§ 40-8-19. Rates of payment to nursing facilities.
(a) Rate reform.
(1) The rates to be paid by the state to nursing facilities licensed pursuant to chapter 17 of title 23, and certified to participate in Title XIX of the Social Security Act for services
rendered to Medicaid-eligible residents, shall be reasonable and adequate to meet
the costs that must be incurred by efficiently and economically operated facilities
in accordance with 42 U.S.C. § 1396a(a)(13). The executive office of health and human services ("executive officeâ€�) shall promulgate
or modify the principles of reimbursement for nursing facilities in effect as of July
1, 2011, to be consistent with the provisions of this section and Title XIX, 42 U.S.C. § 1396 et seq., of the Social Security Act.
(2) The executive office shall review the current methodology for providing Medicaid payments
to nursing facilities, including other long-term care services providers, and is authorized
to modify the principles of reimbursement to replace the current cost-based methodology
rates with rates based on a price-based methodology to be paid to all facilities with
recognition of the acuity of patients and the relative Medicaid occupancy, and to
include the following elements to be developed by the executive office:
(i) A direct-care rate adjusted for resident acuity;
(ii) An indirect-care and other direct-care rate comprised of a base per diem for all facilities;
(iii) Revision of rates as necessary based on increases in direct and indirect costs beginning
October 2024 utilizing data from the most recent finalized year of facility cost report.
The per diem rate components deferred in subsections (a)(2)(i) and (a)(2)(ii) of this
section shall be adjusted accordingly to reflect changes in direct and indirect care
costs since the previous rate review;
(iv) Application of a fair-rental value system;
(v) Application of a pass-through system; and
(vi) Adjustment of rates by the change in a recognized national nursing home inflation
index to be applied on October 1 of each year, beginning October 1, 2012. This adjustment
will not occur on October 1, 2013, October 1, 2014, or October 1, 2015, but will occur
on April 1, 2015. The adjustment of rates will also not occur on October 1, 2017,
October 1, 2018, October 1, 2019, and October 2022. Effective July 1, 2018, rates
paid to nursing facilities from the rates approved by the Centers for Medicare and
Medicaid Services and in effect on October 1, 2017, both fee-for-service and managed
care, will be increased by one and one-half percent (1.5%) and further increased by
one percent (1%) on October 1, 2018, and further increased by one percent (1%) on
October 1, 2019. Effective October 1, 2022, rates paid to nursing facilities from
the rates approved by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services and in effect
on October 1, 2021, both fee-for-service and managed care, will be increased by three
percent (3%). In addition to the annual nursing home inflation index adjustment, there
shall be a base rate staffing adjustment of one-half percent (0.5%) on October 1,
2021, one percent (1.0%) on October 1, 2022, and one and one-half percent (1.5%) on
October 1, 2023. For the twelve-month (12) period beginning October 1, 2025, rates
paid to nursing facilities from the rates approved by the Centers for Medicare and
Medicaid Services and in effect on October 1, 2024, both fee-for-service and managed
care, will be increased by two and three-tenths percent (2.3%). There shall also be
a base rate staffing adjustment of three percent (3%) effective October 1, 2025. Not
less than one hundred percent (100%) of this base-rate staffing adjustment shall be
expended by each nursing facility to increase compensation, wages, benefits, and related
employer costs, for eligible direct-care staff, including the cost of hiring additional
eligible direct-care positions, as defined in this subsection (a)(2)(vi). The inflation
index shall be applied without regard for the transition factors in subsections (b)(1)
and (b)(2). For purposes of October 1, 2016, adjustment only, any rate increase that
results from application of the inflation index to subsections (a)(2)(i) and (a)(2)(ii)
shall be dedicated to increase compensation for direct-care workers in the following
manner: Not less than eighty-five percent (85%) of this aggregate amount shall be
expended to fund an increase in wages, benefits, or related employer costs of direct-care
staff of nursing homes. For purposes of this section, direct-care staff shall include
registered nurses (RNs), licensed practical nurses (LPNs), certified nursing assistants
(CNAs), certified medical technicians, housekeeping staff, laundry staff, dietary
staff, or other similar employees providing direct-care services; provided, however,
that this definition of direct-care staff shall not include: (i) RNs and LPNs who
are classified as "exempt employeesâ€� under the federal Fair Labor Standards Act (29 U.S.C. § 201 et seq.); or (ii) CNAs, certified medical technicians, RNs, or LPNs who are contracted,
or subcontracted, through a third-party vendor or staffing agency. By July 31, 2017,
nursing facilities shall submit to the secretary, or designee, a certification that
they have complied with the provisions of this subsection (a)(2)(vi) with respect
to the inflation index applied on October 1, 2016. Any facility that does not comply
with the terms of such certification shall be subjected to a clawback, paid by the
nursing facility to the state, in the amount of increased reimbursement subject to
this provision that was not expended in compliance with that certification.
(3) Commencing on October 1, 2021, eighty percent (80%) of any rate increase that results
from application of the inflation index to subsections (a)(2)(i) and (a)(2)(ii) of
this section shall be dedicated to increase compensation for all eligible direct-care
workers in the following manner on October 1, of each year.
(i) For purposes of this subsection, compensation increases shall include base salary
or hourly wage increases, benefits, other compensation, and associated payroll tax
increases for eligible direct-care workers. This application of the inflation index
shall apply for Medicaid reimbursement in nursing facilities for both managed care
and fee-for-service. For purposes of this subsection, direct-care staff shall include
registered nurses (RNs), licensed practical nurses (LPNs), certified nursing assistants
(CNAs), certified medication technicians, licensed physical therapists, licensed occupational
therapists, licensed speech-language pathologists, mental health workers who are also
certified nurse assistants, physical therapist assistants, social workers, or any
nurse aides with a valid license, even if it is probationary, housekeeping staff,
laundry staff, dietary staff, or other similar employees providing direct-care services;
provided, however that this definition of direct-care staff shall not include:
(A) RNs and LPNs who are classified as "exempt employees� under the federal Fair Labor
Standards Act (29 U.S.C. § 201 et seq.); or
(B) CNAs, certified medication technicians, RNs, or LPNs who are contracted or subcontracted
through a third-party vendor or staffing agency.
(4)(i) By July 31, 2021, and July 31 of each year thereafter, nursing facilities shall submit
to the secretary or designee a certification that they have complied with the provisions
of subsection (a)(3) of this section with respect to the inflation index applied on
October 1. The executive office of health and human services (EOHHS) shall create
the certification form nursing facilities must complete with information on how each
individual eligible employee's compensation increased, including information regarding
hourly wages prior to the increase and after the compensation increase, hours paid
after the compensation increase, and associated increased payroll taxes. A collective
bargaining agreement can be used in lieu of the certification form for represented
employees. All data reported on the compliance form is subject to review and audit
by EOHHS. The audits may include field or desk audits, and facilities may be required
to provide additional supporting documents including, but not limited to, payroll
records.
(ii) Any facility that does not comply with the terms of certification shall be subjected
to a clawback and twenty-five percent (25%) penalty of the unspent or impermissibly
spent funds, paid by the nursing facility to the state, in the amount of increased
reimbursement subject to this provision that was not expended in compliance with that
certification.
(iii) In any calendar year where no inflationary index is applied, eighty percent (80%)
of the base rate staffing adjustment in that calendar year pursuant to subsection
(a)(2)(vi) of this section shall be dedicated to increase compensation for all eligible
direct-care workers in the manner referenced in subsections (a)(3)(i), (a)(3)(i)(A),
and (a)(3)(i)(B) of this section.
(b) Transition to full implementation of rate reform. For no less than four (4) years after the initial application of the price-based
methodology described in subsection (a)(2) to payment rates, the executive office
of health and human services shall implement a transition plan to moderate the impact
of the rate reform on individual nursing facilities. The transition shall include
the following components:
(1) No nursing facility shall receive reimbursement for direct-care costs that is less
than the rate of reimbursement for direct-care costs received under the methodology
in effect at the time of passage of this act; for the year beginning October 1, 2017,
the reimbursement for direct-care costs under this provision will be phased out in
twenty-five-percent (25%) increments each year until October 1, 2021, when the reimbursement
will no longer be in effect; and
(2) No facility shall lose or gain more than five dollars ($5.00) in its total, per diem
rate the first year of the transition. An adjustment to the per diem loss or gain
may be phased out by twenty-five percent (25%) each year; except, however, for the
years beginning October 1, 2015, there shall be no adjustment to the per diem gain
or loss, but the phase out shall resume thereafter; and
(3) The transition plan and/or period may be modified upon full implementation of facility
per diem rate increases for quality of care-related measures. Said modifications shall
be submitted in a report to the general assembly at least six (6) months prior to
implementation.
(4) Notwithstanding any law to the contrary, for the twelve-month (12) period beginning
July 1, 2015, Medicaid payment rates for nursing facilities established pursuant to
this section shall not exceed ninety-eight percent (98%) of the rates in effect on
April 1, 2015. Consistent with the other provisions of this chapter, nothing in this
provision shall require the executive office to restore the rates to those in effect
on April 1, 2015, at the end of this twelve-month (12) period.