TITLE 12. HEALTH
DEPARTMENT OF MEDICAL ASSISTANCE SERVICES
Emergency Regulation
Title of Regulation: 12VAC30-120. Waivered Services (amending
12VAC30-120-211, 12VAC30-120-213, 12VAC30-120-215, 12VAC30-120-217,
12VAC30-120-219, 12VAC30-120-221, 12VAC30-120-223, 12VAC30-120-225,
12VAC30-120-227, 12VAC30-120-229, 12VAC30-120-231, 12VAC30-120-233,
12VAC30-120-235, 12VAC30-120-237, 12VAC30-120-241, 12VAC30-120-245,
12VAC30-120-247, 12VAC30-120-249).
Statutory Authority: § 32.1-325 of the Code of Virginia; 42 USC
§ 1396 et seq.
Effective Dates: October 29, 2009, through October 28, 2010.
Agency Contact: Helen Leonard, Long Term Care Division, Department of
Medical Assistance Services, 600 East Broad Street, Richmond, VA 23219,
telephone (804) 786-2149, FAX (804) 786-1680, or email
helen.leonard@dmas.virginia.gov.
Summary:
This emergency is required
to comply with the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services' (CMS)
requirements for the renewal of the Mental Retardation/Intellectual Disability
(MR/ID) Waiver (previously referred to as the Mental Retardation Waiver). DMAS
covers these services pursuant to a waiver of certain federal requirements,
permitted by application to CMS, the federal Medicaid authority. CMS approved
the request for the renewal effective July 1, 2009. These emergency regulations
support the renewal application; therefore, these regulations are critical to
successful implementation of the waiver upon receipt of CMS' approval for the
continuation of essential services currently available to Virginians.
Part IV
Mental Retardation/Intellectual Disability Waiver
Article 1
Definitions and General Requirements
12VAC30-120-211. Definitions.
"Activities of daily
living" or "ADL" means personal care tasks, e.g., bathing,
dressing, toileting, transferring, and eating/feeding. An individual's degree
of independence in performing these activities is a part of determining
appropriate level of care and service needs.
"Appeal" means the
process used to challenge adverse actions regarding services, benefits and
reimbursement provided by Medicaid pursuant to 12VAC30-110 and 12VAC30-20-500
through 12VAC30-20-560.
"Assistive
technology" or "AT" means specialized medical equipment and
supplies to include devices, controls, or appliances, specified in the consumer
service plan Individual Support Plan but not available under the
State Plan for Medical Assistance, which enable individuals to increase their
abilities to perform activities of daily living, or to perceive, control, or
communicate with the environment in which they live. This service also includes
items necessary for life support, ancillary supplies and equipment necessary to
the proper functioning of such items, and durable and nondurable medical
equipment not available under the Medicaid State Plan.
"Behavioral health
authority" or "BHA" means the local agency, established by a
city or county under Chapter 1 (§ 37.2-100) of Title 37.2 of the Code of
Virginia that plans, provides, and evaluates mental health, mental
retardation mental retardation/intellectual disability (MR/ID), and
substance abuse services in the locality that it serves.
"CMS" means the
Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, which is the unit of the federal
Department of Health and Human Services that administers the Medicare and
Medicaid programs.
"Case management"
means the assessing and planning of services; linking the individual to
services and supports identified in the consumer service plan Individual
Support Plan; assisting the individual directly for the purpose of
locating, developing or obtaining needed services and resources; coordinating
services and service planning with other agencies and providers involved with
the individual; enhancing community integration; making collateral contacts to
promote the implementation of the consumer service plan Individual
Support Plan and community integration; monitoring to assess ongoing
progress and ensuring services are delivered; and education and counseling that
guides the individual and develops a supportive relationship that promotes the consumer
service plan Individual Support Plan.
"Case manager" means
the individual on behalf of the community services board or behavioral health
authority possessing a combination of mental retardation MR/ID
work experience and relevant education that indicates that the individual
possesses the knowledge, skills and abilities as established by the Department
of Medical Assistance Services in 12VAC30-50-450.
"Community services
board" or "CSB" means the local agency, established by a city or
county or combination of counties or cities under Chapter 5 (§ 37.2-500 et
seq.) of Title 37.2 of the Code of Virginia, that plans, provides, and
evaluates mental health, mental retardation MR/ID, and substance
abuse services in the jurisdiction or jurisdictions it serves.
"Companion" means,
for the purpose of these regulations, a person who provides companion services.
"Companion services"
means nonmedical care, support, and socialization, provided to an adult (age 18
and over). The provision of companion services does not entail hands-on care.
It is provided in accordance with a therapeutic goal in the consumer service
plan Individual Support Plan and is not purely diversional in
nature.
"Comprehensive
assessment" means the gathering of relevant social, psychological, medical
and level of care information by the case manager and is used as a basis for
the development of the consumer service plan Individual Support Plan.
"Consumer-directed
model" means services for which the individual and the individual's
family/caregiver, as appropriate, is responsible for hiring, training,
supervising, and firing of the staff.
"Consumer-directed (CD)
services facilitator" means the DMAS-enrolled provider who is responsible
for supporting the individual and the individual's family/caregiver, as
appropriate, by ensuring the development and monitoring of the
Consumer-Directed Services Individual Service Plan for Supports,
providing employee management training, and completing ongoing review
activities as required by DMAS for consumer-directed CD
companion, personal assistance, and respite services.
"Consumer service
plan" or "CSP" means documents addressing needs in all life
areas of individuals who receive mental retardation waiver services, and is
comprised of individual service plans as dictated by the individual's health
care and support needs. The individual service plans are incorporated in the
CSP by the case manager.
"Crisis
stabilization" means direct intervention to persons with mental
retardation MR/ID who are experiencing serious psychiatric or
behavioral challenges that jeopardize their current community living situation,
by providing temporary intensive services and supports that avert emergency
psychiatric hospitalization or institutional placement or prevent other
out-of-home placement. This service shall be designed to stabilize the
individual and strengthen the current living situation so the individual can be
supported in the community during and beyond the crisis period.
"DBHDS" means the
Department of Behavioral Health and Developmental Services. Prior to July 1,
2009, this agency was known as "DMHMRSAS," or the Department of
Mental Health, Mental Retardation and Substance Abuse Services.
"DBHDS staff"
means persons employed by DBHDS.
"DMAS" means the
Department of Medical Assistance Services.
"DMAS staff" means
persons employed by the Department of Medical Assistance Services.
"DMHMRSAS" means
the Department of Mental Health, Mental Retardation and Substance Abuse Services.
"DMHMRSAS staff"
means persons employed by the Department of Mental Health, Mental Retardation
and Substance Abuse Services.
"DRS" means the
Department of Rehabilitative Services.
"DSS" means the
Department of Social Services.
"Day support" means
training, assistance, and specialized supervision in the acquisition,
retention, or improvement of self-help, socialization, and adaptive skills,
which typically take place outside the home in which the individual resides.
Day support services shall focus on enabling the individual to attain or
maintain his maximum functional level.
"Developmental risk"
means the presence before, during or after an individual's birth of conditions
typically identified as related to the occurrence of a developmental disability
and for which no specific developmental disability is identifiable through
existing diagnostic and evaluative criteria.
"Direct marketing"
means either (i) conducting directly or indirectly door-to-door, telephonic or
other "cold call" marketing of services at residences and provider
sites; (ii) mailing directly; (iii) paying "finders' fees"; (iv)
offering financial incentives, rewards, gifts or special opportunities to
eligible individuals and the individual's family/caregivers, as appropriate, as
inducements to use the providers' services; (v) continuous, periodic marketing
activities to the same prospective individual and the individual's
family/caregiver, as appropriate, for example, monthly, quarterly, or annual
giveaways as inducements to use the providers' services; or (vi) engaging in
marketing activities that offer potential customers rebates or discounts in
conjunction with the use of the providers' services or other benefits as a
means of influencing the individual's and the individual's family/caregiver's,
as appropriate, use of the providers' services.
"Enroll" means that
the individual has been determined by the case manager to meet the eligibility
requirements for the MR MR/ID Waiver and DMHMRSAS DBHDS
has verified the availability of a MR MR/ID Waiver slot for that
individual, and DSS has determined the individual's Medicaid eligibility for
home and community-based services.
"Entrepreneurial
model" means a small business employing eight or fewer individuals who
have disabilities on a shift and usually involves interactions with the public
and with coworkers without disabilities.
"Environmental
modifications" means physical adaptations to a house, place of residence,
primary vehicle or work site (when the work site modification exceeds
reasonable accommodation requirements of the Americans with Disabilities Act)
that are necessary to ensure the individual's health and safety or enable
functioning with greater independence when the adaptation is not being used to
bring a substandard dwelling up to minimum habitation standards and is of
direct medical or remedial benefit to the individual.
"EPSDT" means the
Early Periodic Screening, Diagnosis and Treatment program administered by DMAS
for children under the age of 21 according to federal guidelines that prescribe
preventive and treatment services for Medicaid-eligible children as defined in
12VAC30-50-130.
"Fiscal agent" means
an agency or organization within DMAS or contracted by DMAS to handle
employment, payroll, and tax responsibilities on behalf of individuals who are
receiving consumer-directed CD personal assistance, respite, and
companion services.
"Health Planning
Region" or "HPR" means the federally designated geographical
area within which health care needs assessment and planning takes place, and
within which health care resource development is reviewed.
"Health, welfare, and
safety standard" means that an individual's right to receive a waiver
service is dependent on a finding that the individual needs the service, based
on appropriate assessment criteria and a written individual service plan
Plan for Supports and that services can safely be provided in the
community.
"Home and community-based
waiver services" or "waiver services" means the range of
community support services approved by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid
Services (CMS) pursuant to § 1915(c) of the Social Security Act to be offered
to persons with mental retardation MR/ID and children younger
than age six who are at developmental risk who would otherwise require the
level of care provided in an Intermediate Care Facility for the Mentally
Retarded (ICF/MR.)
"ICF/MR" means a
facility or distinct part of a facility certified by the Virginia Department of
Health, as meeting the federal certification regulations for an Intermediate
Care Facility for the Mentally Retarded and persons with related conditions.
These facilities must address the total needs of the residents, which include
physical, intellectual, social, emotional, and habilitation, and must provide
active treatment.
"Individual" means
the person receiving the services or evaluations established in these
regulations.
"Individual service
plan" or "ISP" means the service plan related solely to the
specific waiver service. Multiple ISPs help to comprise the overall consumer
service plan.
"Individual Support
Plan" means supports and actions to be taken during the year by each
service provider to achieve desired outcomes. The Individual Support Plan is
developed by the individual, and partners chosen by the individual, and
contains essential information and includes what is important to the individual
on a day-to-day basis and in the future and what is important for the
individual to keep healthy and safe as reflected in the Plan for Supports. The
Individual Support Plan is known as the Consumer Service Plan in the Day
Support Waiver.
"Instrumental activities
of daily living" or "IADLs" means tasks such as meal
preparation, shopping, housekeeping, laundry, and money management.
"ISAR" means the
Individual Service Authorization Request and is the DMAS form used by providers
to request prior authorization for MR MR/ID waiver services.
"Medicaid Long-Term
Care Communication Form" or "DMAS-225" means the form used by
the long-term care provider, including the case manager, to report information
about changes in an individual's situation, including, but not limited to,
information on a new address, a different case management agency, income,
interruption in waiver services for more than 30 days, discharge from all
waiver services, or death. DMAS policy describes specific procedures for the
use of the DMAS-225.
"Mental
retardation" "Mental
retardation/intellectual disability" or "MR/ID" means a
disability as defined by the American Association on Intellectual and
Developmental Disabilities (AAIDD). "MR" and "ID" are
synonymous terms.
"Participating
provider" means an entity that meets the standards and requirements set
forth by DMAS and DMHMRSAS DBHDS, and has a current, signed
provider participation agreement with DMAS.
"Pend" means
delaying the consideration of an individual's request for services until all
required information is received by DMHMRSAS DBHDS.
"Person-centered
planning" means a process that focuses on the needs and preferences of the
individual to create an Individual Support Plan containing essential
information, a personal profile, and desired outcomes of the individual to be
shared with persons and providers involved in the provision of services and
supports accomplished through provider(s) services and Plan for Supports.
Person-centered planning is the foundation for identifying and providing
services and supports through the MR/ID Waiver.
"Personal assistance
services" means assistance with activities of daily living, instrumental
activities of daily living, access to the community, self-administration of
medication, or other medical needs, and the monitoring of health status and
physical condition.
"Personal assistant"
means a person who provides personal assistance services.
"Personal emergency
response system (PERS)" is an electronic device that enables certain
individuals at high risk of institutionalization to secure help in an
emergency. PERS services are limited to those individuals who live alone or are
alone for significant parts of the day and who have no regular caregiver for
extended periods of time, and who would otherwise require extensive routine
supervision.
"Plan for
Supports" means each service provider's plan for supporting the individual
in achieving his or her desired outcomes and facilitating ongoing health and
safety. The Plan for Supports is one component of the Individual Support Plan.
The Plan for Supports is referred to as an Individual Service Plan in the Day
Support Waiver.
"Preauthorized"
means that an individual service has been approved by DMHMRSAS the
state-designated agency or its contractor prior to commencement of the
service by the service provider for initiation and reimbursement of services.
"Prevocational
services" means services aimed at preparing an individual for paid or
unpaid employment. The services do not include activities that are specifically
job-task oriented but focus on concepts such as accepting supervision,
attendance, task completion, problem solving and safety. Compensation, if
provided, is less than 50% of the minimum wage.
"Primary caregiver"
means the primary person who consistently assumes the role of providing direct
care and support of the individual to live successfully in the community
without compensation for providing such care.
"Qualified mental
retardation professional" or "QMRP" for the purposes of the
MR/ID Waiver means a professional possessing: (i) at least one year of
documented experience working directly with individuals who have mental
retardation MR/ID or developmental disabilities; (ii) at least
a bachelor's degree in a human services field including, but not limited to,
sociology, social work, special education, rehabilitation counseling, or
psychology, or a bachelor's degree in another field in addition to an
advanced degree in a human services field; and (iii) the required Virginia
or national license, registration, or certification in accordance with his
profession, if applicable.
"Residential support
services" means support provided in the individual's home by a DMHMRSAS-licensed
DBHDS-licensed residential provider or a DSS-approved provider of adult
foster care services. This service is one in which training, assistance, and
supervision is routinely provided to enable individuals to maintain or improve
their health, to develop skills in activities of daily living and safety in the
use of community resources, to adapt their behavior to community and home-like
environments, to develop relationships, and participate as citizens in the
community.
"Respite services"
means services provided to individuals who are unable to care for themselves,
furnished on a short-term basis because of the absence or need for relief of
those unpaid persons normally providing the care.
"Services
facilitation" means a service that assists the individual (or the
individual’s family or caregiver, as appropriate) in arranging for, directing,
and managing services provided through the consumer-directed model.
"Services
facilitator" means the DMAS-enrolled provider who is responsible for
supporting the individual and the individual's family/caregiver, as
appropriate, by ensuring the development and monitoring of the
Consumer-Directed Services Individual Service Plan for Supports,
providing employee management training, and completing ongoing review
activities as required by DMAS for services with an option of a
consumer-directed model. These services include companion, personal assistance,
and respite services.
"Skilled nursing
services" means services that are ordered by a physician and required to
prevent institutionalization, that are not otherwise available under the State
Plan for Medical Assistance and that are provided by a licensed registered
professional nurse, or by a licensed practical nurse under the supervision of a
licensed registered professional nurse, in each case who is licensed to
practice in the Commonwealth.
"Slot" means an
opening or vacancy of waiver services for an individual.
"State Plan for Medical
Assistance" or "Plan" means the Commonwealth's legal document approved
by CMS identifying the covered groups, covered services and their limitations,
and provider reimbursement methodologies as provided for under Title XIX of the
Social Security Act.
"Supported
employment" means work in settings in which persons without disabilities
are typically employed. It includes training in specific skills related to paid
employment and the provision of ongoing or intermittent assistance and
specialized supervision to enable an individual with mental retardation MR/ID
to maintain paid employment.
"Support plan" means
the report of recommendations resulting from a therapeutic consultation.
"Therapeutic
consultation" means activities to assist the individual and the
individual's family/caregiver, as appropriate, staff of residential support,
day support, and any other providers in implementing an individual service
plan a Plan for Supports.
"Transition
services" means set-up expenses for individuals who are transitioning from
an institution or licensed or certified provider-operated living arrangement to
a living arrangement in a private residence where the person is directly
responsible for his own living expenses. 12VAC30-120-2010 provides the service
description, criteria, service units and limitations, and provider requirements
for this service.
12VAC30-120-213. General
coverage and requirements for MR Mental Retardation/Intellectual
Disability (MR/ID) waiver services.
A. Waiver service populations.
Home and community-based waiver services shall be available through a § 1915(c)
of the Social Security Act waiver for the following individuals who have been
determined to require the level of care provided in an ICF/MR.
1. Individuals with mental
retardation; or
2. Individuals younger than the
age of six who are at developmental risk. At the age of six years, these
individuals must have a diagnosis of mental retardation to continue to receive
home and community-based waiver services specifically under this program. Mental
Retardation (MR) MR/ID Waiver recipients individuals
who attain the age of six years of age, who are determined to not have a
diagnosis of mental retardation, and who meet all IFDDS Individual
and Family and Developmental Disability Support (IFDDS) Waiver eligibility
criteria, shall be eligible for transfer to the IFDDS Waiver effective up to
their seventh birthday. Psychological evaluations (or standardized
developmental assessment for children under six years of age) confirming
diagnoses must be completed less than one year prior to transferring to the
IFDDS Waiver. These recipients individuals transferring from the MR
MR/ID Waiver will automatically be assigned a slot in the IFDDS Waiver,
subject to the approval of the slot by CMS the Centers for Medicare
and Medicaid Services (CMS). The case manager will submit the current Level
of Functioning Survey, CSP Individual Support Plan and
psychological evaluation (or standardized developmental assessment for children
under six years of age) to DMAS for review. Upon determination by DMAS that the
individual is appropriate for transfer to the IFDDS Waiver, the case manager
will provide the family with a list of IFDDS Waiver case managers. The case
manager will work with the selected IFDDS Waiver case manager to determine an
appropriate transfer date and submit a DMAS-122 DMAS-225 to the
local DSS. The MR MR/ID Waiver slot will be held by the CSB until
the child has successfully transitioned to the IFDDS Waiver. Once the child has
successfully transitioned, the CSB community services board (CSB)
will reallocate the slot.
B. Covered services.
1. Covered services shall
include: residential support services, day support, supported employment,
personal assistance (both consumer-directed and agency-directed), respite
services (both consumer-directed and agency-directed), assistive technology,
environmental modifications, skilled nursing services, therapeutic
consultation, crisis stabilization, prevocational services, personal emergency
response systems (PERS), companion services (both consumer-directed and
agency-directed), and transition services.
2. These services shall be
appropriate and necessary to maintain the individual in the community. Federal
waiver requirements provide that the average per capita fiscal year
expenditures under the waiver must not exceed the average per capita
expenditures for the level of care provided in an ICF/MR Intermediate
Care Facility for the Mentally Retarded (ICFMR) under the State Plan that
would have been provided had the waiver not been granted.
3. Waiver services shall not be
furnished to individuals who are inpatients of a hospital, nursing facility,
ICF/MR, or inpatient rehabilitation facility. Individuals with mental
retardation MR/ID who are inpatients of these facilities may receive
case management services as described in 12VAC30-50-450. The case manager may
recommend waiver services that would promote exiting from the institutional
placement; however, these services shall not be provided until the individual
has exited the institution.
4. Under this § 1915(c) waiver,
DMAS waives § 1902(a)(10)(B) of the Social Security Act related to
comparability.
C. Requests for increased
services. All requests for increased waiver services by MR MR/ID
Waiver recipients will be reviewed under the health, welfare, and safety
standard. This standard assures that an individual's right to receive a waiver
service is dependent on a finding that the individual needs the service, based
on appropriate assessment criteria and a written ISP Plan for
Supports and that services can safely be provided in the community.
D. Appeals. Individual appeals
shall be considered pursuant to 12VAC30-110-10 through 12VAC30-110-380.
Provider appeals shall be considered pursuant to 12VAC30-10-1000 and
12VAC30-20-500 through 12VAC30-20-560.
E. Urgent criteria. The CSB/BHA
CSB/behavioral health authority (BHA) will determine, from among the
individuals included in the urgent category, who should be served first, based
on the needs of the individual at the time a slot becomes available and not
on any predetermined numerical or chronological order using the
statewide criteria as specified in the Department of Behavioral Health and
Developmental Services (DBHDS) guidance documents.
1. The urgent category will be
assigned when the individual is in need of services because he is determined to
meet one of the criteria established in subdivision 2 of this subsection and
services are needed within 30 days. Assignment to the urgent category may be
requested by the individual, his legally responsible relative, or primary
caregiver. The urgent category may be assigned only when the individual, the
individual's spouse, or the parent of an individual who is a minor child would
accept the requested service if it were offered. Only after all individuals in
the Commonwealth who meet the urgent criteria have been served can individuals
in the nonurgent category be served. Individuals in the nonurgent category are
those who meet the diagnostic and functional criteria for the waiver, including
the need for services within 30 days, but who do not meet the urgent criteria.
In the event that a CSB/BHA has a vacant slot and does not have an individual
who meets the urgent criteria, the slot can be held by the CSB/BHA for 90 days
from the date it is identified as vacant, in case someone in an urgent
situation is identified. If no one meeting the urgent criteria is identified
within 90 days, the slot will be made available for allocation to another
CSB/BHA in the Health Planning Region (HPR). If there is no urgent need at the
time that the HPR is to make a regional reallocation of a waiver slot, the HPR
shall notify DMHMRSAS DBHDS. DMHMRSAS DBHDS shall
have the authority to reallocate said slot to another HPR or CSB/BHA where
there is unmet urgent need. Said authority must be exercised, if at all, within
30 days from receiving such notice.
2. Satisfaction of one or more
of the following criteria shall indicate that the individual should be placed
on the urgent need of waiver services list:
a. Both primary caregivers are
55 years of age or older, or if there is one primary caregiver, that primary
caregiver is 55 years of age or older;
b. The individual is living
with a primary caregiver, who is providing the service voluntarily and without
pay, and the primary caregiver indicates that he can no longer care for the
individual with mental retardation;
c. There is a clear risk of
abuse, neglect, or exploitation;
d. A primary caregiver has a
chronic or long-term physical or psychiatric condition or conditions which
significantly limits the abilities of the primary caregiver or caregivers to
care for the individual with mental retardation;
e. Individual is aging out of
publicly funded residential placement or otherwise becoming homeless (exclusive
of children who are graduating from high school); or
f. The individual with mental
retardation lives with the primary caregiver and there is a risk to the health
or safety of the individual, primary caregiver, or other individual living in
the home due to either of the following conditions:
(1) The individual's behavior
or behaviors present a risk to himself or others which cannot be effectively
managed by the primary caregiver even with generic or specialized support
arranged or provided by the CSB/BHA; or
(2) There are physical care
needs (such as lifting or bathing) or medical needs that cannot be managed by
the primary caregiver even with generic or specialized supports arranged or
provided by the CSB/BHA.
F. Reevaluation of service
need and utilization review. Case managers shall complete reviews and updates
of the CSP Individual Support Plan and level of care as specified
in 12VAC30-120-215 D. Providers shall meet the documentation requirements as
specified in 12VAC30-120-217 B.
12VAC30-120-215. Individual
eligibility requirements.
A. Individuals receiving
services under this waiver must meet the following requirements. Virginia will
apply the financial eligibility criteria contained in the State Plan for the
categorically needy. Virginia has elected to cover the optional categorically
needy groups under 42 CFR 435.211, 435.217, and 435.230. The income level used
for 42 CFR 435.211, 435.217 and 435.230 is 300% of the current Supplemental
Security Income payment standard for one person.
1. Under this waiver, the
coverage groups authorized under § 1902(a)(10)(A)(ii)(VI) of the Social
Security Act will be considered as if they were institutionalized for the
purpose of applying institutional deeming rules. All recipients individuals
under the waiver must meet the financial and nonfinancial Medicaid eligibility
criteria and meet the institutional level of care criteria. The deeming rules
are applied to waiver eligible individuals as if the individual were residing
in an institution or would require that level of care.
2. Virginia shall reduce its
payment for home and community-based waiver services provided to an individual
who is eligible for Medicaid services under 42 CFR 435.217 by that amount of
the individual's total income (including amounts disregarded in determining
eligibility) that remains after allowable deductions for personal maintenance
needs, deductions for other dependents, and medical needs have been made,
according to the guidelines in 42 CFR 435.735 and § 1915(c)(3) of the Social
Security Act as amended by the Consolidated Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act
of 1986. DMAS will reduce its payment for home and community-based waiver
services by the amount that remains after the deductions listed below:
a. For individuals to whom §
1924(d) applies and for whom Virginia waives the requirement for comparability
pursuant to § 1902(a)(10)(B), deduct the following in the respective order:
(1) The basic maintenance needs
for an individual under both this waiver and the mental retardation day
support waiver Day Support Waiver, which is equal to 165% of the SSI
payment for one person. As of January 1, 2002, due to expenses of employment, a
working individual shall have an additional income allowance. For an individual
employed 20 hours or more per week, earned income shall be disregarded up to a
maximum of both earned and unearned income up to 300% SSI; for an individual
employed at least eight but less than 20 hours per week, earned income shall be
disregarded up to a maximum of both earned and unearned income up to 200% of
SSI. If the individual requires a guardian or conservator who charges a fee,
the fee, not to exceed an amount greater than 5.0% of the individual's total
monthly income, is added to the maintenance needs allowance. However, in no
case shall the total amount of the maintenance needs allowance (basic allowance
plus earned income allowance plus guardianship fees) for the individual exceed
300% of SSI. (The guardianship fee is not to exceed 5.0% of the individual's
total monthly income.)
(2) For an individual with only
a spouse at home, the community spousal income allowance determined in
accordance with § 1924(d) of the Social Security Act.
(3) For an individual with a
family at home, an additional amount for the maintenance needs of the family
determined in accordance with § 1924(d) of the Social Security Act.
(4) Amounts for incurred
expenses for medical or remedial care that are not subject to payment by a
third party including Medicare and other health insurance premiums, deductibles,
or coinsurance charges and necessary medical or remedial care recognized under
state law but not covered under the plan.
b. For individuals to whom §
1924(d) does not apply and for whom Virginia waives the requirement for
comparability pursuant to § 1902(a)(10)(B), deduct the following in the
respective order:
(1) The basic maintenance needs
for an individual under both this waiver and the mental retardation day
support waiver Day Support Waiver, which is equal to 165% of the SSI
payment for one person. As of January 1, 2002, due to expenses of employment, a
working individual shall have an additional income allowance. For an individual
employed 20 hours or more per week, earned income shall be disregarded up to a
maximum of both earned and unearned income up to 300% SSI; for an individual
employed at least eight but less than 20 hours per week, earned income shall be
disregarded up to a maximum of both earned and unearned income up to 200% of
SSI. If the individual requires a guardian or conservator who charges a fee,
the fee, not to exceed an amount greater than 5.0% of the individual's total
monthly income, is added to the maintenance needs allowance. However, in no
case shall the total amount of the maintenance needs allowance (basic allowance
plus earned income allowance plus guardianship fees) for the individual exceed
300% of SSI. (The guardianship fee is not to exceed 5.0% of the individual's
total monthly income.)
(2) For an individual with a
dependent child or children, an additional amount for the maintenance needs of
the child or children, which shall be equal to the Title XIX medically needy
income standard based on the number of dependent children.
(3) Amounts for incurred
expenses for medical or remedial care that are not subject to payment by a
third party including Medicare and other health insurance premiums,
deductibles, or coinsurance charges and necessary medical or remedial care
recognized under state law but not covered under the State Medical Assistance
Plan.
3. The following four criteria
shall apply to all mental retardation mental retardation/intellectual
disability (MR/ID) waiver services:
a. Individuals qualifying for mental
retardation MR/ID waiver services must have a demonstrated need for
the service resulting in significant functional limitations in major life
activities. The need for the service must arise from either (i) an individual
having a diagnosed condition of mental retardation MR/ID or (ii)
a child younger than six years of age being at developmental risk of significant
functional limitations in major life activities;
b. The CSP Individual
Support Plan and services that are delivered must be consistent with the
Medicaid definition of each service;
c. Services must be recommended
by the case manager based on a current functional assessment using a DMHMRSAS
approved Department of Behavioral Health and Developmental Services
(DBHDS)-approved assessment instrument, as specified in DBHDS and DMAS
guidance documents, and a demonstrated need for each specific service; and
d. Individuals qualifying for mental
retardation MR/ID waiver services must meet the ICF/MR level of care
criteria.
B. Assessment and enrollment.
1. To ensure that Virginia's
home and community-based waiver programs serve only individuals who would otherwise
be placed in an ICF/MR, home and community-based waiver services shall be
considered only for individuals who are eligible for admission to an ICF/MR
with a diagnosis of mental retardation MR/ID, or who are under
six years of age and at developmental risk. For the case manager to make a
recommendation for waiver services, MR MR/ID Waiver services must
be determined to be an appropriate service alternative to delay or avoid
placement in an ICF/MR, or promote exiting from either an ICF/MR placement or
other institutional placement.
2. The case manager shall
recommend the individual for home and community-based waiver services after
completion of a comprehensive assessment of the individual's needs and available
supports. This assessment process for home and community-based waiver services
by the case manager is mandatory before Medicaid will assume payment
responsibility of home and community-based waiver services. The comprehensive
assessment includes:
a. Relevant medical information
based on a medical examination completed no earlier than 12 months prior to the
initiation of waiver services;
b. The case manager's functional
assessment that demonstrates a need for each specific service. The functional
assessment must be a DMHMRSAS DBHDS approved assessment completed
no earlier than 12 months prior to enrollment;
c. The level of care required
by applying the existing DMAS ICF/MR criteria (12VAC30-130-430 et seq.)
completed no more than six months prior to enrollment. The case manager
determines whether the individual meets the ICF/MR criteria with input from the
individual and the individual's family/caregiver, as appropriate, and service
and support providers involved in the individual's support in the community;
and
d. A psychological evaluation
or standardized developmental assessment for children under six years of age
that reflects the current psychological status (diagnosis), current cognitive
abilities, and current adaptive level of functioning of the individuals.
3. The case manager shall
provide the individual and the individual's family/caregiver, as appropriate,
with the choice of MR MR/ID waiver services or ICF/MR placement.
4. The case manager shall send
the appropriate forms to DMHMRSAS DBHDS to enroll the individual
in the MR MR/ID Waiver or, if no slot is available, to place the
individual on the waiting list. DMHMRSAS DBHDS shall only enroll
the individual if a slot is available. If no slot is available, the
individual's name will be placed on either the urgent or nonurgent statewide
waiting list until such time as a slot becomes available. Once notification has
been received from DMHMRSAS DBHDS that the individual has been
placed on either the urgent or nonurgent waiting list, the case manager must
notify the individual in writing within 10 business days of his placement on
either list, and offer appeal rights. The case manager will contact the
individual and the individual's family/caregiver, as appropriate, at least
annually to provide the choice between institutional placement and waiver
services while the individual is on the waiting list.
C. Waiver approval process:
authorizing and accessing services.
1. Once the case manager has
determined an individual meets the functional criteria for mental
retardation (MR) MR/ID waiver services, has determined that a slot
is available, and that the individual has chosen MR MR/ID waiver
services, the case manager shall submit enrollment information to DMHMRSAS
DBHDS to confirm level of care eligibility and the availability of a
slot.
2. Once the individual has been
enrolled by DMHMRSAS DBHDS, the case manager will submit a DMAS-122
DMAS-225 along with a written confirmation from DMHMRSAS DBHDS
of level of care eligibility, to the local DSS to determine financial
eligibility for the waiver program and any patient pay responsibilities. If
the individual receiving MR/ID Waiver services has a patient pay amount, a
provider shall use the electronic patient pay process that became effective
March 1, 2009. Local departments of social services (LDSS) will enter data
regarding an individual's patient pay amount obligation into the DMAS
electronic reimbursement system at the time action is taken on behalf of the
individual either as a result of an application for long-term care services,
redetermination of eligibility, or reported change in an individual's
situation. Procedures for the verification of an individual's patient pay
obligation are available in the appropriate Medicaid provider manual.
3. After the case manager has
received written notification of Medicaid eligibility by DSS Department
of Social Services (DSS) and written confirmation of enrollment from DMHMRSAS
DBHDS, the case manager shall inform the individual and the individual's
family/caregiver, as appropriate, so that the CSP Individual Support
Plan can be developed. The individual and the individual's
family/caregiver, as appropriate, will meet with the case manager within 30
calendar days to discuss the individual's needs and existing supports, and to
develop a CSP Individual Support Plan that will establish and
document the needed services. The case manager shall provide the individual and
the individual's family/caregiver, as appropriate, with choice of needed
services available under the MR MR/ID Waiver, alternative
settings and providers. A CSP An Individual Support Plan shall be
developed for the individual based on the assessment of needs as reflected in
the level of care and functional assessment instruments and the individual's
and the individual's family/caregiver's, as appropriate, preferences. The CSP
Individual Support Plan development process identifies the services to
be rendered to individuals, the frequency of services, the type of service
provider or providers, and a description of the services to be offered.
4. The individual or case
manager shall contact chosen service providers so that services can be
initiated within 60 days of receipt of enrollment confirmation from DMHMRSAS
DBHDS. The service providers in conjunction with the individual and the
individual's family/caregiver, as appropriate, and case manager will develop ISPs
Plans for Supports for each service. A copy of these plans will be
submitted to the case manager. The case manager will review and ensure the ISP
Plan for Supports meets the established service criteria for the
identified needs prior to submitting to DMHMRSAS the state-designated
agency or its contractor for prior authorization. The ISP Plan
for Supports from each waiver service provider shall be incorporated into
the CSP Individual Support Plan. Only MR MR/ID
Waiver services authorized on the CSP Individual Support Plan by DMHMRSAS
the state-designated agency or its contractor according to DMAS policies
may be reimbursed by DMAS. The Plan for Supports from each waiver service
provider shall be incorporated into the Individual Support Plan along with the
steps for risk mitigation as indicated by the risk assessment.
5. The case manager must submit
the results of the comprehensive assessment and a recommendation to the
DMHMRSAS DBHDS staff for final determination of ICF/MR level of care
and authorization for community-based services. DMHMRSAS The
state-designated agency or its contractor shall, within 10 working days of
receiving all supporting documentation, review and approve, pend for more
information, or deny the individual service requests. DMHMRSAS The
state-designated agency or its contractor will communicate in writing to
the case manager whether the recommended services have been approved and the
amounts and type of services authorized or if any have been denied. Medicaid
will not pay for any home and community-based waiver services delivered prior
to the authorization date approved by DMHMRSAS the state-designated
agency or its contractor if prior authorization is required.
6. MR MR/ID
Waiver services may be recommended by the case manager only if:
a. The individual is Medicaid
eligible as determined by the local office of the Department of Social Services
DSS;
b. The individual has a
diagnosis of mental retardation MR/ID as defined by the American
Association on Mental Retardation: Mental Retardation: Definition,
Classification, and System of Supports, 10th Edition, 2002 Intellectual
and Developmental Disabilities, or is a child under the age of six at
developmental risk, and would in the absence of waiver services, require the
level of care provided in an ICF/MR the cost of which would be reimbursed under
the Plan; and
c. The contents of the
individual service plans are consistent with the Medicaid definition of each
service.
7. All consumer service plans
are subject to approval by DMAS. DMAS is the single state agency authority
responsible for the supervision of the administration of the MR MR/ID
Waiver.
8. If services are not
initiated by the provider within 60 days, the case manager must submit written
information to DMHMRSAS DBHDS requesting more time to initiate
services. A copy of the request must be provided to the individual and the
individual's family/caregiver, as appropriate. DMHMRSAS DBHDS has
the authority to approve the request in 30-day extensions, up to a maximum of
four consecutive extensions, or deny the request to retain the waiver slot for
that individual. DMHMRSAS DBHDS shall provide a written response
to the case manager indicating denial or approval of the extension. DMHMRSAS
DBHDS shall submit this response within 10 working days of the receipt
of the request for extension.
D. Reevaluation of service
need.
1. The consumer service plan
(CSP) Individual Support Plan.
a. The CSP Individual
Support Plan shall be developed annually by the case manager with the
individual and the individual's family/caregiver, as appropriate, other service
providers, consultants, and other interested parties based on relevant, current
assessment data.
b. The case manager is
responsible for continuous monitoring of the appropriateness of the
individual's services and revisions to the CSP Individual Support
Plan as indicated by the changing needs of the individual. At a minimum,
the case manager must review the CSP Individual Support Plan
every three months to determine whether service goals and objectives are being
met and whether any modifications to the CSP Individual Support Plan
are necessary.
c. Any modification to the
amount or type of services in the CSP Individual Support Plan
must be preauthorized by DMHMRSAS or DMAS the state-designated agency
or its contractor.
2. Review of level of care.
a. The case manager shall
complete a reassessment annually in coordination with the individual and the
individual's family/caregiver, as appropriate,, and service providers.
The reassessment shall include an update of the level of care and functional
assessment instrument, risk assessment, and any other appropriate
assessment data. If warranted, the case manager shall coordinate a medical
examination and a psychological evaluation for the individual. The CSP Individual
Support Plan shall be revised as appropriate.
b. A medical examination must
be completed for adults based on need identified by the individual and the
individual's family/caregiver, as appropriate, provider, case manager, or DMHMRSAS
DBHDS staff. Medical examinations and screenings for children must be
completed according to the recommended frequency and periodicity of the EPSDT
program.
c. A new psychological
evaluation shall be required whenever the individual's functioning has
undergone significant change and is no longer reflective of the past
psychological evaluation. A psychological evaluation or standardized
developmental assessment for children under six years of age must reflect the
current psychological status (diagnosis), adaptive level of functioning, and
cognitive abilities.
3. The case manager will
monitor the service providers' ISPs Plans for Supports to ensure
that all providers are working toward the identified goals of the affected
individuals.
4. Case managers will be
required to conduct monthly onsite visits for all MR MR/ID waiver
individuals residing in DSS-licensed assisted living facilities or approved
adult foster care placements.
5. The case manager must obtain
an updated DMAS-122 form from DSS annually DMAS-225, designate a
collector of patient pay when applicable and forward a copy of the updated DMAS-122
DMAS-225 form to all service providers and the consumer-directed fiscal
agent if applicable.
12VAC30-120-217. General
requirements for home and community-based participating providers.
A. Providers approved for participation
shall, at a minimum, perform the following activities:
1. Immediately notify DMAS
the Department of Medical Assistance Services (DMAS) and DMHMRSAS
the Department of Behavioral Health and Developmental Services (DBHDS),
in writing, of any change in the information that the provider previously
submitted to DMAS and DMHMRSAS DBHDS;
2. Assure freedom of choice to
individuals in seeking services from any institution, pharmacy, practitioner,
or other provider qualified to perform the service or services required and
participating in the Medicaid program at the time the service or services were
performed;
3. Assure the individual's
freedom to refuse medical care, treatment and services;
4. Accept referrals for
services only when staff is available to initiate services and perform such
services on an ongoing basis;
5. Provide services and
supplies to individuals in full compliance with Title VI of the Civil Rights
Act of 1964, as amended (42 USC § 2000d et seq.), which prohibits
discrimination on the grounds of race, color, or national origin; the
Virginians with Disabilities Act (§ 51.5-1 et seq. of the Code of
Virginia); § 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, as amended (29 USC§ 794),
which prohibits discrimination on the basis of a disability; and the Americans
with Disabilities Act, as amended (42 USC § 12101 et seq.), which provides
comprehensive civil rights protections to individuals with disabilities in the
areas of employment, public accommodations, state and local government
services, and telecommunications;
6. Provide services and
supplies to individuals of the same quality and in the same mode of delivery as
provided to the general public;
7. Submit charges to DMAS for
the provision of services and supplies to individuals in amounts not to exceed
the provider's usual and customary charges to the general public and accept as
payment in full the amount established by DMAS payment methodology from the
individual's authorization date for the waiver services;
8. Use program-designated
billing forms for submission of charges;
9. Maintain and retain business
and professional records sufficient to document fully and accurately the
nature, scope, and details of the services provided;
a. In general, such records
shall be retained for at least six years from the last date of service or as
provided by applicable state or federal laws, whichever period is longer.
However, if an audit is initiated within the required retention period, the
records shall be retained until the audit is completed and every exception
resolved. Records of minors shall be kept for at least five years after such
minor has reached the age of 18 years.
b. Policies regarding retention
of records shall apply even if the provider discontinues operation. DMAS shall
be notified in writing of storage location and procedures for obtaining records
for review should the need arise. The location, agent, or trustee shall be
within the Commonwealth of Virginia.
10. Agree to furnish
information on request and in the form requested to DMAS, DMHMRSAS DBHDS,
the Attorney General of Virginia or his authorized representatives, federal
personnel, and the state Medicaid Fraud Control Unit. The Commonwealth's right
of access to provider agencies and records shall survive any termination of the
provider agreement;
11. Disclose, as requested by
DMAS, all financial, beneficial, ownership, equity, surety, or other interests
in any and all firms, corporations, partnerships, associations, business
enterprises, joint ventures, agencies, institutions, or other legal entities
providing any form of health care services to recipients of individuals
receiving Medicaid;
12. Pursuant to 42 CFR Part
431, Subpart F, 12VAC30-20-90, and any other applicable state or federal law,
hold confidential and use for authorized DMAS or DMHMRSAS DBHDS
purposes only all medical assistance information regarding individuals served.
A provider shall disclose information in his possession only when the
information is used in conjunction with a claim for health benefits or the data
is necessary for the functioning of the DMAS in conjunction with the cited
laws;
13. Notify DMAS of change of
ownership. When ownership of the provider changes, DMAS shall be notified at
least 15 calendar days before the date of change;
14. For all facilities covered
by § 1616(e) of the Social Security Act in which home and community-based
waiver services will be provided, be in compliance with applicable standards
that meet the requirements for board and care facilities. Health and safety
standards shall be monitored through the DMHMRSAS' DBHDS'
licensure standards or through DSS-approved standards for adult foster care
providers;
15. Suspected abuse or neglect.
Pursuant to §§ 63.2-1509 and 63.2-1606 of the Code of Virginia, if a
participating provider knows or suspects that a home and community-based waiver
service individual is being abused, neglected, or exploited, the party having
knowledge or suspicion of the abuse, neglect, or exploitation shall report this
immediately from first knowledge to the local DSS adult or child protective
services worker and to DMHMRSAS DBHDS Offices of Licensing and
Human Rights as applicable; and
16. Adhere to the provider
participation agreement and the DMAS provider service manual. In addition to
compliance with the general conditions and requirements, all providers enrolled
by DMAS shall adhere to the conditions of participation outlined in their
individual provider participation agreements and in the DMAS provider manual.
B. Documentation requirements.
1. The case manager must
maintain the following documentation for utilization review by DMAS for a
period of not less than six years from each individual's last date of service:
a. The comprehensive assessment
and all CSPs completed for the individual Individual Support Plans;
b. All ISPs Plans for
Supports from every provider rendering waiver services to the individual;
c. All supporting documentation
related to any change in the CSP Individual Support Plan;
d. All related communication
with the individual and the individual's family/caregiver, as appropriate,
consultants, providers, DMHMRSAS DBHDS, DMAS, DSS, DRS or other
related parties; and
e. An ongoing log that
documents all contacts made by the case manager related to the individual and
the individual's family/caregiver, as appropriate.
2. The service providers must
maintain, for a period of not less than six years from the individual's last
date of service, documentation necessary to support services billed.
Utilization review of individual-specific documentation shall be conducted by
DMAS staff. This documentation shall contain, up to and including the last date
of service, all of the following:
a. All assessments and
reassessments.
b. All ISP's Plans
for Supports developed for that individual and the written reviews.
c. Documentation of the date
services were rendered and the amount and type of services rendered.
d. Appropriate data, contact
notes, or progress notes reflecting an individual's status and, as appropriate,
progress or lack of progress toward the goals on the ISP Plan for
Supports.
e. Any documentation to support
that services provided are appropriate and necessary to maintain the individual
in the home and in the community.
C. An individual's case
manager shall not be the direct staff person or the immediate supervisor of a
staff person who provides MR MR/ID Waiver services for the
individual.
12VAC30-120-219. Participation
standards for home and community-based waiver services participating providers.
A. Requests for participation
will be screened to determine whether the provider applicant meets the basic
requirements for participation.
B. For DMAS to approve
provider agreements with home and community-based waiver providers, the
following standards shall be met:
1. For services that have
licensure and certification requirements, licensure and certification
requirements pursuant to 42 CFR 441.302;
2. Disclosure of ownership
pursuant to 42 CFR 455.104 and 455.105; and
3. The ability to document and
maintain individual case records in accordance with state and federal
requirements.
C. The case manager must
inform the individual of all available waiver providers in the community in
which he desires services and he shall have the option of selecting the
provider of his choice from among those providers meeting the individual's
needs.
D. DMAS shall be responsible
for assuring continued adherence to provider participation standards. DMAS
shall conduct ongoing monitoring of compliance with provider participation
standards and DMAS policies and periodically recertify each provider for
participation agreement renewal with DMAS to provide home and community-based
waiver services. A provider's noncompliance with DMAS policies and procedures,
as required in the provider's participation agreement, may result in a written
request from DMAS for a corrective action plan that details the steps the
provider must take and the length of time permitted to achieve full compliance
with the plan to correct the deficiencies that have been cited.
E. A participating provider
may voluntarily terminate his participation in Medicaid by providing 30 days'
written notification. DMAS may terminate at will a provider's participation
agreement on 30 days written notice as specified in the DMAS participation
agreement. DMAS may also immediately terminate a provider's participation
agreement if the provider is no longer eligible to participate in the program.
Such action precludes further payment by DMAS for services provided to
individuals subsequent to the date specified in the termination notice.
F. Provider appeals shall be
considered pursuant to 12VAC30-10-1000 and 12VAC30-20-500 through
12VAC30-20-560.
G. Section 32.1-325 of the
Code of Virginia mandates that "any such Medicaid agreement or contract
shall terminate upon conviction of the provider of a felony." A provider
convicted of a felony in Virginia or in any other of the 50 states or
Washington, DC, must, within 30 days, notify the Medicaid Program of this
conviction and relinquish its provider agreement. In addition, termination of a
provider participation agreement will occur as may be required for federal
financial participation.
H. Case manager's
responsibility for the Individual Information Form (DMAS-122) Medicaid
Long-Term Care Communication Form (DMAS-225). It shall be the
responsibility of the case management provider to notify DMHMRSAS Department
of Behavioral Health and Developmental Services (DBHDS) and DSS, in
writing, when any of the following circumstances occur. Furthermore, it shall
be the responsibility of DMHMRSAS DBHDS to update DMAS, as
requested, when any of the following events occur:
1. Home and community-based
waiver services are implemented.
2. A recipient An
individual dies.
3. A recipient An
individual is discharged from all MR mental
retardation/intellectual disability (MR/ID) waiver services.
4. Any other circumstances
(including hospitalization) that cause home and community-based waiver services
to cease or be interrupted for more than 30 days.
5. A selection by the
individual and the individual's family/caregiver, as appropriate, of a
different community services board/behavioral health authority providing case
management services.
I. Changes or termination of
services. DMHMRSAS DBHDS shall authorize changes to an
individual's CSP Individual Support Plan based on the
recommendations of the case management provider. Providers of direct service
are responsible for modifying their ISPs Plans for Supports with
the involvement of the individual and the individual's family/caregiver, as
appropriate, and submitting ISPs Plans for Supports to the case
manager any time there is a change in the individual's condition or
circumstances which may warrant a change in the amount or type of service
rendered. The case manager will review the need for a change and may recommend
a change to the ISP Plan for Supports to the DMHMRSAS DBHDS
staff. DMHMRSAS DBHDS will review and approve, deny, or pend for
additional information the requested change to the individual's ISP Plan
for Supports, and communicate this to the case manager within 10 business
days of receiving all supporting documentation regarding the request for change
or in the case of an emergency, within three working days of receipt of the
request for change.
The individual and the
individual's family/caregiver, as appropriate, will be notified, in writing, of
the right to appeal the decision or decisions to reduce, terminate, suspend or
deny services pursuant to DMAS client appeals regulations, Part I
(12VAC30-110-10 et seq.) of 12VAC30-110. The case manager must submit this
notification to the individual in writing within 10 business days of the
decision. All CSPs Individual Support Plan are subject to
approval by the Medicaid agency.
1. In a nonemergency situation,
the participating provider shall give the individual and the individual's
family/caregiver, as appropriate, and case manager 10 business days written
notification of the provider's intent to discontinue services. The notification
letter shall provide the reasons and the effective date the provider is
discontinuing services. The effective date shall be at least 12 days from the
date of the notification letter. The individual is not eligible for appeal
rights in this situation and may pursue services from another provider.
2. In an emergency situation
when the health and safety of the individual, other individuals in that
setting, or provider personnel is endangered, the case manager and DMHMRSAS
DBHDS must be notified prior to discontinuing services. The 10 business
day written notification period shall not be required. If appropriate, the
local DSS adult protective services or child protective services and DMHMRSAS
DBHDS Offices of Licensing and Human Rights must be notified
immediately.
3. In the case of termination
of home and community-based waiver services by the CSB/BHA, DMHMRSAS DBHDS
or DMAS staff, individuals shall be notified of their appeal rights by the case
manager pursuant to Part I (12VAC30-110-10 et seq.) of 12VAC30-110. The case
manager shall have the responsibility to identify those individuals who no
longer meet the level of care criteria or for whom home and community-based
waiver services are no longer an appropriate alternative.
Article 2
Covered Services and Limitations and Related Provider Requirements
12VAC30-120-221. Assistive
technology (AT).
A. Service description. AT is
the specialized medical equipment and supplies including those devices,
controls, or appliances, specified in the consumer service plan Individual
Support Plan but not available under the State Plan for Medical Assistance,
which enable individuals to increase their abilities to perform activities of
daily living, or to perceive, control, or communicate with the environment in
which they live. This service also includes items necessary for life support,
ancillary supplies, and equipment necessary to the proper functioning of such
items.
B. Criteria. In order to
qualify for these services, the individual must have a demonstrated need for
equipment or modification for remedial or direct medical benefit primarily in
the individual's home, vehicle, community activity setting, or day program to
specifically serve to improve the individual's personal functioning. This shall
encompass those items not otherwise covered under the State Plan for Medical
Assistance. AT shall be covered in the least expensive, most cost-effective
manner.
C. Service units and service
limitations. Assistive technology is available to individuals who are receiving
at least one other waiver service and may be provided in a residential or
nonresidential setting. The combined total of assistive technology items and
labor related to these items may not exceed $5,000 per CSP Individual
Support Plan year. Costs for assistive technology cannot be carried over
from year to year and must be preauthorized each CSP Individual
Support Plan year. AT shall not be approved for purposes of convenience of
the caregiver or restraint of the individual. An independent professional
consultation must be obtained from staff knowledgeable of that item for each AT
request prior to approval by DMHMRSAS the state-designated agency or
its contractor. All AT must be preauthorized by DMHMRSAS the
state-designated agency or its contractor each CSP Individual
Support Plan year. Equipment/supplies/technology not available as durable
medical equipment through the State Plan may be purchased and billed as
assistive technology as long as the request for equipment/supplies/technology
is documented and justified in the individual's ISP Plan for Supports,
recommended by the case manager, preauthorized by DMHMRSAS the
state-designated agency or its contractor, and provided in the least
expensive, most cost-effective manner.
D. Provider requirements. In
addition to meeting the general conditions and requirements for home and
community-based participating providers as specified in 12VAC30-120-217 and
12VAC30-120-219, assistive technology shall be provided by a DMAS-enrolled
Durable Medical Equipment provider or a DMAS-enrolled CSB/BHA with a MR Mental
Retardation/Intellectual Disability (MR/ID) Waiver provider agreement to
provide assistive technology. The provider documentation requirements are as
follows:
1. The appropriate ISAR Individualized
Service Authorization Request (ISAR) form, to be completed by the case
manager, may serve as the ISP Plan for Supports, provided it
adequately documents the need for the service, the process to obtain this
service (contacts with potential vendors or contractors, or both, of service,
costs, etc.), and the time frame during which the service is to be provided.
This includes a separate notation of evaluation or design, or both, labor, and
supplies or materials, or both. The ISP/ISAR Plan for Supports/ISAR
must include documentation of the reason that a rehabilitation engineer is
needed, if one is to be involved. A rehabilitation engineer may be involved if
disability expertise is required that a general contractor will not have. The ISAR
must be submitted to DMHMRSAS the state-designated agency or its
contractor for authorization to occur;
2. Written documentation
regarding the process and results of ensuring that the item is not covered by
the State Plan for Medical Assistance as durable medical equipment and supplies
and that it is not available from a DME-provider when purchased elsewhere;
3. Documentation of the
recommendation for the item by a qualified professional;
4. Documentation of the date
services are rendered and the amount of service needed;
5. Any other relevant
information regarding the device or modification;
6. Documentation in the case
management record of notification by the designated individual or individual's
representative of satisfactory completion or receipt of the service or item;
and
7. Instructions regarding any
warranty, repairs, complaints, or servicing that may be needed.
12VAC30-120-223. Companion
services.
A. Service description.
Companion services provide nonmedical care, socialization, or support to an
adult (age 18 or older). Companions may assist or support the individual with
such tasks as meal preparation, community access and activities, laundry and
shopping, but do not perform these activities as discrete services. Companions
may also perform light housekeeping tasks. This service is provided in
accordance with a therapeutic goal in the CSP Individual Support Plan
and is not purely diversional in nature. This service may be provided either
through an agency-directed or a consumer-directed model.
B. Criteria.
1. In order to qualify for
companion services, the individual shall have demonstrated a need for
assistance with IADLs, light housekeeping, community access, reminders for
medication self-administration or support to assure safety. The provision of
companion services does not entail hands-on care.
2. Individuals choosing the
consumer-directed option must receive support from a CD services facilitator
and meet requirements for consumer direction as described in
12VAC30-120-225.
C. Service units and service
limitations.
1. The unit of service for
companion services is one hour and the amount that may be included in the ISP
Plan for Supports shall not exceed eight hours per 24-hour day. There is
a limit of 8 hours per 24-hour day for companion services, either agency or
consumer-directed or combined.
2. A companion shall not be
permitted to provide the care associated with ventilators, continuous tube
feedings, or suctioning of airways.
3. The hours authorized are
based on individual need. No more than two unrelated individuals who are
receiving waiver services and live in the same home are permitted to share the
authorized work hours of the companion.
D. Provider requirements. In
addition to meeting the general conditions and requirements for home and
community-based participating providers as specified in 12VAC30-120-217 and
12VAC30-120-219, companion service providers must meet the following
qualifications:
1. Companion services
providers.
a. Agency-directed model: must
be licensed by DMHMRSAS- Department of Behavioral Health and
Developmental Services (DBHDS) as a residential service provider,
supportive in-home residential service provider, day support service provider,
or respite service provider or meet the DMAS criteria to be a personal
care/respite care provider.
b. Consumer-directed model: a
services facilitator meeting the requirements found in 12VAC30-120-225.
2. Companion qualifications.
Companions must meet the following requirements:
a. Be at least 18 years of age;
b. Be able to read and write
English and possess basic math skills;
c. Be capable of following an
ISP a Plan for Supports with minimal supervision;
d. Submit to a criminal history
record check within 15 days from the date of employment. The companion will not
be compensated for services provided to the individual if the records check
verifies the companion has been convicted of crimes described in § 37.2-416 of
the Code of Virginia;
e. Possess a valid Social
Security number;
f. Be capable of aiding in
instrumental activities of daily living; and
g. Receive an annual
tuberculosis (TB) screening.
3. Companion service providers
may not be the individual's spouse. Other family members living under the same
roof as the individual being served may not provide companion services unless
there is objective written documentation as to why there are no other providers
available to provide the service. Companion services shall not be provided by
adult foster care providers or any other paid caregivers for an individual
residing in that home.
4. Family members who are
reimbursed to provide companion services must meet the companion
qualifications.
5. For the agency-directed
model, companions will be employees of providers that will have participation
agreements with DMAS to provide companion services. Providers will be required
to have a companion services supervisor to monitor companion services. The
supervisor must have a bachelor's degree in a human services field and at least
one year of experience working in the mental retardation mental
retardation/intellectual disability (MR/ID) field, or be an LPN or an RN
with at least one year of experience working in the mental retardation MR/ID
field. An LPN or RN must have a current license or certification to practice
nursing in the Commonwealth within his profession.
6. The supervisor or services
facilitator must conduct an initial home visit prior to initiating companion
services to document the efficacy and appropriateness of services and to
establish an individual service plan Plan for Supports for the
individual. The supervisor or services facilitator must provide follow-up home
visits to monitor the provision of services quarterly under the agency-directed
model and semi-annually (every six months) under the consumer-directed model or
as often as needed.
7. Required documentation in
the individual's record. The provider or services facilitator must maintain a
record of each individual receiving companion services. At a minimum these
records must contain:
a. An A copy of the
DBHDS-approved assessment and, as needed, an initial assessment completed
prior to or on the date services are initiated and subsequent reassessments
and changes to the supporting documentation;
b. An ISP A Plan for
Supports containing the following elements:
(1) The individual's strengths,
desired outcomes, required or desired supports, or both;
(2) The services to be rendered
and the schedule of services to accomplish the above outcomes;
c. Documentation that the ISP
Plan for Supports goals, objectives, and activities have been reviewed
by the provider or services facilitator quarterly, annually, and more often as
needed, modified as appropriate, and results of these reviews submitted to the
case manager. For the annual review and in cases where the ISP Plan
for Supports is modified, the ISP Plan for Supports must be
reviewed with the individual and the individual's family/caregiver, as
appropriate.
d. All correspondence to the
individual and the individual's family/caregiver, as appropriate case manager,
DMAS, and DMHMRSAS DBHDS;
e. Contacts made with
family/caregiver, physicians, formal and informal service providers, and all
professionals concerning the individual;
f. The companion services
supervisor or CD services facilitator, as required by
12VAC30-120-225, must document in the individual's record in a summary note
following significant contacts with the companion and home visits with the
individual that occur at least quarterly under the agency-directed model and at
least semi-annually under the consumer-directed model:
(1) Whether companion services
continue to be appropriate;
(2) Whether the plan is
adequate to meet the individual's needs or changes are indicated in the plan;
(3) The individual's
satisfaction with the service;
(4) The presence or absence of
the companion during the supervisor's visit;
(5) Any suspected abuse,
neglect, or exploitation and to whom it was reported; and
(6) Any hospitalization or
change in medical condition, functioning, or cognitive status.
g. A copy of the most recently
completed DMAS-122 DMAS-225. The provider or services facilitator
must clearly document efforts to obtain the completed DMAS-122 DMAS-225
from the case manager.
h. Agency-directed provider companion
records. In addition to the above requirements, the companion record for
agency-directed providers must contain:
(1) The specific services
delivered to the individual by the companion, dated the day of service
delivery, and the individual's responses;
(2) The companion's arrival and
departure times;
(3) The companion's weekly
comments or observations about the individual to include observations of the
individual's physical and emotional condition, daily activities, and responses
to services rendered; and
(4) The companion's and
individual's and the individual's family/caregiver's, as appropriate, weekly
signatures recorded on the last day of service delivery for any given week to
verify that companion services during that week have been rendered.
i. Consumer-directed model
companion record. In addition to the above requirements outlined in
subdivisions D 7 a through g of this section, the companion record for services
facilitators must contain:
(1) The services facilitator's
dated notes documenting any contacts with the individual and the individual's
family/caregiver, as appropriate, and visits to the individual's home;
(2) Documentation of all
training provided to the companion on behalf of the individual and the
individual's family/caregiver, as appropriate;
(3) Documentation of all
employee management training provided to the individual and the individual's
family/caregiver, as appropriate, including the individual's and the
individual's family/caregiver's, as appropriate, receipt of training on their
responsibility for the accuracy of the companion's timesheets; and
(4) All documents signed by the
individual and the individual's family/caregiver, as appropriate, that
acknowledge the responsibilities as the employer.
12VAC30-120-225. Consumer-directed
model of service delivery.
A. Criteria.
1. The MR Mental
Retardation/Intellectual Disability (MR/ID) Waiver has three services,
companion, personal assistance, and respite, that may be provided through a
consumer-directed model.
2. Individuals who choose the
consumer-directed model must have the capability to hire, train, and fire their
own personal assistant or companion and supervise the assistant's or
companion's performance. If an individual is unable to direct his own care or
is under 18 years of age, a family/caregiver may serve as the employer on
behalf of the individual. The case manager shall document in the Individual
Support Plan the individual's choice for the CD model and whether there is a
need for a family/caregiver to serve as the employer on behalf of the
individual.
3. The individual, or if the
individual is unable, then family/caregiver, shall be the employer in this
service, and therefore shall be responsible for hiring, training, supervising,
and firing assistants and companions. Specific employer duties include checking
of references of personal assistants/companions, determining that personal
assistants/companions meet basic qualifications, training
assistants/companions, supervising the assistant's/companion's performance, and
submitting timesheets to the fiscal agent on a consistent and timely basis. The
individual and the individual's family/caregiver, as appropriate, must have a
back-up plan in case the assistant/companion does not show up for work as
expected or terminates employment without prior notice.
4. Consumer Directed (CD)
services facilitation.
a. Individuals choosing consumer-directed models of
service delivery must may receive support from a CD services
facilitator. This is not a separate waiver service, but is required
used in conjunction with consumer-directed CD personal
assistance, respite, or companion services. The CD services facilitator will be
responsible for assessing the individual's particular needs for a requested CD
service, assisting in the development of the ISP Plan for Supports,
providing training to the individual and the individual's family/caregiver, as
appropriate, on his responsibilities as an employer, and providing ongoing
support of the consumer-directed models of services. The CD services
facilitator cannot be the individual, the individual's case manager, direct
service provider, spouse, or parent of the individual who is a minor child, or
a family/caregiver employing the assistant/companion. If an individual enrolled
in consumer-directed services has a lapse in services facilitator for more than
90 consecutive days, the case manager must notify DMHMRSAS Department
of Behavioral Health and Developmental Services (DBHDS) and the
consumer-directed services will be discontinued.
b. If a services facilitator
is not selected by the individual, the individual or the family/caregiver
serving as the employer shall perform all of the duties and requirements
identified for services facilitation, including, but not limited to, those
identified in this subsection and in subsection B of this section.
5. DMAS shall provide for
fiscal agent services for consumer-directed personal assistance services,
consumer-directed companion services, and consumer-directed respite services.
The fiscal agent will be reimbursed by DMAS to perform certain tasks as an
agent for the individual/employer who is receiving consumer-directed services.
The fiscal agent will handle the responsibilities of employment taxes for the
individual. The fiscal agent will seek and obtain all necessary authorizations
and approvals of the Internal Revenue Services in order to fulfill all of these
duties.
B. Provider qualifications. In
addition to meeting the general conditions and requirements for home and
community-based services participating providers as specified in
12VAC30-120-217 and 12VAC30-120-219, the CD services facilitator must meet the
following qualifications:
1. To be enrolled as a Medicaid
CD services facilitator and maintain provider status, the CD services
facilitator shall have sufficient resources to perform the required activities.
In addition, the CD services facilitator must have the ability to maintain and
retain business and professional records sufficient to document fully and
accurately the nature, scope, and details of the services provided.
2. It is preferred that the CD
services facilitator possess a minimum of an undergraduate degree in a human
services field or be a registered nurse currently licensed to practice in the
Commonwealth. In addition, it is preferable that the CD services facilitator
have two years of satisfactory experience in a human service field working with
persons with mental retardation MR/ID. The facilitator must
possess a combination of work experience and relevant education that indicates
possession of the following knowledge, skills, and abilities. Such knowledge,
skills, and abilities must be documented on the provider's application form,
found in supporting documentation, or be observed during a job interview.
Observations during the interview must be documented. The knowledge, skills,
and abilities include:
a. Knowledge of:
(1) Types of functional
limitations and health problems that may occur in persons with mental
retardation MR/ID, or persons with other disabilities, as well as
strategies to reduce limitations and health problems;
(2) Physical assistance that
may be required by people with mental retardation MR/ID, such as
transferring, bathing techniques, bowel and bladder care, and the approximate
time those activities normally take;
(3) Equipment and environmental
modifications that may be required by people with mental retardation MR/ID
that reduce the need for human help and improve safety;
(4) Various long-term care
program requirements, including nursing home and ICF/MR placement criteria,
Medicaid waiver services, and other federal, state, and local resources that
provide personal assistance, respite, and companion services;
(5) MR MR/ID
waiver requirements, as well as the administrative duties for which the
services facilitator will be responsible;
(6) Conducting assessments
(including environmental, psychosocial, health, and functional factors) and
their uses in service planning;
(7) Interviewing techniques;
(8) The individual's right to
make decisions about, direct the provisions of, and control his
consumer-directed personal assistance, companion and respite services,
including hiring, training, managing, approving time sheets, and firing an
assistant/companion;
(9) The principles of human
behavior and interpersonal relationships; and
(10) General principles of
record documentation.
b. Skills in:
(1) Negotiating with
individuals and the individual's family/caregivers, as appropriate, and service
providers;
(2) Assessing, supporting,
observing, recording, and reporting behaviors;
(3) Identifying, developing, or
providing services to individuals with mental retardation MR/ID;
and
(4) Identifying services within
the established services system to meet the individual's needs.
c. Abilities to:
(1) Report findings of the
assessment or onsite visit, either in writing or an alternative format for
individuals who have visual impairments;
(2) Demonstrate a positive
regard for individuals and their families;
(3) Be persistent and remain
objective;
(4) Work independently,
performing position duties under general supervision;
(5) Communicate effectively,
orally and in writing; and
(6) Develop a rapport and
communicate with persons of diverse cultural backgrounds.
3. If the CD services
facilitator is not a RN, the CD services facilitator must inform the primary
health care provider that services are being provided and request skilled
nursing or other consultation as needed.
4. Initiation of services and
service monitoring.
a. For consumer-directed
services, the CD services facilitator must make an initial comprehensive home
visit to collaborate with the individual and the individual's family/caregiver,
as appropriate, to identify the needs, assist in the development of the ISP
Plan for Supports with the individual and the individual's
family/caregiver, as appropriate, and provide employee management training. The
initial comprehensive home visit is done only once upon the individual's entry
into the consumer-directed model of service regardless of the number or type of
consumer-directed services that an individual chooses to receive. If an
individual changes CD services facilitators, the new CD services facilitator
must complete a reassessment visit in lieu of a comprehensive visit.
b. After the initial visit, the
CD services facilitator will continue to monitor the companion, or personal
assistant ISP Plan for Supports quarterly and on an as-needed
basis. The CD services facilitator will review the utilization of consumer-directed
respite services, either every six months or upon the use of 300 respite
services hours, whichever comes first.
c. A face-to-face meeting with
the individual must be conducted at least every six months to reassess the
individual's needs and to ensure appropriateness of any CD services received by
the individual.
5. During visits with the
individual, the CD services facilitator must observe, evaluate, and consult
with the individual and the individual's family/caregiver, as appropriate, and
document the adequacy and appropriateness of consumer-directed services with
regard to the individual's current functioning and cognitive status, medical
needs, and social needs.
6. The CD services facilitator
must be available to the individual by telephone.
7. The CD services
facilitator must submit a A criminal record check pertaining to the
assistant/companion on behalf of the individual and shall be
requested by the program's fiscal agent, who shall report the
findings of the criminal record check to the individual and the individual's
family/caregiver, as appropriate, and the program's fiscal agent. If the
individual is a minor, the assistant/companion must also be screened through
the DSS Child Protective Services Central Registry. Assistants/companions will
not be reimbursed for services provided to the individual effective the date
that the criminal record check confirms an assistant/companion has been found
to have been convicted of a crime as described in § 37.2-416 of the Code of
Virginia or if the assistant/companion has a confirmed record on the DSS Child
Protective Services Central Registry. The criminal record check and DSS Child
Protective Services Central Registry finding must be requested by the CD
services facilitator program's fiscal agent within 15 calendar days
of employment. The services facilitator must maintain evidence that a criminal
record check was obtained and must make such evidence available for DMAS
review.
8. The CD services facilitator
shall review timesheets during the face-to-face visits or more often as needed
to ensure that the number of ISP-approved hours approved in the Plan
for Supports is not exceeded. If discrepancies are identified, the CD
services facilitator must discuss these with the individual to resolve discrepancies
and must notify the fiscal agent.
9. The CD services facilitator
must maintain a list of persons who are available to provide consumer-directed
personal assistance, consumer-directed companion, or consumer-directed respite
services.
10. The CD services facilitator
must maintain records of each individual as described in 12VAC30-120-217,
12VAC30-120-223, and 12VAC30-120-233.
11. Upon the individual's
request, the CD services facilitator shall provide the individual and the
individual's family/caregiver, as appropriate, with a list of persons who can
provide temporary assistance until the assistant/companion returns or the
individual is able to select and hire a new personal assistant/companion. If an
individual is consistently unable to hire and retain the employment of an
assistant/companion to provide consumer-directed personal assistance,
companion, or respite services, the CD services facilitator will make
arrangements with the case manager to have the services transferred to an
agency-directed services provider or to discuss with the individual and the
individual's family/caregiver, as appropriate, other service options.
12VAC30-120-227. Crisis
stabilization services.
A. Crisis stabilization
services involve direct interventions that provide temporary intensive services
and support that avert emergency psychiatric hospitalization or institutional
placement of persons with mental retardation Mental
Retardation/Intellectual Disability (MR/ID) who are experiencing serious
psychiatric or behavioral problems that jeopardize their current community
living situation. Crisis stabilization services will include, as appropriate,
neuro-psychiatric, psychiatric, psychological, and other functional assessments
and stabilization techniques, medication management and monitoring, behavior
assessment and positive behavioral support, and intensive service coordination
with other agencies and providers. This service is designed to stabilize the
individual and strengthen the current living situation, so that the individual
remains in the community during and beyond the crisis period. These services
shall be provided to:
1. Assist with planning and
delivery of services and supports to enable the individual to remain in the
community;
2. Train family/caregivers and
service providers in positive behavioral supports to maintain the individual in
the community; and
3. Provide temporary crisis
supervision to ensure the safety of the individual and others.
B. Criteria.
1. In order to receive crisis
stabilization services, the individual must meet at least one of the following
criteria:
a. The individual is
experiencing a marked reduction in psychiatric, adaptive, or behavioral
functioning;
b. The individual is
experiencing extreme increase in emotional distress;
c. The individual needs
continuous intervention to maintain stability; or
d. The individual is causing
harm to self or others.
2. The individual must be at
risk of at least one of the following:
a. Psychiatric hospitalization;
b. Emergency ICF/MR placement;
c. Immediate threat of loss of
a community service due to a severe situational reaction; or
d. Causing harm to self or
others.
C. Service units and service
limitations. Crisis stabilization services may only be authorized following a
documented face-to-face assessment conducted by a qualified mental retardation
professional (QMRP).
1. The unit for each component
of the service is one hour. This service may only be authorized in 15-day
increments but no more than 60 days in a calendar year may be used. The actual
service units per episode shall be based on the documented clinical needs of
the individual being served. Extension of services, beyond the 15-day limit per
authorization, may only be authorized following a documented face-to-face
reassessment conducted by a qualified mental retardation professional QMRP.
2. Crisis stabilization
services may be provided directly in the following settings (examples below are
not exclusive):
a. The home of an individual
who lives with family, friends, or other primary caregiver or caregivers;
b. The home of an individual
who lives independently or semi-independently to augment any current services
and supports;
c. A community-based
residential program to augment current services and supports;
d. A day program or setting to
augment current services and supports; or
e. A respite care setting to
augment current services and supports.
3. Crisis supervision is an
optional component of crisis stabilization in which one-to-one supervision of
the individual in crisis is provided by agency staff in order to ensure the
safety of the individual and others in the environment. Crisis supervision may
be provided as a component of crisis stabilization only if clinical or
behavioral interventions allowed under this service are also provided during
the authorized period. Crisis supervision must be provided one-to-one and
face-to-face with the individual. Crisis supervision, if provided as a part of
this service, shall be separately billed in hourly service units.
4. Crisis stabilization
services shall not be used for continuous long-term care. Room, board, and
general supervision are not components of this service.
5. If appropriate, the
assessment and any reassessments, shall be conducted jointly with a licensed
mental health professional or other appropriate professional or professionals.
D. Provider requirements. In
addition to the general conditions and requirements for home and
community-based participating providers as specified in 12VAC30-120-217 and
12VAC30-120-219, the following crisis stabilization provider qualifications
apply:
1. Crisis stabilization
services shall be provided by providers licensed by DMHMRSAS Department
of Behavioral Health and Developmental Services (DBHDS) as a provider of
outpatient services, residential, or supportive in-home residential services,
or day support services. The provider must employ or utilize qualified
mental retardation professionals (QMRPs), licensed mental health
professionals or other qualified personnel competent to provide crisis
stabilization and related activities to individuals with mental retardation
MR/ID who are experiencing serious psychiatric or behavioral problems.
The qualified mental retardation professional QMRP shall have:
(i) at least one year of documented experience working directly with
individuals who have mental retardation MR/ID or developmental
disabilities; (ii) at least a bachelor's degree in a human services
field including, but not limited to, sociology, social work, special education,
rehabilitation counseling, or psychology or a bachelor's degree in another
field in addition to an advanced degree in a human services field; and
(iii) the required Virginia or national license, registration, or certification
in accordance with his profession;
2. To provide the crisis
supervision component, providers must be licensed by DMHMRSAS DBHDS
as providers of residential services, supportive in-home residential services,
or day support services;
3. Required documentation in
the individual's record. The provider must maintain a record regarding each
individual receiving crisis stabilization services. At a minimum, the record
must contain the following:
a. Documentation of the
face-to-face assessment and any reassessments completed by a qualified
mental retardation professional QMRP;
b. An ISP A Plan for
Supports that contains, at a minimum, the following elements:
(1) The individual's strengths,
desired outcomes, required or desired supports;
(2) The individual's goals;
(3) Services to be rendered and
the frequency of services to accomplish the above goals and objectives;
(4) A timetable for the
accomplishment of the individual's goals and objectives;
(5) The estimated duration of
the individual's needs for services; and
(6) The provider staff
responsible for the overall coordination and integration of the services
specified in the ISP Plan for Supports.
c. An ISP A Plan for
Supports must be developed or revised and submitted to the case manager for
submission to DMHMRSAS DBHDS within 72 hours of the requested
start date for authorization;
d. Documentation indicating the
dates and times of crisis stabilization services, the amount and type of
service or services provided, and specific information regarding the
individual's response to the services and supports as agreed to in the ISP
Plan for Supports objectives; and
e. Documentation of
qualifications of providers must be maintained for review by DMHMRSAS DBHDS
and DMAS staff.
12VAC30-120-229. Day support
services.
A. Service description. Day
support services shall include a variety of training, assistance, support, and
specialized supervision for the acquisition, retention, or improvement of
self-help, socialization, and adaptive skills. These services are typically
offered in a nonresidential setting that allows peer interactions and community
and social integration.
B. Criteria. For day support
services, individuals must demonstrate the need for functional training,
assistance, and specialized supervision offered primarily in settings other
than the individual's own residence that allows an opportunity for being
productive and contributing members of communities.
C. Types of day support. The
amount and type of day support included in the individual's service plan is
determined according to the services required for that individual. There are
two types of day support: center-based, which is provided primarily at one
location/building, or noncenter-based, which is provided primarily in community
settings. Both types of day support may be provided at either intensive or
regular levels.
D. Levels of day support.
There are two levels of day support, intensive and regular. To be authorized at
the intensive level, the individual must meet at least one of the following criteria:
(i) requires physical assistance to meet the basic personal care needs
(toileting, feeding, etc); (ii) has extensive disability-related difficulties
and requires additional, ongoing support to fully participate in programming
and to accomplish his service goals; or (iii) requires extensive constant
supervision to reduce or eliminate behaviors that preclude full participation
in the program. In this case, written behavioral objectives are required to
address behaviors such as, but not limited to, withdrawal, self-injury,
aggression, or self-stimulation.
E. Service units and service
limitations. Day support services are billed according to the DMAS fee
schedule.
Day support cannot be
regularly or temporarily provided in an individual's home or other residential
setting (e.g., due to inclement weather or individual illness) without prior
written approval from DMHMRSAS the state-designated agency or its
contractor. Noncenter-based day support services must be separate and
distinguishable from either residential support services or personal assistance
services. There must be separate supporting documentation for each service and
each must be clearly differentiated in documentation and corresponding billing.
The supporting documentation must provide an estimate of the amount of day
support required by the individual. Service providers are reimbursed only for
the amount and level of day support services included in the individual's
approved ISP Plan for Supports based on the setting, intensity,
and duration of the service to be delivered. This service shall be limited to
780 units, or its equivalent under the DMAS fee schedule, per CSP Individual
Support Plan year. If this service is used in combination with
prevocational and/or group supported employment services, the combined total
units for these services cannot exceed 780 units, or its equivalent under the
DMAS fee schedule, per CSP Individual Support Plan year.
F. Provider requirements. In
addition to meeting the general conditions and requirements for home and
community-based participating providers as specified in 12VAC30-120-217 and
12VAC30-120-219, day support providers need to meet additional requirements.
1. The provider of day support
services must be licensed by DMHMRSAS Department of Behavioral Health
and Developmental Services (DBHDS) as a provider of day support services.
2. In addition to licensing
requirements, day support staff must also have training in the characteristics
of mental retardation mental retardation/intellectual disability
(MR/ID) and appropriate interventions, training strategies, and support
methods for persons with mental retardation MR/ID and functional
limitations. All providers of day support services must pass an objective,
standardized test of skills, knowledge, and abilities approved by DMHMRSAS
DBHDS and administered according to DMHMRSAS' DBHDS'
defined procedures.
3. Required documentation in
the individual's record. The provider must maintain records of each individual
receiving services. At a minimum, these records must contain the following:
a. A functional completed
copy of the DBHDS-approved assessment conducted by the provider to
evaluate each individual in the day support environment and community settings.
b. An ISP A Plan for
Supports that contains, at a minimum, the following elements:
(1) The individual's strengths,
desired outcomes, required or desired supports and training needs;
(2) The individual's goals and
measurable objectives to meet the above identified outcomes;
(3) Services to be rendered and
the frequency of services to accomplish the above goals and objectives;
(4) A timetable for the
accomplishment of the individual's goals and objectives as appropriate;
(5) The estimated duration of
the individual's needs for services; and
(6) The provider staff
responsible for the overall coordination and integration of the services
specified in the ISP Plan for Supports.
c. Documentation confirming the
individual's attendance and amount of time in services and specific information
regarding the individual's response to various settings and supports as agreed
to in the ISP Plan for Supports objectives. An attendance log or
similar document must be maintained that indicates the date, type of services
rendered, and the number of hours and units, or their equivalent under the DMAS
fee schedule, provided.
d. Documentation indicating
whether the services were center-based or noncenter-based.
e. Documentation regarding
transportation. In instances where day support staff are required to ride with
the individual to and from day support, the day support staff time can be
billed as day support, provided that the billing for this time does not exceed
25% of the total time spent in the day support activity for that day.
Documentation must be maintained to verify that billing for day support staff
coverage during transportation does not exceed 25% of the total time spent in
the day support for that day.
f. If intensive day support
services are requested, documentation indicating the specific supports and the
reasons they are needed. For ongoing intensive day support services, there must
be clear documentation of the ongoing needs and associated staff supports.
g. Documentation indicating
that the ISP Plan for Supports goals, objectives, and activities
have been reviewed by the provider quarterly, annually, and more often as
needed. The results of the review must be submitted to the case manager. For
the annual review and in cases where the ISP Plan for Supports is
modified, the ISP Plan for Supports must be reviewed with the
individual and the individual's family/caregiver, as appropriate.
h. Copy of the most recently
completed DMAS-122 DMAS-225 form. The provider must clearly
document efforts to obtain the completed DMAS-122 DMAS-225 form from
the case manager.
12VAC30-120-231. Environmental
modifications.
A. Service description.
Environmental modifications shall be defined as those physical adaptations to
the home or vehicle, required by the individual's CSP Individual
Support Plan, that are necessary to ensure the health, welfare, and safety
of the individual, or which enable the individual to function with greater
independence and without which the individual would require
institutionalization. Such adaptations may include the installation of ramps
and grab-bars, widening of doorways, modification of bathroom facilities, or
installation of specialized electric and plumbing systems which are necessary
to accommodate the medical equipment and supplies which are necessary for the
welfare of the individual. Modifications can be made to an automotive vehicle
if it is the primary vehicle being used by the individual. Modifications may be
made to an individual's work site when the modification exceeds the reasonable
accommodation requirements of the Americans with Disabilities Act.
B. Criteria. In order to
qualify for these services, the individual must have a demonstrated need for
equipment or modifications of a remedial or medical benefit offered in an
individual's primary home, primary vehicle used by the individual, community
activity setting, or day program to specifically improve the individual's
personal functioning. This service shall encompass those items not otherwise
covered in the State Plan for Medical Assistance or through another program.
C. Service units and service
limitations. Environmental modifications shall be available to individuals who
are receiving at least one other waiver service in addition to targeted mental
retardation mental retardation/intellectual disability (MR/ID) case
management. A maximum limit of $5,000 may be reimbursed per CSP Individual
Support Plan year. Costs for environmental modifications shall not be
carried over from CSP Individual Support Plan year to CSP Individual
Support Plan year and must be prior authorized by DMHMRSAS the
state-designated agency or its contractor for each CSP Individual
Support Plan year. Modifications may not be used to bring a substandard
dwelling up to minimum habitation standards. Excluded are those adaptations or
improvements to the home that are of general utility, such as carpeting, roof
repairs, central air conditioning, etc., and are not of direct medical or
remedial benefit to the individual. Also excluded are modifications that are
reasonable accommodation requirements of the Americans with Disabilities Act,
the Virginians with Disabilities Act, and the Rehabilitation Act. Adaptations
that add to the total square footage of the home shall be excluded from this
service.
D. Provider requirements. In
addition to meeting the general conditions and requirements for home and
community-based participating providers as specified in 12VAC30-120-217 and
12VAC30-120-219, environmental modifications must be provided in accordance with
all applicable federal, state or local building codes and laws by contractors
of the CSB/BHA or providers who have a participation agreement with DMAS who
shall be reimbursed for the amount charged by said contractors. The following
are provider documentation requirements:
1. An ISP A Plan for
Supports that documents the need for the service, the process to obtain the
service, and the time frame during which the services are to be provided. The ISP
Plan for Supports must include documentation of the reason that a
rehabilitation engineer or specialist is needed, if one is to be involved;
2. Documentation of the time
frame involved to complete the modification and the amount of services and
supplies;
3. Any other relevant
information regarding the modification;
4. Documentation of
notification by the individual and the individual's family/caregiver, as
appropriate, of satisfactory completion of the service; and
5. Instructions regarding any
warranty, repairs, complaints, and servicing that may be needed.
12VAC30-120-233. Personal
assistance and respite services.
A. Service description.
Services may be provided either through an agency-directed or consumer-directed
model.
1. Personal assistance services
are provided to individuals in the areas of activities of daily living,
instrumental activities of daily living, access to the community, monitoring of
self-administered medications or other medical needs, monitoring of health
status and physical condition, and work-related personal assistance. They may be
provided in home and community settings to enable an individual to maintain the
health status and functional skills necessary to live in the community or
participate in community activities. When specified, such supportive services
may include assistance with instrumental activities of daily living (IADLs).
Personal assistance does not include either practical or professional nursing
services or those practices regulated in Chapters 30 (§ 54.1-3000 et seq.) and
34 (§ 54.1-3400 et seq.) of Title 54.1 of the Code of Virginia, as appropriate.
This service does not include skilled nursing services with the exception of
skilled nursing tasks that may be delegated pursuant to 18VAC90-20-420 through
18VAC90-20-460.
2. Respite services are
supports for that which is normally provided by the family or other unpaid
primary caregiver of an individual. These services are furnished on a
short-term basis because of the absence or need for relief of those unpaid
caregivers normally providing the care for the individuals.
B. Criteria.
1. In order to qualify for
personal assistance services, the individual must demonstrate a need for
assistance with activities of daily living, community access,
self-administration of medications or other medical needs, or monitoring of health
status or physical condition.
2. Respite services may only be
offered to individuals who have an unpaid primary caregiver who requires
temporary relief to avoid institutionalization of the individual.
C. Service units and service
limitations.
1. The unit of service is one
hour.
2. Each individual must have a
back-up plan in case the personal assistant does not show up for work as
expected or terminates employment without prior notice.
3. Personal assistance is not
available to individuals: (i) who receive congregate residential services or
live in assisted living facilities; (ii) who would benefit from personal
assistance training and skill development; or (iii) who receive comparable
services provided through another program or service.
4. Respite services shall not
be provided to relieve group home or assisted living facility staff where
residential care is provided in shifts. Respite services shall not be provided
by adult foster care providers for an individual residing in that home. Training
of the individual is not provided with respite services.
5. Respite services shall be
limited to a maximum of 720 hours per calendar year. Individuals who are
receiving services through both the agency-directed and consumer-directed model
cannot exceed 720 hours per calendar year combined.
6. The hours authorized are
based on individual need. No more than two unrelated individuals who live in
the same home are permitted to share the authorized work hours of the
assistant.
D. Provider requirements. In
addition to meeting the general conditions and requirements for home and
community-based participating providers as specified in 12VAC30-120-217 and
12VAC30-120-219, personal assistance and respite providers must meet additional
provider requirements:
1. Services shall be provided
by:
a. For the agency-directed
model, an enrolled DMAS personal care/respite care provider or by a DMHMRSAS-licensed
residential services provider licensed by the Department of Behavioral
Health and Developmental Services (DBHDS). In addition, respite services
may be provided by a DMHMRSAS-licensed DBHDS-licensed respite
services provider or a DSS-approved foster care home for children or adult
foster home provider. All personal assistants must pass an objective
standardized test of skills, knowledge, and abilities approved by DMHMRSAS
DBHDS and administered according to DMHMRSAS' DBHDS'
defined procedures.
b. For consumer-directed model,
a services facilitator meeting the services shall meet the
requirements found in 12VAC30-120-225.
2. For DMHMRSAS-licensed
DBHDS-licensed residential or respite services providers, a residential
or respite supervisor will provide ongoing supervision of all assistants.
3. For DMAS-enrolled personal
care/respite care providers, the provider must employ or subcontract with and
directly supervise a RN or a LPN who will provide ongoing supervision of all
assistants. The supervising RN or LPN must be currently licensed to practice
nursing in the Commonwealth and have at least two years of related clinical
nursing experience that may include work in an acute care hospital, public
health clinic, home health agency, ICF/MR or nursing facility.
4. The supervisor or services
facilitator must make a home visit to conduct an initial assessment prior to
the start of services for all individuals requesting personal assistance or
respite services. The supervisor or services facilitator must also perform any
subsequent reassessments or changes to the supporting documentation.
5. The supervisor or services
facilitator must make supervisory home visits as often as needed to ensure both
quality and appropriateness of services. The minimum frequency of these visits
is every 30 to 90 days under the agency-directed model and semi-annually (every
six months) under the consumer-directed model depending on the individual's
needs.
a. When respite services are
not received on a routine basis, but are episodic in nature, the supervisor or
services facilitator is not required to conduct a supervisory visit every 30 to
90 days. Instead, the supervisor or services facilitator must conduct the
initial home visit with the respite assistant immediately preceding the start
of services and make a second home visit within the respite period.
b. When respite services are
routine in nature and offered in conjunction with personal assistance, the
supervisory visit conducted for personal assistance may serve as the
supervisory visit for respite services. However, the supervisor or services
facilitator must document supervision of respite services separately. For this
purpose, the same individual record can be used with a separate section for
respite services documentation.
6. Based on continuing
evaluations of the assistant's performance and individual's needs, the
supervisor or services facilitator shall identify any gaps in the assistant's
ability to function competently and shall provide training as indicated.
7. Qualification of assistants.
a. The assistant must:
(1) Be 18 years of age or older
and possess a valid social security number;
(2) Be able to read and write
English to the degree necessary to perform the tasks expected and possess basic
math skills; and
(3) Have the required skills to
perform services as specified in the individual's ISP Plan for
Supports.
b. Additional requirements for
DMAS-enrolled personal care/respite care providers.
(1) Assistants must complete a
training curriculum consistent with DMAS requirements. Prior to assigning an
assistant to an individual, the provider must obtain documentation that the
assistant has satisfactorily completed a training program consistent with DMAS
requirements. DMAS requirements may be met in one of three ways:
(a) Registration as a certified
nurse aide;
(b) Graduation from an approved
educational curriculum that offers certificates qualifying the student as a
nursing assistant, geriatric assistance, or home health aide;
(c) Completion of
provider-offered training, which is consistent with the basic course outline approved
by DMAS; and
(2) Assistants must have a
satisfactory work record, as evidenced by two references from prior job
experiences, including no evidence of possible abuse, neglect, or exploitation
of aged or incapacitated adults or children.
c. Additional requirements for
the consumer-directed option. The assistant must:
(1) Submit to a criminal
records check and, if the individual is a minor, consent to a search of the DSS
Child Protective Services Central Registry. The assistant will not be compensated
for services provided to the individual if either of these records checks
verifies the assistant has been convicted of crimes described in § 37.2-416 of
the Code of Virginia or if the assistant has a founded complaint confirmed by
the DSS Child Protective Services Central Registry;
(2) Be willing to attend
training at the individual and the individual's family/caregiver, as
appropriate, request;
(3) Understand and agree to
comply with the DMAS MR mental retardation/intellectual disability
(MR/ID) Waiver requirements; and
(4) Receive an annual
tuberculosis (TB) screening.
8. Assistants may not be the
parents of individuals who are minors, or the individuals' spouses. Payment may
not be made for services furnished by other family members living under the
same roof as the individual receiving services unless there is objective
written documentation as to why there are no other providers available to
provide the service. Family members who are approved to be reimbursed for
providing this service must meet the assistant qualifications.
9. Provider inability to render
services and substitution of assistants (agency-directed model).
a. When an assistant is absent,
the provider is responsible for ensuring that services continue to be provided
to individuals. The provider may either provide another assistant, obtain a
substitute assistant from another provider, if the lapse in coverage is to be
less than two weeks in duration, or transfer the individual's services to
another provider. The provider that has the authorization to provide services
to the individual must contact the case manager to determine if additional
preauthorization is necessary.
b. If no other provider is
available who can supply a substitute assistant, the provider shall notify the
individual and the individual's family/caregiver, as appropriate, and case
manager so that the case manager may find another available provider of the
individual's choice.
c. During temporary, short-term
lapses in coverage not to exceed two weeks in duration, the following
procedures must apply:
(1) The preauthorized provider
must provide the supervision for the substitute assistant;
(2) The provider of the
substitute assistant must send a copy of the assistant's daily documentation
signed by the individual and the individual's family/caregiver, as appropriate,
on his behalf and the assistant to the provider having the authorization; and
(3) The preauthorized provider
must bill DMAS for services rendered by the substitute assistant.
d. If a provider secures a substitute
assistant, the provider agency is responsible for ensuring that all DMAS
requirements continue to be met including documentation of services rendered by
the substitute assistant and documentation that the substitute assistant's
qualifications meet DMAS' requirements. The two providers involved are
responsible for negotiating the financial arrangements of paying the substitute
assistant.
10. Required documentation in
the individual's record. The provider must maintain records regarding each
individual receiving services. At a minimum these records must contain:
a. An A copy of the
completed DBHDS-approved assessment and, as needed, an initial assessment
completed by the supervisor or services facilitator prior to or on the date
services are initiated;
b. An ISP A Plan for
Supports, that contains, at a minimum, the following elements:
(1) The individual's strengths,
desired outcomes, required or desired supports;
(2) The individual's goals and
objectives to meet the above identified outcomes;
(3) Services to be rendered and
the frequency of services to accomplish the above goals and objectives; and
(4) For the agency-directed
model, the provider staff responsible for the overall coordination and
integration of the services specified in the ISP Plan for Supports.
c. The ISP Plan for
Supports goals, objectives, and activities must be reviewed by the
supervisor or services facilitator quarterly for personal assistance only,
annually, and more often as needed modified as appropriate and results of these
reviews submitted to the case manager. For the annual review and in cases where
the ISP Plan for Supports is modified, the ISP Plan for
Supports must be reviewed with the individual.
d. Dated notes of any contacts
with the assistant, individual and the individual's family/caregiver, as
appropriate, during supervisory or services facilitator visits to the
individual's home. The written summary of the supervision or services
facilitation visits must include:
(1) Whether services continue
to be appropriate and whether the ISP Plan for Supports is
adequate to meet the need or if changes are indicated in the ISP Plan
for Supports;
(2) Any suspected abuse,
neglect, or exploitation and to whom it was reported;
(3) Any special tasks performed
by the assistant and the assistant's qualifications to perform these tasks;
(4) The individual's
satisfaction with the service;
(5) Any hospitalization or
change in medical condition or functioning status;
(6) Other services received and
their amount; and
(7) The presence or absence of
the assistant in the home during the supervisor's visit.
e. All correspondence to the
individual and the individual's family/caregiver, as appropriate, case manager,
DMAS, and DMHMRSAS DBHDS;
f. Reassessments and any
changes to supporting documentation made during the provision of services;
g. Contacts made with the
individual, family/caregivers, physicians, formal and informal service
providers, and all professionals concerning the individual;
h. Copy of the most recently
completed DMAS-122 DMAS-225 form. The provider or services
facilitator must clearly document efforts to obtain the completed DMAS-122
DMAS-225 form from the case manager.
i. For the agency-directed
model, the assistant record must contain:
(1) The specific services
delivered to the individual by the assistant, dated the day of service
delivery, and the individual's responses;
(2) The assistant's arrival and
departure times;
(3) The assistant's weekly
comments or observations about the individual to include observations of the
individual's physical and emotional condition, daily activities, and responses
to services rendered; and
(4) The assistant's and
individual's and the individual's family/caregiver's, as appropriate, weekly
signatures recorded on the last day of service delivery for any given week to
verify that services during that week have been rendered.
j. For individuals receiving
personal assistance and respite services in a congregate residential setting,
because services that are training in nature are currently or no longer
appropriate or desired, the record must contain:
(1) The specific services
delivered to the individual, dated the day services were provided, the number
of hours as outlined in the ISP Plan for Supports, the
individual's responses, and observations of the individual's physical and
emotional condition; and
(2) At a minimum, monthly
verification by the residential supervisor of the services and hours and
quarterly verification as outlined in 12VAC30-120-241.
k. For the consumer-directed
model, the assistant record must contain:
(1) Documentation of all
training provided to the assistants on behalf of the individual and the
individual's family/caregiver, as appropriate;
(2) Documentation of all
employee management training provided to the individual and the individual's
family/caregiver, as appropriate, including the individual and the individual's
family/caregiver, as appropriate, receipt of training on their responsibility
for the accuracy of the assistant's timesheets;
(3) All documents signed by the
individual and the individual's family/caregiver, as appropriate, that
acknowledge the responsibilities as the employer.
12VAC30-120-235. Personal
Emergency Response System (PERS).
A. Service description. PERS
is a service which monitors individual safety in the home and provides access
to emergency assistance for medical or environmental emergencies through the
provision of a two-way voice communication system that dials a 24-hour response
or monitoring center upon activation and via the individual's home telephone
line. PERS may also include medication monitoring devices.
B. Criteria. PERS can be
authorized when there is no one else in the home who is competent or continuously
available to call for help in an emergency.
C. Service units and service
limitations.
1. A unit of service shall
include administrative costs, time, labor, and supplies associated with the
installation, maintenance, monitoring, and adjustments of the PERS. A unit of
service is the one-month rental price set by DMAS. The one-time installation of
the unit includes installation, account activation, individual and caregiver
instruction, and removal of PERS equipment.
2. PERS services must be
capable of being activated by a remote wireless device and be connected to the
individual's telephone line. The PERS console unit must provide hands-free
voice-to-voice communication with the response center. The activating device
must be waterproof, automatically transmit to the response center an activator
low battery alert signal prior to the battery losing power, and be able to be
worn by the individual.
D. Provider requirements. In
addition to meeting the general conditions and requirements for home and community-based
participating providers as specified in 12VAC30-120-217 and 12VAC30-120-219,
PERS providers must also meet the following qualifications:
1. A PERS provider is a
personal assistance agency, a durable medical equipment provider, a hospital, a
licensed home health provider, or a PERS manufacturer that has the ability to
provide PERS equipment, direct services (i.e., installation, equipment
maintenance and service calls), and PERS monitoring.
2. The PERS provider must
provide an emergency response center with fully trained operators who are
capable of receiving signals for help from an individual's PERS equipment
24-hours a day, 365, or 366, days per year as appropriate, of determining
whether an emergency exists, and of notifying an emergency response
organization or an emergency responder that the PERS individual needs emergency
help.
3. A PERS provider must comply
with all applicable Virginia statutes, applicable regulations of DMAS, and all
other governmental agencies having jurisdiction over the services to be
performed.
4. The PERS provider has the
primary responsibility to furnish, install, maintain, test, and service the
PERS equipment, as required, to keep it fully operational. The provider shall
replace or repair the PERS device within 24 hours of the individual's
notification of a malfunction of the console unit, activating devices, or
medication-monitoring unit while the original equipment is being repaired.
5. The PERS provider must
properly install all PERS equipment into a PERS individual's functioning
telephone line and must furnish all supplies necessary to ensure that the
system is installed and working properly.
6. The PERS installation
includes local seize line circuitry, which guarantees that the unit will have
priority over the telephone connected to the console unit should the phone be
off the hook or in use when the unit is activated.
7. A PERS provider must
maintain a data record for each PERS individual at no additional cost to DMAS.
The record must document the following:
a. Delivery date and
installation date of the PERS;
b. Individual or
family/caregiver signature verifying receipt of PERS device;
c. Verification by a test that
the PERS device is operational, monthly or more frequently as needed;
d. Updated and current
individual responder and contact information, as provided by the individual,
the individual's family/caregiver, or case manager; and
e. A case log documenting the
individual's utilization of the system and contacts and communications with the
individual, family/caregiver, case manager, and responders.
8. The PERS provider must have
back-up monitoring capacity in case the primary system cannot handle incoming
emergency signals.
9. Standards for PERS
equipment. All PERS equipment must be approved by the Federal Communications
Commission and meet the Underwriters' Laboratories, Inc. (UL) safety standard
Number 1635 for Digital Alarm Communicator System Units and Number 1637, which
is the UL safety standard for home health care signaling equipment. The UL listing
mark on the equipment will be accepted as evidence of the equipment's
compliance with such standard. The PERS device must be automatically reset by
the response center after each activation, ensuring that subsequent signals can
be transmitted without requiring manual reset by the individual.
10. A PERS provider must
furnish education, data, and ongoing assistance to DMAS, DMHMRSAS Department
of Behavioral Health and Developmental Services (DBHDS) and case managers
to familiarize staff with the service, allow for ongoing evaluation and
refinement of the program, and must instruct the individual, family/caregiver,
and responders in the use of the PERS service.
11. The emergency response
activator must be activated either by breath, by touch, or by some other means,
and must be usable by individuals who are visually or hearing impaired or
physically disabled. The emergency response communicator must be capable of
operating without external power during a power failure at the individual's
home for a minimum period of 24-hours and automatically transmit a low battery
alert signal to the response center if the back-up battery is low. The
emergency response console unit must also be able to self-disconnect and redial
the back-up monitoring site without the individual resetting the system in the
event it cannot get its signal accepted at the response center.
12. Monitoring agencies must be
capable of continuously monitoring and responding to emergencies under all
conditions, including power failures and mechanical malfunctions. It is the
PERS provider's responsibility to ensure that the monitoring agency and the
agency's equipment meets the following requirements. The monitoring agency must
be capable of simultaneously responding to signals for help from multiple
individuals' PERS equipment. The monitoring agency's equipment must include the
following:
a. A primary receiver and a
back-up receiver, which must be independent and interchangeable;
b. A back-up information
retrieval system;
c. A clock printer, which must
print out the time and date of the emergency signal, the PERS individual's
identification code, and the emergency code that indicates whether the signal
is active, passive, or a responder test;
d. A back-up power supply;
e. A separate telephone
service;
f. A toll free number to be
used by the PERS equipment in order to contact the primary or back-up response
center; and
g. A telephone line monitor,
which must give visual and audible signals when the incoming telephone line is
disconnected for more than 10 seconds.
13. The monitoring agency must
maintain detailed technical and operations manuals that describe PERS elements,
including the installation, functioning, and testing of PERS equipment,
emergency response protocols, and recordkeeping and reporting procedures.
14. The PERS provider shall
document and furnish within 30 days of the action taken a written report to the
case manager for each emergency signal that results in action being taken on
behalf of the individual. This excludes test signals or activations made in
error.
15. The PERS provider is
prohibited from performing any type of direct marketing activities to Medicaid
recipients.
16. The provider must obtain
and keep on file a copy of the most recently completed DMAS-122 DMAS-225
form. The provider must clearly document efforts to obtain the completed DMAS-122
DMAS-225 form from the case manager.
12VAC30-120-237. Prevocational
services.
A. Service description.
Prevocational services are services aimed at preparing an individual for paid
or unpaid employment, but are not job-task oriented. Prevocational services are
provided to individuals who are not expected to be able to join the general
work force without supports or to participate in a transitional sheltered
workshop within one year of beginning waiver services, (excluding supported
employment programs). Activities included in this service are not primarily
directed at teaching specific job skills but at underlying habilitative goals
such as accepting supervision, attendance, task completion, problem solving,
and safety.
B. Criteria. In order to
qualify for prevocational services, the individual shall have a demonstrated
need for support in skills that are aimed toward preparation of paid employment
that may be offered in a variety of community settings.
C. Service units and service
limitations. Billing is in accordance with the DMAS fee schedule.
1. This service is limited to
780 units, or its equivalent under the DMAS fee schedule, per CSP Individual
Support Plan year. If this service is used in combination with day support
and /or group-supported employment services, the combined total units for these
services cannot exceed 780 units, or its equivalent under the DMAS fee
schedule, per CSP Individual Support Plan year.
2. Prevocational services can
be provided in center- or noncenter-based settings. Center-based means services
are provided primarily at one location/building and noncenter-based means
services are provided primarily in community settings. Both center-based or
noncenter-based prevocational services may be provided at either regular or
intensive levels.
3. Prevocational services can
be provided at either a regular or intensive level. For prevocational services
to be authorized at the intensive level, the individual must meet at least one
of the following criteria: (i) require physical assistance to meet the basic
personal care needs (toileting, feeding, etc); (ii) have extensive
disability-related difficulties and require additional, ongoing support to
fully participate in programming and to accomplish service goals; or (iii)
require extensive constant supervision to reduce or eliminate behaviors that
preclude full participation in the program. In this case, written behavioral
objectives are required to address behaviors such as, but not limited to,
withdrawal, self-injury, aggression, or self-stimulation.
4. There must be documentation
regarding whether prevocational services are available in vocational
rehabilitation agencies through § 110 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 or
through the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA). If the
individual is not eligible for services through the IDEA, documentation is
required only for lack of DRS Department of Rehabilitation (DRS)
funding. When services are provided through these sources, the ISP Plan
for Supports shall not authorize them as a waiver expenditure.
5. Prevocational services can
only be provided when the individual's compensation is less than 50% of the
minimum wage.
D. Provider requirements. In
addition to meeting the general conditions and requirements for home and
community-based services participating providers as specified in
12VAC30-120-217 and 12VAC30-120-219, prevocational providers must also meet the
following qualifications:
1. The provider of
prevocational services must be a vendor of extended employment services,
long-term employment services, or supported employment services for DRS Department
of Rehabilitation (DRS), or be licensed by DMHMRSAS Department of
Behavioral Health and Developmental Services (DBHDS) as a provider of day
support services.
2. Providers must ensure and
document that persons providing prevocational services have training in the
characteristics of mental retardation mental retardation/intellectual
disability (MR/ID) and appropriate interventions, training strategies, and
support methods for persons with mental retardation MR/ID and
functional limitations. All providers of prevocational services must pass an
objective, standardized test of skills, knowledge, and abilities approved by DMHMRSAS
DBHDS and administered according to DMHMRSAS DBHDS'
defined procedures.
3. Required documentation in
the individual's record. The provider must maintain a record regarding each
individual receiving prevocational services. At a minimum, the records must
contain the following:
a. A functional completed
copy of the DBHDS-approved assessment conducted by the provider to evaluate
each individual in the prevocational environment and community settings.
b. An ISP A Plan for
Supports, which contains, at a minimum, the following elements:
(1) The individual's strengths,
desired outcomes, required or desired supports, and training needs;
(2) The individual's goals and
measurable objectives to meet the above identified outcomes;
(3) Services to be rendered and
the frequency of services to accomplish the above goals and objectives;
(4) A timetable for the
accomplishment of the individual's goals and objectives;
(5) The estimated duration of
the individual's needs for services; and
(6) The provider staff
responsible for the overall coordination and integration of the services
specified in the ISP Plan for Supports.
c. Documentation indicating
that the ISP Plan for Supports goals, objectives, and activities
have been reviewed by the provider quarterly, annually, and more often as
needed, modified as appropriate, and that the results of these reviews have
been submitted to the case manager. For the annual review and in cases where
the ISP Plan for Supports is modified, the ISP Plan for
Supports must be reviewed with the individual and the individual's
family/caregiver, as appropriate.
d. Documentation confirming the
individual's attendance, amount of time spent in services, and type of services
rendered, and specific information regarding the individual's response to
various settings and supports as agreed to in the ISP Plan for
Supports objectives. An attendance log or similar document must be
maintained that indicates the date, type of services rendered, and the number
of hours and units, or their equivalent under the DMAS fee schedule, provided.
e. Documentation indicating
whether the services were center-based or noncenter-based.
f. Documentation regarding
transportation. In instances where prevocational staff are required to ride
with the individual to and from prevocational services, the prevocational staff
time can be billed for prevocational services, provided that billing for this
time does not exceed 25% of the total time spent in prevocational services for
that day. Documentation must be maintained to verify that billing for
prevocational staff coverage during transportation does not exceed 25% of the
total time spent in the prevocational services for that day.
g. If intensive prevocational
services are requested, documentation indicating the specific supports and the
reasons they are needed. For ongoing intensive prevocational services, there
must be clear documentation of the ongoing needs and associated staff supports.
h. Documentation indicating
whether prevocational services are available in vocational rehabilitation
agencies through § 110 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 or through the
Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA).
i. A copy of the most recently
completed DMAS-122 DMAS-225. The provider must clearly document
efforts to obtain the completed DMAS-122 DMAS-225 form from the
case manager.
12VAC30-120-241. Residential
support services.
A. Service description.
Residential support services consist of training, assistance or specialized
supervision provided primarily in an individual's home or in a licensed or
approved residence to enable an individual to acquire, retain, or improve the
self-help, socialization, and adaptive skills necessary to reside successfully
in home and community-based settings.
Service providers shall be
reimbursed only for the amount and type of residential support services
included in the individual's approved ISP Plan for Supports.
Residential support services shall be authorized in the ISP Plan for
Supports only when the individual requires these services and these
services exceed the services included in the individual's room and board
arrangements for individuals residing in group homes, or, for other
individuals, if these services exceed supports provided by the family/caregiver.
Services will not be routinely reimbursed for a continuous 24-hour period.
B. Criteria.
1. In order for Medicaid to
reimburse for residential support services, the individual shall have a
demonstrated need for supports to be provided by staff who are paid by the
residential support provider.
2. In order to qualify for this
service in a congregate setting, the individual shall have a demonstrated need
for continuous training, assistance, and supervision for up to 24 hours per
day.
3. A functional Providers
must participate in the completion of the Department of Behavioral Health and
Developmental Services (DBHDS)-approved assessment must be conducted to
evaluate each individual in his home environment and community settings.
4. The residential support ISP
A Plan for Supports must indicate the necessary amount and type of
activities required by the individual, the schedule of residential support
services, and the total number of projected hours per week of waiver reimbursed
residential support.
C. Service units and service
limitations. Total billing cannot exceed the authorized amount in the ISP
Plan for Supports. The provider must maintain documentation of the date
and times that services were provided, and specific circumstances that prevented
provision of all of the scheduled services.
1. This service must be
provided on an individual-specific basis according to the ISP Plan
for Supports and service setting requirements;
2. Congregate residential
support services may not be provided to any individual who receives personal
assistance services under the MR mental retardation/intellectual
disability (MR/ID) Waiver or other residential services that provide a
comparable level of care. Respite services may be provided in conjunction with
in-home residential support services to unpaid caregivers.
3. Room, board, and general
supervision shall not be components of this service;
4. This service shall not be
used solely to provide routine or emergency respite for the family/caregiver
with whom the individual lives; and
5. Medicaid reimbursement is
available only for residential support services provided when the individual is
present and when a qualified provider is providing the services.
D. Provider requirements.
1. In addition to meeting the
general conditions and requirements for home and community-based participating
providers as specified in 12VAC30-120-217 and 12VAC30-120-219, the provider of
residential services must have the appropriate DMHMRSAS Department of
Behavioral Health and Developmental Services (DBHDS) residential license.
2. Residential support services
may also be provided in adult foster care homes approved by local DSS offices
pursuant to state DSS regulations.
3. In addition to licensing
requirements, persons providing residential support services are required to
participate in training in the characteristics of mental retardation MR/ID
and appropriate interventions, training strategies, and support methods for
individuals with mental retardation MR/ID and functional limitations.
All providers of residential support services must pass an objective,
standardized test of skills, knowledge, and abilities approved by DMHMRSAS
DBHDS and administered according to DMHMRSAS' DBHDS'
defined procedures.
4. Required documentation in
the individual's record. The provider agency must maintain records of each
individual receiving residential support services. At a minimum these records
must contain the following:
a. A functional completed
copy of the DBHDS-approved assessment conducted by the provider to
evaluate each individual in the residential environment and community settings.
b. An ISP Plan for
Supports containing the following elements:
(1) The individual's strengths,
desired outcomes, required or desired supports, or both, and training needs;
(2) The individual's goals and
measurable objectives to meet the above identified outcomes;
(3) The services to be rendered
and the schedule of services to accomplish the above goals, objectives, and
desired outcomes;
(4) A timetable for the
accomplishment of the individual's goals and objectives;
(5) The estimated duration of
the individual's needs for services; and
(6) The provider staff
responsible for the overall coordination and integration of the services
specified in the ISP Plan for Supports.
c. The ISP Plan for
Supports goals, objectives, and activities must be reviewed by the provider
quarterly, annually, and more often as needed, modified as appropriate, and
results of these reviews submitted to the case manager. For the annual review
and in cases where the ISP Plan for Supports is modified, the ISP
Plan for Supports must be reviewed with the individual and the
individual's family/caregiver, as appropriate.
d. Documentation must confirm
attendance, the amount of time in services, and provide specific information
regarding the individual's response to various settings and supports as agreed
to in the ISP Plan for Supports objectives.
e. A copy of the most recently
completed DMAS-122 DMAS-225. The provider must clearly document
efforts to obtain the completed DMAS-122 DMAS-225 form from the
case manager.
12VAC30-120-245. Skilled nursing
services.
A. Service description.
Skilled nursing services shall be provided for individuals with serious medical
conditions and complex health care who do not meet home health criteria needs
that require specific skilled nursing services that cannot be provided by
non-nursing personnel. Skilled nursing may be provided in the individual's home
or other community setting on a regularly scheduled or intermittent need basis.
It may include consultation, nurse delegation as appropriate, oversight of
direct care staff as appropriate, and training for other providers.
B. Criteria. In order to
qualify for these services, the individual shall have demonstrated complex
health care needs that require specific skilled nursing services ordered by a
physician and that cannot be otherwise accessed under the Title XIX State Plan
for Medical Assistance. The CSP Individual Support Plan must
indicate that the service is necessary in order to prevent institutionalization
and is not available under the State Plan for Medical Assistance.
C. Service units and service
limitations. Skilled nursing services to be rendered by either registered or
licensed practical nurses are provided in hourly units. The services must be
explicitly detailed in an ISP a Plan for Supports and must be
specifically ordered by a physician as medically necessary to prevent institutionalization.
D. Provider requirements. In
addition to meeting the general conditions and requirements for home and
community-based participating providers as specified in 12VAC30-120-217 and
12VAC30-120-219, participating skilled nursing providers must meet the
following qualifications:
1. Skilled nursing services
shall be provided by either a DMAS-enrolled home care organization provider or
home health provider, or by a registered nurse licensed by the Commonwealth or
licensed practical nurse licensed by the Commonwealth (under the supervision of
a registered nurse licensed by the Commonwealth), contracted or employed by DMHMRSAS-licensed
Department of Behavioral Health and Developmental Services-licensed day
support, respite, or residential providers.
2. Skilled nursing services
providers may not be the parents of individuals who are minors, or the
individual's spouse. Payment may not be made for services furnished by other
family members living under the same roof as the individual receiving services
unless there is objective written documentation as to why there are no other
providers available to provide the care. Family members who provide skilled
nursing services must meet the skilled nursing requirements.
3. Foster care providers may
not be the skilled nursing services providers for the same individuals to whom
they provide foster care.
4. Required documentation. The
provider must maintain a record that contains:
a. An ISP A Plan for
Supports that contains, at a minimum, the following elements:
(1) The individual's strengths,
desired outcomes, required or desired supports;
(2) The individual's goals;
(3) Services to be rendered and
the frequency of services to accomplish the above goals and objectives;
(4) The estimated duration of
the individual's needs for services; and
(5) The provider staff
responsible for the overall coordination and integration of the services
specified in the ISP Plan for Supports;
b. Documentation of any
training of family/caregivers or staff, or both, to be provided, including the
person or persons being trained and the content of the training, consistent
with the Nurse Practice Act;
c. Documentation of the
determination of medical necessity by a physician prior to services being
rendered;
d. Documentation of nursing
license/qualifications of providers;
e. Documentation indicating the
dates and times of nursing services and the amount and type of service or
training provided;
f. Documentation that the ISP
Plan for Supports was reviewed by the provider quarterly, annually, and
more often as needed, modified as appropriate, and results of these reviews
submitted to the case manager. For the annual review and in cases where the ISP
Plan for Supports is modified, the ISP Plan for Supports
must be reviewed with the individual.
g. Documentation that the ISP
Plan for Supports has been reviewed by a physician within 30 days of
initiation of services, when any changes are made to the ISP, and also reviewed
and approved annually by a physician; and
h. A copy of the most recently
completed DMAS-122 DMAS-225. The provider must clearly document
efforts to obtain the completed DMAS-122 DMAS-225 form from the
case manager.
12VAC30-120-247. Supported
employment services.
A. Service description.
1. Supported employment
services are provided in work settings where persons without disabilities are
employed. It is especially designed for individuals with developmental
disabilities, including individuals with mental retardation mental
retardation/intellectual disability (MR/ID), who face severe impediments to
employment due to the nature and complexity of their disabilities, irrespective
of age or vocational potential.
2. Supported employment
services are available to individuals for whom competitive employment at or
above the minimum wage is unlikely without ongoing supports and who because of
their disability need ongoing support to perform in a work setting.
3. Supported employment can be
provided in one of two models. Individual supported employment shall be defined
as intermittent support, usually provided one-on-one by a job coach to an
individual in a supported employment position. Group supported employment shall
be defined as continuous support provided by staff to eight or fewer
individuals with disabilities in an enclave, work crew, bench work, or
entrepreneurial model. The individual's assessment and CSP Individual
Support Plan must clearly reflect the individual's need for training and
supports.
B. Criteria.
1. Only job development tasks
that specifically include the individual are allowable job search activities
under the MR MR/ID waiver supported employment and only after
determining this service is not available from DRS.
2. In order to qualify for
these services, the individual shall have demonstrated that competitive
employment at or above the minimum wage is unlikely without ongoing supports,
and that because of his disability, he needs ongoing support to perform in a
work setting.
3. A functional Providers
must participate in the completion of the Department of Behavioral Health and
Developmental Services (DBHDS)-approved assessment must be conducted to
evaluate the individual in his work environment and related community settings.
4. The ISP Plan for
Supports must document the amount of supported employment required by the
individual. Service providers are reimbursed only for the amount and type of
supported employment included in the individual's ISP Plan for
Supports based on the intensity and duration of the service delivered.
C. Service units and service
limitations.
1. Supported employment for
individual job placement is provided in one hour units. This service is limited
to 40 hours per week.
2. Group models of supported
employment (enclaves, work crews, bench work and entrepreneurial model of
supported employment) will be billed according to the DMAS fee schedule.
This service is limited to 780
units, or its equivalent under the DMAS fee schedule, per CSP Individual
Support Plan year. If this service is used in combination with
prevocational and day support services, the combined total units for these
services cannot exceed 780 units, or its equivalent under the DMAS fee
schedule, per CSP Individual Support Plan year.
3. For the individual job
placement model, reimbursement of supported employment will be limited to
actual documented interventions or collateral contacts by the provider, not the
amount of time the individual is in the supported employment situation.
D. Provider requirements. In
addition to meeting the general conditions and requirements for home and
community-based participating providers as specified in 12VAC30-120-217 and
12VAC30-120-219, supported employment provider qualifications include:
1. Group and agency-directed
individual supported employment shall be provided only by agencies that are DRS
vendors of supported employment services;
2. Required documentation in
the individual's record. The provider must maintain a record regarding each
individual receiving supported employment services. At a minimum, the records
must contain the following:
a. A functional completed
copy of the DBHDS-approved assessment conducted by the provider to
evaluate each individual in the supported employment environment and related
community settings.
b. Documentation indicating
individual ineligibility for supported employment services through DRS or IDEA.
If the individual is not eligible through IDEA, documentation is required only
for the lack of DRS funding;
c. An ISP A Plan for
Supports that contains, at a minimum, the following elements:
(1) The individual's strengths,
desired outcomes, required/desired supports and training needs;
(2) The individual's goals and,
for a training goal, a sequence of measurable objectives to meet the above
identified outcomes;
(3) Services to be rendered and
the frequency of services to accomplish the above goals and objectives;
(4) A timetable for the
accomplishment of the individual's goals and objectives;
(5) The estimated duration of
the individual's needs for services; and
(6) Provider staff responsible
for the overall coordination and integration of the services specified in the
plan.
d. The ISP Plan for
Supports goals, objectives, and activities must be reviewed by the provider
quarterly, annually, and more often as needed, modified as appropriate, and the
results of these reviews submitted to the case manager. For the annual review
and in cases where the ISP Plan for Supports is modified, the ISP
Plan for Supports must be reviewed with the individual and the individual's
family/caregiver, as appropriate.
e. In instances where supported
employment staff are required to ride with the individual to and from supported
employment activities, the supported employment staff time can be billed for
supported employment provided that the billing for this time does not exceed
25% of the total time spent in supported employment for that day. Documentation
must be maintained to verify that billing for supported employment staff
coverage during transportation does not exceed 25% of the total time spent in
supported employment for that day.
f. There must be a copy of the
completed DMAS-122 DMAS-225 in the record. Providers must clearly
document efforts to obtain the DMAS-122 DMAS-225 form from the
case manager.
12VAC30-120-249. Therapeutic
consultation.
A. Service description.
Therapeutic consultation provides expertise, training and technical assistance
in any of the following specialty areas to assist family members, caregivers,
and other service providers in supporting the individual. The specialty areas
are (i) psychology, (ii) behavioral consultation, (iii) therapeutic recreation,
(iv) speech and language pathology, (v) occupational therapy, (vi) physical
therapy, and (vii) rehabilitation engineering. The need for any of these
services, is based on the individual's CSP Individual Support Plan,
and provided to those individuals for whom specialized consultation is
clinically necessary and who have additional challenges restricting their
ability to function in the community. Therapeutic consultation services may be
provided in the individual's home, and in appropriate community settings and
are intended to facilitate implementation of the individual's desired outcomes
as identified in his CSP Individual Support Plan.
B. Criteria. In order to
qualify for these services, the individual shall have a demonstrated need for
consultation in any of these services. Documented need must indicate that the CSP
Individual Support Plan cannot be implemented effectively and
efficiently without such consultation from this service.
1. The individual's therapeutic
consultation ISP Plan for Supports must clearly reflect the
individual's needs, as documented in the social assessment information,
for specialized consultation provided to family/caregivers and providers in
order to implement the ISP Plan for Supports effectively.
2. Therapeutic consultation
services may not include direct therapy provided to waiver individuals or
monitoring activities, and may not duplicate the activities of other services
that are available to the individual through the State Plan for Medical
Assistance.
C. Service units and service
limitations. The unit of service shall equal one hour. The services must be
explicitly detailed in the ISP Plan for Supports. Travel time,
written preparation, and telephone communication are in-kind expenses within
this service and are not billable as separate items. Therapeutic consultation
may not be billed solely for purposes of monitoring. Only behavioral
consultation may be offered in the absence of any other waiver service when the
consultation is determined to be necessary to prevent institutionalization.
D. Provider requirements. In
addition to meeting the general conditions and requirements for home and
community-based participating providers as specified in 12VAC30-120-217 and
12VAC30-120-219, professionals rendering therapeutic consultation services
shall meet all applicable state or national licensure, endorsement or
certification requirements. Persons providing rehabilitation consultation shall
be rehabilitation engineers or certified rehabilitation specialists. Behavioral
consultation may be performed by professionals based on the professionals' work
experience, education, and demonstrated knowledge, skills, and abilities.
The following documentation is
required for therapeutic consultation:
1. An ISP A Plan for
Supports, that contains at a minimum, the following elements:
a. Identifying information:
b. Targeted objectives, time
frames, and expected outcomes; and
c. Specific consultation
activities.
2. A written support plan
detailing the recommended interventions or support strategies for providers and
family/caregivers to use to better support the individual in the service.
3. Ongoing documentation of
consultative services rendered in the form of contact-by-contact or monthly
notes that identify each contact.
4. If the consultation service
extends beyond the one year, the ISP Plan for Supports must be
reviewed by the provider with the individual receiving the services and the
case manager, and this written review must be submitted to the case manager, at
least annually, or more as needed. If the consultation services extend three
months or longer, written quarterly reviews are required to be completed by the
service provider and are to be forwarded to the case manager. Any changes to
the ISP Plan for Supports must be reviewed with the individual
and the individual's family/caregiver, as appropriate.
5. A copy of the most recently
completed DMAS-122 DMAS-225. The provider must clearly document
efforts to obtain a copy of the completed DMAS-122 DMAS-225 from
the case manager.
6. A final disposition summary
that must be forwarded to the case manager within 30 days following the end of
this service.
NOTICE: The forms used in administering the above regulation
are listed below. Any amended or added forms are reflected in the listing and
are published following the listing.
FORMS (12VAC30-120)
Virginia Uniform Assessment
Instrument (UAI) (1994).
Consent to Exchange Information,
DMAS-20 (rev. 4/03).
Provider Aide/LPN Record
Personal/Respite Care, DMAS-90 (rev. 12/02).
LPN Skilled Respite Record,
DMAS-90A (eff. 7/05).
Personal Assistant/Companion
Timesheet, DMAS-91 (rev. 8/03).
Questionnaire to Assess an
Applicant's Ability to Independently Manage Personal Attendant Services in the
CD-PAS Waiver or DD Waiver, DMAS-95 Addendum (eff. 8/00).
Medicaid Funded Long-Term Care
Service Authorization Form, DMAS-96 (rev. 10/06).
Screening Team Plan of Care
for Medicaid-Funded Long Term Care, DMAS-97 (rev. 12/02).
Provider Agency Plan of Care,
DMAS-97A (rev. 9/02).
Consumer Directed Services
Plan of Care, DMAS-97B (rev. 1/98).
Community-Based Care Recipient
Assessment Report, DMAS-99 (rev. 4/03).
Consumer-Directed Personal
Attendant Services Recipient Assessment Report, DMAS-99B (rev. 8/03).
MI/MR Level I Supplement for
EDCD Waiver Applicants, DMAS-101A (rev. 10/04).
Assessment of Active Treatment
Needs for Individuals with MI, MR, or RC Who Request Services under the Elder
or Disabled with Consumer-Direction Waivers, DMAS-101B (rev. 10/04).
AIDS Waiver Evaluation Form
for Enteral Nutrition, DMAS-116 (6/03).
Patient Information Form,
DMAS-122 (rev. 11/07).
Medicaid Long-Term Care Communication
Form, DMAS-225.
Technology Assisted
Waiver/EPSDT Nursing Services Provider Skills Checklist for Individuals Caring
for Tracheostomized and/or Ventilator Assisted Children and Adults, DMAS-259.
Home Health Certification and
Plan of Care, CMS-485 (rev. 2/94).
IFDDS Waiver Level of Care
Eligibility Form (eff. 5/07).


VA.R. Doc. No. R10-2056; Filed October 29, 2009, 3:06 p.m.