In 2020, a new "integrated" appeal and fair hearing process launched for about 10% of Managed Long Term Care members -- those who are in Medicaid Advantage Plus (“MAP”), which consists of a "FIDE-SNP" (Fully Integrated Dual Eligible - Special Needs Plan) that covers the Medicare services, and a Medicaid Managed Care plan that includes a Managed Long Term Care (MLTC) plan. The Medicare and Medicaid services, including MLTC, are all covered by one managed care insurance plan called a MAP.
NEW May 2022 - CMS Issues brief Report on Financial Alignment Initiative for Medicare-Medicaid Enrollees New York Integrated Appeals and Grievances Demonstration - First Brief Report (PDF) Related content: Financial Alignment Initiative for Medicare-Medicaid Enrollees
In this article:
There are two types of Medicaid managed care plans that provide Medicaid home care and other community-based long term care services for adult Dual Eligibles in NYS (Dual Eligibles = have Medicare and Medicaid)
These plans combine in one plan a certain kind of Medicare Advantage Plan, an MLTC plan and a Medicaid managed care plan. "Capitation" is the monthly premium a plan receives from the government to provide a package of services. "Full capitation" means that the plan receives a monthly "capitation" premium from both the federal and state government to provide ALL Medicare and Medicaid services.
See helpful info on ICAN website --What kinds of MLTC plans are there?
The plan is responsible for authorizing and paying for ALL Medicare and Medicaid services, including the services normally provided by an MLTC plan. The member must use only providers that are in the plan's provider network. This is true for Medicare and Medicaid providers.
"DUAL FIDE SPECIAL NEEDS PLANS" - Only Medicare Advantage Plans that are "Dual-SNP's" or DUAL-Special Needs Plans may become MAP plans. Further, it can't be any Dual-SNP. It must be a Fully-Integrated Dual Eligible Special Seeds Plan (FIDE SNP). Some other Dual-SNPs are not fully integrated, meaning they may cater to people with Medicare and Medicaid but are not combined Medicare/Medicaid plans integrating both benefit packages.
For a list of MAP plans in your area, go to https://www.nymedicaidchoice.com/choose/find-long-term-care-plan and enter your county or for lists of plans by area go to https://nymedicaidchoice.com/program-materials and scroll down to Long Term Care Plans in your area. Here are links for NYC:
MLTC Medicaid Plans - New York City
Medicaid Advantage Plus - New York City
Program of All-Inclusive Care for the Elderly - New York City
Also see this NYS MAP list, which NYLAG compiled from NYS DOH MLTC list. This list also identifies the Name and ID number of the Dual-SNP plan that the member joins when they join a MAP plan, and also the counties in which these plans are enrolling people in 2021-2022.
WARNING - PLAN NAMES ARE CONFUSING!! Most MAP plans are operated by insurance companies that also operate MLTC partially capitated plans and other plans, such as Medicare Advantage plans. It can be difficult to tell one from the other. The lists at the links above show that they have slightly different names. When you ask your client what plan they are in, it is not enough to say "VNS CHOICE" since that company operates an MLTC ("VNS CHOICE") and a MAP plan ("VNS CHOICE TOTAL"). All of these companies also operate Medicare Advantage plans.
List of all SNP's in NYS (2021) (2022) - shows which plans in your county are FIDE SNPs - only these can be MAP plans. A few are "HIDE" SNP's - Highly Integrated SNPs. This list also has some SNP's that are not D-SNPs - they are for I-SNPs for Institutionalized people or Chronic Care SNPs.
There are nearly 31,000 people in 10 MAP plans as of Sept. 2021 – all but 1,100 of those are in NYC.
This is compared to about 245,000 in regular MLTC plans. See DOH monthly enrollment stats (Download document for most recent month -- Tab named Medicaid Advantage Plus shows number enrolled in each plan in NYC and in each county).
Only 12 counties outside NYC have MAP plans as of Sept. 2021.
Find lists of MAP Plans here. with counties covered.
Yes. PACE plans are "fully capitated plans like MAP plans and also are only for people who need Medicaid long term care services, and the plans cover all Medicare and Medicaid services. Three are only 5,500 New Yorkers in PACE plans in NYC and 16 other counties as of Sept. 2021 (See DOH monthly enrollment stats (download most recent document -- On tab for Managed Long Term Care look at the TOP for PACE enrollment - number enrolled in each plan in NYC and in each county).
The FIDA program was similar to MAP, but was a demonstration program that closed at the end of 2019.
Managed Long Term Care (MLTC) or "Partially Capitated" plans
Most adults who have Medicare and need community-based long term care services are in “partially capitated” MLTC plans. This means the plan receives a monthly "capitation" premium payment from NYS only for the Medicaid long term care services in the MLTC benefit package. Members of MLTC plans have their Medicare coverage separate – they can choose to have Original Medicare or Medicare Advantage.
MAP members who want to appeal an adverse decision by the MAP plan denying or reducing Medicaid personal care or CDPAP services (or any other plan services) must use a NEW appeal and hearing procedure that is slightly different than the regular OTDA Fair Hearings used for MLTC. In both MAP and MLTC, “exhaustion” of the plan appeal is required first before a fair hearing. See article on MLTC appeals and exhaustion.
The new Integrated Appeal process essentially continues the integrated procedure that was used in the FIDA demonstration program, that ended Dec. 31, 2019. OTDA calls it "FIDE-SNP" appeals - Fully Integrated Dual Eligible - Special Needs Plan.
How is the MAP-FIDE Appeal System Different than MLTC Appeals and Hearings?
Initial adverse notice (request for new or incresed service or notice of reduction) -
MLTC Notice called "Initial Adverse Determination" or IAD - Model denial IAD and Model reduction IAD
MAP notice called "Coverage Determination Notice" - download Integrated Beneficiary Notices (ZIP)
in both, member must request an internal appeal within the plan, and has the right to Aid Continuing if the appeal is requested before the Effective Date of a proposed reduction -(NOTE 15-day advance notice required of a reduction - not the usual 10-day advance notice for other Medicaid and MLTC reductions.) This is in the Memorandum of Understanding between CMS and NYS DOH Section 3.2.2.3 (P. 10 of theh PDF) that governs MAP hearings.
Plan Notice Denying Internal Plan Appeal -
MLTC Notice Called "Final Adverse Determination" or FAD - Model Denial FAD and Model Reduction FAD -
MAP "Appeal Decision Notice" -- (from Integrated Beneficiary Notices (ZIP))
Hearing - Two different hearing systems for MLTC and MAP -
MLTC - Member must request a Fair Hearing with NYS OTDA like any other Medicaid hearing. If the action is a threatened reduction, member must request the hearing in time to get Aid Continuing - before the Effective Date of the reduction.
MAP "FIDE" Hearings - are held by the Integrated Administrative Hearings Office (IAHO), which is administered by NYS OTDA through a separate system than regular Medicaid fair hearings. The procedures and timing requirements for the IAHO hearings are in the Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) between the NYS Dept. of Health and CMS that governs the integrated hearings demonstration.
Within 2 business days after its adverse Appeal Decision, the plan must AUTOMATICALLY forward the case and the case file to the IAHO, which serves as the request for the hearing. MOU Appendix 3, Section 3.4.1.1. The MAP member does NOT have to request this hearing.
It is this action that Healthfirst MAP plan failed to do for 789 members. See March 2021 News Alert above to read about how this mistake is being remedied for these members.
Within 14 calendar days of forwarding the administrative record to the IAHO, the plan must send the member an Acknowledgement of Automatic Administrative Hearing and Confirmation of Aid Status with a copy to the IAHO. MOU Appendix 3, Section 3.4.4.; 3.5.1. The notice should advise the member that if the do not hear from OTDA about scheduling the hearing within 10 days (24 hours for expedited appeals), the member should call the IAHO.
OTDA is supposed to send the member and plan notice of the hearing 10 days in advance. MOU Appendix 3, Section 3.5.2.
OPTIONAL STEP WHILE FAIR HEARING PENDING - EXTERNAL APPEAL
Both the MLTC FAD notice and the MAP-FIDE Plan Appeal Decision notice (in this zip file) explain that the member has the right to file an External Appeal with the NYS Dept. of Financial Services, which is NYS's insurance department. External appeals may only be used if the denial was based on lack of medical necessity, but this is generally the issue in these appeals. The appeals are solely on paper so strong documentary evidence is needed.
If the "expedited" external appeal track is used, a decision may be issued in a matter of days - much faster than a fair hearing. If the external appeal decision is favorable, it is binding on the plan, and the fair hearing request may be withdrawn.
If the external appeal is decided adversely, the enrollee still may do the fair hearing. Since these take a long time to schedule, it is recommended to request the fair hearing first, then file and pursue the External Appeal while the Fair Hearing is pending.
See more about these appeals here. The State DFS External Appeal website is here.
Obtaining the Evidence Packet for the Hearing -
MAP plan SHOULD send it automatically to the member, without having to request it. See the sample Appeal Decision Notice. The MOU at pagd 3 specifically requires MAP plans to comply with other requirements in the managed care regulations - 42 C.F.R. Part 438, which requires plans to provide the case file during the plan appeal.
MLTC - Plan SHOULD have provided the member with their file during the course of the initial plan appeal. 42 CFR 438.406(b)(5). If plan did not, member has right to request it for the hearing.
Submitting Evidence for the Hearing - because of COVID-19, all hearings are being held by phone. See 20 GIS TA/DC 097 – NYS OTDA Office of Admin. Hearings (OAH) Transmittal 20-05 - Allowing or Requiring Fair Hearing Appearances by Written, Telephonic, Video, or other Electronic Means.
MAP - Submit evidence by FAX: 518-473-8783 Email: otda.sm.MAP.Integrated.Appeals.Office@otda.ny.gov
Mail: Integrated Appeals/IAHO-10A, P.O. Box 1930, Albany, NY 12201
Email: otda.sm.fhdocuments.submissions@otda.ny.gov
MAP: IAHO 1 (844) 523-8777
MLTC: OTDA OAH 1 (800) 342-3334
3. WARNING re Varshavsky case and Home Hearings: Members of regular MLTC plans have some special hearing rights under a class action called Varshavsky v. Perales. That decision held that Medicaid recipients who cannot travel to a hearing without substantial hardship because of a disability have the right to a hearing held in their home, if an initial hearing held by phone is not decided fully favorably. The State is taking the position that Varshavsky does not apply to MAP-FIDE hearings.
There are two important benefits of Varshavsky that as of now apply only to people in MLTC and not MAP plans. See Varshavsky fact sheet for more about these benefits.
See Varshavsky Fact Sheet with more info and tips.
Medicare Rights Center has created a toolkit with resources about MAP benefits, consumer rights and appeals. On that webpage you will find links to fliers:
CMS Webpage on Integrated Financial Alignment Initiatives for Dual Eligibles
CMS Webpage for New York's Financial Alignment Initiative
NY Integrated Appeals and Grievances Demonstration
On January 1, 2020, CMS and NYSDOH transitioned remaining FIDA enrollees to MAP plans and aligned D-SNPs. This transition also included extending the FIDA integrated appeals and grievances process to MAP and aligned D-SNP plans. Under the revamped NY Integrated Appeals and Grievances Demonstration, CMS and NYSDOH are testing the integrated appeals and grievances process begun under FIDA with a larger volume of full benefit dual eligible individuals. As of January 2020, approximately 18,000 individuals are enrolled in a MAP and aligned D-SNP plan.
Federal regulations - The MOU refers to 42 C.F.R. 422.633, which was amended on Jan. 19, 2021, as part of new requirements applicable to certain Integrated Dual Eligible Special Needs Plans. See 86 FR 6103
NEW May 2022 - CMS Issues brief Report on Financial Alignment Initiative for Medicare-Medicaid Enrollees New York Integrated Appeals and Grievances Demonstration - First Brief Report (PDF)
The Healthfirst MAP plan failed to "auto-forward" appeals for 789 members to the Integrated Administrative Hearings Office (IAHO), which is administered by NYS OTDA, under the process described below. As a result, hearings to appeal the "Appeal Decision Notice" by the plan were never scheduled (this is the equivalent of the Final Adverse Determination for MLTC plans). About 75% of these appeals involve the plan's denial of an increase in home care hours (personal care or CDPAP). The rest involve denial of one-time requests like medical supplies or equipment, or other issues.
To remedy this mistake, the State Dept. of Health has ordered this plan to give a "temporary approval" of the requested increase in hours now until the end of the current authorization or the next assessment, whichever is sooner. See letter sent by Healthfirst MAP to members. If at the next assessment the plan determines that a reduction is justified, it may reduce services. Advocates have asked DOH to confirm that the plan may only reduce services at the reassessment for reasons outlined in DOH MLTC Policy 16.06: Guidance on Notices Proposing to Reduce or Discontinue Personal Care Services or Consumer Directed Personal Assistance Services, and must provide advance notice of the proposed reduction with Aid Continuing rights.
Also, the plan must reimburse members who paid out of pocket for the requested increase in services after the adverse "Level 1" decision and prior to March 24, 2021.
The plan has sent this notice to members affected by this mistake. The notice explains the above actions, how to request reimbursement, and how to get help from the ICAN Ombudsman program.