The Delaware Gazette

Ohio reaches agreement on coordinated medical care

ANN SANNER

Asso­ci­ated Press

COLUMBUS — Ohio and the fed­eral gov­ern­ment reached an agree­ment Wednes­day on a plan aimed at bet­ter coor­di­nat­ing med­ical care for some of the state’s sick­est and most expen­sive patients.

Gov. John Kasich’s admin­is­tra­tion wants to stream­line the way health care is deliv­ered to peo­ple enrolled in both Med­ic­aid and Medicare.

Ohio has more than 182,000 so-called “dual-eligible” indi­vid­u­als. And while they make up only 14 per­cent of total the state’s Med­ic­aid enroll­ment, they account for almost 40 per­cent of total Med­ic­aid spend­ing, accord­ing to state figures.

Coor­di­nat­ing care is expected to save the state and fed­eral gov­ern­ment $243 mil­lion in Med­ic­aid spend­ing through the end of 2016, said Ohio Med­ic­aid Direc­tor John McCarthy.

The big­ger ben­e­fit, he said, will be bet­ter health care. Providers, as an exam­ple, will make deci­sions based on need rather than whether it’s paid for by Med­ic­aid or Medicare, McCarthy said.

“That’s our No. 1 con­cern,” he said, “mak­ing sure the per­son gets what they need.”

The fed­eral Medicare pro­gram serves the elderly and dis­abled, while Med­ic­aid pro­vides cov­er­age for the poor though state and fed­eral funding.

The two pro­grams oper­ate fairly inde­pen­dently of each other. Medicare gen­er­ally helps pay for doc­tor and hos­pi­tal vis­its, along with pre­scrip­tion drugs. Med­ic­aid typ­i­cally helps pay for long-term care, such as nurs­ing homes, among other services.

Offi­cials worked to cre­ate a three-year demon­stra­tion project aimed at bet­ter coor­di­nat­ing the care of the ben­e­fi­cia­ries in the programs.

The project would affect a por­tion of the dual-eligible pop­u­la­tion — almost 114,000 peo­ple liv­ing in seven urban regions. Vol­un­tary enroll­ment in the pro­gram begins Sept. 1.

Fed­eral offi­cials had to sign off on the project before the state could move for­ward. Wednesday’s agree­ment makes Ohio the third state — after Mass­a­chu­setts and Wash­ing­ton — to final­ize such a pro­posal, the Kasich admin­is­tra­tion said.

As a result of the lack of con­nec­tion between Med­ic­aid and Medicare, some patients are more costly to the sys­tem, offi­cials say.

For instance, a patient could be dis­charged from a hos­pi­tal to a nurs­ing home instead of to a less expen­sive home-based care because the two pro­grams aren’t talk­ing to each other in the same setting.

The state wants to bet­ter link the two pro­grams so that the ben­e­fi­cia­ries have to work with only a sin­gle entity to receive the services.

Indi­vid­u­als would get a care man­ager to help them with med­ical deci­sions and to live inde­pen­dently if they are still at home.

Ohio’s plan is also designed to elim­i­nate unnec­es­sary health tests, pre­vent med­ica­tion errors and keep peo­ple health­ier and out of emer­gency rooms.

“Bet­ter care coor­di­na­tion across the state means health­ier Ohioans, and it will also help in dri­ving down costs in the long run,” Kasich said in a statement.

AP News Posted by on Dec 12 2012. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS Feed. Comments can be made below.

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