| Literature DB >> 32462570 |
Arielle Elmaleh-Sachs1, Eric C Schneider2.
Abstract
This perspective describes federal efforts in the United States (U.S.) to integrate care for an especially complex, vulnerable, and costly patient population: adults eligible for both Medicare and Medicaid insurance. The goal of the paper is to demystify for clinical policy leaders and practicing clinicians the origins and evolution of the Dual-Eligible Special Needs Plans (D-SNPs) recently permanently authorized by the U.S. Congress and to explore the potential for these policy changes to help such health plans improve care for the sickest and most vulnerable Americans.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32462570 PMCID: PMC7728965 DOI: 10.1007/s11606-020-05914-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Gen Intern Med ISSN: 0884-8734 Impact factor: 5.128
Fig. 1Schematic of insurance options and plans available to Medicare and Medicaid dual-eligible beneficiaries.
Integration Options for Medicaid with Special Needs Plans for Dual-Eligible Medicare Beneficiaries
| Type of alignment (from least to most integrated) | Description and requirements | Payment model | States and statistics |
|---|---|---|---|
| Dual-Eligible Special Needs Plans (D-SNPs) | - Must contract with state Medicaid agencies. - Subject to 8 minimum requirements to provide or arrange for Medicaid benefits, but integration not required.[ | - Separate payments to Medicare and Medicaid.[ - No shared savings with Medicaid state programs.[ | - 2.6 million enrollees. - 480 plans. - 42 states, PR and DC.[ |
| D-SNPs with additional state-mandated covered services | States can require D-SNPs to:[ - Cover Medicare premiums and cost-sharing (typically paid by Medicaid). - Provide Medicaid acute care services not covered by Medicare (vision, dental, hearing, transportation, etc.). - Provide or arrange for Medicaid MLTSS or behavioral health services. | - If the D-SNP covers Medicaid benefits, and no companion Medicaid plan exists, Medicaid capitated payments may go directly to the D-SNP.[ | - Varies by state. |
| D-SNPs with Medicaid Managed Long-Term Services and Supports (MLTSS) plans | - State Medicaid MLTSS plans either offer a companion D-SNP plan or states can require D-SNPs to operate MLTSS plans in the same geographic area.[ - Includes both Medicare and Medicaid benefits (LTSS and/or behavioral health services).[ - Allows for administrative alignment of these benefits when the plans are highly integrated.[ | - If there is a companion Medicaid MLTSS plan, Medicaid capitated payments go directly to the Medicaid plan.[ | -14 of 22 states with MLTSS programs have enhanced contracting between D-SNP and MLTSS.[ |
| Fully Integrated Dual-Eligible Special Needs Plans (FIDE SNPs) | - Aligned Medicare and Medicaid benefits through a single managed care organization.[ - Integrated enrollment process and administrative alignment of Medicare and Medicaid.[ - Must cover Medicaid benefits with LTSS, and nursing facility services for at least 180 days per plan year.[ | - Plan receives separate capitation payments from Medicare and Medicaid and integrates services.[ - Savings from reduced Medicare service go to Medicare, no mechanism for shared savings with state.[ | - 201,765 enrollees. - 45 plans. - 10 states.[ |