WSR 11-17-071

PROPOSED RULES

DEPARTMENT OF

SOCIAL AND HEALTH SERVICES
(Aging and Adult Services Administration)

[ Filed August 16, 2011, 12:44 p.m. ]

     Original Notice.

     Preproposal statement of inquiry was filed as WSR 11-05-031.

     Title of Rule and Other Identifying Information: Chapter 388-106 WAC, Long-term care services (chronic care management).

     Hearing Location(s): Office Building 2, Auditorium, DSHS Headquarters, 1115 Washington, Olympia, WA 98504 (public parking at 11th and Jefferson. A map is available at http://www1.dshs.wa.gov/msa/rpau/RPAU-OB-2directions.html

or by calling (360) 664-6094), on October 11, 2011, at 10:00 a.m.

     Date of Intended Adoption: Not earlier than October 12, 2011.

     Submit Written Comments to: DSHS Rules Coordinator, P.O. Box 45850, Olympia, WA 98504-5850, delivery 1115 Washington Street S.E., Olympia, WA 98504, e-mail DSHSRPAURulesCoordinator@dshs.wa.gov, fax (360) 664-6185, by 5 p.m. on October 11, 2011.

     Assistance for Persons with Disabilities: Contact Jennisha Johnson, DSHS rules consultant, by September 27, 2011, TTY (360) 664-6178 or (360) 664-6094 or by e-mail at jennisha.johnson@dshs.wa.gov.

     Purpose of the Proposal and Its Anticipated Effects, Including Any Changes in Existing Rules: The department is adopting new rules in chapter 388-106 WAC regarding addition of a new service to the state plan. This new service is called chronic care management (CCM). CCM provides chronic care management to high-cost and high-risk medicaid only clients who meet eligibility criteria and voluntarily agree to participate.

     Reasons Supporting Proposal: See above.

     Statutory Authority for Adoption: RCW 74.08.090, 74.09.520.

     Statute Being Implemented: RCW 74.08.090, 74.09.520.

     Rule is not necessitated by federal law, federal or state court decision.

     Name of Proponent: Department of social and health services, governmental.

     Name of Agency Personnel Responsible for Drafting, Implementation and Enforcement: Cathy Sweeney, P.O. Box 45600, Olympia, WA 98504-5600, (360) 725-2607.

     No small business economic impact statement has been prepared under chapter 19.85 RCW. The preparation of a small business economic impact statement is not required, as no new costs will be imposed on small businesses or nonprofits as a result of this rule amendment.

     A cost-benefit analysis is not required under RCW 34.05.328. Rules are exempt per RCW 34.05.328 (5)(b)(v), rules the content of which is explicitly and specifically dictated by statute.

August 11, 2011

Katherine I. Vasquez

Rules Coordinator

4318.3
AMENDATORY SECTION(Amending WSR 10-08-074, filed 4/6/10, effective 5/7/10)

WAC 388-106-0010   What definitions apply to this chapter?   "Ability to make self understood" means how you make yourself understood to those closest to you; express or communicate requests, needs, opinions, urgent problems and social conversations, whether in speech, writing, sign language, symbols, or a combination of these including use of a communication board or keyboard:

     (a) Understood: You express ideas clearly;

     (b) Usually understood: You have difficulty finding the right words or finishing thoughts, resulting in delayed responses, or you require some prompting to make self understood;

     (c) Sometimes understood: You have limited ability, but are able to express concrete requests regarding at least basic needs (e.g. food, drink, sleep, toilet);

     (d) Rarely/never understood. At best, understanding is limited to caregiver's interpretation of client specific sounds or body language (e.g. indicated presence of pain or need to toilet.)

     "Activities of daily living (ADL)" means the following:

     (a) Bathing: How you take a full-body bath/shower, sponge bath, and transfer in/out of tub/shower.

     (b) Bed mobility: How you move to and from a lying position, turn side to side, and position your body while in bed, in a recliner, or other type of furniture.

     (c) Body care: How you perform with passive range of motion, applications of dressings and ointments or lotions to the body and pedicure to trim toenails and apply lotion to feet. In adult family homes, contracted assisted living, enhanced adult residential care, and enhanced adult residential care-specialized dementia care facilities, dressing changes using clean technique and topical ointments must be performed by a licensed nurse or through nurse delegation in accordance with chapter 246-840 WAC. Body care excludes:

     (i) Foot care if you are diabetic or have poor circulation; or

     (ii) Changing bandages or dressings when sterile procedures are required.

     (d) Dressing: How you put on, fasten, and take off all items of clothing, including donning/removing prosthesis.

     (e) Eating: How you eat and drink, regardless of skill. Eating includes any method of receiving nutrition, e.g., by mouth, tube or through a vein.

     (f) Locomotion in room and immediate living environment: How you move between locations in your room and immediate living environment. If you are in a wheelchair, locomotion includes how self-sufficient you are once in your wheelchair.

     (g) Locomotion outside of immediate living environment including outdoors: How you move to and return from more distant areas. If you are living in a boarding home or nursing facility (NF), this includes areas set aside for dining, activities, etc. If you are living in your own home or in an adult family home, locomotion outside immediate living environment including outdoors, includes how you move to and return from a patio or porch, backyard, to the mailbox, to see the next-door neighbor, etc.

     (h) Walk in room, hallway and rest of immediate living environment: How you walk between locations in your room and immediate living environment.

     (i) Medication management: Describes the amount of assistance, if any, required to receive medications, over the counter preparations or herbal supplements.

     (j) Toilet use: How you use the toilet room, commode, bedpan, or urinal, transfer on/off toilet, cleanse, change pad, manage ostomy or catheter, and adjust clothes.

     (k) Transfer: How you move between surfaces, i.e., to/from bed, chair, wheelchair, standing position. Transfer does not include how you move to/from the bath, toilet, or vehicle.

     (l) Personal hygiene: How you maintain personal hygiene, including combing hair, brushing teeth, shaving, applying makeup, washing/drying face, hands (including nail care), and perineum (menses care). Personal hygiene does not include hygiene in baths and showers.

     "Aged person" means a person sixty-five years of age or older.

     "Agency provider" means a licensed home care agency or a licensed home health agency having a contract to provide long-term care personal care services to you in your own home.

     "Application" means a written request for medical assistance or long-term care services submitted to the department by the applicant, the applicant's authorized representative, or, if the applicant is incompetent or incapacitated, someone acting responsibly for the applicant. The applicant must submit the request on a form prescribed by the department.

     "Assessment details" means a summary of information that the department entered into the CARE assessment describing your needs.

     "Assessment or reassessment" means an inventory and evaluation of abilities and needs based on an in-person interview in your own home or your place of residence, using CARE.

     "Assistance available" means the amount of informal support available if the need is partially met. The department determines the amount of the assistance available using one of four categories:

     (a) Less than one-fourth of the time;

     (b) One-fourth to one-half of the time;

     (c) Over one-half of the time to three-fourths of the time; or

     (d) Over three-fourths but not all of the time.

     "Assistance with body care" means you need assistance with:

     (a) Application of ointment or lotions;

     (b) Trimming of toenails;

     (c) Dry bandage changes; or

     (d) Passive range of motion treatment.

     "Assistance with medication management" means you need assistance managing your medications. You are scored as:

     (a) Independent if you remember to take medications as prescribed and manage your medications without assistance.

     (b) Assistance required if you need assistance from a nonlicensed provider to facilitate your self-administration of a prescribed, over the counter, or herbal medication, as defined in chapter 246-888 WAC. Assistance required includes reminding or coaching you, handing you the medication container, opening the container, using an enabler to assist you in getting the medication into your mouth, alteration of a medication for self-administration, and placing the medication in your hand. This does not include assistance with intravenous or injectable medications. You must be aware that you are taking medications.

     (c) Self-directed medication assistance/administration if you are a person with a functional disability who is capable of and who chooses to self-direct your medication assistance/administration.

     (d) Must be administered if you must have medications placed in your mouth or applied or instilled to your skin or mucus membrane. Administration must either be performed by a licensed professional or delegated by a registered nurse to a qualified caregiver (per chapter 246-840 WAC). Intravenous or injectable medications may never be delegated. Administration may also be performed by a family member or unpaid caregiver if facility licensing regulations allow.

     "Authorization" means an official approval of a departmental action, for example, a determination of client eligibility for service or payment for a client's long-term care services.

     "Blind person" means a person determined blind as described under WAC 388-511-1105 by the division of disability determination services of the medical assistance administration.

     "Categorically needy" means the status of a person who is eligible for medical care under Title XIX of the Social Security Act. See WAC 388-475-0100 and chapter 388-513 WAC.

     "Chronic care management" means programs that provide care management and coordination activities for medical assistance clients receiving long-term care services and supports determined to be at risk for high medical costs.

     "Health action plan" means an individual plan which identifies health-related problems, interventions and goals.

     "Client" means an applicant for service or a person currently receiving services from the department.

     "Current" means a behavior occurred within seven days of the CARE assessment date, including the day of the assessment. Behaviors that the department designates as current must include information about:

     (a) Whether the behavior is easily altered or not easily altered; and

     (b) The frequency of the behavior.

     "Decision making" means your ability and actual performance in making everyday decisions about tasks or activities of daily living. The department determines whether you are:

     (a) Independent: Decisions about your daily routine are consistent and organized; reflecting your lifestyle, choices, culture, and values.

     (b) Modified independence/difficulty in new situations: You have an organized daily routine, are able to make decisions in familiar situations, but experience some difficulty in decision making when faced with new tasks or situations.

     (c) Moderately impaired/poor decisions; unaware of consequences: Your decisions are poor and you require reminders, cues and supervision in planning, organizing and correcting daily routines. You attempt to make decisions, although poorly.

     (d) Severely impaired/no or few decisions: Decision making is severely impaired; you never/rarely make decisions.

     "Department" means the state department of social and health services, aging and disability services administration or its designee.

     "Designee" means area agency on aging.

     "Difficulty" means how difficult it is or would be for you to perform an instrumental activity of daily living (IADL). This is assessed as:

     (a) No difficulty in performing the activity;

     (b) Some difficulty in performing the activity (e.g., you need some help, are very slow, or fatigue easily); or

     (c) Great difficulty in performing the activity (e.g., little or no involvement in the activity is possible).

     "Disabling condition" means you have a medical condition which prevents you from self performance of personal care tasks without assistance.

     "Estate recovery" means the department's process of recouping the cost of medicaid and long-term care benefit payments from the estate of the deceased client. See chapter 388-527 WAC.

     "Home health agency" means a licensed:

     (a) Agency or organization certified under medicare to provide comprehensive health care on a part-time or intermittent basis to a patient in the patient's place of residence and reimbursed through the use of the client's medical identification card; or

     (b) Home health agency, certified or not certified under medicare, contracted and authorized to provide:

     (i) Private duty nursing; or

     (ii) Skilled nursing services under an approved medicaid waiver program.

     "Income" means income as defined under WAC 388-500-0005.

     "Individual provider" means a person employed by you to provide personal care services in your own home. See WAC 388-71-0500 through 388-71-05909.

     "Disability" is described under WAC 388-511-1105.

     "Informal support" means a person or resource that is available to provide assistance without home and community program funding. The person or resource providing the informal support must be age 18 or older.

     "Institution" means medical facilities, nursing facilities, and institutions for the mentally retarded. It does not include correctional institutions. See medical institutions in WAC 388-500-0005.

     "Instrumental activities of daily living (IADL)" means routine activities performed around the home or in the community and includes the following:

     (a) Meal preparation: How meals are prepared (e.g., planning meals, cooking, assembling ingredients, setting out food, utensils, and cleaning up after meals). NOTE: The department will not authorize this IADL to plan meals or clean up after meals. You must need assistance with actual meal preparation.

     (b) Ordinary housework: How ordinary work around the house is performed (e.g., doing dishes, dusting, making bed, tidying up, laundry).

     (c) Essential shopping: How shopping is completed to meet your health and nutritional needs (e.g., selecting items). Shopping is limited to brief, occasional trips in the local area to shop for food, medical necessities and household items required specifically for your health, maintenance or well-being. This includes shopping with or for you.

     (d) Wood supply: How wood is supplied (e.g., splitting, stacking, or carrying wood) when you use wood as the sole source of fuel for heating and/or cooking.

     (e) Travel to medical services: How you travel by vehicle to a physician's office or clinic in the local area to obtain medical diagnosis or treatment-includes driving vehicle yourself, traveling as a passenger in a car, bus, or taxi.

     (f) Managing finances: How bills are paid, checkbook is balanced, household expenses are managed. The department cannot pay for any assistance with managing finances.

     (g) Telephone use: How telephone calls are made or received (with assistive devices such as large numbers on telephone, amplification as needed).

     "Long-term care services" means the services administered directly or through contract by the aging and disability services administration and identified in WAC 388-106-0015.

     "Medicaid" is defined under WAC 388-500-0005.

     "Medically necessary" is defined under WAC 388-500-0005.

     "Medically needy (MN)" means the status of a person who is eligible for a federally matched medical program under Title XIX of the Social Security Act, who, but for income above the categorically needy level, would be eligible as categorically needy. Effective January 1, 1996, an AFDC-related adult is not eligible for MN.

     "New Freedom consumer directed services (NFCDS)" means a mix of services and supports to meet needs identified in your assessment and identified in a New Freedom spending plan, within the limits of the individual budget, that provide you with flexibility to plan, select, and direct the purchase of goods and services to meet identified needs. Participants have a meaningful leadership role in:

     (a) The design, delivery and evaluation of services and supports;

     (b) Exercising control of decisions and resources, making their own decisions about health and well being;

     (c) Determining how to meet their own needs;

     (d) Determining how and by whom these needs should be met; and

     (e) Monitoring the quality of services received.

     "New Freedom consumer directed services (NFCDS) participant" means a participant who is an applicant for or currently receiving services under the NFCDS waiver.

     "New Freedom spending plan (NFSP)" means the plan developed by you, as a New Freedom participant, within the limits of an individual budget, that details your choices to purchase specific NFCDS and provides required federal medicaid documentation.

     "Own home" means your present or intended place of residence:

     (a) In a building that you rent and the rental is not contingent upon the purchase of personal care services as defined in this section;

     (b) In a building that you own;

     (c) In a relative's established residence; or

     (d) In the home of another where rent is not charged and residence is not contingent upon the purchase of personal care services as defined in this section.

     "Past" means the behavior occurred from eight days to five years of the assessment date. For behaviors indicated as past, the department determines whether the behavior is addressed with current interventions or whether no interventions are in place.

     "Personal aide" is defined in RCW 74.39.007.

     "Personal care services" means physical or verbal assistance with activities of daily living (ADL) and instrumental activities of daily living (IADL) due to your functional limitations. Assistance is evaluated with the use of assistive devices.

     "Physician" is defined under WAC 388-500-0005.

     "Plan of care" means assessment details and service summary generated by CARE.

     "Provider or provider of service" means an institution, agency, or person:

     (a) Having a signed department contract to provide long-term care client services; and

     (b) Qualified and eligible to receive department payment.

     "Reasonable cost" means a cost for a service or item that is consistent with the market standards for comparable services or items.

     "Representative" means a person who you have chosen, or has been appointed by a court, whose primary duty is to act on your behalf to direct your service budget to meet your identified health, safety, and welfare needs.

     "Residential facility" means a licensed adult family home under department contract or licensed boarding home under department contract to provide assisted living, adult residential care or enhanced adult residential care.

     "Self performance for ADLs" means what you actually did in the last seven days before the assessment, not what you might be capable of doing. Coding is based on the level of performance that occurred three or more times in the seven-day period and does not include support provided as defined in WAC 388-106-0010. Your self performance level is scored as:

     (a) Independent if you received no help or oversight, or if you needed help or oversight only once or twice;

     (b) Supervision if you received oversight (monitoring or standby), encouragement, or cueing three or more times;

     (c) Limited assistance if you were highly involved in the activity and given physical help in guided maneuvering of limbs or other nonweight bearing assistance on three or more occasions. For bathing, limited assistance means physical help is limited to transfer only;

     (d) Extensive assistance if you performed part of the activity, but on three or more occasions, you needed weight bearing support or you received full performance of the activity during part, but not all, of the activity. For bathing, extensive assistance means you needed physical help with part of the activity (other than transfer);

     (e) Total dependence if you received full caregiver performance of the activity and all subtasks during the entire seven-day period from others. Total dependence means complete nonparticipation by you in all aspects of the ADL; or

     (f) Activity did not occur if you or others did not perform an ADL over the last seven days before your assessment. The activity may not have occurred because:

     (i) You were not able (e.g., walking, if paralyzed);

     (ii) No provider was available to assist; or

     (iii) You declined assistance with the task.

     "Self performance for IADLs" means what you actually did in the last thirty days before the assessment, not what you might be capable of doing. Coding is based on the level of performance that occurred three or more times in the thirty-day period. Your self performance is scored as:

     (a) Independent if you received no help, set-up help, or supervision;

     (b) Set-up help/arrangements only if on some occasions you did your own set-up/arrangement and at other times you received help from another person;

     (c) Limited assistance if on some occasions you did not need any assistance but at other times in the last thirty days you required some assistance;

     (d) Extensive assistance if you were involved in performing the activity, but required cueing/supervision or partial assistance at all times;

     (e) Total dependence if you needed the activity fully performed by others; or

     (f) Activity did not occur if you or others did not perform the activity in the last thirty days before the assessment.

     "Service summary" is CARE information which includes: Contacts (e.g. emergency contact), services the client is eligible for, number of hours or residential rates, personal care needs, the list of formal and informal providers and what tasks they will provide, a provider schedule, referral needs/information, and dates and agreement to the services.

     "SSI-related" is defined under WAC 388-475-0050.

     "Status" means the amount of informal support available. The department determines whether the ADL or IADL is:

     (a) Met, which means the ADL or IADL will be fully provided by an informal support;

     (b) Unmet, which means an informal support will not be available to provide assistance with the identified ADL or IADL;

     (c) Partially met, which means an informal support will be available to provide some assistance, but not all, with the identified ADL or IADL; or

     (d) Client declines, which means you do not want assistance with the task.

     "Supplemental Security Income (SSI)" means the federal program as described under WAC 388-500-0005.

     "Support provided" means the highest level of support provided (to you) by others in the last seven days before the assessment, even if that level of support occurred only once.

     (a) No set-up or physical help provided by others;

     (b) Set-up help only provided, which is the type of help characterized by providing you with articles, devices, or preparation necessary for greater self performance of the activity. (For example, set-up help includes but is not limited to giving or holding out an item or cutting food);

     (c) One-person physical assist provided;

     (d) Two- or more person physical assist provided; or

     (e) Activity did not occur during entire seven-day period.

     "You/your" means the client.

[Statutory Authority: RCW 74.08.090 and 74.09.520. 10-08-074, § 388-106-0010, filed 4/6/10, effective 5/7/10. Statutory Authority: RCW 74.08.090, 74.09.520, 74.39A.030. 06-16-035, § 388-106-0010, filed 7/25/06, effective 8/25/06. Statutory Authority: RCW 74.08.090, 74.09.520, 74.39A.010 and 74.39A.020. 06-05-022, § 388-106-0010, filed 2/6/06, effective 3/9/06. Statutory Authority: RCW 74.08.090, 74.09.520. 05-11-082, § 388-106-0010, filed 5/17/05, effective 6/17/05.]


NEW SECTION
WAC 388-106-1500   What is the department's chronic care management program?   (1) The department of social and health services, aging and disability services administration's chronic care management program is designed to improve health outcomes, reduce medical costs, improve functional and self-care abilities and slow progression of disease or disability. The program:

     (a) Offers care management and coordination activities for medical assistance-eligible clients who are also receiving medicaid long-term care services identified to be at risk for high medical costs;

     (b) Provides education, training and coordination of services for program participants through providers contracted with the department to assist in achieving health action plans;

     (c) Assists program participants in improving self-management skills and improving health outcomes; and

     (d) The program provides education to better utilize health care services.

     (2) The department's chronic care management program does not:

     (a) Change the scope of services available to clients eligible under a Title XIX medicaid program;

     (b) Interfere with the relationship between a client and a client's chosen providers;

     (c) Duplicate or take the place of existing case management activities available to a client in the client's community; or

     (d) Substitute for established activities, including case management, that are otherwise available to a client through programs administered by the department or other government agencies.

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NEW SECTION
WAC 388-106-1505   What services may I receive under the chronic care management program?   You may be eligible to receive the following services under the chronic care management program:

     (1) Registered nurse care manager assistance with coordination of health care, support services, education, training and transitional care services.

     (2) Registered nurse care manager assessment of your risk factors, health status, self-management skills and treatment plan.

     (3) Registered nurse care manager development of a health action plan to identify your health-related problems, interventions and goals.

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NEW SECTION
WAC 388-106-1510   Who provides chronic care management services to medical assistance clients receiving long-term care services and supports?   Chronic care management program services may be provided by department contracted organizations. Each contracted organization must meet the conditions of the contract between the department and the contractors, including:

     (1) Meet all applicable state and federal requirements;

     (2) Provide services according to the contract with the department;

     (3) Document all chronic care management services as required by the contract with the department; and

     (4) Submit timely and accurate invoices for payment.

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NEW SECTION
WAC 388-106-1515   Am I eligible to enroll in the chronic care management program?   (1) You are eligible for chronic care management services if you are:

     (a) Age twenty-one or older;

     (b) Identified through predictive modeling as being at risk for having future high medical costs as a result of requiring medical treatment for multiple conditions;

     (c) Agree to enroll in the chronic care management program;

     (d) Are a recipient of the supplemental security income (SSI) program or general assistance with expedited medical categorically needy (GAX) program;

     (e) Have a current CARE assessment as defined in WAC 388-106-0050;

     (f) Assessed by CARE as meeting one or more of the following characteristics:

     (i) Live alone in your own home;

     (ii) Experience isolated moods and behaviors;

     (iii) Rate your health as fair or poor;

     (iv) Have deteriorating self-sufficiency; or

     (v) Have more than 8 prescribed medications; and

     (g) Receive home and community support services in your home; or

     (h) Receive home and community support services in a licensed residential facility.

     (2) As a long-term care services client, you are not eligible for enrollment in the chronic care management program if you do not meet the criteria described above, or if you are:

     (a) Eligible for enrollment in the department's healthy options managed care program;

     (b) Receiving hospice services;

     (c) Receiving case management services for HIV/AIDS;

     (d) Receiving education, training and coordination services for another program due to pregnancy;

     (e) Eligible for third party coverage that provides a comparable service;

     (f) Eligible for medicare coverage;

     (g) Enrolled in another managed care program or other chronic care management program; or

     (h) Residing in an institution as defined in WAC 388-500-0005, for more than thirty days.

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NEW SECTION
WAC 388-106-1520   How do I enroll in the chronic care management program?   Enrollment in the chronic care management program is voluntary. You must meet the eligibility criteria listed in WAC 388-106-1515. You may be referred by:

     (1) The department's referral and enrollment process;

     (2) The department's case managers;

     (3) Providers in other settings; or

     (4) You may also request to enroll by contacting your long-term care case manager.

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NEW SECTION
WAC 388-106-1525   How long can I participate in the chronic care management program?   (1) There is no required minimum or maximum duration of enrollment in the chronic care management program.

     (2) The chronic care management program is a voluntary service and you may choose to disenroll at any time for any reason.

     (3) Your registered nurse care manager shall disenroll you when:

     (a) You are not actively participating in the chronic care management program; or

     (b) You have met your goals and are sustaining self-management activities.

     (4) You are required to be disenrolled when:

     (a) You become medicare eligible;

     (b) You enroll in hospice, PACE, Washington medicaid integration project, or a managed care program;

     (c) You reside in an institution as defined in WAC 388-106-0010, for more than thirty days; or

     (d) You become pregnant.

     (5) At the time of disenrollment, you will continue to receive services for which you are eligible.

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NEW SECTION
WAC 388-106-1530   Is there a cost to me for participating in the chronic care management program?   There is no cost to participants enrolled in the chronic care management program.

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NEW SECTION
WAC 388-106-1535   Do I have a right to a fair hearing while receiving chronic care management services?   Yes. If you do not agree with a decision regarding eligibility, enrollment or disenrollment for chronic care management program services, you have a right to a fair hearing based on the rules outlined in WAC 388-106-1305.

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