Now, keep up to date
with daily feeds of newly posted stories
about America's Seniors...click on the box
to the left
Changing Medicaid Could Cause Problems for
Assisted Living Consumers
WASHINGTON, May
4, 2011 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/
-- In light of current Congressional budget
proposals to block grant Medicaid and
presumably make it easier for states to
ignore federal Medicaid law, the National
Senior Citizens Law Center shows in a series
of papers about Medicaid payment for
assisted living that there are numerous
consumer protection problems that could be
exacerbated by such a change.
"Block grants would likely create even more
problems in terms of how states loosely
define and regulate assisted living," said
NSCLC Executive Director Paul
Nathanson.
"A far more coordinated approach to
oversight that focuses on the needs of the
low-income older is needed, not a free for
all."
And, at a March Senate hearing on the topic,
series author and NSCLC Directing Attorney Eric
Carlson said,
"If assisted living facilities agree to
accept Medicaid, they should be held as
accountable as other health care providers
at both the federal and state levels."
The series of policy issue briefs and white
papers highlight a number of issues that
states have dealt with in different ways and
which build the case for action to address
problems faced by not just the 1 million
older adults who live in them, but millions
of family members as well. In all of the
policy issue briefs are case examples of how
consumers are impacted and, in many of the
white papers state by state practices are
described.
All of the papers make recommendations about
what should be done to better protect
consumers. The Medicaid program, which is a
shared federal/state program in which the
federal government sets the rules and shares
costs with the states, should:
·
Make sure that, when granting waivers to
allow assisted living to be considered as
home and community based services,
facilities are not simply a nursing home by
another name.
·
Prevent a Medicaid-certified facility from
refusing to accept someone with Medicaid or
seek to evict a resident who is
Medicaid-eligible.
·
Not allow facilities to overcharge Medicaid
residents, leaving them with no money to pay
for personal needs.
·
Require facilities to accept the specified
amount for services and to not request or
accept supplemental payments for service
from Medicaid residents or their families.
·
Ensure that assisted living facilities hold
a room if a Medicaid resident is absent
temporarily such as needing to be the
hospital temporarily.
·
Change too restrictive rules affecting the
transfer of assets that, in some cases, mean
that after a transfer of even the smallest
amount, someone can never become eligible
for Medicaid payment in assisted living.
·
Protect spouses of a medically needy
assisted living resident in the same way
that the law protects the spouses of
medically needy nursing home residents.
·
Seek ways such as state supplementation of
Supplemental Security Income (SSI) to expand
the availability of assisted living to
low-income older adults.
The issue briefs and white papers are part
of a series developed with support from The
Commonwealth Fund, a national, private
foundation based in New
York City that
supports independent research on health care
issues and makes grants to improve health
care practice and policy. To see the
completed series, visit www.medicaidalseries.org
.
The National Senior Citizens Law Center is a
non-profit organization whose principal
mission is to protect the rights of
low-income older adults. Through advocacy,
litigation, and the education and counseling
of local advocates, we seek to ensure the
health and economic security of those with
limited income and resources, and access to
the courts for all. For
more information, visit our Web site at www.NSCLC.org.
... ..
...
...