the Public Health
Service Act), the State shall--
(i) notwithstanding section 1906, require such parent
to apply for, enroll in, and pay premiums for such
coverage as a condition of such parent's child being or
remaining eligible for medical assistance under
subsection (a)(10)(A)(ii)(XIX) if the parent is
determined eligible for such coverage and the employer
contributes at least 50 percent of the total cost of
annual premiums for such coverage; and
(ii) if such coverage is obtained--
(I) subject to paragraph (2) of section
1916(h), reduce the premium imposed by the
State under that section in an amount that
reasonably reflects the premium contribution
made by the parent for private coverage on
behalf of a child with a disability; and
(II) treat such coverage as a third party
liability under subsection (a)(25).
(B) In the case of a parent to which subparagraph (A)
applies, a State, notwithstanding section 1906 but subject to
paragraph (1)(C)(ii), may provide for payment of any portion of
the annual premium for such family coverage that the parent is
required to pay. Any payments made by the State under this
subparagraph shall be considered, for purposes of section
1903(a), to be payments for medical assistance.
(dd) Electronic Transmission of Information.--If the State
agency determining eligibility for medical assistance under
this title or child health assistance under title XXI verifies
an element of eligibility based on information from an Express
Lane Agency (as defined in subsection (e)(13)(F)), or from
another public agency, then the applicant's signature under
penalty of perjury shall not be required as to such element.
Any signature requirement for an application for medical
assistance may be satisfied through an electronic signature, as
defined in section 1710(1) of the Government Paperwork
Elimination Act (44 U.S.C. 3504 note). The requirements of
subparagraphs (A) and (B) of section 1137(d)(2) may be met
through evidence in digital or electronic form.
(ee)(1) For purposes of subsection (a)(46)(B)(ii), the
requirements of this subsection with respect to an individual
declaring to be a citizen or national of the United States for
purposes of establishing eligibility under this title, are, in
lieu of requiring the individual to present satisfactory
documentary evidence of citizenship or nationality under
section 1903(x) (if the individual is not described in
paragraph (2) of that section), as follows:
(A) The State submits the name and social security
number of the individual to the Commissioner of Social
Security as part of the program established under
paragraph (2).
(B) If the State receives notice from the
Commissioner of Social Security that the name or social
security number, or the declaration of citizenship or
nationality, of the individual is inconsistent with
information in the records maintained by the
Commissioner--
(i) the State makes a reasonable effort to
identify and address the causes of such
inconsistency, including through typographical
or other clerical errors, by contacting the
individual to confirm the accuracy of the name
or social security number submitted or
declaration of citizenship or nationality and
by taking such additional actions as the
Secretary, through regulation or other
guidance, or the State may identify, and
continues to provide the individual with
medical assistance while making such effort;
and
(ii) in the case such inconsistency is not
resolved under clause (i), the State--
(I) notifies the individual of such
fact;
(II) provides the individual with a
period of 90 days from the date on
which the notice required under
subclause (I) is received by the
individual to either present
satisfactory documentary evidence of
citizenship or nationality (as defined
in section 1903(x)(3)) or resolve the
inconsistency with the Commissioner of
Social Security (and continues to
provide the individual with medical
assistance during such 90-day period);
and
(III) disenrolls the individual from
the State plan under this title within
30 days after the end of such 90-day
period if no such documentary evidence
is presented or if such inconsistency
is not resolved.
(2)(A) Each State electing to satisfy the requirements of
this subsection for purposes of section 1902(a)(46)(B) shall
establish a program under which the State submits at least
monthly to the Commissioner of Social Security for comparison
of the name and social security number, of each individual
newly enrolled in the State plan under this title that month
who is not described in section 1903(x)(2) and who declares to
be a United States citizen or national, with information in
records maintained by the Commissioner.
(B) In establishing the State program under this paragraph,
the State may enter into an agreement with the Commissioner of
Social Security--
(i) to provide, through an on-line system or
otherwise, for the electronic submission of, and
response to, the information submitted under
subparagraph (A) for an individual enrolled in the
State plan under this title who declares to be citizen
or national on at least a monthly basis; or
(ii) to provide for a determination of the
consistency of the information submitted with the
information maintained in the records of the
Commissioner through such other method as agreed to by
the State and the Commissioner and approved by the
Secretary, provided that such method is no more
burdensome for individuals to comply with than any
burdens that may apply under a method described in
clause (i).
(C) The program established under this paragraph shall
provide that, in the case of any individual who is required to
submit a social security number to the State under subparagraph
(A) and who is unable to provide the State with such number,
shall be provided with at least the reasonable opportunity to
present satisfactory documentary evidence of citizenship or
nationality (as defined in section 1903(x)(3)) as is provided
under clauses (i) and (ii) of section 1137(d)(4)(A) to an
individual for the submittal to the State of evidence
indicating a satisfactory immigration status.
(3)(A) The State agency implementing the plan approved under
this title shall, at such times and in such form as the
Secretary may specify, provide information on the percentage
each month that the inconsistent submissions bears to the total
submissions made for comparison for such month. For purposes of
this subparagraph, a name, social security number, or
declaration of citizenship or nationality of an individual
shall be treated as inconsistent and included in the
determination of such percentage only if--
(i) the information submitted by the individual is
not consistent with information in records maintained
by the Commissioner of Social Security;
(ii) the inconsistency is not resolved by the State;
(iii) the individual was provided with a reasonable
period of time to resolve the inconsistency with the
Commissioner of Social Security or provide satisfactory
documentation of citizenship status and did not
successfully resolve such inconsistency; and
(iv) payment has been made for an item or service
furnished to the individual under this title.
(B) If, for any fiscal year, the average monthly percentage
determined under subparagraph (A) is greater than 3 percent--
(i) the State shall develop and adopt a corrective
plan to review its procedures for verifying the
identities of individuals seeking to enroll in the
State plan under this title and to identify and
implement changes in such procedures to improve their
accuracy; and
(ii) pay to the Secretary an amount equal to the
amount which bears the same ratio to the total payments
under the State plan for the fiscal year for providing
medical assistance to individuals who provided
inconsistent information as the number of individuals
with inconsistent information in excess of 3 percent of
such total submitted bears to the total number of
individuals with inconsistent information.
(C) The Secretary may waive, in certain limited cases, all or
part of the payment under subparagraph (B)(ii) if the State is
unable to reach the allowable error rate despite a good faith
effort by such State.
(D) Subparagraphs (A) and (B) shall not apply to a State for
a fiscal year if there is an agreement described in paragraph
(2)(B) in effect as of the close of the fiscal year that
provides for the submission on a real-time basis of the
information described in such paragraph.
(4) Nothing in this subsection shall affect the rights of any
individual under this title to appeal any disenrollment from a
State plan.
(ff) Notwithstanding any other requirement of this title or
any other provision of Federal or State law, a State shall
disregard the following property from resources for purposes of
determining the eligibility of an individual who is an Indian
for medical assistance under this title:
(1) Property, including real property and
improvements, that is held in trust, subject to Federal
restrictions, or otherwise under the supervision of the
Secretary of the Interior, located on a reservation,
including any federally recognized Indian Tribe's
reservation, pueblo, or colony, including former
reservations in Oklahoma, Alaska Native regions
established by the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act,
and Indian allotments on or near a reservation as
designated and approved by the Bureau of Indian Affairs
of the Department of the Interior.
(2) For any federally recognized Tribe not described
in paragraph (1), property located within the most
recent boundaries of a prior Federal reservation.
(3) Ownership interests in rents, leases, royalties,
or usage rights related to natural resources (including
extraction of natural resources or harvesting of
timber, other plants and plant products, animals, fish,
and shellfish) resulting from the exercise of federally
protected rights.
(4) Ownership interests in or usage rights to items
not covered by paragraphs (1) through (3) that have
unique religious, spiritual, traditional, or cultural
significance or rights that support subsistence or a
traditional lifestyle according to applicable tribal
law or custom.
(gg) Maintenance of Effort.--
(1) General requirement to maintain eligibility
standards until state exchange is fully operational.--
Subject to the succeeding paragraphs of this
subsection, during the period that begins on the date
of enactment of the Patient Protection and Affordable
Care Act and ends on the date on which the Secretary
determines that an Exchange established by the State
under section 1311 of the Patient Protection and
Affordable Care Act is fully operational, as a
condition for receiving any Federal payments under
section 1903(a) for calendar quarters occurring during
such period, a State shall not have in effect
eligibility standards, methodologies, or procedures
under the State plan under this title or under any
waiver of such plan that is in effect during that
period, that are more restrictive than the eligibility
standards, methodologies, or procedures, respectively,
under the plan or waiver that are in effect on the date
of enactment of the Patient Protection and Affordable
Care Act.
(2) Continuation of eligibility standards for
children through september 30, 2027.--The requirement
under paragraph (1) shall continue to apply to a State
through September 30, 2027 (but during the period that
begins on October 1, 2019, and ends on September 30,
2027 only with respect to children in families whose
income does not exceed 300 percent of the poverty line
(as defined in section 2110(c)(5)) applicable to a
family of the size involved) with respect to the
eligibility standards, methodologies, and procedures
under the State plan under this title or under any
waiver of such plan that are applicable to determining
the eligibility for medical assistance of any child who
is under 19 years of age (or such higher age as the
State may have elected).
(3) Nonapplication.--During the period that begins on
January 1, 2011, and ends on December 31, 2013, the
requirement under paragraph (1) shall not apply to a
State with respect to nonpregnant, nondisabled adults
who are eligible for medical assistance under the State
plan or under a waiver of the plan at the option of the
State and whose income exceeds 133 percent of the
poverty line (as defined in section 2110(c)(5))
applicable to a family of the size involved if, on or
after December 31, 2010, the State certifies to the
Secretary that, with respect to the State fiscal year
during which the certification is made, the State has a
budget deficit, or with respect to the succeeding State
fiscal year, the State is projected to have a budget
deficit. Upon submission of such a certification to the
Secretary, the requirement under paragraph (1) shall
not apply to the State with respect to any remaining
portion of the period described in the preceding
sentence.
(4) Determination of compliance.--
(A) States shall apply modified adjusted
gross income.--A State's determination of
income in accordance with subsection (e)(14)
shall not be considered to be eligibility
standards, methodologies, or procedures that
are more restrictive than the standards,
methodologies, or procedures in effect under
the State plan or under a waiver of the plan on
the date of enactment of the Patient Protection
and Affordable Care Act for purposes of
determining compliance with the requirements of
paragraph (1), (2), or (3).
(B) States may expand eligibility or move
waivered populations into coverage under the
state plan.--With respect to any period
applicable under paragraph (1), (2), or (3), a
State that applies eligibility standards,
methodologies, or procedures under the State
plan under this title or under any waiver of
the plan that are less restrictive than the
eligibility standards, methodologies, or
procedures, applied under the State plan or
under a waiver of the plan on the date of
enactment of the Patient Protection and
Affordable Care Act, or that makes individuals
who, on such date of enactment, are eligible
for medical assistance under a waiver of the
State plan, after such date of enactment
eligible for medical assistance through a State
plan amendment with an income eligibility level
that is not less than the income eligibility
level that applied under the waiver, or as a
result of the application of subclause (VIII)
of section 1902(a)(10)(A)(i), shall not be
considered to have in effect eligibility
standards, methodologies, or procedures that
are more restrictive than the standards,
methodologies, or procedures in effect under
the State plan or under a waiver of the plan on
the date of enactment of the Patient Protection
and Affordable Care Act for purposes of
determining compliance with the requirements of
paragraph (1), (2), or (3).
(hh)(1) A State may elect to phase-in the extension of
eligibility for medical assistance to individuals described in
subclause (XX) of subsection (a)(10)(A)(ii) based on the
categorical group (including nonpregnant childless adults) or
income, so long as the State does not extend such eligibility
to individuals described in such subclause with higher income
before making individuals described in such subclause with
lower income eligible for medical assistance.
(2) If an individual described in subclause (XX) of
subsection (a)(10)(A)(ii) is the parent of a child who is under
19 years of age (or such higher age as the State may have
elected) who is eligible for medical assistance under the State
plan or under a waiver of such plan, the individual may not be
enrolled under the State plan unless the individual's child is
enrolled under the State plan or under a waiver of the plan or
is enrolled in other health insurance coverage. For purposes of
the preceding sentence, the term ``parent'' includes an
individual treated as a caretaker relative for purposes of
carrying out section 1931.
(ii)(1) Individuals described in this subsection are
individuals--
(A) whose income does not exceed an income
eligibility level established by the State that
does not exceed the highest income eligibility
level established under the State plan under
this title (or under its State child health
plan under title XXI) for pregnant women; and
(B) who are not pregnant.
(2) At the option of a State, individuals described
in this subsection may include individuals who, had
individuals applied on or before January 1, 2007, would
have been made eligible pursuant to the standards and
processes imposed by that State for benefits described
in clause (XVI) of the matter following subparagraph
(G) of section subsection (a)(10) pursuant to a waiver
granted under section 1115.
(3) At the option of a State, for purposes of
subsection (a)(17)(B), in determining eligibility for
services under this subsection, the State may consider
only the income of the applicant or recipient.
(jj) Primary Care Services Defined.--For purposes of
subsection (a)(13)(C), the term ``primary care services''
means--
(1) evaluation and management services that are
procedure codes (for services covered under title
XVIII) for services in the category designated
Evaluation and Management in the Healthcare Common
Procedure Coding System (established by the Secretary
under section 1848(c)(5) as of December 31, 2009, and
as subsequently modified); and
(2) services related to immunization administration
for vaccines and toxoids for which CPT codes 90465,
90466, 90467, 90468, 90471, 90472, 90473, or 90474 (as
subsequently modified) apply under such System.
(kk) Provider and Supplier Screening, Oversight, and
Reporting Requirements.--For purposes of subsection (a)(77),
the requirements of this subsection are the following:
(1) Screening.--The State complies with the process
for screening providers and suppliers under this title,
as established by the Secretary under section
1866(j)(2).
(2) Provisional period of enhanced oversight for new
providers and suppliers.--The State complies with
procedures to provide for a provisional period of
enhanced oversight for new providers and suppliers
under this title, as established by the Secretary under
section 1866(j)(3).
(3) Disclosure requirements.--The State requires
providers and suppliers under the State plan or under a
waiver of the plan to comply with the disclosure
requirements established by the Secretary under section
1866(j)(5).
(4) Temporary moratorium on enrollment of new
providers or suppliers.--
(A) Temporary moratorium imposed by the
secretary.--
(i) In general.--Subject to clause
(ii), the State complies with any
temporary moratorium on the enrollment
of new providers or suppliers imposed
by the Secretary under section
1866(j)(7).
(ii) Exceptions.--
(I) Compliance with
moratorium.--A State shall not
be required to comply with a
temporary moratorium described
in clause (i) if the State
determines that the imposition
of such temporary moratorium
would adversely impact
beneficiaries' access to
medical assistance.
(II) FFP available.--
Notwithstanding section
1903(i)(2)(E), payment may be
made to a State under this
title with respect to amounts
expended for items and services
described in such section if
the Secretary, in consultation
with the State agency
administering the State plan
under this title (or a waiver
of the plan), determines that
denying payment to the State
pursuant to such section would
adversely impact beneficiaries'
access to medical assistance.
(iii) Limitation on charges to
beneficiaries.--With respect to any
amount expended for items or services
furnished during calendar quarters
beginning on or after October 1, 2017,
the State prohibits, during the period
of a temporary moratorium described in
clause (i), a provider meeting the
requirements specified in subparagraph
(C)(iii) of section 1866(j)(7) from
charging an individual or other person
eligible to receive medical assistance
under the State plan under this title
(or a waiver of the plan) for an item
or service described in section
1903(i)(2)(E) furnished to such an
individual.
(B) Moratorium on enrollment of providers and
suppliers.--At the option of the State, the
State imposes, for purposes of entering into
participation agreements with providers or
suppliers under the State plan or under a
waiver of the plan, periods of enrollment
moratoria, or numerical caps or other limits,
for providers or suppliers identified by the
Secretary as being at high-risk for fraud,
waste, or abuse as necessary to combat fraud,
waste, or abuse, but only if the State
determines that the imposition of any such
period, cap, or other limits would not
adversely impact beneficiaries' access to
medical assistance.
(5) Compliance programs.--The State requires
providers and suppliers under the State plan or under a
waiver of the plan to establish, in accordance with the
requirements of section 1866(j)(7), a compliance
program that contains the core elements established
under subparagraph (B) of that section 1866(j)(7) for
providers or suppliers within a particular industry or
category.
(6) Reporting of adverse provider actions.--The State
complies with the national system for reporting
criminal and civil convictions, sanctions, negative
licensure actions, and other adverse provider actions
to the Secretary, through the Administrator of the
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, in accordance
with regulations of the Secretary.
(7) Enrollment and npi of ordering or referring
providers.--The State requires--
(A) all ordering or referring physicians or
other professionals to be enrolled under the
State plan or under a waiver of the plan as a
participating provider; and
(B) the national provider identifier of any
ordering or referring physician or other
professional to be specified on any claim for
payment that is based on an order or referral
of the physician or other professional.
(8) Provider terminations.--
(A) In general.--Beginning on July 1, 2018,
in the case of a notification under subsection
(a)(41) with respect to a termination for a
reason specified in section 455.101 of title
42, Code of Federal Regulations (as in effect
on November 1, 2015) or for any other reason
specified by the Secretary, of the
participation of a provider of services or any
other person under the State plan (or under a
waiver of the plan), the State, not later than
30 days after the effective date of such
termination, submits to the Secretary with
respect to any such provider or person, as
appropriate--
(i) the name of such provider or
person;
(ii) the provider type of such
provider or person;
(iii) the specialty of such
provider's or person's practice;
(iv) the date of birth, Social
Security number, national provider
identifier (if applicable), Federal
taxpayer identification number, and the
State license or certification number
of such provider or person (if
applicable);
(v) the reason for the termination;
(vi) a copy of the notice of
termination sent to the provider or
person;
(vii) the date on which such
termination is effective, as specified
in the notice; and
(viii) any other information required
by the Secretary.
(B) Effective date defined.--For purposes of
this paragraph, the term ``effective date''
means, with respect to a termination described
in subparagraph (A), the later of--
(i) the date on which such
termination is effective, as specified
in the notice of such termination; or
(ii) the date on which all appeal
rights applicable to such termination
have been exhausted or the timeline for
any such appeal has expired.
(9) Other state oversight.--Nothing in this
subsection shall be interpreted to preclude or limit
the ability of a State to engage in provider and
supplier screening or enhanced provider and supplier
oversight activities beyond those required by the
Secretary.
(ll) Termination Notification Database.--In the case of a
provider of services or any other person whose participation
under this title or title XXI is terminated (as described in
subsection (kk)(8)), the Secretary shall, not later than 30
days after the date on which the Secretary is notified of such
termination under subsection (a)(41) (as applicable), review
such termination and, if the Secretary determines appropriate,
include such termination in any database or similar system
developed pursuant to section 6401(b)(2) of the Patient
Protection and Affordable Care Act (42 U.S.C. 1395cc note;
Public Law 111-148).
(mm) Directory Physician or Provider Described.--A physician
or provider described in this subsection is--
(1) in the case of a physician or provider of a
provider type for which the State agency, as a
condition on receiving payment for items and services
furnished by the physician or provider to individuals
eligible to receive medical assistance under the State
plan, requires the enrollment of the physician or
provider with the State agency, a physician or a
provider that--
(A) is enrolled with the agency as of the
date on which the directory is published or
updated (as applicable) under subsection
(a)(83); and
(B) received payment under the State plan in
the 12-month period preceding such date; and
(2) in the case of a physician or provider of a
provider type for which the State agency does not
require such enrollment, a physician or provider that
received payment under the State plan (or a waiver of
the plan) in the 12-month period preceding the date on
which the directory is published or updated (as
applicable) under subsection (a)(83).
* * * * * * *
DEFINITIONS
Sec. 1905. For purposes of this title--
(a) The term ``medical assistance'' means payment of part or
all of the cost of the following care and services or the care
and services themselves, or both (if provided in or after the
third month before the month in which the recipient makes
application for assistance or, in the case of medicare cost-
sharing with respect to a qualified medicare beneficiary
described in subsection (p)(1), if provided after the month in
which the individual becomes such a beneficiary) for
individuals, and, with respect to physicians' or dentists'
services, at the option of the State, to individuals (other
than individuals with respect to whom there is being paid, or
who are eligible, or would be eligible if they were not in a
medical institution, to have paid with respect to them a State
supplementary payment and are eligible for medical assistance
equal in amount, duration, and scope to the medical assistance
made available to individuals described in section
1902(a)(10)(A)) not receiving aid or assistance under any plan
of the State approved under title I, X, XIV, or XVI, or part A
of title IV, and with respect to whom supplemental security
income benefits are not being paid under title XVI, who are--
(i) under the age of 21, or, at the option of the
State, under the age of 20, 19, or 18 as the State may
choose,
(ii) relatives specified in section 406(b)(1) with
whom a child is living if such child is (or would, if
needy, be) a dependent child under part A of title IV,
(iii) 65 years of age or older,
(iv) blind, with respect to States eligible to
participate in the State plan program established under
title XVI,
(v) 18 years of age or older and permanently and
totally disabled, with respect to States eligible to
participate in the State plan program established under
title XVI,
(vi) persons essential (as described in the second
sentence of this subsection) to individuals receiving
aid or assistance under State plans approved under
title I, X, XIV, or XVI,
(vii) blind or disabled as defined in section 1614,
with respect to States not eligible to participate in
the State plan program established under title XVI,
(viii) pregnant women,
(ix) individuals provided extended benefits under
section 1925,
(x) individuals described in section 1902(u)(1),
(xi) individuals described in section 1902(z)(1),
(xii) employed individuals with a medically improved
disability (as defined in subsection (v)),
(xiii) individuals described in section 1902(aa),
(xiv) individuals described in section
1902(a)(10)(A)(i)(VIII) or 1902(a)(10)(A)(i)(IX),
(xv) individuals described in section
1902(a)(10)(A)(ii)(XX),
(xvi) individuals described in
section 1902(ii), or
(xvii) individuals who are eligible for home and
community-based services under needs-based criteria
established under paragraph (1)(A) of section 1915(i),
or who are eligible for home and community-based
services under paragraph (6) of such section, and who
will receive home and community-based services pursuant
to a State plan amendment under such subsection,
but whose income and resources are insufficient to meet all of
such cost--
(1) inpatient hospital services (other than services
in an institution for mental diseases);
(2)(A) outpatient hospital services, (B) consistent
with State law permitting such services, rural health
clinic services (as defined in subsection (l)(1)) and
any other ambulatory services which are offered by a
rural health clinic (as defined in subsection (l)(1))
and which are otherwise included in the plan, and (C)
Federally-qualified health center services (as defined
in subsection (l)(2)) and any other ambulatory services
offered by a Federally-qualified health center and
which are otherwise included in the plan;
(3) other laboratory and X-ray services;
(4)(A) nursing facility services (other than services
in an institution for mental diseases) for individuals
21 years of age or older; (B) early and periodic
screening, diagnostic, and treatment services (as
defined in subsection (r)) for individuals who are
eligible under the plan and are under the age of 21;
(C) family planning services and supplies furnished
(directly or under arrangements with others) to
individuals of child-bearing age (including minors who
can be considered to be sexually active) who are
eligible under the State plan and who desire such
services and supplies; and (D) counseling and
pharmacotherapy for cessation of tobacco use by
pregnant women (as defined in subsection (bb));
(5)(A) physicians' services furnished by a physician
(as defined in section 1861(r)(1)), whether furnished
in the office, the patient's home, a hospital, or a
nursing facility, or elsewhere, and (B) medical and
surgical services furnished by a dentist (described in
section 1861(r)(2)) to the extent such services may be
performed under State law either by a doctor of
medicine or by a doctor of dental surgery or dental
medicine and would be described in clause (A) if
furnished by a physician (as defined in section
1861(r)(1));
(6) medical care, or any other type of remedial care
recognized under State law, furnished by licensed
practitioners within the scope of their practice as
defined by State law;
(7) home health care services;
(8) private duty nursing services;
(9) clinic services furnished by or under the
direction of a physician, without regard to whether the
clinic itself is administered by a physician, including
such services furnished outside the clinic by clinic
personnel to an eligible individual who does not reside
in a permanent dwelling or does not have a fixed home
or mailing address;
(10) dental services;
(11) physical therapy and related services;
(12) prescribed drugs, dentures, and prosthetic
devices; and eyeglasses prescribed by a physician
skilled in diseases of the eye or by an optometrist,
whichever the individual may select;
(13) other diagnostic, screening, preventive, and
rehabilitative services, including--
(A) any clinical preventive services that are
assigned a grade of A or B by the United States
Preventive Services Task Force;
(B) with respect to an adult individual,
approved vaccines recommended by the Advisory
Committee on Immunization Practices (an
advisory committee established by the
Secretary, acting through the Director of the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention) and
their administration; and
(C) any medical or remedial services
(provided in a facility, a home, or other
setting) recommended by a physician or other
licensed practitioner of the healing arts
within the scope of their practice under State
law, for the maximum reduction of physical or
mental disability and restoration of an
individual to the best possible functional
level;
(14) inpatient hospital services and nursing facility
services for individuals 65 years of age or over in an
institution for mental diseases;
(15) services in an intermediate care facility for
the mentally retarded (other than in an institution for
mental diseases) for individuals who are determined, in
accordance with section 1902(a)(31), to be in need of
such care;
(16) (A) effective January 1, 1973, inpatient
psychiatric hospital services for individuals under age
21, as defined in subsection (h), and, (B) for
individuals receiving services described in
subparagraph (A), early and periodic screening,
diagnostic, and treatment services (as defined in
subsection (r)), whether or not such screening,
diagnostic, and treatment services are furnished by the
provider of the services described in such
subparagraph;
(17) services furnished by a nurse-midwife (as
defined in section 1861(gg)) which the nurse-midwife is
legally authorized to perform under State law (or the
State regulatory mechanism provided by State law),
whether or not the nurse-midwife is under the
supervision of, or associated with, a physician or
other health care provider, and without regard to
whether or not the services are performed in the area
of management of the care of mothers and babies
throughout the maternity cycle;
(18) hospice care (as defined in subsection (o));
(19) case management services (as defined in section
1915(g)(2)) and TB-related services described in
section 1902(z)(2)(F);
(20) respiratory care services (as defined in section
1902(e)(9)(C));
(21) services furnished by a certified pediatric
nurse practitioner or certified family nurse
practitioner (as defined by the Secretary) which the
certified pediatric nurse practitioner or certified
family nurse practitioner is legally authorized to
perform under State law (or the State regulatory
mechanism provided by State law), whether or not the
certified pediatric nurse practitioner or certified
family nurse practitioner is under the supervision of,
or associated with, a physician or other health care
provider;
(22) home and community care (to the extent allowed
and as defined in section 1929) for functionally
disabled elderly individuals;
(23) community supported living arrangements services
(to the extent allowed and as defined in section 1930);
(24) personal care services furnished to an
individual who is not an inpatient or resident of a
hospital, nursing facility, intermediate care facility
for the mentally retarded, or institution for mental
disease that are (A) authorized for the individual by a
physician in accordance with a plan of treatment or (at
the option of the State) otherwise authorized for the
individual in accordance with a service plan approved
by the State, (B) provided by an individual who is
qualified to provide such services and who is not a
member of the individual's family, and (C) furnished in
a home or other location;
(25) primary care case management services (as
defined in subsection (t));
(26) services furnished under a PACE program under
section 1934 to PACE program eligible individuals
enrolled under the program under such section;
(27) subject to subsection (x), primary and secondary
medical strategies and treatment and services for
individuals who have Sickle Cell Disease;
(28) freestanding birth center services (as defined
in subsection (l)(3)(A)) and other ambulatory services
that are offered by a freestanding birth center (as
defined in subsection (l)(3)(B)) and that are otherwise
included in the plan; [and]
(29) subject to paragraph (2) of subsection (ee), for
the period beginning October 1, 2020, and ending
September 30, 2025, medication-assisted treatment (as
defined in paragraph (1) of such subsection); and
[(29)] (30) any other medical care, and any other
type of remedial care recognized under State law,
specified by the Secretary,
except as otherwise provided in paragraph (16), such term does
not include--
(A) any such payments with respect to care or
services for any individual who is an inmate of a
public institution (except as a patient in a medical
institution); or
(B) any such payments with respect to care or
services for any individual who has not attained 65
years of age and who is a patient in an institution for
mental diseases.
For purposes of clause (vi) of the preceding sentence, a person
shall be considered essential to another individual if such
person is the spouse of and is living with such individual, the
needs of such person are taken into account in determining the
amount of aid or assistance furnished to such individual (under
a State plan approved under title I, X, XIV, or XVI), and such
person is determined, under such a State plan, to be essential
to the well-being of such individual. The payment described in
the first sentence may include expenditures for medicare cost-
sharing and for premiums under part B of title XVIII for
individuals who are eligible for medical assistance under the
plan and (A) are receiving aid or assistance under any plan of
the State approved under title I, X, XIV, or XVI, or part A of
title IV, or with respect to whom supplemental security income
benefits are being paid under title XVI, or (B) with respect to
whom there is being paid a State supplementary payment and are
eligible for medical assistance equal in amount, duration, and
scope to the medical assistance made available to individuals
described in section 1902(a)(10)(A), and, except in the case of
individuals 65 years of age or older and disabled individuals
entitled to health insurance benefits under title XVIII who are
not enrolled under part B of title XVIII, other insurance
premiums for medical or any other type of remedial care or the
cost thereof. No service (including counseling) shall be
excluded from the definition of ``medical assistance'' solely
because it is provided as a treatment service for alcoholism or
drug dependency.
(b) Subject to subsections (y), (z), and (aa) and section
1933(d), the term ``Federal medical assistance percentage'' for
any State shall be 100 per centum less the State percentage;
and the State percentage shall be that percentage which bears
the same ratio to 45 per centum as the square of the per capita
income of such State bears to the square of the per capita
income of the continental United States (including Alaska) and
Hawaii; except that (1) the Federal medical assistance
percentage shall in no case be less than 50 per centum or more
than 83 per centum, (2) the Federal medical assistance
percentage for Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands, Guam, the
Northern Mariana Islands, and American Samoa shall be 55
percent, (3) for purposes of this title and title XXI, the
Federal medical assistance percentage for the District of
Columbia shall be 70 percent, (4) the Federal medical
assistance percentage shall be equal to the enhanced FMAP
described in section 2105(b) with respect to medical assistance
provided to individuals who are eligible for such assistance
only on the basis of section 1902(a)(10)(A)(ii)(XVIII), and (5)
in the case of a State that provides medical assistance for
services and vaccines described in subparagraphs (A) and (B) of
subsection (a)(13), and prohibits cost-sharing for such
services and vaccines, the Federal medical assistance
percentage, as determined under this subsection and subsection
(y) (without regard to paragraph (1)(C) of such subsection),
shall be increased by 1 percentage point with respect to
medical assistance for such services and vaccines and for items
and services described in subsection (a)(4)(D). The Federal
medical assistance percentage for any State shall be determined
and promulgated in accordance with the provisions of section
1101(a)(8)(B). Notwithstanding the first sentence of this
section, the Federal medical assistance percentage shall be 100
per centum with respect to amounts expended as medical
assistance for services which are received through an Indian
Health Service facility whether operated by the Indian Health
Service or by an Indian tribe or tribal organization (as
defined in section 4 of the Indian Health Care Improvement
Act). Notwithstanding the first sentence of this subsection, in
the case of a State plan that meets the condition described in
subsection (u)(1), with respect to expenditures (other than
expenditures under section 1923) described in subsection
(u)(2)(A) or subsection (u)(3) for the State for a fiscal year,
and that do not exceed the amount of the State's available
allotment under section 2104, the Federal medical assistance
percentage is equal to the enhanced FMAP described in section
2105(b).
(c) For definition of the term ``nursing facility'', see
section 1919(a).
(d) The term ``intermediate care facility for the mentally
retarded'' means an institution (or distinct part thereof) for
the mentally retarded or persons with related conditions if--
(1) the primary purpose of such institution (or
distinct part thereof) is to provide health or
rehabilitative services for mentally retarded
individuals and the institution meets such standards as
may be prescribed by the Secretary;
(2) the mentally retarded individual with respect to
whom a request for payment is made under a plan
approved under this title is receiving active treatment
under such a program; and
(3) in the case of a public institution, the State or
political subdivision responsible for the operation of
such institution has agreed that the non-Federal
expenditures in any calendar quarter prior to January
1, 1975, with respect to services furnished to patients
in such institution (or distinct part thereof) in the
State will not, because of payments made under this
title, be reduced below the average amount expended for
such services in such institution in the four quarters
immediately preceding the quarter in which the State in
which such institution is located elected to make such
services available under its plan approved under this
title.
(e) In the case of any State the State plan of which (as
approved under this title)--
(1) does not provide for the payment of services
(other than services covered under section 1902(a)(12))
provided by an optometrist; but
(2) at a prior period did provide for the payment of
services referred to in paragraph (1);
the term ``physicians' services'' (as used in subsection
(a)(5)) shall include services of the type which an optometrist
is legally authorized to perform where the State plan
specifically provides that the term ``physicians' services'',
as employed in such plan, includes services of the type which
an optometrist is legally authorized to perform, and shall be
reimbursed whether furnished by a physician or an optometrist.
(f) For purposes of this title, the term ``nursing facility
services'' means services which are or were required to be
given an individual who needs or needed on a daily basis
nursing care (provided directly by or requiring the supervision
of nursing personnel) or other rehabilitation services which as
a practical matter can only be provided in a nursing facility
on an inpatient basis.
(g) If the State plan includes provision of chiropractors'
services, such services include only--
(1) services provided by a chiropractor (A) who is
licensed as such by the State and (B) who meets uniform
minimum standards promulgated by the Secretary under
section 1861(r)(5); and
(2) services which consist of treatment by means of
manual manipulation of the spine which the chiropractor
is legally authorized to perform by the State.
(h)(1) For purposes of paragraph (16) of subsection (a), the
term ``inpatient psychiatric hospital services for individuals
under age 21'' includes only--
(A) inpatient services which are provided in an
institution (or distinct part thereof) which is a
psychiatric hospital as defined in section 1861(f) or
in another inpatient setting that the Secretary has
specified in regulations;
(B) inpatient services which, in the case of any
individual (i) involve active treatment which meets
such standards as may be prescribed in regulations by
the Secretary, and (ii) a team, consisting of
physicians and other personnel qualified to make
determinations with respect to mental health conditions
and the treatment thereof, has determined are necessary
on an inpatient basis and can reasonably be expected to
improve the condition, by reason of which such services
are necessary, to the extent that eventually such
services will no longer be necessary; and
(C) inpatient services which, in the case of any
individual, are provided prior to (i) the date such
individual attains age 21, or (ii) in the case of an
individual who was receiving such services in the
period immediately preceding the date on which he
attained age 21, (I) the date such individual no longer
requires such services, or (II) if earlier, the date
such individual attains age 22;
(2) Such term does not include services provided during any
calendar quarter under the State plan of any State if the total
amount of the funds expended, during such quarter, by the State
(and the political subdivisions thereof) from non-Federal funds
for inpatient services included under paragraph (1), and for
active psychiatric care and treatment provided on an outpatient
basis for eligible mentally ill children, is less than the
average quarterly amount of the funds expended, during the 4-
quarter period ending December 31, 1971, by the State (and the
political subdivisions thereof) from non-Federal funds for such
services.
(i) The term ``institution for mental diseases'' means a
hospital, nursing facility, or other institution of more than
16 beds, that is primarily engaged in providing diagnosis,
treatment, or care of persons with mental diseases, including
medical attention, nursing care, and related services.
(j) The term ``State supplementary payment'' means any cash
payment made by a State on a regular basis to an individual who
is receiving supplemental security income benefits under title
XVI or who would but for his income be eligible to receive such
benefits, as assistance based on need in supplementation of
such benefits (as determined by the Commissioner of Social
Security), but only to the extent that such payments are made
with respect to an individual with respect to whom supplemental
security income benefits are payable under title XVI, or would
but for his income be payable under that title.
(k) Increased supplemental security income benefits payable
pursuant to section 211 of Public Law 93-66 shall not be
considered supplemental security income benefits payable under
title XVI.
(l)(1) The terms ``rural health clinic services'' and ``rural
health clinic'' have the meanings given such terms in section
1861(aa), except that (A) clause (ii) of section 1861(aa)(2)
shall not apply to such terms, and (B) the physician
arrangement required under section 1861(aa)(2)(B) shall only
apply with respect to rural health clinic services and, with
respect to other ambulatory care services, the physician
arrangement required shall be only such as may be required
under the State plan for those services.
(2)(A) The term ``Federally-qualified health center
services'' means services of the type described in
subparagraphs (A) through (C) of section 1861(aa)(1) when
furnished to an individual as an patient of a Federally-
qualified health center and, for this purpose, any reference to
a rural health clinic or a physician described in section
1861(aa)(2)(B) is deemed a reference to a Federally-qualified
health center or a physician at the center, respectively.
(B) The term ``Federally-qualified health center'' means an
entity which--
(i) is receiving a grant under section 330 of the
Public Health Service Act,
(ii)(I) is receiving funding from such a grant under
a contract with the recipient of such a grant, and
(II) meets the requirements to receive a grant under
section 330 of such Act,
(iii) based on the recommendation of the Health
Resources and Services Administration within the Public
Health Service, is determined by the Secretary to meet
the requirements for receiving such a grant, including
requirements of the Secretary that an entity may not be
owned, controlled, or operated by another entity, or
(iv) was treated by the Secretary, for purposes of
part B of title XVIII, as a comprehensive Federally
funded health center as of January 1, 1990;
and includes an outpatient health program or facility operated
by a tribe or tribal organization under the Indian Self-
Determination Act (Public Law 93-638) or by an urban Indian
organization receiving funds under title V of the Indian Health
Care Improvement Act for the provision of primary health
services. In applying clause (ii), the Secretary may waive any
requirement referred to in such clause for up to 2 years for
good cause shown.
(3)(A) The term ``freestanding birth center services'' means
services furnished to an individual at a freestanding birth
center (as defined in subparagraph (B)) at such center.
(B) The term ``freestanding birth center'' means a health
facility--
(i) that is not a hospital;
(ii) where childbirth is planned to occur away from
the pregnant woman's residence;
(iii) that is licensed or otherwise approved by the
State to provide prenatal labor and delivery or
postpartum care and other ambulatory services that are
included in the plan; and
(iv) that complies with such other requirements
relating to the health and safety of individuals
furnished services by the facility as the State shall
establish.
(C) A State shall provide separate payments to providers
administering prenatal labor and delivery or postpartum care in
a freestanding birth center (as defined in subparagraph (B)),
such as nurse midwives and other providers of services such as
birth attendants recognized under State law, as determined
appropriate by the Secretary. For purposes of the preceding
sentence, the term ``birth attendant'' means an individual who
is recognized or registered by the State involved to provide
health care at childbirth and who provides such care within the
scope of practice under which the individual is legally
authorized to perform such care under State law (or the State
regulatory mechanism provided by State law), regardless of
whether the individual is under the supervision of, or
associated with, a physician or other health care provider.
Nothing in this subparagraph shall be construed as changing
State law requirements applicable to a birth attendant.
(m)(1) Subject to paragraph (2), the term ``qualified family
member'' means an individual (other than a qualified pregnant
woman or child, as defined in subsection (n)) who is a member
of a family that would be receiving aid under the State plan
under part A of title IV pursuant to section 407 if the State
had not exercised the option under section 407(b)(2)(B)(i).
(2) No individual shall be a qualified family member for any
period after September 30, 1998.
(n) The term ``qualified pregnant woman or child'' means--
(1) a pregnant woman who--
(A) would be eligible for aid to families
with dependent children under part A of title
IV (or would be eligible for such aid if
coverage under the State plan under part A of
title IV included aid to families with
dependent children of unemployed parents
pursuant to section 407) if her child had been
born and was living with her in the month such
aid would be paid, and such pregnancy has been
medically verified;
(B) is a member of a family which would be
eligible for aid under the State plan under
part A of title IV pursuant to section 407 if
the plan required the payment of aid pursuant
to such section; or
(C) otherwise meets the income and resources
requirements of a State plan under part A of
title IV; and
(2) a child who has not attained the age of 19, who
was born after September 30, 1983 (or such earlier date
as the State may designate), and who meets the income
and resources requirements of the State plan under part
A of title IV.
(o)(1)(A) Subject to subparagraphs (B) and (C), the term
``hospice care'' means the care described in section
1861(dd)(1) furnished by a hospice program (as defined in
section 1861(dd)(2)) to a terminally ill individual who has
voluntarily elected (in accordance with paragraph (2)) to have
payment made for hospice care instead of having payment made
for certain benefits described in section 1812(d)(2)(A) and for
which payment may otherwise be made under title XVIII and
intermediate care facility services under the plan. For
purposes of such election, hospice care may be provided to an
individual while such individual is a resident of a skilled
nursing facility or intermediate care facility, but the only
payment made under the State plan shall be for the hospice
care.
(B) For purposes of this title, with respect to the
definition of hospice program under section 1861(dd)(2), the
Secretary may allow an agency or organization to make the
assurance under subparagraph (A)(iii) of such section without
taking into account any individual who is afflicted with
acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS).
(C) A voluntary election to have payment made for hospice
care for a child (as defined by the State) shall not constitute
a waiver of any rights of the child to be provided with, or to
have payment made under this title for, services that are
related to the treatment of the child's condition for which a
diagnosis of terminal illness has been made.
(2) An individual's voluntary election under this subsection
--
(A) shall be made in accordance with procedures that
are established by the State and that are consistent
with the procedures established under section
1812(d)(2);
(B) shall be for such a period or periods (which need
not be the same periods described in section
1812(d)(1)) as the State may establish; and
(C) may be revoked at any time without a showing of
cause and may be modified so as to change the hospice
program with respect to which a previous election was
made.
(3) In the case of an individual--
(A) who is residing in a nursing facility or
intermediate care facility for the mentally retarded
and is receiving medical assistance for services in
such facility under the plan,
(B) who is entitled to benefits under part A of title
XVIII and has elected, under section 1812(d), to
receive hospice care under such part, and
(C) with respect to whom the hospice program under
such title and the nursing facility or intermediate
care facility for the mentally retarded have entered
into a written agreement under which the program takes
full responsibility for the professional management of
the individual's hospice care and the facility agrees
to provide room and board to the individual,
instead of any payment otherwise made under the plan with
respect to the facility's services, the State shall provide for
payment to the hospice program of an amount equal to the
additional amount determined in section 1902(a)(13)(B) and, if
the individual is an individual described in section
1902(a)(10)(A), shall provide for payment of any coinsurance
amounts imposed under section 1813(a)(4).
(p)(1) The term ``qualified medicare beneficiary'' means an
individual--
(A) who is entitled to hospital insurance benefits
under part A of title XVIII (including an individual
entitled to such benefits pursuant to an enrollment
under section 1818, but not including an individual
entitled to such benefits only pursuant to an
enrollment under section 1818A),
(B) whose income (as determined under section 1612
for purposes of the supplemental security income
program, except as provided in paragraph (2)(D)) does
not exceed an income level established by the State
consistent with paragraph (2), and
(C) whose resources (as determined under section 1613
for purposes of the supplemental security income
program) do not exceed twice the maximum amount of
resources that an individual may have and obtain
benefits under that program or, effective beginning
with January 1, 2010, whose resources (as so
determined) do not exceed the maximum resource level
applied for the year under subparagraph (D) of section
1860D-14(a)(3) (determined without regard to the life
insurance policy exclusion provided under subparagraph
(G) of such section) applicable to an individual or to
the individual and the individual's spouse (as the case
may be).
(2)(A) The income level established under paragraph (1)(B)
shall be at least the percent provided under subparagraph (B)
(but not more than 100 percent) of the official poverty line
(as defined by the Office of Management and Budget, and revised
annually in accordance with section 673(2) of the Omnibus
Budget Reconciliation Act of 1981) applicable to a family of
the size involved.
(B) Except as provided in subparagraph (C), the percent
provided under this clause, with respect to eligibility for
medical assistance on or after--
(i) January 1, 1989, is 85 percent,
(ii) January 1, 1990, is 90 percent, and
(iii) January 1, 1991, is 100 percent.
(C) In the case of a State which has elected treatment under
section 1902(f) and which, as of January 1, 1987, used an
income standard for individuals age 65 or older which was more
restrictive than the income standard established under the
supplemental security income program under title XVI, the
percent provided under subparagraph (B), with respect to
eligibility for medical assistance on or after--
(i) January 1, 1989, is 80 percent,
(ii) January 1, 1990, is 85 percent,
(iii) January 1, 1991, is 95 percent, and
(iv) January 1, 1992, is 100 percent.
(D)(i) In determining under this subsection the income of an
individual who is entitled to monthly insurance benefits under
title II for a transition month (as defined in clause (ii)) in
a year, such income shall not include any amounts attributable
to an increase in the level of monthly insurance benefits
payable under such title which have occurred pursuant to
section 215(i) for benefits payable for months beginning with
December of the previous year.
(ii) For purposes of clause (i), the term ``transition
month'' means each month in a year through the month following
the month in which the annual revision of the official poverty
line, referred to in subparagraph (A), is published.
(3) The term ``medicare cost-sharing'' means (subject to
section 1902(n)(2)) the following costs incurred with respect
to a qualified medicare beneficiary, without regard to whether
the costs incurred were for items and services for which
medical assistance is otherwise available under the plan:
(A)(i) premiums under section 1818 or 1818A, and
(ii) premiums under section 1839,
(B) Coinsurance under title XVIII (including
coinsurance described in section 1813).
(C) Deductibles established under title XVIII
(including those described in section 1813 and section
1833(b)).
(D) The difference between the amount that is paid
under section 1833(a) and the amount that would be paid
under such section if any reference to ``80 percent''
therein were deemed a reference to ``100 percent''.
Such term also may include, at the option of a State, premiums
for enrollment of a qualified medicare beneficiary with an
eligible organization under section 1876.
(4) Notwithstanding any other provision of this title, in the
case of a State (other than the 50 States and the District of
Columbia)--
(A) the requirement stated in section 1902(a)(10)(E)
shall be optional, and
(B) for purposes of paragraph (2), the State may
substitute for the percent provided under subparagraph
(B) of such paragraph or 1902(a)(10)(E)(iii) any
percent.
In the case of any State which is providing medical assistance
to its residents under a waiver granted under section 1115, the
Secretary shall require the State to meet the requirement of
section 1902(a)(10)(E) in the same manner as the State would be
required to meet such requirement if the State had in effect a
plan approved under this title.
(5)(A) The Secretary shall develop and distribute to States a
simplified application form for use by individuals (including
both qualified medicare beneficiaries and specified low-income
medicare beneficiaries) in applying for medical assistance for
medicare cost-sharing under this title in the States which
elect to use such form. Such form shall be easily readable by
applicants and uniform nationally. The Secretary shall provide
for the translation of such application form into at least the
10 languages (other than English) that are most often used by
individuals applying for hospital insurance benefits under
section 226 or 226A and shall make the translated forms
available to the States and to the Commissioner of Social
Security.
(B) In developing such form, the Secretary shall consult with
beneficiary groups and the States.
(6) For provisions relating to outreach efforts to increase
awareness of the availability of medicare cost-sharing, see
section 1144.
(q) The term ``qualified severely impaired individual'' means
an individual under age 65--
(1) who for the month preceding the first month to
which this subsection applies to such individual--
(A) received (i) a payment of supplemental
security income benefits under section 1611(b)
on the basis of blindness or disability, (ii) a
supplementary payment under section 1616 of
this Act or under section 212 of Public Law 93-
66 on such basis, (iii) a payment of monthly
benefits under section 1619(a), or (iv) a
supplementary payment under section 1616(c)(3),
and
(B) was eligible for medical assistance under
the State plan approved under this title; and
(2) with respect to whom the Commissioner of Social
Security determines that--
(A) the individual continues to be blind or
continues to have the disabling physical or
mental impairment on the basis of which he was
found to be under a disability and, except for
his earnings, continues to meet all non-
disability-related requirements for eligibility
for benefits under title XVI,
(B) the income of such individual would not,
except for his earnings, be equal to or in
excess of the amount which would cause him to
be ineligible for payments under section
1611(b) (if he were otherwise eligible for such
payments),
(C) the lack of eligibility for benefits
under this title would seriously inhibit his
ability to continue or obtain employment, and
(D) the individual's earnings are not
sufficient to allow him to provide for himself
a reasonable equivalent of the benefits under
title XVI (including any federally administered
State supplementary payments), this title, and
publicly funded attendant care services
(including personal care assistance) that would
be available to him in the absence of such
earnings.
In the case of an individual who is eligible for
medical assistance pursuant to section 1619(b) in June,
1987, the individual shall be a qualified severely
impaired individual for so long as such individual
meets the requirements of paragraph (2).
(r) The term ``early and periodic screening, diagnostic, and
treatment services'' means the following items and services:
(1) Screening services--
(A) which are provided--
(i) at intervals which meet
reasonable standards of medical and
dental practice, as determined by the
State after consultation with
recognized medical and dental
organizations involved in child health
care and, with respect to immunizations
under subparagraph (B)(iii), in
accordance with the schedule referred
to in section 1928(c)(2)(B)(i) for
pediatric vaccines, and
(ii) at such other intervals,
indicated as medically necessary, to
determine the existence of certain
physical or mental illnesses or
conditions; and
(B) which shall at a minimum include--
(i) a comprehensive health and
developmental history (including
assessment of both physical and mental
health development),
(ii) a comprehensive unclothed
physical exam,
(iii) appropriate immunizations
(according to the schedule referred to
in section 1928(c)(2)(B)(i) for
pediatric vaccines) according to age
and health history,
(iv) laboratory tests (including lead
blood level assessment appropriate for
age and risk factors), and
(v) health education (including
anticipatory guidance).
(2) Vision services--
(A) which are provided--
(i) at intervals which meet
reasonable standards of medical
practice, as determined by the State
after consultation with recognized
medical organizations involved in child
health care, and
(ii) at such other intervals,
indicated as medically necessary, to
determine the existence of a suspected
illness or condition; and
(B) which shall at a minimum include
diagnosis and treatment for defects in vision,
including eyeglasses.
(3) Dental services--
(A) which are provided--
(i) at intervals which meet
reasonable standards of dental
practice, as determined by the State
after consultation with recognized
dental organizations involved in child
health care, and
(ii) at such other intervals,
indicated as medically necessary, to
determine the existence of a suspected
illness or condition; and
(B) which shall at a minimum include relief
of pain and infections, restoration of teeth,
and maintenance of dental health.
(4) Hearing services--
(A) which are provided--
(i) at intervals which meet
reasonable standards of medical
practice, as determined by the State
after consultation with recognized
medical organizations involved in child
health care, and
(ii) at such other intervals,
indicated as medically necessary, to
determine the existence of a suspected
illness or condition; and
(B) which shall at a minimum include
diagnosis and treatment for defects in hearing,
including hearing aids.
(5) Such other necessary health care, diagnostic
services, treatment, and other measures described in
section 1905(a) to correct or ameliorate defects and
physical and mental illnesses and conditions discovered
by the screening services, whether or not such services
are covered under the State plan.
Nothing in this title shall be construed as limiting providers
of early and periodic screening, diagnostic, and treatment
services to providers who are qualified to provide all of the
items and services described in the previous sentence or as
preventing a provider that is qualified under the plan to
furnish one or more (but not all) of such items or services
from being qualified to provide such items and services as part
of early and periodic screening, diagnostic, and treatment
services. The Secretary shall, not later than July 1, 1990, and
every 12 months thereafter, develop and set annual
participation goals for each State for participation of
individuals who are covered under the State plan under this
title in early and periodic screening, diagnostic, and
treatment services.
(s) The term ``qualified disabled and working individual''
means an individual--
(1) who is entitled to enroll for hospital insurance
benefits under part A of title XVIII under section
1818A (as added by 6012 of the Omnibus Budget
Reconciliation Act of 1989);
(2) whose income (as determined under section 1612
for purposes of the supplemental security income
program) does not exceed 200 percent of the official
poverty line (as defined by the Office of Management
and Budget and revised annually in accordance with
section 673(2) of the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act
of 1981) applicable to a family of the size involved;
(3) whose resources (as determined under section 1613
for purposes of the supplemental security income
program) do not exceed twice the maximum amount of
resources that an individual or a couple (in the case
of an individual with a spouse) may have and obtain
benefits for supplemental security income benefits
under title XVI; and
(4) who is not otherwise eligible for medical
assistance under this title.
(t)(1) The term ``primary care case management services''
means case-management related services (including locating,
coordinating, and monitoring of health care services) provided
by a primary care case manager under a primary care case
management contract.
(2) The term ``primary care case manager'' means any of the
following that provides services of the type described in
paragraph (1) under a contract referred to in such paragraph:
(A) A physician, a physician group practice, or an
entity employing or having other arrangements with
physicians to provide such services.
(B) At State option--
(i) a nurse practitioner (as described in
section 1905(a)(21));
(ii) a certified nurse-midwife (as defined in
section 1861(gg)); or
(iii) a physician assistant (as defined in
section 1861(aa)(5)).
(3) The term ``primary care case management contract'' means
a contract between a primary care case manager and a State
under which the manager undertakes to locate, coordinate, and
monitor covered primary care (and such other covered services
as may be specified under the contract) to all individuals
enrolled with the manager, and which--
(A) provides for reasonable and adequate hours of
operation, including 24-hour availability of
information, referral, and treatment with respect to
medical emergencies;
(B) restricts enrollment to individuals residing
sufficiently near a service delivery site of the
manager to be able to reach that site within a
reasonable time using available and affordable modes of
transportation;
(C) provides for arrangements with, or referrals to,
sufficient numbers of physicians and other appropriate
health care professionals to ensure that services under
the contract can be furnished to enrollees promptly and
without compromise to quality of care;
(D) prohibits discrimination on the basis of health
status or requirements for health care services in
enrollment, disenrollment, or reenrollment of
individuals eligible for medical assistance under this
title;
(E) provides for a right for an enrollee to terminate
enrollment in accordance with section 1932(a)(4); and
(F) complies with the other applicable provisions of
section 1932.
(4) For purposes of this subsection, the term ``primary
care'' includes all health care services customarily provided
in accordance with State licensure and certification laws and
regulations, and all laboratory services customarily provided
by or through, a general practitioner, family medicine
physician, internal medicine physician, obstetrician/
gynecologist, or pediatrician.
(u)(1) The conditions described in this paragraph for a State
plan are as follows:
(A) The State is complying with the requirement of
section 2105(d)(1).
(B) The plan provides for such reporting of
information about expenditures and payments
attributable to the operation of this subsection as the
Secretary deems necessary in order to carry out the
fourth sentence of subsection (b).
(2)(A) For purposes of subsection (b), the expenditures
described in this subparagraph are expenditures for medical
assistance for optional targeted low-income children described
in subparagraph (B).
(B) For purposes of this paragraph, the term ``optional
targeted low-income child'' means a targeted low-income child
as defined in section 2110(b)(1) (determined without regard to
that portion of subparagraph (C) of such section concerning
eligibility for medical assistance under this title) who would
not qualify for medical assistance under the State plan under
this title as in effect on March 31, 1997 (but taking into
account the expansion of age of eligibility effected through
the operation of section 1902(l)(1)(D)). Such term excludes any
child eligible for medical assistance only by reason of section
1902(a)(10)(A)(ii)(XIX).
(3) For purposes of subsection (b), the expenditures
described in this paragraph are expenditures for medical
assistance for children who are born before October 1, 1983,
and who would be described in section 1902(l)(1)(D) if they had
been born on or after such date, and who are not eligible for
such assistance under the State plan under this title based on
such State plan as in effect as of March 31, 1997.
(4) The limitations on payment under subsections (f) and (g)
of section 1108 shall not apply to Federal payments made under
section 1903(a)(1) based on an enhanced FMAP described in
section 2105(b).
(v)(1) The term ``employed individual with a medically
improved disability'' means an individual who--
(A) is at least 16, but less than 65, years of age;
(B) is employed (as defined in paragraph (2));
(C) ceases to be eligible for medical assistance
under section 1902(a)(10)(A)(ii)(XV) because the
individual, by reason of medical improvement, is
determined at the time of a regularly scheduled
continuing disability review to no longer be eligible
for benefits under section 223(d) or 1614(a)(3); and
(D) continues to have a severe medically determinable
impairment, as determined under regulations of the
Secretary.
(2) For purposes of paragraph (1), an individual is
considered to be ``employed'' if the individual--
(A) is earning at least the applicable minimum wage
requirement under section 6 of the Fair Labor Standards
Act (29 U.S.C. 206) and working at least 40 hours per
month; or
(B) is engaged in a work effort that meets
substantial and reasonable threshold criteria for hours
of work, wages, or other measures, as defined by the
State and approved by the Secretary.'
(w)(1) For purposes of this title, the term ``independent
foster care adolescent'' means an individual--
(A) who is under 21 years of age;
(B) who, on the individual's 18th birthday, was in
foster care under the responsibility of a State; and
(C) whose assets, resources, and income do not exceed
such levels (if any) as the State may establish
consistent with paragraph (2).
(2) The levels established by a State under paragraph (1)(C)
may not be less than the corresponding levels applied by the
State under section 1931(b).
(3) A State may limit the eligibility of independent foster
care adolescents under section 1902(a)(10)(A)(ii)(XVII) to
those individuals with respect to whom foster care maintenance
payments or independent living services were furnished under a
program funded under part E of title IV before the date the
individuals attained 18 years of age.
(x) For purposes of subsection (a)(27), the strategies,
treatment, and services described in that subsection include
the following:
(1) Chronic blood transfusion (with deferoxamine
chelation) to prevent stroke in individuals with Sickle
Cell Disease who have been identified as being at high
risk for stroke.
(2) Genetic counseling and testing for individuals
with Sickle Cell Disease or the sickle cell trait to
allow health care professionals to treat such
individuals and to prevent symptoms of Sickle Cell
Disease.
(3) Other treatment and services to prevent
individuals who have Sickle Cell Disease and who have
had a stroke from having another stroke.
(y) Increased FMAP for Medical Assistance for Newly Eligible
Mandatory Individuals.--
(1) Amount of increase.--Notwithstanding subsection
(b), the Federal medical assistance percentage for a
State that is one of the 50 States or the District of
Columbia, with respect to amounts expended by such
State for medical assistance for newly eligible
individuals described in subclause (VIII) of section
1902(a)(10)(A)(i), shall be equal to--
(A) 100 percent for calendar quarters in
2014, 2015, and 2016;
(B) 95 percent for calendar quarters in 2017;
(C) 94 percent for calendar quarters in 2018;
(D) 93 percent for calendar quarters in 2019;
and
(E) 90 percent for calendar quarters in 2020
and each year thereafter.
(2) Definitions.--In this subsection:
(A) Newly eligible.--The term ``newly
eligible'' means, with respect to an individual
described in subclause (VIII) of section
1902(a)(10)(A)(i), an individual who is not
under 19 years of age (or such higher age as
the State may have elected) and who, as of
December 1, 2009, is not eligible under the
State plan or under a waiver of the plan for
full benefits or for benchmark coverage
described in subparagraph (A), (B), or (C) of
section 1937(b)(1) or benchmark equivalent
coverage described in section 1937(b)(2) that
has an aggregate actuarial value that is at
least actuarially equivalent to benchmark
coverage described in subparagraph (A), (B), or
(C) of section 1937(b)(1), or is eligible but
not enrolled (or is on a waiting list) for such
benefits or coverage through a waiver under the
plan that has a capped or limited enrollment
that is full.
(B) Full benefits.--The term ``full
benefits'' means, with respect to an
individual, medical assistance for all services
covered under the State plan under this title
that is not less in amount, duration, or scope,
or is determined by the Secretary to be
substantially equivalent, to the medical
assistance available for an individual
described in section 1902(a)(10)(A)(i).
(z) Equitable Support for Certain States.--
(1)(A) During the period that begins on January 1,
2014, and ends on December 31, 2015, notwithstanding
subsection (b), the Federal medical assistance
percentage otherwise determined under subsection (b)
with respect to a fiscal year occurring during that
period shall be increased by 2.2 percentage points for
any State described in subparagraph (B) for amounts
expended for medical assistance for individuals who are
not newly eligible (as defined in subsection (y)(2))
individuals described in subclause (VIII) of section
1902(a)(10)(A)(i).
(B) For purposes of subparagraph (A), a State
described in this subparagraph is a State that--
(i) is an expansion State described in
paragraph (3);
(ii) the Secretary determines will not
receive any payments under this title on the
basis of an increased Federal medical
assistance percentage under subsection (y) for
expenditures for medical assistance for newly
eligible individuals (as so defined); and
(iii) has not been approved by the Secretary
to divert a portion of the DSH allotment for a
State to the costs of providing medical
assistance or other health benefits coverage
under a waiver that is in effect on July 2009.
(2)(A) For calendar quarters in 2014 and each year
thereafter, the Federal medical assistance percentage
otherwise determined under subsection (b) for an
expansion State described in paragraph (3) with respect
to medical assistance for individuals described in
section 1902(a)(10)(A)(i)(VIII) who are nonpregnant
childless adults with respect to whom the State may
require enrollment in benchmark coverage under section
1937 shall be equal to the percent specified in
subparagraph (B)(i) for such year.
(B)(i) The percent specified in this subparagraph for
a State for a year is equal to the Federal medical
assistance percentage (as defined in the first sentence
of subsection (b)) for the State increased by a number
of percentage points equal to the transition percentage
(specified in clause (ii) for the year) of the number
of percentage points by which--
(I) such Federal medical assistance
percentage for the State, is less than
(II) the percent specified in subsection
(y)(1) for the year.
(ii) The transition percentage specified in this
clause for--
(I) 2014 is 50 percent;
(II) 2015 is 60 percent;
(III) 2016 is 70 percent;
(IV) 2017 is 80 percent;
(V) 2018 is 90 percent; and
(VI) 2019 and each subsequent year is 100
percent.
(3) A State is an expansion State if, on the date of
the enactment of the Patient Protection and Affordable
Care Act, the State offers health benefits coverage
statewide to parents and nonpregnant, childless adults
whose income is at least 100 percent of the poverty
line, that includes inpatient hospital services, is not
dependent on access to employer coverage, employer
contribution, or employment and is not limited to
premium assistance, hospital-only benefits, a high
deductible health plan, or alternative benefits under a
demonstration program authorized under section 1938. A
State that offers health benefits coverage to only
parents or only nonpregnant childless adults described
in the preceding sentence shall not be considered to be
an expansion State.
(aa)(1) Notwithstanding subsection (b), beginning January 1,
2011, the Federal medical assistance percentage for a fiscal
year for a disaster-recovery FMAP adjustment State shall be
equal to the following:
(A) In the case of the first fiscal year (or part of
a fiscal year) for which this subsection applies to the
State, the State's regular FMAP shall be increased by
50 percent of the number of percentage points by which
the State's regular FMAP for such fiscal year is less
than the Federal medical assistance percentage
determined for the State for the preceding fiscal year
after the application of only subsection (a) of section
5001 of Public Law 111-5 (if applicable to the
preceding fiscal year) and without regard to this
subsection, subsections (y) and (z), and subsections
(b) and (c) of section 5001 of Public Law 111-5.
(B) In the case of the second or any succeeding
fiscal year for which this subsection applies to the
State, the State's regular FMAP for such fiscal year
shall be increased by 25 percent (or 50 percent in the
case of fiscal year 2013) of the number of percentage
points by which the State's regular FMAP for such
fiscal year is less than the Federal medical assistance
percentage received by the State during the preceding
fiscal year.
(2) In this subsection, the term ``disaster-recovery FMAP
adjustment State'' means a State that is one of the 50 States
or the District of Columbia, for which, at any time during the
preceding 7 fiscal years, the President has declared a major
disaster under section 401 of the Robert T. Stafford Disaster
Relief and Emergency Assistance Act and determined as a result
of such disaster that every county or parish in the State
warrant individual and public assistance or public assistance
from the Federal Government under such Act and for which--
(A) in the case of the first fiscal year (or part of
a fiscal year) for which this subsection applies to the
State, the State's regular FMAP for the fiscal year is
less than the Federal medical assistance percentage
determined for the State for the preceding fiscal year
after the application of only subsection (a) of section
5001 of Public Law 111-5 (if applicable to the
preceding fiscal year) and without regard to this
subsection, subsections (y) and (z), and subsections
(b) and (c) of section 5001 of Public Law 111-5, by at
least 3 percentage points; and
(B) in the case of the second or any succeeding
fiscal year for which this subsection applies to the
State, the State's regular FMAP for the fiscal year is
less than the Federal medical assistance percentage
determined for the State for the preceding fiscal year
under this subsection by at least 3 percentage points.
(3) In this subsection, the term ``regular FMAP'' means, for
each fiscal year for which this subsection applies to a State,
the Federal medical assistance percentage that would otherwise
apply to the State for the fiscal year, as determined under
subsection (b) and without regard to this subsection,
subsections (y) and (z), and section 10202 of the Patient
Protection and Affordable Care Act.
(4) The Federal medical assistance percentage determined for
a disaster-recovery FMAP adjustment State under paragraph (1)
shall apply for purposes of this title (other than with respect
to disproportionate share hospital payments described in
section 1923 and payments under this title that are based on
the enhanced FMAP described in 2105(b)) and shall not apply
with respect to payments under title IV (other than under part
E of title IV) or payments under title XXI.
(bb)(1) For purposes of this title, the term ``counseling and
pharmacotherapy for cessation of tobacco use by pregnant
women'' means diagnostic, therapy, and counseling services and
pharmacotherapy (including the coverage of prescription and
nonprescription tobacco cessation agents approved by the Food
and Drug Administration) for cessation of tobacco use by
pregnant women who use tobacco products or who are being
treated for tobacco use that is furnished--
(A) by or under the supervision of a physician; or
(B) by any other health care professional who--
(i) is legally authorized to furnish such
services under State law (or the State
regulatory mechanism provided by State law) of
the State in which the services are furnished;
and
(ii) is authorized to receive payment for
other services under this title or is
designated by the Secretary for this purpose.
(2) Subject to paragraph (3), such term is limited to--
(A) services recommended with respect to pregnant
women in ``Treating Tobacco Use and Dependence: 2008
Update: A Clinical Practice Guideline'', published by
the Public Health Service in May 2008, or any
subsequent modification of such Guideline; and
(B) such other services that the Secretary recognizes
to be effective for cessation of tobacco use by
pregnant women.
(3) Such term shall not include coverage for drugs or
biologicals that are not otherwise covered under this title.
(cc) Requirement for Certain States.--Notwithstanding
subsections (y), (z), and (aa), in the case of a State that
requires political subdivisions within the State to contribute
toward the non-Federal share of expenditures required under the
State plan under section 1902(a)(2), the State shall not be
eligible for an increase in its Federal medical assistance
percentage under such subsections if it requires that political
subdivisions pay a greater percentage of the non-Federal share
of such expenditures, or a greater percentage of the non-
Federal share of payments under section 1923, than the
respective percentages that would have been required by the
State under the State plan under this title, State law, or
both, as in effect on December 31, 2009, and without regard to
any such increase. Voluntary contributions by a political
subdivision to the non-Federal share of expenditures under the
State plan under this title or to the non-Federal share of
payments under section 1923, shall not be considered to be
required contributions for purposes of this subsection. The
treatment of voluntary contributions, and the treatment of
contributions required by a State under the State plan under
this title, or State law, as provided by this subsection, shall
also apply to the increases in the Federal medical assistance
percentage under section 5001 of the American Recovery and
Reinvestment Act of 2009.
(dd) Increased FMAP for Additional Expenditures for Primary
Care Services.--Notwithstanding subsection (b), with respect to
the portion of the amounts expended for medical assistance for
services described in section 1902(a)(13)(C) furnished on or
after January 1, 2013, and before January 1, 2015, that is
attributable to the amount by which the minimum payment rate
required under such section (or, by application, section
1932(f)) exceeds the payment rate applicable to such services
under the State plan as of July 1, 2009, the Federal medical
assistance percentage for a State that is one of the 50 States
or the District of Columbia shall be equal to 100 percent. The
preceding sentence does not prohibit the payment of Federal
financial participation based on the Federal medical assistance
percentage for amounts in excess of those specified in such
sentence.
(ee) Medication-assisted Treatment.--
(1) Definition.--For purposes of subsection (a)(29),
the term ``medication-assisted treatment''--
(A) means all drugs approved under section
505 of the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act
(21 U.S.C. 355), including methadone, and all
biological products licensed under section 351
of the Public Health Service Act (42 U.S.C.
262) to treat opioid use disorders; and
(B) includes, with respect to the provision
of such drugs and biological products,
counseling services and behavioral therapy.
(2) Exception.--The provisions of paragraph (29) of
subsection (a) shall not apply with respect to a State
for the period specified in such paragraph, if before
the beginning of such period the State certifies to the
satisfaction of the Secretary that implementing such
provisions statewide for all individuals eligible to
enroll in the State plan (or waiver of the State plan)
would not be feasible by reason of a shortage of
qualified providers of medication-assisted treatment,
or facilities providing such treatment, that will
contract with the State or a managed care entity with
which the State has a contract under section 1903(m) or
under section 1905(t)(3).
* * * * * * *
Sec. 1945. State Option To Provide Coordinated Care Through a
Health Home for Individuals With Chronic Conditions.--
(a) In General.--Notwithstanding section 1902(a)(1) (relating
to statewideness), section 1902(a)(10)(B) (relating to
comparability), and any other provision of this title for which
the Secretary determines it is necessary to waive in order to
implement this section, beginning January 1, 2011, a State, at
its option as a State plan amendment, may provide for medical
assistance under this title to eligible individuals with
chronic conditions who select a designated provider (as
described under subsection (h)(5)), a team of health care
professionals (as described under subsection (h)(6)) operating
with such a provider, or a health team (as described under
subsection (h)(7)) as the individual's health home for purposes
of providing the individual with health home services.
(b) Health Home Qualification Standards.--The Secretary shall
establish standards for qualification as a designated provider
for the purpose of being eligible to be a health home for
purposes of this section.
(c) Payments.--
(1) In general.--A State shall provide a designated
provider, a team of health care professionals operating
with such a provider, or a health team with payments
for the provision of health home services to each
eligible individual with chronic conditions that
selects such provider, team of health care
professionals, or health team as the individual's
health home. Payments made to a designated provider, a
team of health care professionals operating with such a
provider, or a health team for such services shall be
treated as medical assistance for purposes of section
1903(a), except that, subject to paragraph (4), during
the first 8 fiscal year quarters that the State plan
amendment is in effect, the Federal medical assistance
percentage applicable to such payments shall be equal
to 90 percent.
(2) Methodology.--
(A) In general.--The State shall specify in
the State plan amendment the methodology the
State will use for determining payment for the
provision of health home services. Such
methodology for determining payment--
(i) may be tiered to reflect, with
respect to each eligible individual
with chronic conditions provided such
services by a designated provider, a
team of health care professionals
operating with such a provider, or a
health team, as well as the severity or
number of each such individual's
chronic conditions or the specific
capabilities of the provider, team of
health care professionals, or health
team; and
(ii) shall be established consistent
with section 1902(a)(30)(A).
(B) Alternate models of payment.--The
methodology for determining payment for
provision of health home services under this
section shall not be limited to a per-member
per-month basis and may provide (as proposed by
the State and subject to approval by the
Secretary) for alternate models of payment.
(3) Planning grants.--
(A) In general.--Beginning January 1, 2011,
the Secretary may award planning grants to
States for purposes of developing a State plan
amendment under this section. A planning grant
awarded to a State under this paragraph shall
remain available until expended.
(B) State contribution.--A State awarded a
planning grant shall contribute an amount equal
to the State percentage determined under
section 1905(b) (without regard to section 5001
of Public Law 111-5) for each fiscal year for
which the grant is awarded.
(C) Limitation.--The total amount of payments
made to States under this paragraph shall not
exceed $25,000,000.
(4) Special rule relating to substance use disorder
health homes.--
(A) In general.--In the case of a State with
an SUD-focused State plan amendment approved by
the Secretary on or after October 1, 2018, the
Secretary may, at the request of the State,
extend the application of the Federal medical
assistance percentage described in paragraph
(1) to payments for the provision of health
home services to SUD-eligible individuals under
such State plan amendment, in addition to the
first 8 fiscal year quarters the State plan
amendment is in effect, for the subsequent 2
fiscal year quarters that the State plan
amendment is in effect. Nothing in this section
shall be construed as prohibiting a State with
a State plan amendment that is approved under
this section and that is not an SUD-focused
State plan amendment from additionally having
approved on or after such date an SUD-focused
State plan amendment under this section,
including for purposes of application of this
paragraph.
(B) Report requirements.--In the case of a
State with an SUD-focused State plan amendment
for which the application of the Federal
medical assistance percentage has been extended
under subparagraph (A), such State shall, at
the end of the period of such State plan
amendment, submit to the Secretary a report on
the following, with respect to SUD-eligible
individuals provided health home services under
such State plan amendment:
(i) The quality of health care
provided to such individuals, with a
focus on outcomes relevant to the
recovery of each such individual.
(ii) The access of such individuals
to health care.
(iii) The total expenditures of such
individuals for health care.
For purposes of this subparagraph, the
Secretary shall specify all applicable
measures for determining quality,
access, and expenditures.
(C) Best practices.--Not later than October
1, 2020, the Secretary shall make publicly
available on the Internet website of the
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services best
practices for designing and implementing an
SUD-focused State plan amendment, based on the
experiences of States that have State plan
amendments approved under this section that
include SUD-eligible individuals.
(D) Definitions.--For purposes of this
paragraph:
(i) SUD-eligible individuals.--The
term ``SUD-eligible individual'' means,
with respect to a State, an individual
who satisfies all of the following:
(I) The individual is an
eligible individual with
chronic conditions.
(II) The individual is an
individual with a substance use
disorder.
(III) The individual has not
previously received health home
services under any other State
plan amendment approved for the
State under this section by the
Secretary.
(ii) SUD-focused state plan
amendment.--The term ``SUD-focused
State plan amendment'' means a State
plan amendment under this section that
is designed to provide health home
services primarily to SUD-eligible
individuals.
(d) Hospital Referrals.--A State shall include in the State
plan amendment a requirement for hospitals that are
participating providers under the State plan or a waiver of
such plan to establish procedures for referring any eligible
individuals with chronic conditions who seek or need treatment
in a hospital emergency department to designated providers.
(e) Coordination.--A State shall consult and coordinate, as
appropriate, with the Substance Abuse and Mental Health
Services Administration in addressing issues regarding the
prevention and treatment of mental illness and substance abuse
among eligible individuals with chronic conditions.
(f) Monitoring.--A State shall include in the State plan
amendment--
(1) a methodology for tracking avoidable hospital
readmissions and calculating savings that result from
improved chronic care coordination and management under
this section; and
(2) a proposal for use of health information
technology in providing health home services under this
section and improving service delivery and coordination
across the care continuum (including the use of
wireless patient technology to improve coordination and
management of care and patient adherence to
recommendations made by their provider).
(g) Report on Quality Measures.--As a condition for receiving
payment for health home services provided to an eligible
individual with chronic conditions, a designated provider shall
report to the State, in accordance with such requirements as
the Secretary shall specify, on all applicable measures for
determining the quality of such services. When appropriate and
feasible, a designated provider shall use health information
technology in providing the State with such information.
(h) Definitions.--In this section:
(1) Eligible individual with chronic conditions.--
(A) In general.--Subject to subparagraph (B),
the term ``eligible individual with chronic
conditions'' means an individual who--
(i) is eligible for medical
assistance under the State plan or
under a waiver of such plan; and
(ii) has at least--
(I) 2 chronic conditions;
(II) 1 chronic condition and
is at risk of having a second
chronic condition; or
(III) 1 serious and
persistent mental health
condition.
(B) Rule of construction.--Nothing in this
paragraph shall prevent the Secretary from
establishing higher levels as to the number or
severity of chronic or mental health conditions
for purposes of determining eligibility for
receipt of health home services under this
section.
(2) Chronic condition.--The term ``chronic
condition'' has the meaning given that term by the
Secretary and shall include, but is not limited to, the
following:
(A) A mental health condition.
(B) Substance use disorder.
(C) Asthma.
(D) Diabetes.
(E) Heart disease.
(F) Being overweight, as evidenced by having
a Body Mass Index (BMI) over 25.
(3) Health home.--The term ``health home'' means a
designated provider (including a provider that operates
in coordination with a team of health care
professionals) or a health team selected by an eligible
individual with chronic conditions to provide health
home services.
(4) Health home services.--
(A) In general.--The term ``health home
services'' means comprehensive and timely high-
quality services described in subparagraph (B)
that are provided by a designated provider, a
team of health care professionals operating
with such a provider, or a health team.
(B) Services described.--The services
described in this subparagraph are--
(i) comprehensive care management;
(ii) care coordination and health
promotion;
(iii) comprehensive transitional
care, including appropriate follow-up,
from inpatient to other settings;
(iv) patient and family support
(including authorized representatives);
(v) referral to community and social
support services, if relevant; and
(vi) use of health information
technology to link services, as
feasible and appropriate.
(5) Designated provider.--The term ``designated
provider'' means a physician, clinical practice or
clinical group practice, rural clinic, community health
center, community mental health center, home health
agency, or any other entity or provider (including
pediatricians, gynecologists, and obstetricians) that
is determined by the State and approved by the
Secretary to be qualified to be a health home for
eligible individuals with chronic conditions on the
basis of documentation evidencing that the physician,
practice, or clinic--
(A) has the systems and infrastructure in
place to provide health home services; and
(B) satisfies the qualification standards
established by the Secretary under subsection
(b).
(6) Team of health care professionals.--The term
``team of health care professionals'' means a team of
health professionals (as described in the State plan
amendment) that may--
(A) include physicians and other
professionals, such as a nurse care
coordinator, nutritionist, social worker,
behavioral health professional, or any
professionals deemed appropriate by the State;
and
(B) be free standing, virtual, or based at a
hospital, community health center, community
mental health center, rural clinic, clinical
practice or clinical group practice, academic
health center, or any entity deemed appropriate
by the State and approved by the Secretary.
(7) Health team.--The term ``health team'' has the
meaning given such term for purposes of section 3502 of
the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act.
* * * * * * *
[all]