Sunday, January 29, 2012

RSVP Date Extended for Conversations that Matter: Gainesville

Save the Date!
Conversations That Matter:
Justice and Developmental Disabilities

·         Meet with advocates and community leaders for a dialogue about individuals with developmental disabilities and the justice system.
·         Discuss current programs and practices in Georgia and your community and identify community based alternatives to incarceration.
·         Receive updates on the Georgia Crisis System for individuals with developmental disabilities.

  
February 9, 2012
11:30am-1:30pm Gainesville
The Oaks at Lanier Charter Career Academy
2719 Tumbling Creek Road
Gainesville, GA 30504

Extended RSVP to Friday, Feb. 3, 2012

Marty Owens, 678-617-5527
Scott Crain, 770-540-4479
  

Please send to those in your network that you feel should be invited to the discussion. If you have any questions or require any additional information, please contact Heidi Fernandez.


Sponsored by the Department of Behavioral Health and Developmental Disabilities, Division of Developmental Disabilities. Presented by All About Developmental Disabilities.

Saturday, January 28, 2012

Provider Pay Cuts Provoke Fierce Opposition

Georgia Health News


Andy Miller


Pat Ellis held hands with her son John while waiting to get into an already packed state board room Thursday.
The Ellises traveled from Commerce to Atlanta to attend a hearing that focused on proposed state cuts in payments for certain residential and day programs for the developmentally disabled.
John Ellis, 39, who has Down syndrome, has been going to Jackson Creative, a service center for people with disabilities, for 18 years. Four to five days a week, John does activities ranging from community volunteer work, including folding church bulletins, to attending music therapy at the University of Georgia.
“If the rates are reduced, [John’s] days will be cut down, and the quality of services will be cut down,’’ Pat Ellis said. “It’s such an important part of his day.’’
The Ellises were part of a huge crowd of people with disabilities, family members, consumer advocates and service providers who attended the three-hour hearing. The atmosphere at the event was often emotional.
The proposed rate changes are being considered by the board of the Department of Community Health, which runs Medicaid in the state.
The revisions were proposed after the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services required Georgia to review its rates under ‘‘waiver’’ services for thousands of people with developmental disabilities.
The new rate schedule was determined by a consulting firm that surveyed providers. State officials at the Department of Behavioral Health and Developmental Disabilities (DBHDD) said most rates will actually be increasing, not decreasing.
Program providers have been involved throughout the process, said DBHDD spokesman Tom Wilson on Friday.
“No one is questioning the value of the services to the individuals receiving them,’’ Wilson said. “What’s at question is how much the people of Georgia should be expected to pay for them.’’ In some cases, he said, providers were spending 70 cents or less of each dollar on direct care.
The overflow crowd Thursday uniformly urged the state not to rush to change the rates. They called for either maintaining the current pay structure or taking more time to study the proposed changes. Many in the crowd wore stickers with “New Rate Models’’ crossed out.
Betty Peeples of Cartersville told state officials that her daughter Angela, 34, has benefited greatly from attending a day program for people with disabilities.
“I do not see [the pay reductions] as being good for anyone,’’ Peeples said. The cuts will affect jobs – both at service centers and for parents who will no longer be able to work, she said.

‘Do no harm’

Tojuan Hawkins, 36, who has autism, told the public hearing that his Lawrenceville day program allows him to have a job stringing and bundling shoelaces. He also does ceramics and artwork at Creative Enterprises, a training and employment program. “I don’t want anything to jeopardize my job,’’ he said.
Leigh McIntosh, executive director at Creative Enterprises, told GHN that the changes ‘‘could potentially put us out of business.’’
Elsewhere on Thursday, DBHDD Commissioner Frank Shelp told state lawmakers that the Community Health board would not take up the rate changes until March, instead of February as previously planned.
If the changes are approved, said DBHDD spokesman Wilson on Friday, they probably will not be implemented for more than a year.
Meanwhile, a bill has been introduced in the Georgia House that would require legislative approval for provider rate changes.
All About Developmental Disabilities, an advocacy group and services provider, said in a statement that it is ‘‘concerned with the overall instability to the provider community that any immediate changes to rates might cause. . . . More cuts to an already overburdened and under-resourced service system would pose concern for both individuals and family members and their ability to keep much-needed services.’’
Some developmentally disabled Georgians live in ‘‘host homes,’’ which for them are essentially what foster homes are for minors. This program is targeted for a rate cut.
Ryan Whitmire of Lutheran Services of Georgia, which provides host homes, told the Thursday hearing that the proposed reduction would cost his nonprofit $80,000. “It’s a huge hit,’’ he said.
Diane Wilush, president of the Service Providers Association for Developmental Disabilities, told state officials that program providers have not seen a rate increase in eight years.
“The underlying principle should be ‘Do no harm,’ ’’ she said.
Wilush urged state officials to ‘‘go back to the table, include providers and families . . . and properly support quality.’’
Bill Hogan said his 56-year-old son benefits from services from the DeKalb Community Service Board.
“Without these, he would not be able to live and work as he does,’’ Hogan told the hearing. If proposed rates go through, he said, “providers will have to discontinue services,’’ which he said would be ‘‘catastrophic’’ to people like his son.

Friday, January 27, 2012

Report calls for expanded Georgia Medicaid managed care

Atlanta Business Chronicle
Dave Williams
A consultant is recommending Georgia enroll all of its Medicaid patients in managed care, including those now receiving traditional fee-for-service coverage.
A report released Friday by the Georgia Department of Community Health (DCH) suggests that more than 357,000 Medicaid recipients enrolled in fee for service – primarily the aged, blind and disabled – join the 1.1 million being covered through managed care.
The report, put together by Navigant Consulting, Inc. of Chicago, argues that aged, blind and disabled patients covered through fee-for-service plans don’t have access to care-management programs that provide chronic-care services they need more than most patient groups.
At the same time, the report maintains that streamlining Georgia Medicaid to a single coverage delivery system would reduce administrative costs.
“Now that the report has been delivered, we will begin our review and analysis … building on what is currently working and rebuilding what can be working better,” DCH Commissioner David Cook said.
“During this evaluation process, we will identify opportunities to eliminate unnecessary and costly bureaucratic red tape, ease administrative burdens, enhance efficiencies and improve access and health care outcomes.”
Navigant was awarded a $2 million contract last summer and spent the last several months of 2011 working on the report.

"Transportation and a More Livable Future"

Watch “Transportation and a More Livable Future”
on WPBA Atlanta, Sunday, Jan. 29 at 9:30 a.m.

“Transportation and a More Livable Future” is the latest installment of the Atlanta Regional Commission’s quarterly public affairs television show. The show features a look at how local governments, ARC and others are planning for an Atlanta region that is as vibrant and promising 30 years from now as it is today. Viewers can learn more about the upcoming Regional Transportation Referendum on July 31. Studio guests include ARC Board Chair Tad Leithead, Norcross Mayor Bucky Johnson and Henry County Commission Chair B.J. Mathis who look at transportation and other factors that will shape the future of metro Atlanta. The show airs this Sunday, January 29th at 9:30 am on Atlanta's WPBA Channel 30.



Promo for “Transportation and a More Livable Future” from Atlanta Regional Commission on Vimeo.

Friday, January 20, 2012

Health Care Spikes Worry Georgia Lawmakers

The Augusta Chronicle
Walter C. Jones

ATLANTA -- Saving the trickiest problems for last, legislative budget writers wrapped up three days of hearings on state spending needs learning about looming gaps in healthcare resources.
The House and Senate appropriations committees met jointly this week to get broad overviews of the money demands of the state’s largest agencies while the rest of the General Assembly was in recess. Monday, the House Appropriations Committee’s subcommittees will begin weeks of in-depth hearings to pore over the details of what Gov. Nathan Deal has recommended spending in each area.
Deal asked every agency to cut 2 percent of its expenditures next year, but he’s also calling on legislators to make big boosts in health care. For the Department of Community Health, he wants $437 million added next year and for the balance of the current fiscal year to cover rising health costs and the growing enrollment in the insurance plans for state workers, teachers and the poor. That includes enrolling the children of 21,000 state employees in the PeachCare for Kids insurance plan for children from low-income families.
Rep. Matt Dollar, R-Marietta, asked Community Health Commissioner David Cook about shaving costs by investigating bogus claims in the program for the poor, Medicaid.
“There is fraud and abuse out there,” Cook said, adding that the department recently recovered $46 million and won nine convictions from 54 people charged with Medicaid fraud.
“These are the bad guys. We need to ferret that out but not make it too onerous for the people who are providing legitimate services,” he said.
More troubling is the ballooning costs in the coming decade due to federal health reform requirements, said Rep. Mickey Channell, R-Greensboro.
He said the federal law will add 700,000 people to the state’s Medicaid roles, a 50 percent increase.
“Not to mention where are we going to get the doctors to treat them, but where are we going to get the money?” he asked.
Cook agreed the state’s seven-year cost could be $2.5 billion and then double over the following five years as federal funding for the expansion declines.
“It’s a huge unknown,” he said.
Another budget time bomb is the $62 billion in unfunded medical coverage for state retirees over the next 30 years, Cook said.
Also coming before lawmakers Thursday were the heads of the Department of Human Services, seeking $15 million and the Department of Behavioral Health & Developmental Disabilities requesting $30 million.

Thursday, January 19, 2012

Conversations that Matter: College Park

Just a friendly reminder that there is still time to RSVP for the Conversations that Matter: College Park! We have extended the RSVP to January 20th, 2012.

Meet with advocates and community leaders for a dialogue about individuals with developmental disabilities and the justice system.

Discuss current programs and practices in Georgia and your community and identify community-based alternatives to incarceration.

Receive updates on the Georgia Crisis System for individuals with developmental disabilities.

January 26, 2012
6:30pm-8:30pm College Park

South Fulton Service Center
5600 Stonewall Tell Road
College Park, GA 30049

To RSVP contact:

Yvette Pollard
404-664-1393

Tuesday, January 17, 2012

NOW & COMP Waiver Proposed Rates

If you or a family member receive the NOW or COMP Medicaid Waivers, you might want to review the Proposed Rates on the DCH website. These were just posted at the end of last week. Please note that they have a period for public comment that begins on January 26th at 1pm at the Department of Community Health, 2 Peachtree Street, Fifth Floor Board room, and  DCH will collect comments from citizens until February 2, 2012.

If you cannot attend in person, they ask that you submit comments to the Board of Community Health, Post Office Box 1966, Atlanta, Georgia 30303.Comments submitted will be available for review by the public at the Department of Community Health, Monday – Friday, 9:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., in Room 4053, 2 Peachtree Street, N.W., Atlanta, Georgia 30303.

Tuesday, January 10, 2012

2012 Partners in Policymaking

Partners in Policymaking is an innovative leadership training opportunity designed to involve and empower people with developmental disabilities, parents of young children with disabilities and other family members. People with developmental disabilities and parents of young children with developmental disabilities are the primary target groups of the Partners program (However, other family members are strongly urged to apply.)  Partners in Policymaking will primarily focus on two subjects: community building, and state-level advocacy.

The program seeks participants from varying ethnic and cultural backgrounds, different geographic regions of the state and various disabilities, as are persons not actively involved in existing advocacy efforts.

All About Developmental Disabilities will issue applications to interested individuals throughout the year. Thirty-five (35) persons will be selected to participate in the twentieth Partners class in Georgia. Scholarships for travel, childcare and personal assistance services needed for attendance at Partners sessions are available to all participants.

Partners will attend two weekend-long sessions (Friday, Saturday, and Sunday). The first weekend will be held March 23rd – 25th, and the second weekend will be held April 20th – 22nd. Attendance is mandatory and all of the session’s dates will be announced prior to the deadline for applications. Both weekends will be held in Decatur, Georgia.

Advocates strengthen communities. The Partners program teaches the skills needed not only to affect change in individuals’ lives, but also for those people that walk behind. Graduates from Partners have gone on to serve their communities as: Regional Boards Chairperson, Director of the ADA Exchange, Organizers of parental support groups in local communities, members of state wide task forces, Coordinator of the Advocacy Alliance, coordinators and participants in many conferences related to issues of disability.

Partners will hear from subject matter experts on topics like the History of the Disability Movement, Building Accountability and Commitment, and Person Centered Planning during the first weekend. The second weekend will focus on state-level advocacy. Participants will understand the process of a bill becoming a law, the state budgeting process, and will meet with former legislators to help hone their advocacy skills.

The deadline to apply to the 2012 Partners in Policymaking course is February 1st, 2012. To apply, click the link below.


For more information, please contact Ryan Johnson at rjohnson@aadd.org or 404-809-2927.

Monday, January 09, 2012

Some with Developmental Disabilities Lose Services

Evette King talks with her autistic son Gerald Stephens at their home. Without a caregiver, King is able to work only a couple of days a week when her adult daughter can help out.
Last spring, King’s 19-year-old son, Gerald Stephens, joined a growing number of Georgians with mental illness or developmental disabilities who have been discharged or are at risk of being cut off from a state program that has been a life line for thousands of elderly and disabled people for the past 15 years.
The program -- which provides housekeeping, transportation to adult day centers, care management and other services -- not only helps people avoid ending up in nursing homes but ultimately saves taxpayers money, advocates say. Caring for someone in the community costs thousands of dollars less each month than in a nursing home.
In 2007, however, a federal agency told the state it had to move the program known as SOURCE -- Service Options Using Resources in a Community Environment -- under a different umbrella. The new, more restrictive framework limited it to the elderly and physically disabled -- excluding some people who suffer from schizophrenia, Down syndrome, bipolar disorder, depression, and other mental and developmental disabilities.
"It's destroying people's lives," said Talley Wells, an Atlanta Legal Aid Society attorney who represents half a dozen individuals in danger of being eliminated who sued the state in 2010.
Under the more stringent rules, the state Department of Community Health has had to carefully reassess on a case-by-case basis whether SOURCE participants require a nursing home level of care. That includes people with physical disabilities whose health may have improved over time, said Catherine Ivy, deputy director of aging and special populations in the agency’s Medicaid division.
“The state is not discharging people because they have a mental illness or have a developmental disability,” Ivy said. “We agonize over these decisions.”
If the state doesn’t strictly follow the new guidelines for the Medicaid-funded program, it could risk losing federal money, she said, adding that SOURCE continues to serve mentally ill and developmentally disabled individuals who also have physical impairments. Those discharged keep their other Medicaid benefits, such as hospital and pharmacy services.
More than 19,000 Georgians receive services through SOURCE, which was launched in 1997. Through it, case managers and primary care doctors work together to coordinate individuals’ long-term care.
The average monthly cost to Medicaid per SOURCE participant totaled $1,538 in fiscal 2007, compared with placement in a nursing facility at $4,369, according to a state audit report. That year, SOURCE cost $92.3 million, with 62 percent paid by the federal government, the report shows.
Last year, in a letter to a top federal health official, Gov. Nathan Deal touted SOURCE as a model for fostering better coordination of care and preventing unnecessary long-term institutionalization, while improving cost efficiency and people’s well-being.
The loss of services comes at the same time Georgia is also shelling out tens of millions of dollars to move mentally ill and developmentally disabled people out of state institutions -- an effort spurred by a U.S. Department of Justice investigation into the abuse and deaths of dozens of mental hospital patients. A series of articles by The Atlanta Journal-Constitution uncovered the abuse starting in 2007.
The Department of Community Health said it doesn't have information on how many people with mental illness or developmental disabilities have been discharged from SOURCE. But Wells said his office has received calls weekly since the beginning of 2010 from families in danger of losing funding, and he estimates hundreds could be affected.
The department reassesses annually whether people still qualify for the program, and those discharged are given 30 days' notice. Workers help those discharged to find alternative services.
Mental health services in Georgia have long been underfunded, leaving programs such as SOURCE as safety valves, said Hunter Hurst, the founder of the program and director of the St. Joseph’s/Candler health system’s Georgia Infirmary in Savannah. Limited dollars along with strict Medicaid funding guidelines have presented challenges, Hurst said.
“The rules really are very, very specific as to who can get which service,” he said. “Is the service they qualify for going to serve them well?”
Community-based care makes both good medical and fiscal sense by keeping people healthy -- eliminating avoidable and expensive hospital visits -- said Thomas Bornemann, director of the Carter Center’s mental health program. A person with mental illness who has a chronic illness such as diabetes could end up in the emergency department in danger of having a limb amputated, which costs a lot more money than preventive care, Bornemann said.
At the same time, Medicaid programs across the country have been under an intense spotlight as states increasingly face fiscal pressures and are looking for ways to be more efficient, Bornemann said.
For King, the SOURCE discharge notice came as a shock.
“I thought they were joking,” she said, adding that the department didn’t help connect her with other services. “It’s pushed us back a lot.”
Without a caregiver to watch Gerald, who needs constant monitoring, King is only able to work a couple of days or so each week when her adult daughter can help out.
King, who also has an 11-year-old son, has scraped together enough money to keep the lights on so far, but it’s unclear how she’ll be able to keep paying rent. Gerald recently became eligible for a different Medicaid-funded program for the developmentally disabled, but thousands of people are on the waiting list, said Wells, who is working with the family.
Evette King recently sat in her south Atlanta home fretting about how she could avoid eviction without someone to watch, feed and bathe her severely autistic son so she can work and pay the bills.
The Georgia Department of Behavioral Health and Developmental Disabilities is doing what it can to help people affected by the changes to SOURCE find housing, but resources are limited, spokesman Tom Wilson said.
The agency is overseeing the roll-out of new services under the Justice Department settlement, which some former SOURCE recipients might be eligible for if they’re often readmitted to hospitals or in danger of becoming homeless, Wilson said.
“It is difficult," he said, "when [someone] lacks a stable home to maintain recovery.”

Friday, January 06, 2012

Conversations that Matter: Savannah

Just a friendly reminder! Due to the holidays, we have extended the deadline to RSVP for the Savannah Conversations that Matter to Sunday January 8th, 2012.

Conversations That Matter: Justice and Developmental Disabilities

Meet with advocates and community leaders for a dialogue about individuals with developmental disabilities and the justice system.

Discuss current programs and practices in Georgia and your community and identify community-based alternatives to incarceration.

Receive updates on the Georgia Crisis System for individuals with developmental disabilities.

January 12, 2012
6:30pm-8:30pm Savannah

The Armstrong Center
Armstrong Atlantic State University
13040 Abercorn Street
Savannah, Georgia 31419-1997

The deadline to RSVP has been extended to 12:00pm Sunday, January 8th. To RSVP, contact:

Jennifer McGee, 912-355-9098

Mary Poncy, 912-272-2774