Washington State

House of Representatives

Office of Program Research

BILL

ANALYSIS

Ways & Means Committee

HB 3202

This analysis was prepared by non-partisan legislative staff for the use of legislative members in their deliberations. This analysis is not a part of the legislation nor does it constitute a statement of legislative intent.

Brief Description: Concerning the nursing facility medicaid payment system.

Sponsors: Representative Cody.

Brief Summary of Bill

  • Makes a number of changes to nursing home rates.

  • Postpones rebasing of nursing home rates for one year and the cycle for rebasing moves to every even-numbered year.

  • Raises minimum occupancy in operations, property, and finance components to 92 percent for non-essential community providers, holding facilities with 60 beds or less at 90 percent minimum occupancy and essential community providers at 85 percent minimum occupancy.

  • Eliminates the variable return rate component.

  • Eliminates bed banking.

  • Changes the case mix adjustment cycle to once every 6 months from once every quarter.

  • Reduces the rate on return in the finance component from 8.5 percent to 7.5 percent for tangible assets purchased on or after May 17, 1999.

  • Freezes the 2 percent allowance for capital growth.

  • Requires the Department of Social and Health Services to establish a pay-for-performance subsidy system and to the extent funds are made available, establishes a payment subsidy that will reward facilities with low turnover in direct care staff.

Hearing Date: 3/8/10

Staff: Carma Matti-Jackson (786-7140).

Background:

The Washington State Medicaid (Medicaid) program includes long-term care assistance and services provided to low-income individuals. Clients may be served in their own homes, in community residential settings, and in skilled nursing facilities.

There are just over 250 skilled nursing facilities licensed in Washington State that provide 24-hour long-term care services for approximately 10,900 Medicaid-eligible clients. The Medicaid nursing home payment system is administered by the Department of Social and Health Services (DSHS). The Medicaid rates in Washington are unique to each facility and are generally based on the facility’s costs, occupancy rate, and client acuity (sometimes called the "case mix"). In the biennial appropriations act, the Legislature sets a statewide weighted average Medicaid payment rate, sometimes referred to as the "budget dial." If the actual statewide nursing facility payments exceed the budget dial, the DSHS is required to proportionally adjust downward all nursing facility payment rates to meet the budget dial.

The payment system consists of seven different rate components: Direct care, therapy care, support services, operations, property, financing allowance, and variable return.

All rate components except for direct care are subject to minimum occupancy adjustments. Aside from specific cases where a “hold harmless” applies, if a facility does not meet the minimum occupancy requirements, the rates are adjusted downward. Currently, the minimum occupancy requirements in the operations, property, and finance components are 90 percent for all facilities except Essential Community Providers (ECP). The minimum occupancy for ECPs is 85 percent. Under current statute, facilities can reduce the effects of minimum occupancy through bed banking (temporarily reducing the number of patient beds for which they are licensed). Beds can be banked for up to eight years before the facility has to decide whether to renew the Medicaid licensing on them, sell them, or relinquish them.

Regular cost reports are required by the nursing homes. Review is also required. Costs and payments are part of the review. Rates are regularly rebased through this process. The property and finance rate components are rebased annually. All other rate components except for variable return are rebased every odd-numbered year. Variable return rates are currently frozen at the June 30, 2006, level.

Summary of Bill:

The minimum occupancy in the operations, finance, and property components for non-essential community providers is raised from 90 percent to 92 percent. Facilities with 60 beds or less remain at 90 percent minimum occupancy. Essential community providers would remain at 85 percent minimum occupancy. Bed banking is eliminated.

The case mix adjustment cycle is changed to every 6 months instead of every quarter. Rebasing is postponed for one year and the cycle for rebasing moves to every even-numbered year. The rebase schedule is thus 2007, 2009, 2012, 2014, 2016, and so on.

The finance component's rate on return for tangible assets purchased on or after May 17, 1999, is reduced from 8.5 percent to 7.5 percent. There are no changes to the rate on return for assets purchased before May 17, 1999. Capital growth is frozen and new capital projects are put on hold.

The variable return component is eliminated.

The DSHS is required to establish a pay for performance supplemental payment structure that provides payment add-ons for high performing facilities. To the extent that funds are appropriated for the purpose, the pay-for-performance structure will include a one percent reduction to facilities that have direct care staff turnover above 75 percent and a payment add-on to facilities that maintain direct care staff turnover below 75 percent.

Appropriation: None.

Fiscal Note: Requested on March 1, 2010.

Effective Date: The bill takes effect 90 days after adjournment of the session in which the bill is passed.