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Developmental Disability Managed Care
The
administration of Illinois Governor Patrick Quinn announced
plans to create a Managed Care System to administer all health
care, acute medical and long-term residential, day program and
other support services for individuals with autism, cerebral
palsy, Down Syndrome and other intellectual, physical,
behavioral health and developmental disabilities.
According to
Jim Parker, Deputy Administrator for Medical Programs at the
Illinois Department of Healthcare and Family Services, the
overall goal of this initiative is to create a “truly integrated
health system” for 40,000 individuals with disabilities. One or
more Managed Care Organizations (MCO) would be placed between
the state and current service providers to eliminate
inefficiencies and reduce the costs of providing health care and
other state funded support services for Illinois residents with
disabilities.
The MCO would
be paid by the state to establish contracts and manage payments
to local hospitals, physician groups and other medical providers
for traditional and acute medical care. Additional contracts
would be let out for bid to provide long-term residential, day
programs and other specialized support services for individuals
with disabilities.
Similar to
Health Maintenance Organizations (HMOs), medical and human
service organizations would provide their respective services
within certain geographic boundaries, at a specific, capped
dollar amount as established by the MCO. According to Parker,
the Governor has a target date of July 1, 2010 for
implementation of the program.
All of the
Advocates for persons with disabilities were caught off guard by
the direction and speed of the Governor’s proposal. It was our
understanding that the original charge of the Medicaid Task
Force was only to manage costs within the health and acute care
system. This alone is a monumental task. How Healthcare and
Family Services can do this, plus include the entire long-term
DD support system by July, 2010 is inconceivable.
For persons
with disabilities, cutting the already barebones costs of
long-term residential, day and other specialized support
services will create even more hardships. The Healthcare and
Family Service people have no inkling of what individuals with
disabilities in Illinois have been through during the last 15
years. Our community disability funding is already 25% behind
the rest of the country. If the MCO manages out any more costs,
services will decline and, just as in the state institutions,
the Feds could move to decertify our community developmental
disability system. The resulting loss of federal match would
accelerate our race to the bottom.
While health
and acute care have the established medical HMO model to guide
them, there are no managed care templates that are viable given
Illinois' history of underfunding its long term, community
support services for persons with disabilities. If, after 10+
years, Illinois still has not developed a viable plan to
modernize its state institutions; how does it expect to
radically change the community system in 6 months? Plus, Health
and Family Services have not even made attempts to inform the
people with disabilities who will be impacted by these actions.
Participants at
the December 2nd meeting asked but did not receive
answers on why the Governor thinks another level of bureaucracy
is a necessity; why the pilot program was limited to certain
Chicago suburbs; and who will oversee the operations of the MCO.
Given these
uncertainties, advocates for persons with disabilities are
asking for an open hearing from the State’s Managed Care Task
Force so that Legislators and the Governor can receive input
from those persons who will be most affected. Additionally,
they will look to change the announced timetable to better
reflect the state’s ability to truly implement just the health
and acute care portions of the managed care process.
Lastly, given
the complexity of the health care portion of this plan,
elimination of community long-term residential, day and other
disability support services from inclusion in the initial phase
of managed care must be considered.
Please
contact the
Governor, Legislative Leadership and your local state senator
and representative today! |