Advocates worried by KanCare ; Developmental disability care switching hands
| By Jenni Bergal; Jenni Bergal Kaiser Health News | |
| Proquest LLC |
He has tried to eat light bulbs and charcoal briquettes and can be aggressive, sometimes scratching people near him.
The Carneys -- and thousands of parents and relatives of developmentally disabled Kansans -- fear that come January, the world they have become accustomed to may be turned upside down.
That is when the state's
<p>Three for-profit national insurance companies that run KanCare for the state will be making final decisions about eligibility and care. Currently, a network of community-based nonprofits and county agencies has that responsibility. Families and advocates worry about the insurers' lack of experience managing a statewide program. They also are concerned that the need to make a profit ultimately will destroy a system they think works well.
"This is an unprecedented model. No state has ever taken a developmental disability population and placed it in an arrangement like this, with an out-of-state managed care system, all at once," said
Many states are scrambling to place large numbers of people on
By next year, more than two dozen states are expected to have set up programs to transfer frail elderly, mentally ill or physically disabled people into managed care for home and community-based services. But in most states, the developmentally disabled -- people with such impairments as cerebral palsy, Down syndrome and autism -- have been excluded from managed care for these services because their needs are so specialized.
They live with their families, or in apartments, single-family homes or group homes. Some need round-the-clock supervision. Many require assistance with dressing, bathing and preparing meals, as well as transportation. Some need help finding a job or volunteer work, and many attend daytime activity centers.
"There is a great deal of fear in the community that these big, private health plans don't know much about this population," said
Only a handful of states, including
Although the frail elderly, physically disabled and mentally ill receive long-term services through KanCare, the developmentally disabled were given a one-year grace period for 2013 by
The health plans say that although they may not have much experience with this particular type of program, they have been handling similar services for physically disabled and elderly members. They also have been hiring workers and managers with expertise in developmental disabilities in
Sullivan noted the state will maintain a high level of oversight and stringent contractual requirements, such as withholding 3 percent to 5 percent of payments to the plans to ensure that performance requirements are met.
The Carneys worry about their son's future.
"We had a system that worked really well," she said, "so why are they trying to fix something that's not broken?"
| Copyright: | (c) 2013 ProQuest Information and Learning Company; All Rights Reserved. |
| Wordcount: | 992 |



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