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Trump extends deadline for states to meet Medicaid standards

By Phil Galewitz

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The Trump administration has given states three extra years to carry out plans for helping elderly and disabled people receive Medicaid services without being forced to go into nursing homes.

Federal standards requiring states find ways of delivering care to Medicaid enrollees in home and community-based settings will take effect in 2022 instead of 2019, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services announced this week.

The standards were set by an Obama administration rule adopted in 2014 that governs where more than 3 million Medicaid enrollees get care.

Among other things, the rule requires states to provide opportunities for enrollees to engage in community life, control their own money and seek employment in competitive settings. It also ensures that enrollees in group homes and other residential settings get more privacy and housing choices that include places where non-disabled people live.

Matt Salo, executive director of the National Association of Medicaid Directors, applauded the delay.

“We have long been on record saying that the regulation was hopelessly unrealistic in its time frame,” he said. “Delaying it actually helps consumers because the underlying regulation was going to push too many changes too fast into a system that wasn’t ready.”

The Obama administration’s 2014 rule was an effort to create a federal standard to improve the quality of care that the disabled receive outside institutions.

Some states had tried ― and struggled ― to make changes on their own, partly due to a lack of funding and political difficulties of changing deeply-entrenched relationships with providers.

Some had, for instance, forced providers to change longstanding operations at group homes and so-called sheltered workshops such as Goodwill Industries where disabled people often work apart from other employees, performing menial tasks for less than minimum wage.

Helping disabled people find work in places where they are not segregated costs states more money, said Gary Blumenthal, CEO of the Association of Developmental Disabilities Providers.

The delay in implementing the federal rule is “a victory for the status quo and for states reluctant to embrace the [new standards],” he said.

States spent several years fighting the new rules during the Obama administration and that slowed their planning, said Elizabeth Priaulx, senior legal specialist with the National Disability Rights Network. She noted states were under pressure from nursing homes and for-profit group homes to resist the changes.

“It is unfortunate the delay had to occur,” but many states were not ready, she said.

The new rule also directs states and providers to reconfigure existing community settings such as group homes to ensure that people will have more privacy. “Without these dollars it’s difficult to change the system,” Blumenthal said.

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