AB 1552, as amended, Lowenthal. Community-based adult services: adult day health care centers.
Existing law establishes the Medi-Cal program, administered by the State Department of Health Care Services, under which health care services are provided to qualified, low-income persons. The Medi-Cal program is, in part, governed and funded by federal Medicaid Program provisions. Existing law provides, to the extent permitted by federal law, that adult day health care (ADHC) be excluded from coverage under the Medi-Cal program.
This bill would establish the Community-Based Adult Services (CBAS) program as a Medi-Cal benefit. The bill would require that CBAS providers be licensed as ADHC centers and certified by the California Department of Aging as CBAS providers. The bill would require CBAS providers to meet specified licensing requirements and to provide care in accordance with specified regulations. The bill would require that those provisions be implemented only to the extent that federal financial participation is available.
This bill would declare that it is to take effect immediately as an urgency statute.
Vote: 2⁄3. Appropriation: no. Fiscal committee: yes. State-mandated local program: no.
The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
The Legislature finds and declares all of the
2following:
3(a) California supports the dignity, independence, and choice
4of seniors and persons with disabilities to live in the most integrated
5setting appropriate, in their own home or a community-based
6setting, and to be free from unnecessary institutionalization.
7(b) The American population is swiftly aging. According to the
8Centers for Disease Control, in 2007, individuals 65 years of age
9and over represented 12.6% of the American population; by 2030
10it is estimated the older adult population will reach 20% of the
11whole, with 70
million adults over 65 years of age. Many of these
12adults will experience disability and chronic conditions. The
13Alzheimer’s Association reports that over five million Americans
14are living with Alzheimer’s disease and that number will grow to
1516 million by 2050, with the cost of caring for those individuals
16growing from $203 billion in 2013 to $1.2 trillion by mid-century.
17(c) According to the United States Census, California’s older
18adult population is the country’s largest, with over four million
19seniors currently residing in the state. The California Department
20of Aging reports that one in every five Californians is now age 60
21or older and 40% of those individuals have a disability. The state’s
22population is also diverse: just under one-half million older adults
23in the state identify as Latino or Hispanic, 354,000 identify as
24Asian, over
182,000 as African American, and over 100,000 people
25as Native American, Pacific Islander, or multiracial.
26(d) Adult Day Health Care (ADHC) was established in
27California in 1974 as a service designed to meet the needs of older
28adults and adults with disabilities in community settings rather
29than in institutional care. ADHC centers are licensed daytime
30health facilities that provide integrated services from a
P3 1multidisciplinary team including nurses, social workers,
2occupational therapists, and other professionals.
3(e) ADHC centers serve frail elders and other adults with
4disabilities, chronic conditions, and complex care needs, such as
5Alzheimer’s disease or other dementia, diabetes, high blood
6pressure, mental health diagnoses, traumatic brain injury, and
7people who have had a
stroke or breathing problems or who cannot
8take medications properly.
9(f) ADHC centers also offer caregiver support, addressing
10research findings that identify caregiver stress as a leading cause
11of placement in a nursing facility, as well as putting the aging or
12disabled adult at increased risk for abuse or neglect.
13(g) ADHC services include health, therapeutic, and social
14services including transportation; skilled nursing care; physical,
15occupational, and speech therapy; medical social work services;
16therapeutic exercise activities; protective supervision; activities
17of daily living, brain-stimulating activities, and a nutritionally
18balanced hot meal. Services are provided in accordance with a
19person-centered care plan designed after a three-day
20interdisciplinary team assessment
that includes a home visit and
21communication with the participant’s primary care physician.
22(h) ADHC participants, who are at risk of institutionalization,
23receive services in the center and return to their own homes at
24night. According to a recent study by the California Medicaid
25Research Institute, the statewide weighted average annual per
26person nursing home cost for Medi-Cal/Medicare recipients in
27California is $83,364, while the average annual expenditure per
28person for ADHC for this population is $9,312.
29(i) ADHC centers are licensed by the State Department of Public
30Health and overseen by the California Department of Aging and
31the State Department of Health Care Services.
32(j) In 1977, Senator Henry Mello issued a
report that identified
33the need for 600 ADHC centers statewide to meet the needs of
34California’s elder population. At its peak in 2004, approximately
35360 ADHC centers provided care to over 40,000 medically fragile
36Californians. In December 2013, there were a total of 270 open
37ADHC centers in California, including 245 serving the Medi-Cal
38population, two centers serving private-pay clients, and 23 centers
39associated with Programs of All-Inclusive Care for the Elderly.
P4 1Medi-Cal recipients receiving services at ADHC centers totaled
224,800 persons.
3(k) In 2014, 32 California counties do not have an adult day
4health center.
5(l) For many years, ADHC was a state plan optional benefit of
6the Medi-Cal program, offering an integrated medical and social
7services model of care
that helped individuals continue to live
8outside of nursing homes or other institutions.
9(m) California’s adult day services have experienced significant
10instability in recent years due to California’s fiscal crisis and
11subsequent budget reductions. The Budget Act of 2011 and the
12related trailer bill, Chapter 3 of the Statutes of 2011, eliminated
13ADHC as a Medi-Cal optional State Plan benefit.
14(n) A class action lawsuit, Esther Darling, et al. v. Toby Douglas,
15et al., challenged the elimination of ADHC as a violation of the
16Supreme Court decision in Olmstead v. L.C. The state settled the
17lawsuit, agreeing to replace ADHC services with a new program
18called Community-Based Adult Services (CBAS), effective April
191, 2012, to provide necessary medical and social services to
20individuals
with intensive health care needs. CBAS is a managed
21care benefit, administered through California’s Medi-Cal Managed
22Care Organizations. For CBAS-eligible individuals who do not
23qualify for managed care enrollment and who have an approved
24medical exemption or who reside inbegin delete Shasta, Humboldt, Butte, or begin insert a countyend insert where managed care is currently not
25Imperial counties,end delete
26available, CBAS services are provided as a Medi-Cal
27fee-for-service benefit.
28(o) The State Department of Health Care Services amended the
29“California Bridge to Reform”begin insert Sectionend insert 1115 Waiver to include the
30new CBAS
program, which was approved by the Centers for
31Medicare and Medicaid Services on March 30, 2012. CBAS is
32operational under thebegin insert Sectionend insert 1115 Bridge to Reformbegin delete waiverend delete
33begin insert Waiverend insert through August 31, 2014. There is no cap on enrollment
34for this waiver service.
35(p) Adult day services and CBAS programs remain a source of
36necessary skilled nursing, therapeutic services, personal care,
37supervision, health monitoring, and caregiver support. The state’s
38demographic forecast projects the continued growth of the aging
39population at least through the year 2050, thereby increasing the
40need and
demand for integrated, community-based services.
P5 1(q) Continuation of a well-defined and well-regulated system
2of CBAS programs is essential in order to meet the rapidly
3changing needs of California’s diverse and aging population and
4the state’s goals for the Coordinated Care Initiative.
5(r) Ensuring that the CBAS program is codified beyond August
631, 2014, will enable thousands of disabled and frail Californians
7who rely upon adult day health programs today, and those who
8will need this service in the future, to be able to remain independent
9and free of institutionalization for as long as possible.
Article 7 (commencing with Section 14590.10) is
11added to Chapter 8.7 of Part 3 of Division 9 of the Welfare and
12Institutions Code, to read:
13
(a) Notwithstanding the operational period of CBAS
17as specified in the Special Terms and Conditions of California’s
18Bridge to Reform Section 1115(a) Medicaid Demonstration
19(11-W-00193/9), and notwithstanding the duration of the CBAS
20settlement agreement, Case No. C-09-03798 SBA, CBAS shall be
21a Medi-Cal benefit, and shall be included as a covered service in
22contracts with all managed health care plans, with standards,
23eligibility criteria, and provisions that are at least equal to those
24contained in the Special Terms and Conditions of the demonstration
25on the date the act that added this section is
chaptered. Any
26modifications to the CBAS program that differ from the Special
27Terms and Conditions of the demonstration shall be permitted only
28if they offer more protections or permit greater access to CBAS.
29(b) (1) CBAS providers shall be licensed as adult day health
30care centers and certified by the California Department of Aging
31as CBAS providers, and shall meet the standards specified in this
32chapter and Chapter 5 (commencing with Section 54001) of
33Division 3 of Title 22 of the California Code of Regulations.
34(2) CBAS providers shall meet all applicable licensing and
35Medi-Cal standards, including, but not limited to, licensing
36provisions in Division 2 (commencing with
Section 1200) of the
37Health and Safety Code, including Chapter 3.3 (commencing with
38Section 1570) of Division 2 of the Health and Safety Code, and
39shall provide services in accordance with Chapter 10 (commencing
P6 1with Section 78001) of Division 5 of Title 22 of the California
2Code of Regulations.
3(3) CBAS providers shall comply with the provisions of
4California’s Bridge to Reform Section 1115(a) Medicaid
5Demonstration (11-W-00193/9) and any successor demonstration.
6(c) (1) In counties where the State Department of Health Care
7Services has implemented Medi-Cal managed care, CBAS shall
8be available as a Medi-Cal managed care benefit pursuant to
9Section 14186.3, except that for individuals who qualify for CBAS,
10but who are not
qualified for, or who are exempt from, enrollment
11in Medi-Cal managed care, CBAS shall be provided as a
12fee-for-service Medi-Cal benefit.
13(2) In counties that have not implemented Medi-Cal managed
14care, CBAS shall be provided as a fee-for-service Medi-Cal benefit
15to all eligible Medi-Cal beneficiaries who qualify for CBAS.
16(d) For purposes of this section, “Community-Based Adult
17Services” or “CBAS” means an outpatient, facility-based
program,
18provided pursuant to a participant’s individualized plan of care,
19as developed by the center’s multidisciplinary team, that delivers
20nutrition services, professional nursing care, therapeutic activities,
21facilitated participation in group or individual activities, social
22services, personal care services, and, when specified in the
23individual plan of care, physical therapy, occupational therapy,
24speech therapy, behavioral health services, registered dietician
25services, and transportation.
26(e) This section shall be implemented only to the extent that
27federal financial participation is available.
This act is an urgency statute necessary for the
29immediate preservation of the public peace, health, or safety within
30the meaning of Article IV of the Constitution and shall go into
31immediate effect. The facts constituting the necessity are:
32In order to allow sufficient time to implement these provisions
33and to ensure the continuity of Community-Based Adult Services
34in California and the health and safety of program participants, it
35is necessary that this act take effect immediately.
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