Friday, September 21, 2018

Michigan: The Burden of Funding Crises should not be borne by People with Disabilities

Some Michigan Community Mental Health Agencies and administrative regional entities called PIHPs (Prepaid Inpatient Health Plans) are facing diminishing revenues in combination with demands for more services that they are required to provide. Washtenaw County appears to be having difficulties similar to those in Western Michigan, though not as extreme (yet). 

When the response to these fiscal crises is to reduce services to people the agencies are obligated to serve, families and their disabled family members need a refresher course on their rights while demanding that local and state agencies sort out how these shortfalls in funding will be resolved. 

This is a note from DD Advocates of Western Michigan with some good advice on what to do when service reductions are contemplated:

Note that a Medicaid recipient is entitled to services ‘appropriate to their needs’, not subject to available (or reduced) budgeting. It is the CMH's responsibility to provide all of those appropriate services. It is the state's responsibility to provide adequate funding. The Regional Entity [the PIHP] is the intermediary in this process, possessing the contract for providing eligible Medicaid services through it's provider network and CMH agencies. If the Region does not have adequate funding, then it must press the state to allocate more funds for these needed (required) services. Oversight of individual CMH agency funding and the region's budget is a critical component of its mandate. … Encourage the prohibition of ‘rationing’ in any shape or form. ‘Utilization management’ can just be a buzzword for rationing, and is what the medical insurance business uses to limit their financial exposure. The more they restrict or make difficult to access, the better their bottom line. If a service is appropriate and needed, is Medicaid allowable and requested via the PCP [Person Centered Plan], then insist on its delivery, or challenge any such failure to provide it via the Medicaid Fair Hearing process. Demand what is your entitlement. It's their job to figure out how the provide it.” [emphasis added]

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