The Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) published a
final Medicaid rule that permits Medicaid recipients to self-direct
their own health care and supportive services. The rule,
Self-Directed Personal Assistance Services Program State Plan
Option (Cash and Counseling), is a great victory for persons
with disabilities. Medicaid recipients in need of long-term care
have been given the freedom to control their own destiny. If states
take advantage of it, this change has the potential to
revolutionize the $100 billion long-term care delivery system under
Medicaid.
Medicaid Dominance in Long-Term
Care
The Medicaid program is the largest single source of funding for
long-term care, accounting for nearly half of paid caregiving.
Approximately one-third of Medicaid spending goes to long-term care
($114 billion in FY 2009). Over the next 10 years, Medicaid is
projected to spend $1.7 trillion on long-term care.[1]
Provider special interests benefit from the status quo. Most
Medicaid spending on long-term care is still provided in nursing
homes, institutions for mental diseases, and intermediate care
facilities for persons with mental retardation or developmental
disabilities. Large public and private institutions are also often
staffed by health care workers represented by unions.
People need long-term care services because they have
limitations in their functional ability to meet their own needs in
the "activities of daily living" such as bathing, dressing,
cooking, and eating. Individuals may need assistance due to an
array of conditions including developmental disabilities (autism,
mental retardation), chronic mental illness, other severe cognitive
impairment, or physical disabilities. As part of a defined benefit
program, a person on Medicaid is entitled to coverage in a nursing
home as a mandatory service. Individuals often do not have a choice
about long-term care; placements are made by default as to what is
available.
Self-direction, with the benefit of counseling, is a dramatic
reversal of the traditional model of long-term care that is based
on dependency. Self-direction puts the individual back in control.
This raises expectations and demands greater personal
responsibility on the part of the Medicaid recipient. But properly
understood, that in itself adds value and quality as well as
expands access to services.
Early Alternatives and New Options
In the early 1980s, home- and community-based services were
allowed as an alternative to institutional care. States gradually
developed their waivers and expanded the number of people served by
them. Typically, states would contract with local government or
private agencies to provide direct services. But control over
hiring, what services were provided, how many units of services
were allowed, and when services were provided was generally in the
hands of the state, local government, or agency.
In contrast, self-direction is a person-centered, market-based
approach founded on the belief that individuals themselves know
best as to what they (or a family member) need to support
themselves in their own homes. Individuals may manage a service
budget and directly purchase goods and services using a cash
allowance or may direct a service plan in which a separate entity
makes the actual procurement of services. Self-direction generally
includes at least personal care services but may also include a
broader array of goods and services including transportation and
supportive employment.
John Kemp, an expert on disability issues, has explained that
"control and choice is not just a theme; they are a tenet of the
disability movement."[2] Experience shows, moreover, that putting
the consumer rather than the provider in control is also cost
effective as well as personally liberating. Says Kemp: "We have
been trying to save our government money for a long time."[3]
Promoting Dignity
"Cash and Counseling" in Medicaid was a seed planted in the
mid-1990s through grants from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation.
Arkansas, Florida, and New Jersey became the leaders of
self-direction programsand demonstrated what such independence can
mean to people on Medicaid. In his first month in office, President
George W. Bush issued his New Freedom Initiative and challenged
federal officials to promote "full access to community life" for
disabled persons. Consequently, the U.S. Department of Health and
Human Services (HHS) developed Independence Plus, a Medicaid
model waiver for the states that incorporated self-direction. It
was ultimately adopted by 15 states. Waivers are, however,
discretionary and temporary. The Deficit Reduction Act of 2005 gave
authority to the states to offer it as a state plan option.
Self-direction is federal policy; it must be carried out, however,
at the state and local levels.
Personal Benefits
Suzanne Crisp, another expert on the policy of self-direction,
spells out its numerous benefits:
- Higher levels of consumer satisfaction;
- Fewer unmet patient needs;
- The same or better scores on measures of health status;
- The same or better scores on measures of participant
safety;
- Reported better quality of life;
- No experience of adverse effects on health; and
- An expanded labor market for a non-traditional pool of
workers.[4]
Crisp notes there are tremendous opportunities to expand these
benefits, as there are "almost 2 million Americans who receive
publicly funded personal care services each year."[5]
In a study of individuals with mental illness who self-direct
part of their own care, Vidhya Alakeson, an HHS official, found
that "the traditional system was seen by consumers to be
unsupportive and consumers felt uninformed about their diagnosis
and medications."[6] Alakeson also noted that "consumers
expressed the view that the public mental health system focused too
heavily on illness and did not foster wellness. They valued the
fact that SDC [self-directed care] was explicitly focused on
creating or sustaining a life in the community and on the full
range of their needs."[7]
Some have opposed various state efforts to introduce greater
personal responsibility in the Medicaid program with the rationale
that the lives of Medicaid families are too chaotic to expect
compliance or involvement. But as Alakeson has found, that is
precisely what some of the most vulnerable Medicaid recipients
themselves want. Self-direction has positive effects beyond health
status. Prior to the start-up of self-direction in Florida, only 23
percent of participants were employed, and just 8 percent
were in school. By the end of the first year of self-direction, 47
percent of participants were working and 44 percent were being
educated.[8]
Taxpayer Savings
Savings from successful self-direction will show up across the
board in public programs. With competition from self-direction, the
following will occur:
- Traditional personal care agencies will improve quality;
- Participants will trade welfare checks for paychecks;
- Individuals will leave group homes (more expensive) for
their own homes (less expensive);
- Vacancies in group homes will mean states will have available
capacity to move more individuals from the state institutions (more
expensive) to group homes (less expensive); and
- Stabilization and recovery will reduce acute care services in
emergency rooms and inpatient hospitalization.
In addition, there are significant costs associated with serving
people with mental illness through the judicial system. Such costs
are typically borne by state and local governments, so improvement
in the service delivery system brought by self-direction will
provide savings to them.
Opportunities for the States
The change in federal law is now complete. Because the new
regulation is final, it is time for the states to act and adopt
self-direction as part of overall Medicaid reform. States can adopt
self-direction through a simple state plan amendment process. All
that is needed is a change in philosophy and a change in attitudes
in the state capitals and among local public officials toward
people with disabilities. Medicaid recipients and taxpayers alike
will benefit.
Dennis G. Smith is Senior
Fellow in the Center for Health Policy Studies at The Heritage
Foundation.
[1]
Office of the Actuary, Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services,
State Health Reform: Converting Medicaid Dollars into Premium
Assistance, table A2, September 16, 2008.
[2]
John Kemp, "Workable Solutions for Long-Term Care," lecture at The
Heritage Foundation, September 24, 2008.
[4]
Suzanne Crisp, "Self-Direction: An Innovative Design for Systems
Change," lecture at The Heritage Foundation, September 24,
2008.
[6]
Vidhya Alakeson, "The Contribution of Self-Direction to Improving
the Quality of Mental Health Services," U.S. Department of Health
and Human Services, Office of the Assistant Secretary for Planning
and Evaluation, November 2007, p. 29, at /static/reportimages/E9CC729BB7D0200E572998B878CE09F4.pdf
(November 12, 2008).