Published on: 15959524. Rule 59G-8.100 is being repealed. Requirements contained within this rule are no longer necessary as a result of the Statewide Medicaid Managed Care program implementation.
Published on: 8983575. The purpose of the proposed rule is to incorporate changes to the Payment Methodology for Participating Medicaid Managed Health Care Plans, as incorporated by reference in Rule 59G-8.100, F.A.C., to provide the following changes based Section 409.9124, F.S., Managed care reimbursement, effective July 1, 2010.
The Agency for Health Care Administration will modify the payment methodology for participating Medicaid managed health care plans to reflect the use of fee for service encounter data and financial data as data sources in the rate setting process.
Published on: 34840. PURPOSE AND EFFECT: The purpose of the proposed amendment is to incorporate changes to the Payment Methodology for Participating Medicaid Managed Health Care Plans, effective July 1, 2005, to provide the following changes based on the 2005-06 General Appropriations Act, Specific Appropriations 225, 226, Senate Bill 838, Section 20, and Section 409.9124, F.S.
1. Section B (4): Discount Factor (D) – equals the percentage of the projected payment limit that is allocated to each service area as referenced in Table 2.
2. Section B (6) Payment Limit (PL) – means the projected cost for HMO covered services in a Medicaid fee-for-service system, including MediPass costs and fee-for-service costs attributable to recipients enrolled for a portion of a year in a managed care plan or waiver program, but excluding the fee paid to primary care physicians for MediPass enrollees, actual expenditures for children enrolled for reimbursement under the CMS program, and other excluded groups as described in Section 10.3 of the HMO contracts. The final capitation rate paid to HMOs is calculated as a percentage of the PL by taking into consideration age and gender factors, service area, other discount factors, and eligibility category expenditures. Pursuant to 42 CFR 438.6, the final capitation rates must be actuarially sound. Medicaid payment for a defined scope of services to be furnished to a defined number of recipients may not exceed the cost to the agency of providing those same services on a fee-for-service basis to an actuarially equivalent population group.
Section 409.9124, F.S., limits the projected weighted rate on a per member per month basis to the per member per month rate adopted by the Florida Legislature.
3. Section B (7) Service Categories or HMO Capitation Categories mean:
Hospital/ Medical Services – all HMO covered services not falling into the three other HMO capitation categories specified in subparagraph 5.b., c., and d. These include: hospital inpatient, hospital outpatient, physician services, prescribed medicine, lab and x-ray, family planning, home health services, EPSDT Screening, child vision, child hearing, nurse practitioner, birthing center, rural health services, physical therapy, speech therapy, occupational therapy, respiratory therapy, clinic, physician assistant, dialysis center services, and Medicare dual eligible crossover expenditures.
4. Section C (1): AP – equals amount paid for HMO covered services rendered under the MediPass program, minority networks, Emergency Room Diversion and other related projects, and the standard Medicaid fee-for-service system for SFY 1 and SFY 2 the most recent two years available for eligibility groups, age and gender bands, and service areas equivalent to the managed care population.
5. Section C (1): IBNR – equals an estimated percentage of the total amount of claims incurred during the applicable fiscal year that have not yet been submitted to the Agency for Health Care Administration (agency). This calculation is based upon an evaluation of SFY 1. As the expenditures in each SFY of the base include the 12 months of the referenced year (months 1-12) plus the following 6 months (months 13-18), the evaluation for the period of claims incurred but not reported includes claims paid from 19-30 months after the beginning of SFY 1. This evaluation is determined statewide and includes all covered service categories.
6. Section C (1): TPL – equals third party liability recovery adjustments, which is the Agency’s estimated percentage of third party liability recovery based on the average of the actual amounts recovered for SFY 1 and SFY 2.
7. Section C (2): Step 1
Eligibility Group Age/Gender Bands (age in years unless otherwise noted)
TANF/AFDC Months 0-2
Months 3-11
1-5
6-13
14-20 Male 14-20 Female
21-54 Male
21-54 Female
55 and over
SSI – no Medicare Months 0-2
Months 3-11
1- 5
6-13 14-20
21-54
55 and over
SSI Medicare Part A and B Under 65 65 and over
SSI Medicare Part B only All ages combined
8. Section C: Step 4
IBNR Claims: A certain percentage of claims are paid after each year’s data is summarized. The agency summarizes each state fiscal year of data six months after it ends. The IBNR adjustment reflects an estimate of the claims that will be paid after December 31, for SFY 2 incurred but not reported claims. The estimated claims amount is added to the expenditures for combined SFY 1 and SFY 2 to reflect the total fee-for-service costs.
9. Section C: Step 4
Third Party Liability (TPL) Adjustment: The claims data does not include all of the TPL recoveries realized by the agency. Based on an average of SFY 1 and SFY 2 TPL data, the SFY 4 cost estimates are adjusted downward to reflect the TPL recoveries. This adjustment includes only those recoveries that are not already reflected in the claims data. The TPL adjustment factors are calculated separately for each eligibility category, and may vary annually.
10. Section E: TA – the trend adjustment necessary to remain within Section 409.9124, F.S. The final weighted rate for all eligibility groups shall not exceed the per member per month amount adopted by the Florida Legislature.