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Tim Rogers posted on October 13, 2009 20:01
As part of a new Medicaid Program twenty-nine states are moving people out of Nursing Homes and into Home Care. A recent article in the New York Times about Walter Brown – a former Nursing Home patient – explains how the program works.
Mr. Brown, who lives in Philadelphia, had a stroke two years ago and went into a Nursing Home.
“It was,” he told the Times, “like being in jail.”
Now he’s out.
Because Pennsylvania – as part of the new program – is “reaching out to people like Mr. Brown, who have been in nursing homes for more than six months, aiming to disprove the notion that once people have settled into a nursing home, they will be there forever.”
For years the Times reports, “Medicaid practically steered people into nursing homes.”
“Medicaid,” says Gene Coffey, an attorney with the non-profit National Senior Citizens Law Center, “has had an institutional bias in favor of nursing homes. Federal law requires states to provide nursing home services. But not home or community based services.”
But, now, Pennsylvania is moving patients like Mr. Brown out of Nursing Homes and back into their own homes, where they receive Home Care.
The final savings aren’t clear but a recent study by the University of California found home care costs taxpayers $44,000 a year less than nursing home care.
North Carolina policy still tilts toward sending patients to Nursing Homes – but wouldn’t it be a pleasant change to open the newspaper and read a story like this, where a patient left a Nursing Home and returned to his own home. It could cut health care costs. And make patients – like Mr. Brown – happier.
[Read the rest of this article...]
Carter Wrenn posted on October 12, 2009 19:56
Tim Rogers – the Director at the Association of Hospice and Home Care – has taken his life in his hands and tackled Craigan L. Gray, MD, MBA, JD and Director of the Division of Medical Assistance at Department of Health and Human Services head on.
Rogers wrote Doctor Gray to explain how Gray’s letter to elderly Medicaid patients (see blog below) about losing their home care has caused a lot of upheaval – and urged Dr. Gray to send another letter to clear the air. Gray’s answer was, ‘Thank you for your input. Let’s talk about it sometime’ – which sounds kind of like a polite sandbag, but, whatever it is, hardly solves the problem.
It turns out Doctor, Lawyer, MBA Gray made a couple of other mistakes in his letter. First, he wrote every Medicaid patient in the state they had to undergo an ‘independent assessment’ to see if they should continue to receive home care. But, in fact, the new ‘independent assessments’ only apply to patients applying to receive home care for the first time – not patients whose doctors have already placed them in care and who’ve been receiving it with DHHS approval for years.
Gray also wrote the elderly patients and told them not to talk about the care they need to home care providers. That looks like he misunderstood another new provision of the law. More to the point: Not talking to the person providing your care creates a pretty obvious practical problem.
Doctor Gray’s one of the most powerful men in state government – except for Secretary Lanier Cansler he has more say in who gets care than anyone. He controls millions of dollars in state contracts and spends hundreds of millions of taxpayers’ money.
Right now he’s struggling with the mess the legislature left him with the budget, trying to figure out how to cut care to patients who’re legally eligible – and need – care.
His letter may be a first step in that direction – and a misguided step. There was no need to send elderly patients letters that intimidated – at least part of – them. And, beyond that, folks in America sort of like to practice freedom of speech and, generally, more good comes of it than harm.
[Read the rest of this article...]
Carter Wrenn posted on October 12, 2009 19:48
Craigan Gray, the head of the Division of Medical Assistance at the Department of Health and Human Services, is a well educated man. He signs his official letters Craigan L. Gray – MD, MBA, JD, Director. He’s a doctor, an MBA, and an attorney. That makes you kind of wonder why (with a medical degree and a law degree) he’s working in state government – even if he is making more than the Governor. It must also be tough for his boss Lanier Cansler, who’s only a CPA, when it comes time for the two of them to sit down and argue health care policy.
But there’s also always a possibility someone with Dr. Gray’s education might lose the common touch.
Imagine, for instance, an eighty year old woman living on $160 a week, whose health is failing. She gets forgetful now and then, and can’t take care of her everyday needs like cooking, bathing and walking on her own – but that’s okay because she’s got home care from Medicaid to help her get by.
Then one morning she receives an official letter – that sounds a lot like it came from the IRS –telling her she’s about to be evaluated to determine if her home care ought to be eliminated and she ought not to discuss it with the people who care for her. It’d scare the willies out of her – right?
Craigan L. Gray signed and sent that letter to every eighty year old lady on Medicaid home care in North Carolina.
It’s fine that Craigan L. Gray is so well educated but somewhere along the way he missed (or forgot) what nurses and aides learn and relearn everyday – that a lot of medical care involves a virtue they don’t give a degree for – TLC.
[Read the rest of this article...]
Carter Wrenn posted on October 10, 2009 19:37
The gray-suited factotums and Grand Vizier’s over at the DHHS headquarters on the old Dorothea Dix Campus have come up with a new mantra: ‘We’re going to give patients what they need, not what they want.’
That sounds reasonable until you get past the ‘spin.’
Let’s say for simplicity’s sake there are two kinds of people who work in health care: The nurses and doctors and nurses aides who sit by beds and care for patients, and the administrators who sit in offices and manage health care programs for DHHS.
CCME is an example. CCME is a private company. DHHS pays it to manage North Carolina’s Home Care program. There are a lot of other private companies – like CCME – who manage health care programs for the state and when it comes to getting state contracts they’re wired into the Department of Health and Human Services like the military-industrial complex is wired into the Pentagon.
CCME’s main work is reviewing providers’ record keeping, interviewing patients then reporting back to DHHS.
CCME just renegotiated its contract with DHHS and received a 29% pay increase for its patient interviews.
At the same time DHHS just cut what it pays the people who provide home care to elderly patients 4.9% .Meaning the brunt of the cuts will be borne by home care aides who work by the patient’s bedside – instead of managers who don’t provide care to anyone.
If a CCME manager interviews just two patients in a day – and they will interview thousands of patients – those two interviews at $450 a piece will cost the state more in one day than what it costs the state to cover an entire month of services for the average patient.Now why is CCME’s fee going up from $350 to $450 for each patient ‘interview’ – while the folks providing care are being cut?
Well, DHHS Secretary Lanier Cansler’s former lobbying partner is a consultant with CCME. Maybe that’s just an accident. Or coincidence. But, either way, it doesn’t look good. And it certainly looks like an example of a health care management company snuggling up to the folks in DHHS who grant the contracts.
Whatever the reason, money’s tight at DHHS and when they spend more on managers – like CCME – it means spending less for care. So, CCME’s new contract cuts the ground out from under DHHS’s new mantra.
It’s not giving patients the care they need instead of what they want.
Instead, what it’s really saying is, We’re going to give patients the care we want them to have – and if it’s not what they need they’ll just
have to adjust
[Read the rest of this article...]
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Previous Blogs & Articles
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| For Immediate Release: NC Court of Appeals Rules in Favor of Home Care Patients by Tim Rogers | |
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact: Tim Rogers, CEO
Phone: 919-848-3450
Fax: ... | | Our Member Nurses are astonished, appalled and aghast - let's turn around bad policy for patients by Tim Rogers | | "Nurses, today we must lift our heads from the bedside and recognize the challenging environment we are currently in and do something about it. Our profession and our patients can wait no longer – nur... | | Home & Hospice Care License Plate by Tim Rogers | |
Home Care License Plate: We must have 300 applications in hand before NCDMV will begin to manufacture our special ‘Home Care’ License plate. We are about two-thirds of the way... | | NC Home Health Agencies Rank 2nd in the Nation - Quality Project by Tim Rogers | |
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact: Tim Rogers, CEO
Phone: 919-848-3450
Fax: ... | | For Immediate Release: Judge Overby rules in favor of Home Care patients! by Carter Wrenn | |
For Immediate Release:
Contact Tim Rogers 919-848-3450 (office) 919-961-3555 cell
timrogers@homeandhospicecare.org -
February 19, 2010
Today, the Honorable Donald W. Overby... | | N.C. plans crippling cutbacks in Personal Care by | | The following Op-Ed by Tim Rogers, CEO of the Association for Home and Hospice Care, was published in the News and Observer in response to an earlier editorial by DHHS Secretary Lanier Cansler claimin... | | Send Three Emails to Save NC Home Health Medicaid PDN by Tim Rogers | | Normal
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... | | Penny Wise and Pound Foolish by Tim Rogers | | Normal
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... | | Getting Out of Jail by Tim Rogers | | Normal
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... | | Craigan Gray MD, MBA and JD Again by Carter Wrenn | | Tim Rogers – the Director at the Association of Hospice and Home Care – has taken his life in his hands and tackled Craigan L. Gray, MD, MBA, JD and Director of the Division of Medical Assistance at D... | | TLC by Carter Wrenn | | Craigan Gray, the head of the Division of Medical Assistance at the Department of Health and Human Services, is a well educated man. He signs his official letters Craigan L. Gray – MD, MBA, JD, Direct... | | $450 a Clip by Carter Wrenn | | The gray-suited factotums and Grand Vizier’s over at the DHHS headquarters on the old Dorothea Dix Campus have come up with a new mantra: ‘We’re going to give patients what they need, not what they wa... | | Politics Doesn’t Always Make Sense by Carter Wrenn | |
I thought politics worked like this: We elect people, they pass laws, things happen.
I learned back when Reagan was President a lot less might happen than hoped for – because th... | | Senator Doug Berger - A Strange Explanation by Carter Wrenn | | | Senator Berger’s Bill – To Wipe Felons’ Records Clean by Carter Wrenn | | The other night at his Town Hall Meeting State Senator Doug Berger attacked the Association for Home and Hospice Care, saying we opposed his bill to let felons under 21 years old have their records ‘e... | | New Video – Senator Doug Berger Explains the State Budget on Health Care by Carter Wrenn | | In his Town Hall Meeting in Henderson, State Senator Doug Berger, who heads the Senate Appropriations Committee on Health and Human Services, explained part of the State Budget on health care.
&... | | What’s Happening in State Senator Doug Berger’s District by Carter Wrenn | | Our TV Ads, E-mails, and press releases have created a debate in Senator Doug Berger’s district about his bill to cut home care for 20,000 elderly Medicaid patients.
Here are two examples from... | | New Television Ad - "Covering His Tracks" by Carter Wrenn | | Normal
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... | | Political Antics by Carter Wrenn | | Politicians tend to be hum-drum until one of them lands in hot water then watching their antics can be, well, reminiscent of a trip to the county fair as a child and watching the contortions of the ma... | | Senator Doug Berger's World by Carter Wrenn | | Senator Doug Berger probably never dreamed anyone would run TV ads in his district telling his constituents how he voted to cut 20,000 elderly Medicaid patients’ home care then, eight days later, turn... | | Association for Home & Hospice Care of North Carolina CEO Tim Rogers, sent the following email to all General Assembly Members today. by Carter Wrenn | | 3101 Industrial Drive
Suite 204
Raleigh, North Carolina 27609
Phone: 919.848.3450
Toll Free (NC): 800.999.2357
Cell: 919.961.3555
Email: TimRogers@homeandhospicecare.org
TracyColvard@homeandhos... | | Association for Home & Hospice Care of North Carolina thanks Congressman G.K. Butterfield for expressing concern on the proposed home care cuts. by Carter Wrenn | | Congressman G.K. Butterfield submitted this letter to the editors of several newspapers in his district:
July 8, 2009
Unkind and Unwise Cuts for the Elderly and Disabled
Given these difficu... | | How Politicians Cover-Up Their Mistakes by Carter Wrenn | | Here’s a case study of how politicians cover-up their mistakes.
In April Senator Doug Berger cut home care for 20,000 Medicaid patients – then, 8 days later, voted to spend $25 million to build the T... | | The Association for Home and Hospice Care’s New Video - "A $400,000,000 Mistake" by Carter Wrenn | | Back in February of 2007 Senator Doug Berger wrote his constituents about North Carolina’s home care program: “Most seniors prefer to live in their own homes and receive services rather than be placed... | | New Ad on Home Care by Carter Wrenn | | Today The Association for Home and Hospice Care of North Carolina (AHHC) aired a new Internet video advertisement, here on its website – SaveHomeCareandHospice.com. AHHC is emailing links to... | | Association CEO Tim Rogers writes State Senator Doug Berger by Carter Wrenn | | Email from Association for Home & Hospice Care of North Carolina CEO Tim Rogers, to State Senator Doug Berger questioning Senator Berger's claim that 45% of the Medicaid Home C... | | Senator Berger Responds by Carter Wrenn | | State Senator Doug Berger responds to Association CEO Tim Rogers' email regarding Senator Doug Berger's claim that 45% of the Medicaid Home Care Patients are ineligable.
... | | Tim Rogers' Email to Senator Berger - -"misleading percentages" by Carter Wrenn | | Association for Home & Hospice Care of North Carolina CEO, Tim Rogers' Email to Senator Berger documenting flaws in his review. See Tim's email below:
From: Tim Rogers [mailto:timrog]... | | A Surprise... by Carter Wrenn | | Mid-June 2009: DHHS response to a Public Information request brought another surprise. Over six weeks before the request, DHHS notified Senate Fiscal Research Staffer, M... | | From TalkingAboutPolitics.com by Carter Wrenn | | Senator Doug Berger's Blooper
June 08, 2009
For the past month, State Senator Doug Berger has been telling just about anyone who’ll listen that 45% of the patients who get home care ser... | | Email to Senator Doug Berger from DHHS by Carter Wrenn | | DHHS to Senator Doug Berger: The review does not show that home care patients are ineligable. Because the 'reviews' did not include a physical examination of a single patient. Re... | | E-mail from Tim Rogers to NC Legislators - CCME Percentages Inaccurate per Secretary Cansler by Carter Wrenn | | From: Tim Rogers
Sent: Monday, June 15, 2009
To: NC Legislators
Subject: E-mail from Tim Rogers to Legislators
Dear North Carolina Legislator:
I want to share with you new information I h... | | The NC State House restores part of Berger's cuts...Berger Retaliates! by Carter Wrenn | | The NC State House restores part of Senator Berger's cut. In response, Senator Berger tries to cut the program...again! Read the release below:
For Immediate Release:
June 2... | | From TalkingAboutPolitics.com by Carter Wrenn | | Berger’s Blooper – Chapter II
June 23, 2009
Some people never seem to learn and Democratic Senator Doug Berger is looking like a case in point.
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Carter Wrenn posted on June 25, 2009 11:19 pm
Senator Doug Berger’s blooper is going on television.
When Senator Berger passed a bill ... |
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