Example: dental hygienist

IDD Service Delivery Systems 082812 - Center for …

CHCSC enter for health Care Strategies, Inc. Trends and Challenges in Publicly-Financed Care for Individuals with Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities By: Gretchen Engquist, PhD Cyndy Johnson, and William Courtland Johnson, PhD Independent Consultants Made possible through support from: Schaller Anderson, an Aetna Company September 2012 Trends and Challenges in Publicly-Financed Care for Individuals with Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities 2012 Center for health Care Strategies, Inc. G. Engquist, C. Johnson and Johnson. Trends and Challenges in Publicly-Financed Care for Individuals with Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities.

CHCS Center for Health Care Strategies, Inc. Trends and Challenges in Publicly-Financed Care for Individuals with Intellectual and Developmental

Tags:

  Health, Services, System, Delivery, Idd service delivery systems 082812, 082812

Information

Domain:

Source:

Link to this page:

Please notify us if you found a problem with this document:

Other abuse

Transcription of IDD Service Delivery Systems 082812 - Center for …

1 CHCSC enter for health Care Strategies, Inc. Trends and Challenges in Publicly-Financed Care for Individuals with Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities By: Gretchen Engquist, PhD Cyndy Johnson, and William Courtland Johnson, PhD Independent Consultants Made possible through support from: Schaller Anderson, an Aetna Company September 2012 Trends and Challenges in Publicly-Financed Care for Individuals with Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities 2012 Center for health Care Strategies, Inc. G. Engquist, C. Johnson and Johnson. Trends and Challenges in Publicly-Financed Care for Individuals with Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities.

2 Center for health Care Strategies, Inc. September 2012. Systems of Care Innovations for Individuals with Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities Series This report is part of CHCS Innovations in Systems of Care for Individuals with Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities series, which was developed to help state and other policymakers identify and implement Systems of care that improve outcomes for individuals with intellectual and developmental disabilities, their families, and their communities. The publications, supported by Schaller Anderson, an Aetna company, provide policy and technical resources to guide program identification and implementation.

3 Other titles in this series available at include: Systems of Care for Individuals with Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities: A Survey of States Brief describes the results of a national survey of states regarding current Delivery Systems and planned innovations. Structuring New Service Delivery Models for Individuals with Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities Brief outlines guiding principles and core elements of person-centered Service Delivery models that focus on valued outcomes. About the Center for health Care Strategies The Center for health Care Strategies (CHCS) is a nonprofit health policy resource Center dedicated to improving health care access and quality for low-income Americans.

4 CHCS works with state and federal agencies, health plans, providers, and consumer groups to develop innovative programs that better serve people with complex and high-cost health care needs. For more information, visit Trends and Challenges in Publicly-Financed Care for Individuals with Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities 3 Contents I. Deinstitutionalization .. 4 Opposition to Further Deinstitutionalization .. 5 Fiscal Challenges in Transitioning from Institutional Care to HCBS .. 5 Residential Alternatives to Institutional Care .. 6 II. Community Support services for People with I/DD .. 6 III.

5 Case Management .. 8 Rethinking Case Management .. 8 Rethinking Case Management in Hennepin County, Minnesota .. 9 Rethinking Case Management in New Jersey .. 9 Best Practices in Case Management for Persons with I/DD .. 10 IV. Direct Service Workers and Independent Providers .. 10 Independent Providers .. 10 Paid Family Caregivers .. 11 V. Resource Allocation .. 11 Prospective versus Retrospective Budgeting .. 12 Resource Allocation Tools .. 13 VI. Transitions from School to Adult Systems of Care .. 14 Transitioning to Adult services : There s More to Life Than TV .. 14 Best Practices for Transitioning Students .. 14 VII. Meaningful Day Activities and Integrated Employment.

6 16 Meaningful Day Activities .. 16 Integrated Employment .. 16 Employment First in Washington State .. 17 Person-Centered Career Planning .. 18 Person-Centered Care Planning: Making Dreams Real .. 18 VIII. Caring for Older Adults with I/DD .. 18 Aging Caregivers .. 19 Work-Related Issues .. 19 Physical health Issues .. 20 Behavioral health Issues .. 20 Best Practices in Caring for Older Individuals with I/DD .. 20 IX. Quality Oversight .. 21 Quality Performance Benchmarks .. 21 Trends and Challenges in Publicly-Financed Care for Individuals with Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities 4 here are roughly seven million individuals with intellectual and developmental disabilities (I/DD) in the United States, but only about 25 percent receive services through publicly-funded programs such as Medicaid and Medicare.

7 The other 75 percent are supported by their families or live independently without publicly-funded supports and services . That said, the number of publicly-funded beneficiaries with I/DD is growing at a rapid pace nationwide. There are various factors fueling this growth, including increased longevity, which heightens overall demand for services as aging caregivers lose the ability to care for loved ones. A second factor is a greater availability of non-institutional services and supports, which encourages families that would otherwise resist institutionalization to apply for In anticipation of an expanding population, this resource paper summarizes important trends and challenges facing the publicly-funded Service Delivery system for people with I/DD, including: The rebalancing of the I/DD system of care toward a greater reliance on home- and community-based services ; The community-based services and supports offered through most state waiver programs for persons with I/DD; The evolving role of the case manager.

8 The evolving role of direct- Service workers and independent providers, including paid family members; Allocation of resources; Transition from school to adult Systems of care; Meaningful day activities and integrated employment; The challenge of caring for older adults with I/DD and their caregivers; and Quality oversight and community integration. I. Deinstitutionalization Prior to World War I, psychiatric hospitals were almost the only out-of-home placement alternatives available to individuals diagnosed with I/DD. Following that era, the development of separate state facilities came into vogue and grew to such an extent that by 1967 the census of state institutions was almost 200,000 residents, with an facility average facility of more than 1,400.

9 However, in the late 1960s a number of media expos s uncovering inadequate conditions, overcrowding, and a lack of treatment triggered increasing demand for reforms. In response, in 1971 the federal government established the Intermediate Care Facility for Persons with Mental Retardation (ICF/MR) program, enabling states to apply for federal matching funds under Medicaid to provide intermediate care in a federally-certified, publicly-owned institution. Predictably, most states embraced the program and the number of individuals residing in ICF/MRs increased dramatically during the 1970s. In addition to improving the quality of care, ICF/MRs resulted in significant decreases in the number of residents served within individual facilities because many of the previous institutions had been overcrowded according to the new federal standards.

10 In 1977, privately operated ICFs/MR also became eligible for federal reimbursement and by 1993 most persons receiving ICF/MR services were served in privately-operated institutions, and that trend continues today. Then in 1981 the federal government initiated home- and community-based services (HCBS) waiver authority, allowing states to implement non-institutional, community-based services for Medicaid-eligible beneficiaries meeting certain criteria. T Trends and Challenges in Publicly-Financed Care for Individuals with Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities 5 The passage of the Americans with Disabilities Act in 1990 and the Olmstead Supreme Court ruling in 1999 further encouraged the national trend toward deinstitutionalization.


Related search queries