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Non-Emergency Medical Transportation

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Non-Emergency Medical Transportation Federal Requirement Section 6083/1902(a) of the Deficit Reduction Act of 2005 (DRA) provides States the authority to establish a ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Non-Emergency Medical Transportation


1
Non-Emergency Medical Transportation
2
Federal Requirement
  • Section 6083/1902(a) of the Deficit Reduction Act
    of 2005 (DRA) provides States the authority to
    establish a non-emergency medical transportation
    brokerage program.
  • Under such a program, the State contracts with
    one or more brokers to manage the provision of
    non-emergency transportation services for
    Medicaid recipients who need transportation to or
    from medical providers.

3
What Is A Transportation Brokerage Program?
  • Brokerage programs provide administrative
    oversight and coordination of human services
    transportation through a contract with the State.
  • Brokers act as gatekeepers, ensuring recipients
    receive the most efficient, cost effective and
    appropriate mode of transportation.
  • Brokers verify recipient eligibility for
    transportation, schedule trips, and dispatch
    trips to transportation providers.
  • Brokers contract directly with transportation
    providers in local communities to transport
    recipients to and from medical facilities.
  • Transportation providers are paid by the Broker.

4
Current Transportation Costs in NC
  • Approximately 43M for State Fiscal Year 2010
  • Overall Medicaid Budget 9,450,000,000
  • Required Budget Reductions
  • 356,151,356 (state)
  • 2 rate reduction
  • Reductions in utilization of services limits on
    services
  • 90 m thru CCNC
  • Increased PI recoupments
  • Assessments
  • More Prior authorization
  • Must meet budget targets or additional cuts will
    occur such as
  • Additional rate cuts
  • Elimination of services

5
2007 Medicaid Quality Assurance Review Findings
  • 1,068 reimbursements for transportation without
    evidence of a medical service provided on day of
    transport.
  • 164 reimbursements for transportation provided
    for non-covered services.
  • 113 reimbursements for individuals transported
    that were not authorized for Medicaid.

6
2007 Medicaid Quality Assurance Review Findings
  • 91 reimbursements for individuals ineligible for
    transportation services.
  • 77 reimbursements claimed for cancelled medical
    appointments.
  • Transportation Logs were incomplete or contained
    incorrect information regarding who was
    transported and when.
  • Overall Findings 9.65 payment error rate based
    on the dollar amount of ineligible reimbursement
    claims.

7
Current Transportation Issues
  • Each of the one-hundred county DSS offices are
    responsible for assessing the need for
    transportation, arranging for, and providing
    non-emergency transportation services to
    recipients in their counties.
  • Rural counties experience difficulty in
    administering transportation due to the lack of
    available resources to provide the transportation
    in remote areas.
  • Smaller counties experience difficulties where
    there are limited resources available for
    recipients who must be transported after hours
    and on weekends. They often have no resources
    other than the county van system.

8
Current Transportation Issues
  • Larger counties with a high number of recipients
    needing transportation state that the amount of
    paperwork and documentation is time consuming on
    a daily basis.
  • Very few counties have staff devoted to
    transportation only. As a result, clerical
    staff, case workers, social workers, and others
    in the agency handle transportation, in addition
    to other duties.
  • Overall lack of documentation to support
    transportation claim reimbursements
    inconsistency in the application of
    transportation policy statewide.

9
Transportation Brokerage Program Will Provide
  • Administrative oversight of non-emergency
    transportation services through a contract.
  • Consistency in access to Medical transportation
    in all areas of the state.
  • A higher level of accountability for
    transportation service providers.
  • More effective and efficient system for Medicaid
    recipients to request non-emergency
    transportation services as Broker will be
    required to establish a call center with 24/7
    access.
  • More detailed reporting of costs, number of
    unduplicated recipients served, methods of
    transportation utilized, average cost by type,
    etc.

10
Transportation Brokerage Program Will Provide
  • Ability to handle all non-emergency medical
    transportation, including medically necessary
    non-emergency ambulance transportation currently
    billed as a Medicaid covered service as well as
    transportation currently handled by the county
    departments of social services.
  • Utilization of county/and DSS public
    transportation systems as well as private
    transportation providers currently available in
    local communities.
  • Elimination of county share in administrative
    cost of non-emergency medical transportation.
  • Projected cost savings in administration of
    medical transportation with statewide controls
    and policy administration.

11
Other State Brokerage Programs Cost Savings
  • Kentucky reduced transportation costs from 60M
    in 2002 to 43M in 2003.
  • Oregons cost per ride dropped from 7.98 per
    ride to 6.20 per ride in the first year.
  • Washington state reports that before the
    implementation of a brokerage system, the cost of
    a single trip averaged 30. The cost is now 17.
  • Missouris brokerage program reduced costs from
    12 per trip to 7 per trip.
  • Georgia saw costs cut in half during the first
    year of its brokerage program, and reports
    budget savings of 25M due to implementing a
    brokerage program.

12
Concerns From Transportation Providers Regarding
Brokerage
  • Decreased transportation provider income.
  • Quality of service will decrease for the
    recipient.
  • Transportation provider insurance costs will
    increase.
  • Broker may not be located in state.
  • Start-up issues experienced by other states going
    to brokerage.
  • Lack of understanding of unique needs of
    recipients
  • Will cause loss of funding source for
    transportation infrastructure in the county
    (non-Medicaid transportation)

13
Benefits of Brokerage
  • Brokerage is a single managed system for
    arrangement, oversight and payment of
    non-emergency medical transportation services.
  • The brokerage system is the most accepted
    alternative model for managing non-emergency
    medical transportation services around the
    country.
  • Brokerage provides a network of transportation
    providers that provide transportation services
    to Medicaid recipients who need access to medical
    care or services in an efficient and effective
    manner.

14
Benefits of Brokerage
  • Approximately 30 states have brokerage systems in
    place.
  • Improves service delivery efficiency.
  • Avoids service duplication by coordinating
    transportation services.
  • Determines the least costly, most appropriate
    mode of transportation.
  • Verification that transportation providers meet
    vehicle and driver standards.

15
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