New Hampshire Department of Health and Human Services
Transcription
New Hampshire Department of Health and Human Services
New Hampshire Department of Health and Human Services Preparing for SFY 16/17 January 21, 2015 House Finance Committee Nick Toumpas, Commissioner 1/21/2015 DHHS Finance Committee Update 1 Agenda • Objective – Set context for development of SFY 16/17 budget and policy • • • • Brief Overview of DHHS and Current State Setting the Context for Budget Development Review of SFY 16/17 Budget Request Review of Key Strategic Themes and Innovation Initiatives • Questions and answers • Next Steps 1/21/2015 DHHS Finance Committee Update 2 Executive Summary • • • • • • • The Department has and continues to faces unprecedented challenges to fulfilling our core mission. These challenges and the demands on DHHS along with the realities of the external environment require a rethinking of how we do things. DHHS is responding with a dual agenda: focus on achieving greater efficiency and effectiveness in core operations while driving a set of transformative initiatives that define how we deal with the new realities. Central to our future is to focus on the whole person and improving the health of the population. Projections on budgets are challenging every year, but this year with the level of changes to our Medicaid business model will make the effort more challenging Alignment between State Health Improvement Program and the Medicaid Care Management program that will drive improved health for all citizens We will present and discuss our budget along two dimensions, the “agency” view and by a population segmentation to bring greater transparency to our choices and their implications on those served by the Department. 1/21/2015 DHHS Finance Committee Update 3 Overview of DHHS The Mission Roles and Responsibilities Services, Programs and Populations Caseloads Staffing SFY 15 Budget Status 1/21/2015 DHHS Finance Committee Update 4 DHHS Mission & Responsibilities “To join communities and families in providing opportunities for citizens to achieve health and independence” • To meet the health needs of New Hampshire citizens • To meet the basic human needs of New Hampshire citizens • To provide treatment and support services to those who have unique needs including disabilities, mental illness, special health care needs or substance abuse problems • To protect and care for New Hampshire’s most vulnerable citizens 1/21/2015 DHHS Finance Committee Update 5 Key Roles of DHHS • Educate the public and providers on navigating complex systems of care • Deliver services to clients – – – – Directly via our 11 District Offices Client Services Call Center Directly via 3 Institutions Purchased via contracts with providers • Protect the health and safety of the population – Protect children and adults from abuse and exploitation – Public health disease prevention, surveillance and response • Provide regulatory oversight – Health facilities – Child care facilities – Food service businesses • Insure program and operational integrity 1/21/2015 DHHS Finance Committee Update 6 Services and Populations To join communities and families in providing opportunities for citizens to achieve health and independence Children & Families Elderly Child Abuse Protection & Prevention Elder Abuse Protection & Prevention Juvenile Justice Child Support Foster Care & Adoption Employment Services Food Stamps Child Development Transitional Cash Assistance Mental Health & Substance Abuse Developmentally Disabled Community Mental Health Support Services Employment Supports Caregivers Housing Nutrition New Hampshire Hospital Family Supports Glencliff Home Residential Services Long-term Care Community-Based Nursing Homes Home Care Housing Substance Abuse Prevention, Intervention & Treatment Population Health Public Health Laboratory Services Disease Prevention Food Safety Childhood Vaccines Emergency Response Homelessness Rural Health WIC -------Medicaid Medical Primary Care, Specialty Care, Rx Services----- Enabling Organization Support Service Eligibility, Fraud Investigations, Appeals, Quality Assurance, Licensing, Recoveries Lean, Data Analytics, Inspections, Ombudsman, Finance, Business Operations, Systems, HR 1/21/2015 DHHS Finance Committee Update 7 Caseloads 6 Year View • • • • • Date Unduplicated Medicaid LTC FANF APTD SNAP Jan-2009 131,088 106,833 7,243 12,347 7,299 73,617 Jan-2010 146,491 117,326 7,312 14,392 8,337 101,013 Jan-2011 153,338 119,554 7,217 13,796 8,740 113,127 Jan-2012 154,765 119,338 7,189 11,781 8,834 117,047 Jan-2013 157,348 130,239 7,194 8,559 8,115 120,153 Jan-2014 154,862 132,034 7,265 7,330 7,834 113,326 Nov-2014 180,798 162,848 7,160 6,705 7,607 107,214 Caseloads in the traditional Medicaid program have stabilized and have actually declined We had a significant increase in low income children to the Medicaid program in the first half of CY 14 The NH Health Protection Program has added over 31,000 newly eligible—100% FFP through 12/31/16 Declines in FANF and APTD driven by policy decisions SNAP decreases driven by improved economy 1/21/2015 DHHS Finance Committee Update 8 Staffing • Positions in calendar year 2014 – 1/1/14: 2,897 authorized, 309 vacant, 10.6% vacant – 1/1/15: 2,981 authorized, 356 vacant, 11.9% vacant • 68 positions were added to address NH Health Protection Program eligibility • 93 of 2,981 authorized positions are Unclassified and of those, 18 are vacant • Since July 2011, DHHS has abolished 468 positions Authorized % Organization 296 9.9% Public Health, Drug and Alcohol 799 26.8% Institutions: New Hampshire Hospital and Glencliff Home 504 16.9% Client Services and Family Assistance 841 28.3% Human Services (DCYF, DCSS, HHS, OMHRA, BEAS/APS) 382 12.8% Program Integrity, operations support, information and administrative services 159 5.3% Medicaid enterprise 1/21/2015 DHHS Finance Committee Update 9 NH DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES DEPARTMENT VACANCY PERCENT July 1, 2008 Through December 31, 2014 20.0% July 2011 Abolished 369 18.0% 16.0% 14.0% 12.0% Dec 2011 Abolished 99 10.0% 8.0% 6.0% December 31, 2014 - 11.9% 4.0% 2.0% 0.0% 1/21/2015 DHHS Finance Committee Update 10 SFY 14 Actual Spending ($000’s) Total Spending of $1,877,984 Direct Service: Institutions $ 86,987 Division Administration $ 34,957 Enrolled Providers Service Delivery Management $ 1,151,977 $18,926 Medicaid Enhancement Contracted Services IT Systems $ 101,509 $ 301,561 $ 47,015 Field Operations Human Resources $ 67,266 $ 1,620 Cash Assistance Legal, Regulatory, Audits $ 42,463 87.9% 12.1% $ Direct Services 1/21/2015 $ 23,703 $ Administration DHHS Finance Committee Update 11 Medicaid Spending by Eligibility Category Percentage Of Clients Percentage Of Costs Low Income Child 58.6% 22.0% Low Income Adult 12.0% 7.8% Severely Disabled Child 1.2% 3.6% Adults Disabled Physical 6.3% 20.1% Adults Mental Illness 8.6% 22.5% Elderly 6.6% 23.4% QMB/SLMB 6.6% 0.7% ~72% of members/ ~33% of costs ~22% of members/ ~66% of costs QMB: Qualified Medicare Beneficiary/SLMB: Special Low Income Beneficiary Based on average for SFY 10 through SFY 14 1/21/2015 DHHS Finance Committee Update 12 SFY 15 Budget Update • DHHS produces a monthly Dashboard for the Governor and the Legislature (see Attached) – 4 sections • • • • • • • Narrative Budget summary and projection for the Fiscal Year Key program client counts Select initiative updates November 2014 Dashboard projects a $58.33M general fund shortfall 5 factors drive almost 90% of the total General Fund shortfall – $9.3M for mandated back of the budget reductions plus DHHS share of Statewide reduction – $9.6M due to delay in implementation of Medicaid Care Management and decision to defer second step of program to July 1, 2015 – $5.7M for startup and operational costs to implement the NH Health Protection Program (SB 413) – $5.4M for costs to fund US DOJ litigation on State’s mental health system (HB 1635) – $21.4M in additional costs to fund Medicaid caseload increases due to change in Federally prescribed eligibility calculation—Modified Adjusted Gross Income or MAGI DHHS has addressed ~$17M of the general fund shortfalls – A plan to address the balance will be presented to the Fiscal Committee on January 23rd of this month – DHHS will also seek authority for transfers to balance accounts and enable sufficient funds to make payments to the Managed Care Organizations – The plan will impact the Department’s lapse obligation 1/21/2015 DHHS Finance Committee Update 13 Key Accomplishments DHHS has had a number of significant successes in a challenging time • Implemented the Medicaid Care Management program • Implemented the NH Health Protection Program • Worked with LRGH to establish a new Designated Receiving Facility in Franklin • Systems – 9 months after go-live with a new MMIS, adapted system to address care management – Continued to update the New Heights and NH EASY systems to accommodate NH HPP – Implemented a new Child Support Enforcement information system • Received approval for rule on the Therapeutic Use of Cannabis program – Expect to make decisions on the Alternative Treatment Centers in early February • Created a State Health Improvement Plan that targets 10 key health areas • Continued partnership with the National Guard on serving the State’s citizen warriors • Creating a “no wrong door” for long-term care assessment • Centralized the medical and financial eligibility functions for long-term care • Achieve Prison Rape Elimination Act (PREA) standard at the Sununu Youth Services Center • Awarded 2 bonuses for excellent performance on the SNAP program • Led health, medical and shelter operations for multiple natural weather events 1/21/2015 DHHS Finance Committee Update 14 Setting the Context Challenges SFY 15 Update 1/21/2015 DHHS Finance Committee Update 15 External Factors Impact DHHS Increasing Client Complexity and Diversity Economic and Fiscal Delivery Systems Technology Demographics 1/21/2015 Cybersecurity DHHS Litigation Uninsured Federal government DHHS Finance Committee Update 16 Key Challenges • Continue full implementation of Medicaid Care Management program to achieve our goals • Increasingly complex populations that challenge where care can be best provided – Demographics and impacts on long-term care system financing • A mental health system that is strained and driving additional costs at all levels of government – Daily waiting list for admission into the New Hampshire Hospital • An epidemic of drug and opioid use is challenging every level of government and communities • Cybersecurity threatens all of State government and DHHS is no exception • Accelerating need for changes to key information systems – – Federal requirements Changes to State programs • Payment structures are not aligned with desired client and provider behaviors – Many provider networks are financially fragile and fragmented • Department’s workforce is aging and risk loss of significant program and operational knowledge DHHS has a number of strategic initiatives to respond to each of these challenges 1/21/2015 DHHS Finance Committee Update 17 Strategic Themes • Strategy – – – • Customer Service – – • – – Care management , service coordination through integrated service delivery systems Performance based contracting—focused on outcomes vs. services and payment system that is aligned with desired outcomes Strengthen and integrate provider networks Community based services when more effective and efficient than institutional services Enabling Management Infrastructure – – – 1/21/2015 Assure that what we are doing in service delivery and operations is measurable and effective Service Delivery – – • No wrong door, efficient and effective interactions with clients Centralize services with greater use of technology Quality Management – • Focus on first on population segment and then based on primary need Whole person and client centered over the life span High quality services that contribute to the improvement in the health of the population Strengthen data and information systems Integrity and efficiency in all operations Optimize State and Federal resources DHHS Finance Committee Update 18 SFY 16/17 Budget Overview Budget Summary Budget Drivers Strategies to Reduce Budget Request 1/21/2015 DHHS Finance Committee Update 19 Overview • DHHS currently working Governor’s phase • Summary of Maintenance request in $000’s Total Funds General Funds – SFY 14 $1,878 $534 – SFY 15 $2,118 $614 – SFY 16 $2,440 $746 – SFY 17 $2,511 $778 1/21/2015 DHHS Finance Committee Update 20 SFY 16/17 Budget Overview Agency Perspective General Funds Only Agency Description 42 45 47 48 49 90 91 92 93 94 95 FY 2014 FY 2015 Actual Adj Auth FY 2016 Maint 80,233 81,503 48,651 50,275 89,422 281,339 76,191 49,101 Change FY 2017 Total Human Services (SYSC, DCYF) Div Family Asst. & Div Client Services OMBP Elderly and Adult Services DCBCS (Military Support, Drug & Alch. Svs) Public Health Glencliff Behavioral Health Developmental Svs NH Hopital Commissioner Office 72,493 39,713 113,051 63,727 3,410 4,147 6,142 5,677 13,457 17,786 18,284 6,174 7,139 8,052 41,755 73,024 13,920 117,951 148,853 156,913 21,234 23,314 26,808 39,810 43,148 54,423 10,673 891 Totals 533,512 613,903 746,295 75,197 821,492 Maint 84,913 83,217 50,275 51,454 29,007 310,346 295,513 12,875 61,976 51,888 17,584 19 458 280 Change 3,436 SFY 16-17 Biennium Total Total Maint Change Total SFY 16-17 Biennium Maint Incr Change Inc 9,531 7,350 86,653 51,454 305,044 59,238 164,720 101,729 576,852 100,989 6,846 38,538 20,225 171,566 101,729 615,390 121,214 11,994 13,365 374,379 (38,929) 6,846 38,538 20,225 16,350 5,767 7,054 19,175 18,452 892 8,052 8,165 31,504 13,840 19,631 156,932 167,455 27,266 27,769 437 54,703 54,597 320 12,821 19,344 8,165 33,471 167,455 28,206 54,917 11,444 36,736 16,217 27,760 324,368 54,577 109,020 17,727 1,783 37,215 19 895 600 29,171 38,519 16,217 64,975 324,387 55,472 109,620 17,727 1,783 37,215 19 895 600 1,524,412 123,848 1,648,260 1,155 5,493 2,904 (87,019) 57,564 10,029 26,062 376,997 778,117 48,651 826,768 123,848 • DHHS budget comprised of 11 agencies • SFY 14 to SFY 15 increase of ~$80M in General Funds • Driven largely be increases in Developmental Disabilities, Mental Health and NH HPP start-up costs • Key issues for consideration • Maintenance of Effort • No change items are included yet, there are two that will need to be considered 1/21/2015 DHHS Finance Committee Update 21 Segmented by Population A whole person focus requires looking at the full range of activities for the segment Funds in 85 accounting units drive 98% of budget—this view shows what population served Supporting narratives provide details on who, what, how much, etc. Figures Rounded to $000 Total Funds SFY14 Genl Fund SFY14 MEDICAL SERVICES MENTAL HEALTH SERVICES HUMAN SERVICES LONG TERM SUPPORT SERVICES TOTALS $254,298 $8,646 $165,489 $13,902 $442,335 $43,447 $3,185 $72,321 $5,981 $124,934 MEDICAL SERVICES MENTAL HEALTH SERVICES HUMAN SERVICES LONG TERM SUPPORT SERVICES TOTALS $277,081 $68,667 $44,809 $227,143 $617,699 $52,805 $26,326 $25,765 $109,525 $214,421 MEDICAL SERVICES MENTAL HEALTH SERVICES HUMAN SERVICES LONG TERM SUPPORT SERVICES TOTALS $94,221 0 $28,807 $383,514 $506,542 $56,212 0 $16,393 $24,226 $96,831 PREVENTION SERVICES PROTECTION SERVICES MEDICAL SERVICES TOTAL $8,765 $15,027 $119,452 $143,244 $3,822 $6,520 $21,875 $32,217 TOTAL ADMINISTRATIVE $142,742 $59,722 $745,052 $77,313 $239,105 $624,558 $8,765 $15,027 $142,742 $1,852,562 98.6% $174,338 $29,511 $114,479 $139,732 $3,822 $6,520 $59,722 $528,124 99.0% MEDICAL SERVICES MENTAL HEALTH SERVICES HUMAN SERVICES LONG TERM SUPPORT SERVICES PREVENTION SERVICES PROTECTION SERVICES ADMINISTRATIVE COSTS TOTALS PERCENTAGE LISTED 1/21/2015 Total Funds SFY15 Genl Fund SFY15 CHILDREN $301,554 $48,149 $9,263 $3,497 $198,351 $83,704 $19,666 $8,854 $528,834 $144,203 ADULT $332,768 $58,376 $86,079 $36,256 $48,559 $27,231 $269,669 $135,662 $737,075 $257,525 SENIORS $117,961 $69,132 0 0 $33,491 $18,429 $394,183 $27,067 $545,635 $114,628 GENERAL POPULATION $12,563 $4,798 $27,384 $7,705 $79,687 $2,528 $119,634 $15,031 ADMINISTRATION $151,217 $75,378 $831,970 $95,342 $280,401 $683,518 $12,563 $27,384 $151,217 $2,082,395 98.3% $178,184 $39,753 $129,364 $171,583 $4,798 $7,705 $75,378 $606,765 98.8% Total SFY16 General SFY16 Total SFY17 General SFY17 Biennium to Biennium Increase in GF $376,834 $10,229 $193,463 $18,635 $599,161 $102,091 $4,021 $85,906 $9,377 $201,395 $391,666 $10,472 $196,246 $19,044 $617,427 $107,424 $4,165 $87,410 $9,607 $208,606 $117,919 $1,504 $17,291 $4,149 $140,864 $416,579 $93,244 $47,681 $289,394 $846,898 $127,772 $43,028 $27,316 $142,988 $341,104 $435,629 $98,731 $48,514 $309,775 $892,649 $134,613 $47,260 $27,870 $153,246 $362,988 $151,204 $27,706 $2,189 $51,047 $232,146 $84,791 0 $33,488 $415,356 $533,635 $54,807 0 $20,149 $28,815 $103,771 $88,629 0 $33,634 $428,953 $551,216 $57,281 0 $20,687 $30,887 $108,855 ($13,256) $0 $6,014 $8,409 $1,167 $12,084 $27,837 $214,772 $254,693 $4,579 $8,548 $2,663 $15,790 $12,055 $28,540 $219,671 $260,266 $4,602 $8,659 $2,726 $15,987 $562 $2,982 ($19,014) ($15,470) $191,525 TOTALS $88,776 $189,723 $89,718 $43,394 $1,092,975 $103,473 $274,632 $723,385 $12,084 $27,837 $191,525 $2,425,911 98.7% $287,333 $47,049 $133,371 $181,180 $4,579 $8,548 $88,776 $750,836 99.1% $1,135,595 $109,203 $278,394 $757,772 $12,055 $28,540 $189,723 $2,511,282 98.8% $302,043 $51,425 $135,967 $193,740 $4,602 $8,659 $89,718 $786,154 99.1% $236,853 $29,210 $25,495 $63,605 $562 $2,982 $43,394 $402,101 DHHS Finance Committee Update 22 Agency Request Increase SFY 14/15 to SFY 16/17 TOTAL Maintenance Request Medicaid 376,997 193,480 % of Increase 51% • LTSS Disabilities 46,162 3,322 2,630 52,114 12% 1% 1% 14% • 5,505 3,669 1% 1% • 16,692 4% 2,485 1,946 1% 1% MMIS (enhanced FFP) 3,500 1% Transfers to DoIT (direct & shared) 8,500 2% • • • • • • Public Health 3,339 1% Est Dept Wide Sal & Ben Items not accounted for 33,823 51,944 9% 14% Total Maintenance 376,997 DD medicaid waiver & wl ABD medicaid waiver & wl I HS medicaid waiver & wl Seniors Nursing Home /CFI Services Non Medicaid social svc Human Services NHH Glencliff OIS Areas of change _ Maintenance Only Caseload growth assumptions vary by population and program Significant growth in Medicaid driven by MAGI Rates increase requests vary by population and program NH HPP operations including eligibility staff Waiver services and DD waitlist requests Crisis beds as the NHH Essential system changes Increase in salary and benefits Greater details in House phase of budget Misc 1/21/2015 DHHS Finance Committee Update 23 Change Budget • Total Change Budget of $123.8M General funds over biennium • Significant items – Governor’s Commission Full Funding – Substance Use Disorder benefit for current Medicaid population – Elimination of Budget Neutrality Factor for Nursing Home services • Two items are non-discretionary – Community Mental Health Agreement Funding • $9.7M in SFY 16 • $13.3M in SFY 17 – Possible funding from the 1115 Transformation waiver could offset a portion of this request – DCYF Age of Majority (HB 525) • $1.75M in SFY 16 • $1.75M in SFY 17 1/21/2015 DHHS Finance Committee Update 24 Budget Considerations • Traditional budget development focused on – Rates---Utilization---Caseloads • What considerations or options impact budget request? – – Caseload growth assumptions Rate increases in both Fee for Service and Care Management • – – Rates for care management must be actuarially sound and approved by CMS Cost of living increases Utilization of service projections in both Fee for Service and in the Care Management program • Projecting change in trend for Step 2 services and populations – Medicaid Enhancement Tax and payments for Uncompensated Care – Maintenance of Effort on key Federal programs – Program requirements at both State and Federal level • – – – – – Includes information systems Disease burden or need of target populations Functions performed by the Department Level of County Cap—this did not change Pending Federal action on certain programs, CHIP Impact of the changes to how eligibility is calculated for certain populations • The Modified Adjusted Gross Income or MAGI impacts for children and parents – Cost shifting to local and county – State impacts of the NH HPP 1/21/2015 DHHS Finance Committee Update 25 Innovation Initiatives High Level Review Medicaid Care Management Mental Health System Improving the Health of the Population Organization Additional detailed Sessions Planned with Finance and Division III 1/21/2015 DHHS Finance Committee Update 26 Key Initiatives • Develop the SFY 16/17 budget • Fully implement a managed care model for Medicaid – – – Implementation of Premium Assistance Program Implementation of next phases of Substance Use Disorder benefit Implementation of Step 2 Care Management for the long-term supports and services focused on those with intellectual and developmental disabilities and the elderly • Strengthen the Mental Health System – – – – Continue to strengthen the mental health system infrastructure Implementation of the Community Mental Health Agreement 1115 Transformation Waiver Re-engineering the New Hampshire Hospital admissions area and creating 10 crisis beds • Redesign of the Organization – – Centralize Client Services Centralize long-term care eligibility-clinical and financial • Systems – – – – Certification of the Medicaid Management Information System Implementation of ICD-10 Continued improvements to New Heights system Increased focus on information security • Improving the health of the population – – 1/21/2015 Integration of the State Health Improvement Plan with Care Management and across all populations Awarded grant to plan for regional health cooperatives to assess and improve health at the local level DHHS Finance Committee Update 27 Additional Updates • The Department has 3 additional updates for the House Finance Committee and Division III to provide greater detail on several critical initiatives. – January 22: Medicaid and New Hampshire Health Protection Program – January 26: DSH/MET and the Community Mental Health Agreement – January 27: Overview of the yet to be delivered 1115 Transformation Waiver focused on Mental Health and Substance Use Disorders infrastructure and innovation 1/21/2015 DHHS Finance Committee Update 28 Care Management Timeline • DHHS used a phased approach to implement SB 147 where all populations and services be in a managed care model – Step 1: all Medicaid State Plan Services plus mental health and Rx services for certain populations • Implemented on December 1, 2013 – Step 2: implement in two phases • Phase 1: mandate most of Medicaid population into the program, expand services to include nursing facility and those within the Choices for Independence waiver – Targeted for July 1, 2015 – Requires CMS approval • Phase 2: integrates services provided for those with Intellectual and Developmental disabilities, those with Acquired Brain Disorders and In-Home Supports – Target date is not determined – Will require CMS approval – Step 3: was planned to be Medicaid Expansion but SB 413 ushered in the NH Health Protection Program • The Health Insurance Premium Program or HIPP went live on August 15, 2014 • The Bridge to Premium Assistance Program went live thru the MCOs on September 1, 2014 • The Premium Assistance Program is targeted to go-live on January 1, 2016 – The Fiscal Committee approved the 1115 Waiver and it has been submitted to CMS – CMS must approve the waiver before March 31, 2015 » Should CMS not approve the waiver by this time, the Bridge program ends on June 30, 2015 1/21/2015 DHHS Finance Committee Update 29 NH Medicaid Care Management Enrollment, 12/1/13 – 1/1/15 160,000 133,716 140,000 120,000 104,284 Members 100,000 108,206 111,151 114,366 116,143 119,152 119,790 120,966 121,444 137,030 140,225 145,763 126,938 MAGI Impact NHHPP 80,000 Total MCM 60,000 Non-MCM 40,000 26,147 25,186 22,772 18,775 17,708 17,450 16,306 15,824 16,125 3/1/14 4/1/14 5/1/14 6/1/14 7/1/14 8/1/14 20,000 21,418 22,090 21,127 22,067 9/1/14 10/1/14 11/1/14 12/1/14 1/1/15 21,102 0 12/1/13 1/21/2015 1/1/14 2/1/14 DHHS Finance Committee Update Note: Non-MCM Includes retroactive enrollment and excludes members who only have Medicare savings plans (e.g., QMB) 30 NH Medicaid Care Management by Eligibility Group, 1/1/15 Low-Income Children (Age 0-18) 47,936 50,000 40,000 Children With Severe Disabilities (Age 0-18) Foster Care & Adoption Subsidy (Age 0-25) 39,612 Low-Income Adults & BCCP (Age 19-64) NHHPP (Age 19-64) Adults With Disabilities (Age 19-64) 30,000 5,226 4,128 7,025 1,128 486 1,000 3,074 1,535 7,583 12,568 8,200 825 305 1,694 767 10,000 6,778 6,494 20,000 11,150 Elderly & Elderly With Disabilities (Age 65+) 316 Percent of Total Eligibility Group Population 60,000 0 NH Healthy Families 1/21/2015 Well Sense DHHS Finance Committee Update Non-MCM 31 Improving the Mental Health System • Several elements – 10-Year Olmstead Plan – Community Mental Health Agreement – Leverage the NH Health Protection Program mental health and substance use disorder service funding – 1115 Transformation Waiver – Re-engineering of the admissions unit at NHH – Medicaid Care Management drives integrated behavioral health and primary care • Innovative payment structure between the MCO and the Community Mental Health Centers 1/21/2015 DHHS Finance Committee Update 32 Improving the Health of the Population • NH today is a healthy State but with high health care costs • Under the leadership of the Division of Public Health Services a State Health Improvement Plan developed • Recently, the State has been awarded a second State Innovation Model planning grant – Action is required by Fiscal 1/21/2015 DHHS Finance Committee Update 33 State Health Improvement Plan: Charting a Course to Improve the Health of New Hampshire 10 Key Health Areas SHIP Aims: • • “Highlight 10 key health areas and their health outcome indicators that describe the most significant health issues currently facing our population.” “To assist state and community leaders in focusing their work to improve the public’s health and to promote coordination and collaboration among public health partners.” Tobacco Reduce adult cigarette smoking, the initiation of tobacco use in children, tobacco use by adolescents, smoking during pregnancy, and exposure to indoor tobacco use Obesity/Diabetes Reduce adult and childhood obesity; decrease emergency department visits and hospitalizations for diabetes Heart Disease and Stroke Reduce high blood pressure and cholesterol in adults, and death from coronary heart disease and/or stroke Healthy Mothers and Babies Reduce preterm births, unintended teen births, and children dental caries; increase screening for Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) and other developmental delays Cancer Prevention Increase colorectal cancer screening and mammogram screening for breast cancer; reduce melanoma and lung cancer deaths Asthma Increase asthma control in adults and children Injury Prevention Reduce unintentional poisoning deaths, falls-related deaths in older adults, motor vehicle crash injuries in teens, suicide deaths for all persons, and suicide attempts by adolescents Infectious Disease Increase childhood vaccinations, timeliness of foodborne illness investigations, and seasonal influenza vaccinations; reduce health care associated infections, and enhance food safety Emergency Preparedness Misuse of Alcohol and Drugs 1/21/2015 Health Outcome Indicators Increase community engagement in public health emergency activities and the State’s ability to dispense emergency countermeasures to the public; strengthen the capacity to respond to public health emergencies in a timely manner and the capacity to maintain situational awareness of health threats Reduce binge drinking, marijuana use in youth, the non-medical use of pain relievers, and drug-related overdose deaths DHHS Finance Committee Update Operating Model for the Future • Improve the health of the population – Focus on prevention and wellness – Whole person • Separate strategy and delivery to break silos and set stage for payment reform • Quality and outcome measurement at a Department level – Build on the significant commitment to Quality in MCM • Centralize and streamline client services from front door inquiry to determination of eligibility • Realign and focus the enabling functions • DHHS has outlined the overall architecture for the organization around these major elements and will do further design and implementation in several stages – First area of focus has been some consolidations—see Efficiency section – Next area of focus are the Medicaid related operations 1/21/2015 DHHS Finance Committee Update 35 Other Updates Litigation Efficiencies 1/21/2015 DHHS Finance Committee Update 36 Litigation • There are a number of active cases. • Four of the most significant are: – Amanda D, et. al. Hassan, et. al; United States v New Hampshire – Residential Child Care Rate Appeal (Chase Home) 2007-2010 – Wallace et. al. v. State of New Hampshire – Harbor Homes, Inc. v. Nicholas Toumpas • Other litigation concerning various personnel matters 1/21/2015 DHHS Finance Committee Update 37 Innovation and Efficiency • LEAN has become part of DHHS culture • Redesign of the organization • Centralization of several critical functions – Client Services – Long-term care eligibility – Contracting unit – Assessment is in progress to align or consolidate like functions across all areas 1/21/2015 DHHS Finance Committee Update 38 Summary and Next Steps • DHHS is a vital organization to the people of the State of New Hampshire • Our staff and those of our partners are diligent and committed • Resource limitations are the reality and we are embracing innovation and change to fulfill our mission • We will be before the Fiscal Committee on Friday to outline SFY 15 spending adjustments • Further sessions with House Finance and Division III are scheduled to do more in-depth reviews of key issues 1/21/2015 DHHS Finance Committee Update 39 Thank You [email protected] (O) 603-271-9446, (C) 603-545-4995 1/21/2015 DHHS Finance Committee Update 40