Sen. Heather A. Steans

Filed: 4/20/2018

 

 


 

 


 
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1
AMENDMENT TO SENATE BILL 2382

2    AMENDMENT NO. ______. Amend Senate Bill 2382 by replacing
3everything after the enacting clause with the following:
 
4    "Section 1. Findings; intent. According to the
5Congressional Research Service reporting, approximately 35% to
660% of children placed in foster care have at least one chronic
7or acute physical health condition that requires treatment,
8including growth failure, asthma, obesity, vision impairment,
9hearing loss, neurological problems, and complex chronic
10illnesses; as many as 50% to 75% show behavioral or social
11competency issues that may warrant mental health services; many
12of these physical and mental health care issues persist and,
13relative to their peers in the general population, children who
14leave foster care for adoption and those who age out of care
15continue to have greater health needs.
16    Federal child welfare policy requires states to develop
17strategies to address the health care needs of each child in

 

 

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1foster care and mandates coordination of state child welfare
2and Medicaid agencies to ensure that the health care needs of
3children in foster care are properly identified and treated.
4    The Department of Children and Family Services is
5responsible for ensuring safety, family permanence, and
6well-being for the children placed in its custody and
7protecting these children from further trauma by ensuring
8timely access to appropriate placements and services,
9especially those children with complex emotional and
10behavioral needs who are at much greater risk for not achieving
11the fundamental child welfare goals of safety, permanence, and
12well-being.
13    The Department remains under federal court oversight
14pursuant to the B.H. Consent Decree, in part, for failure to
15provide constitutionally sufficient services and placements
16for children with psychological, behavioral, or emotional
17challenges; the 2015 court-appointed Expert Panel found too
18many children in the class experience multiple disruptions of
19placement, services, and relationships; these children and
20their families endure indeterminate waits, month upon month,
21for services the child and family need, without a concrete plan
22or timeframe; these disruptions and delays and the inaction of
23Department officials exacerbate children's already serious and
24chronic mental health problems; the Department's approach to
25treatment and its system of practice has been one shaped by
26crises, practitioner preferences, tradition, and system

 

 

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1expediency.
2    The American Academy of Pediatrics cautions that the
3effects of managed care on children's access to services and
4actual health outcomes are not yet clear; it outlines design
5and implementation principles if managed care is to be
6implemented for children.
7    It is the intent of the General Assembly to ensure that
8children are provided a system of health care with full and
9inclusive access to physical and behavioral health services
10necessary for them to thrive.
11    The General Assembly finds it necessary to protect youth in
12care by requiring the Department to plan the use of managed
13care services transparently, collaboratively, and deliberately
14to ensure quality outcomes and accountable oversight.
 
15    Section 5. The Children and Family Services Act is amended
16by adding Section 5.45 as follows:
 
17    (20 ILCS 505/5.45 new)
18    Sec. 5.45. Managed care plan services.
19    (a) As used in this Section:
20    "Caregiver" means an individual or entity directly
21providing the day-to-day care of a child ensuring the child's
22safety and well-being.
23    "Child" or "youth" means a child placed in the care of the
24Department pursuant to the Juvenile Court Act of 1987.

 

 

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1    "Department" means the Department of Children and Family
2Services, or any successor State agency.
3    "Director" means the Director of Children and Family
4Services.
5    "Managed care organization" has the meaning ascribed to
6that term in Section 5-30.1 of the Illinois Public Aid Code.
7    "Medicaid managed care plan" means a health care plan
8operated by a managed care organization under the Medical
9Assistance Program established in Article V of the Illinois
10Public Aid Code.
11    (b) Every child who is in the care of the Department
12pursuant to the Juvenile Court Act of 1987 shall receive the
13necessary services required by this Act and the Juvenile Court
14Act of 1987, including any child enrolled in a Medicaid managed
15care plan. The Department shall adopt rules as set forth in
16this subsection (e) before the Department is permitted to
17utilize Medicaid managed care services for children.
18    (c) The Department shall not relinquish its authority or
19diminish its responsibility to determine, provide, or
20authorize necessary services that are in the best interest of a
21child even if those services are directly or indirectly:
22        (1) provided by a managed care organization, another
23    State agency, or other third parties;
24        (2) coordinated through a managed care organization,
25    another State agency, or other third parties; or
26        (3) paid for by a managed care organization, another

 

 

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1    State agency, or other third parties.
2    (d) The Department shall:
3        (1) implement and enforce measures to prevent
4    enrollment in Medicaid managed care plans from disrupting
5    service delivery or hindering continuity of treatment for
6    any child;
7        (2) establish a single point of contact at the
8    Department for health care coverage inquiries and dispute
9    resolution systemwide without transferring this
10    responsibility to a third party such as a managed care
11    coordinator;
12        (3) prohibit mandatory participation in Medicaid
13    managed care plans for any child; and
14        (4) develop managed care contract measures, quality
15    assurance activities, and performance delivery evaluations
16    with input from health care providers, caregivers of youth
17    in care, State agency personnel, representatives of youth
18    in care, managed care organizations, child welfare
19    providers and related trade associations, parents of
20    children in out-of-home care, academic institutions,
21    pediatric experts, court stakeholders, and other child
22    advocates; and
23        (5) post on its website:
24            (A) a link to any rule adopted in accordance to
25        subsection (e) of this Section;
26            (B) each managed care organization's contract,

 

 

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1        enrollee handbook, and directory; and
2            (C) the State's current Health Care Oversight and
3        Coordination Plan developed in accordance with federal
4        requirements.
5    (e) The Department shall adopt rules regarding the
6provision of health care services to children enrolled in
7Medicaid managed care plans. The proposed rules shall address,
8but not be limited to, the following:
9        (1) an assessment of existing network adequacy, plans
10    to address gaps in network before transition to managed
11    care, and ongoing network evaluation;
12        (2) preparation and training of organizations,
13    caregivers, frontline staff, and managed care
14    organizations;
15        (3) the identification of administrative changes
16    necessary for successful transition to managed care, and
17    the timeframes to make changes;
18        (4) defined roles, responsibilities, and lines of
19    authority for care coordination, placement providers,
20    service providers, and each State agency involved in
21    management and oversight of managed care services;
22        (5) data used to establish baseline performance and
23    quality of care, which shall be used to evaluate outcomes
24    and identify ongoing areas for improvement;
25        (6) a process and timeline for stakeholder input into
26    managed care contract development;

 

 

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1        (7) a dispute resolution process, including the rights
2    of enrollees and representatives of enrollees under the
3    dispute process and timeframes for dispute resolution
4    determinations and remedies;
5        (8) the relationship of the dispute resolution process
6    described in paragraph (7) to the administrative review
7    process under the Administrative Review Law;
8        (9) an initial enrollment process and enrollment
9    process for those children entering or exiting the
10    Department's care after the implementation of managed
11    care;
12        (10) protections to ensure the continued provision of
13    health care services if a child's residence or legal
14    guardian changes;
15        (11) a method, as informed by pediatric experts, that
16    the Department shall use to ensure an appropriate rate is
17    utilized for Medicaid managed care plans to meet the
18    specialized needs of children in the Department's care;
19        (12) the notification process and timeframes to inform
20    managed care plan enrollees and enrollees' caregivers of
21    any changes in health care coverage or a change in a
22    child's managed care provider;
23        (13) defined pre-clearance requirements for
24    prescriptions, goods, and services in emergency and
25    non-emergency situations, if applicable;
26        (14) implementation of a robust, responsive

 

 

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1    beneficiary support system that has the capacity to provide
2    assistance in navigating the Medicaid managed care system
3    to all current and prospective beneficiaries and their
4    representatives, including, but not limited to:
5            (A) establishing a single point of contact
6        systemwide;
7            (B) defining informational notice requirements;
8            (C) explanation of enrollment and disenrollment
9        rights;
10            (D) education on grievance process and
11        requirements for timely responses; and
12            (E) key beneficiary protections.
13    (f) Reports.
14        (1) On or before February 1, 2019, and on or before
15    each February 1 thereafter, the Department shall submit a
16    report to the House and Senate Human Services Committees,
17    or to any successor committees, on measures of access to
18    and the quality of health care services for children
19    enrolled in Medicaid managed care plans, including, but not
20    limited to, data showing whether:
21            (A) children enrolled in Medicaid managed care
22        plans have continuity of care across placement types,
23        geographic regions, and specialty service needs;
24            (B) each child is receiving the early periodic
25        screening, diagnosis, and treatment services as
26        required by federal law, including, but not limited to,

 

 

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1        regular preventative care and timely specialty care;
2            (C) children are assigned to health homes;
3            (D) each child has a health care oversight and
4        coordination plan as required by federal law;
5            (E) there exists complaints and grievances
6        indicating gaps or barriers in service delivery;
7            (F) stakeholders, including pediatric experts,
8        have and continue to be engaged in quality improvement
9        initiatives;
10            (G) there exists disenrollment trends and related
11        reasons such as poor quality of care, lack of access to
12        services covered by the managed care organization,
13        lack of access to providers experienced in addressing
14        enrollees' needs, limitations of in-network and
15        out-of-network coverage, or any other factors.
16        The report shall be prepared in consultation with
17    health care providers in the program, caregivers of youth
18    in care, State agency personnel, personnel of the
19    Department of Healthcare and Family Services,
20    representatives of youth in care, managed care
21    organizations, parents of children in out-of-home care,
22    and other agencies, organizations, or individuals the
23    Director deems appropriate in order to obtain
24    comprehensive and objective information about the managed
25    care plan operation.
26        (2) During each legislative session, the House and

 

 

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1    Senate Human Services Committees shall hold a hearing to
2    take public testimony about managed care implementation
3    for children in the care of, adopted from, or placed in
4    guardianship by the Department. The Department shall
5    present testimony, including information provided in the
6    report required under paragraph (1), compliance with
7    adopted rules, and any recommendations for statutory
8    changes to improve health care for children in the
9    Department's care.
 
10    Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon
11becoming law.".