Okla. Admin. Code § 317:35-16-2 - Determination of medical eligibility for State Plan Personal Care (SPPC) services for Expansion Adults, TEFRA, and certain MAGI populations
(A)
Eligibility. The OHCA Clinical Review team (OHCA nurse) determines
medical eligibility for SPPC services based on the Uniform Comprehensive
Assessment Tool (UCAT) Part III and the determination that the member has unmet
care needs that require personal care assistance. SPPC services are initiated
to support the regular care provided in the member's home. SPPC services are
not intended to take the place of regular care, general maintenance tasks, or
meal preparation provided by natural supports, such as spouses or other adults
who live in the same household. Additionally, SPPC services are not furnished
when they principally benefit the family unit. To be eligible for SPPC
services, the applicant:
(1) Has adequate
informal supports. This means there is adult supervision that is present or
available to contribute to care, or decision-making ability, as documented on
the UCAT Part III. To remain in his or her home without risk to his or her
health, safety, and well-being, the applicant:
(A) Must have the decision-making ability to
respond appropriately to situations that jeopardize his or her health and
safety, or has available supports that compensate for his or her lack of
ability as documented on the UCAT Part III; or
(B) His or her decision-making ability, lacks
the physical capacity to respond appropriately to situations that jeopardize
health and safety, and an OHCA nurse has informed his/her of potential risks
and consequences of remaining in the home.
(2) Requires a care plan for planning and
administering services delivered under a professional personnel's
supervision;
(3) Has a physical
impairment or combination of physical and mental impairments as documented on
the UCAT Part III. An applicant who poses a threat to himself or herself or
others, as supported by professional or credible documentation, may not be
approved for SPPC services. An individual who is actively psychotic or believed
to be in danger of potential harm to himself or herself or others may not be
approved;
(4) Does not have
household members or persons who routinely visit the household who, as
supported by professional or credible documentation, pose a threat of harm or
injury to the applicant or other household visitors;
(5) Lacks the ability to meet personal care
needs without additional supervision or assistance, or to communicate needs to
others; and
(6) Requires
assistance, not of a technical nature, to prevent or minimize physical health
regression and deterioration.
(B)
Definitions. The following
words and terms, when used in this subsection, shall have the following
meaning, unless the context clearly indicates otherwise:
(1)
"Activities of Daily Living"
or "ADL" means activities that reflect the applicant's or member's
ability to perform self-care tasks essential for sustaining health and safety,
such as:
(A) Bathing;
(B) Eating;
(C) Dressing;
(D) Grooming;
(E) Transferring, including activities such
as getting in and out of a tub or moving from bed to chair;
(F) Mobility;
(G) Toileting; and
(H) Bowel or bladder control.
(2)
"ADLs score of three (3)
or greater" means the applicant or member cannot do at least one (1) ADL
at all or needs some help with two (2) or more ADLs.
(3)
"Applicant or Member support very
low" means the applicant's or member's UCAT Part III Support score is
zero (0), this indicates, in the UCAT Part III assessor's clinical judgment,
the formal and informal sources are sufficient for the applicant's or member's
present need level in most functional areas.
(4)
"Applicant or Member support
low" means the member's UCAT Part III Support score is five (5), this
indicates, in the UCAT Part III assessor's clinical judgment, the support from
formal and informal sources are nearly sufficient for the applicant's or
member's present need level in most functional areas. The applicant or member,
family, or informal supports are meeting most needs typically expected of
family or household members to share or do for one another, such as general
household maintenance. There is little risk of institutional placement with
loss of current supports.
(5)
"Applicant or Member support moderate" means the UCAT Part III
applicant or member score is fifteen (15), this indicates, in the UCAT Part III
assessor's clinical judgment, the formal and informal support is available, but
overall, it is inadequate, changing, fragile, or otherwise problematic. The
applicant or member requires additional assistance that usually includes
personal care assistance with one (1) or more ADLs not available through
Medicare, the Veterans Administration, or other federal entitlement programs.
Informal caregiver support is considered questionable or unreliable due to one
(1) or more criteria in (A) through (D) of this paragraph:
(A) Care or support is required continuously
with no relief or backup available;
(B) Informal support lacks continuity due to
conflicting responsibilities such as work or child care;
(C) Persons with advanced age or disability
provide care; or
(D) Institutional
placement can reasonably be expected with any loss of existing
support.
(6)
"Applicant or Member support high" means the applicant or member
score is twenty-five (25) this indicates, in the UCAT Part III assessor's
clinical judgment, the formal and informal supports are not sufficient as there
is very little or no support available to meet the applicant's or member's high
degree of need.
(7)
"Community Services Worker" means any non-licensed health
professional employed by or under contract with a community services provider
who provides, for compensation or as a volunteer, health-related services,
training, or supportive assistance to frail elderly, disabled person(s), or
person(s) with developmental disabilities.
(8)
"Community Services Worker
Registry" means aa registry established by the OKDHS per Section
(§) 1025.1 of Title 56 of the Oklahoma Statutes (O.S.) to list community
services workers who have a final investigative finding of abuse, neglect, or
exploitation, per 43A O.S. § 10-103, involving a frail elderly, disabled
person(s), or person(s) with developmental disabilities was made by OKDHS or an
administrative law judge; and amended in 2002, to include the listing of
SoonerCare (Medicaid) personal care assistants (PCAs) providing personal care
services.
(9)
"Instrumental
Activities of Daily Living" or "IADL" means those daily
activities that reflect the applicant or member's ability to perform household
chores and tasks within the community essential for sustaining health and
safety, such as:
(A) Shopping;
(B) Cooking;
(C) Cleaning;
(D) Managing money;
(E) Using a phone;
(F) Doing laundry;
(G) Taking medication; and
(H) Accessing transportation.
(10)
"IADLs score is at
least six (6)" means the applicant or member needs some help with at
least three (3) IADLs or cannot do two (2) IADLs at all.
(11)
"IADLs score of eight (8) or
greater" means the applicant or member needs some help with at least
four (4) IADLs or the member cannot do two (2) IADLs at all and needs some help
with one (1) or more other IADLs.
(12)
"MSQ" means the Mental
Status Questionnaire.
(13)
"MSQ moderate risk range" means a total weighted-score of seven
(7) to eleven (11) that indicates an orientation-memory-concentration
impairment or memory impairment.
(14)
"Nutrition moderate risk"
means a total weighted UCAT Part III Nutrition score is eight (8) or greater
that indicates poor appetite or weight loss combined with special diet
requirements, medications, or difficulties in eating.
(15)
"Social Resource score is eight
(8) or more" means the applicant or member lives alone, has no informal
support when he or she is sick or needs assistance, or has little or no contact
with others.
(C)
Medical eligibility minimum criteria for SPPC. The medical
eligibility minimum criteria for SPPC services are the minimum UCAT score
criteria that an applicant or member meets for medical eligibility and are:
(1) ADLs score is five (5) or greater; or has
an IADLs score of eight (8) or greater; or Nutrition score is (8) or greater;
or the MSQ score is seven (7) or greater; or the ADLs score is three (3) and
IADLs score is at least six (6); and
(2) Applicant or Member Support score is
fifteen (15) or more; or Applicant or Member Support score is five (5) and the
Social Resources score is eight (8) or greater.
(D)
Medical eligibility
determination. Medical eligibility for personal care is determined by
the OHCA. The medical decision for personal care is made by the OHCA
supervisor, overseeing SPPC services, utilizing the UCAT Part III. The member
will be notified prior to UCAT III assessment that the result could indicate a
need for disability review.
(1) Referrals will
be made to the OKDHS if the applicant requires a disability review based on
information obtained in referral and/or UCAT Part III.
(2) Upon receipt of the referral the OHCA
nurse is responsible for completing the UCAT Part III assessment visit within
ten (10) business days of the personal care application for the applicant who
is SoonerCare eligible at the time of the request. The OHCA nurse completes the
assessment visit within twenty (20) business days of the referral for the
applicant not determined SoonerCare eligible at the time of the request. When
the application indicates the request is from an individual who resides at home
and an immediate response is required to ensure the applicant's health and
safety, to prevent an emergency situation, or to avoid institutional placement,
the UCAT Part III assessment visit has top-scheduling priority.
(3) During the assessment visit, the OHCA
nurse completes the UCAT III and reviews rights to privacy, fair hearing,
provider choice, and the pre-service acknowledgement agreement with the member.
The OHCA nurse informs the applicant of medical eligibility criteria and
provides information about OHCA long-term care service options. The OHCA nurse
documents if the member wants to be considered for nursing facility level of
care services or if the member is applying for a specific service program on
the UCAT Part III. When, based on the information obtained during the
assessment, the OHCA nurse determines if the member may be at risk for health
and safety, an immediate referral is made to Adult Protective Services or Child
Protective Services, as applicable. The referral is documented on the UCAT Part
III.
(A) When the applicant's needs cannot be
met by personal care services alone, the OHCA nurse provides information about
other community long-term care service options. The OHCA nurse assists in
accessing service options the applicant or member selects in addition to, or in
place of, SPPC services.
(B) When
multiple household members are applying for SoonerCare SPPC services, the UCAT
Part III assessment is done for all the household members at the same
time.
(C) The OHCA nurse provides
the applicant or member with information about the qualified agencies in his or
her local area that provide services and obtains the applicant's or member's
primary and secondary agency choice. When the applicant or family declines to
choose a primary personal care service agency, the round-robin rotation system
is used for agency selection. The OHCA nurse documents the selected personal
care provider agency's name.
(4) The OHCA nurse completes the UCAT Part
III and sends it to an alternate OHCA nurse for medical eligibility
determination. SPPC services eligibility is established on the date medical
eligibility is approved and financial eligibility is established. This date
serves as the certification date for services to be initiated.
(A) When the time length from the initial
assessment to the date of service eligibility determination exceeds ninety (90)
calendar days, a new UCAT Part III assessment is required.
(B) The OHCA nurse assigns a medical
certification period of not more than thirty-six (36) months for persons
eighteen (18) years of age and older or not more than twelve (12) months for
persons younger than eighteen (18) years of age. The service plan period is for
twelve (12) months and is provided by the OHCA nurse.
(5) Upon establishing SPPC certification, the
OHCA nurse notifies the applicant's or member's preferred provider agency, or
when necessary, the secondary provider agency or the provider agency selected
by the round robin rotation system. Within one (1) business day of provider
agency acceptance, the OHCA nurse submits the information via electronic system
to the provider agency for plan development. Refer to OAC
317:35-15-8(a).
(6) Following the provider agency's SPPC plan
development, and within three (3) business days of receipt from the provider
agency, the OHCA nurse reviews the documentation to ensure agreement with the
plan. Once agreement is established, the plan is submitted to OHCA Personal
Care Supervisor for review and then the plan is authorized.
(7) Within one (1) business day of knowledge
of the authorization, the OHCA nurse submits the plan authorization to the
provider agency via electronic system.
Notes
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No prior version found.