QM))quality measure points, and twenty ((QM))quality measure points, identified in the most recent available five-star quality rating system technical user's guide published by the center for medicare and medicaid services.(d) Facilities meeting or exceeding the highest performance threshold (top level) for a quality measure receive twenty-five points. Facilities meeting the second highest performance threshold receive twenty points. Facilities meeting the third level of performance threshold receive fifteen points. Facilities in the bottom performance threshold level receive no points. Points from all quality measures must then be summed into a single aggregate quality score for each facility.
(e) Facilities receiving an aggregate quality score of eighty percent of the overall available total score or higher must be placed in the highest tier (tier V), facilities receiving an aggregate score of between seventy and seventy-nine percent of the overall available total score must be placed in the second highest tier (tier IV), facilities receiving an aggregate score of between sixty and sixty-nine percent of the overall available total score must be placed in the third highest tier (tier III), facilities receiving an aggregate score of between fifty and fifty-nine percent of the overall available total score must be placed in the fourth highest tier (tier II), and facilities receiving less than fifty percent of the overall available total score must be placed in the lowest tier (tier I).
(f) The tier system must be used to determine the amount of each facility's per patient day quality incentive component. The per patient day quality incentive component for tier IV is seventy-five percent of the per patient day quality incentive component for tier V, the per patient day quality incentive component for tier III is fifty percent of the per patient day quality incentive component for tier V, and the per patient day quality incentive component for tier II is twenty-five percent of the per patient day quality incentive component for tier V. Facilities in tier I receive no quality incentive component.
(g) Tier system payments must be set in a manner that ensures that the entire biennial appropriation for the quality incentive program is allocated.
(h) Facilities with insufficient three-quarter average ((CMS [centers for medicare and medicaid services]))centers for medicare and medicaid services quality data must be assigned to the tier corresponding to their five-star quality rating. Facilities with a five-star quality rating must be assigned to the highest tier (tier V) and facilities with a one-star quality rating must be assigned to the lowest tier (tier I). The use of a facility's five-star quality rating shall only occur in the case of insufficient ((CMS [centers for medicare and medicaid services]))centers for medicare and medicaid services minimum data set information.
(i) The quality incentive rates must be adjusted semiannually on July 1 and January 1 of each year using, at a minimum, the most recent available three-quarter average ((CMS [centers for medicare and medicaid services]))centers for medicare and medicaid services quality data.
(j) Beginning July 1, 2017, the percentage of short-stay residents who newly received an antipsychotic medication must be added as a quality measure. The department must determine the quality incentive thresholds for this quality measure in a manner consistent with those outlined in (b) through (h) of this subsection using the centers for medicare and medicaid services quality data.
(k) Beginning July 1, 2017, the percentage of direct care staff turnover must be added as a quality measure using the centers for medicare and medicaid services' payroll-based journal and nursing home facility payroll data. Turnover is defined as an employee departure. The department must determine the quality incentive thresholds for this quality measure using data from the centers for medicare and medicaid services' payroll-based journal, unless such data is not available, in which case the department shall use direct care staffing turnover data from the most recent medicaid cost report.
(7) Reimbursement of the safety net assessment imposed by chapter
74.48 RCW and paid in relation to medicaid residents must be continued.
(8) The direct care and indirect care components must be rebased in even-numbered years, beginning with rates paid on July 1, 2016. In addition, rates paid beginning July 1, 2019, must be rebased on the 2017 calendar year cost report. Rates paid on July 1, 2016, must be based on the 2014 calendar year cost report. On a percentage basis, after rebasing, the department must confirm that the statewide average daily rate has increased at least as much as the average rate of inflation, as determined by the skilled nursing facility market basket index published by the centers for medicare and medicaid services, or a comparable index. If after rebasing, the percentage increase to the statewide average daily rate is less than the average rate of inflation for the same time period, the department is authorized to increase rates by the difference between the percentage increase after rebasing and the average rate of inflation.
(9) The direct care component provided in subsection (3) of this section is subject to the reconciliation and settlement process provided in RCW
74.46.022(6). Beginning July 1, 2016, pursuant to rules established by the department, funds that are received through the reconciliation and settlement process provided in RCW
74.46.022(6) must be used for technical assistance, specialized training, or an increase to the quality enhancement established in subsection (6) of this section. The legislature intends to review the utility of maintaining the reconciliation and settlement process under a price-based payment methodology, and may discontinue the reconciliation and settlement process after the 2017-2019 fiscal biennium.
(10) Compared to the rate in effect June 30, 2016, including all cost components and rate add-ons, no facility may receive a rate reduction of more than one percent on July 1, 2016, more than two percent on July 1, 2017, or more than five percent on July 1, 2018. To ensure that the appropriation for nursing homes remains cost neutral, the department is authorized to cap the rate increase for facilities in fiscal years 2017, 2018, and 2019."
ESHB 1109 - S AMD TO WM COMM AMD (S-3636.2/19) 496
By Senator Rivers
WITHDRAWN 04/04/2019
On page 731, line 9, after "79A.05.059," insert "74.46.561,"
EFFECT: Requires the DSHS Long-Term Care program to rebase Medicaid rates for nursing homes in FY 2020 using 2017 cost reports, in addition to rebasing rates in FY 2021 using 2018 cost reports as required under current law.
FISCAL IMPACT (2019-2021): $19,907,000 Near General Fund—State/ $39,815,000 Total Funds
FOUR-YEAR OUTLOOK EFFECT: $19,907,000 Near General Fund—State
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