Public Act 100-1016 Public Act 1016 100TH GENERAL ASSEMBLY |
Public Act 100-1016 | SB2951 Enrolled | LRB100 18740 KTG 33974 b |
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| AN ACT concerning public aid.
| Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
| represented in the General Assembly:
| Section 1. Short title. This Act may be cited as the Early | Mental Health and Addictions Treatment Act. | Section 5. Medicaid Pilot Program; early treatment for | youth and young adults. | (a) The General Assembly finds as follows: | (1) Most mental health conditions begin in adolescence | and young adulthood, yet it can take an average of 10 years | before the right diagnosis and treatment are received. | (2) Over 850,000 Illinois youth under age 25 will | experience a mental health condition. | (3) Early treatment of significant mental health | conditions can enable wellness and recovery and prevent a | life of disability or early death from suicide. | (4) Early treatment leads to higher rates of school | completion and employment. | (5) Illinois' mental health system is aimed at adults | with advanced mental illnesses who have become disabled, | rather than focusing on youth in the early stages of a | mental health condition to prevent progression. | (6) Many states are implementing programs and services |
| for the early treatment of significant mental health | conditions in youth. | (7) The cost of early community-based treatment is a | fraction of the cost of a life of multiple | hospitalizations, disability, criminal justice | involvement, and homelessness, the common trajectory for | someone with a serious mental health condition. | (8) Early treatment for adolescents and young adults | with mental health conditions will save lives and State | dollars. | (b) As the sole Medicaid State agency, the Department of | Healthcare and Family Services, in partnership with the | Department of Human Services' Division of Mental Health and | with meaningful input from stakeholders, shall develop a pilot | program under which a qualifying adolescent or young adult, as | defined in subsection (d), may receive community-based mental | health treatment from a youth-focused community support team | for early treatment, as provided in subsection (e), that is | specifically tailored to the needs of youth and young adults in | the early stages of a serious emotional disturbance or serious | mental illness for purposes of stabilizing the youth's | condition and symptoms and preventing the worsening of the | illness and debilitating or disabling symptoms. The pilot | program shall be implemented across a broad spectrum of | geographic regions across the State. | (c) Federal waiver or State Plan amendment; implementation |
| timeline. | (1) Federal approval. The Department of Healthcare and | Family Services shall submit any necessary application to | the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services for | a waiver or State Plan amendment to implement the pilot | program described in this Section no later than September | 30, 2019. If the Department determines the pilot program | can be implemented without federal approval, the | Department shall implement the program no later than | December 31, 2019. The Department shall not draft any rules | in contravention of this timetable for pilot program | development and implementation. This pilot program shall | be implemented only to the extent that federal financial | participation is available. | (2) Implementation. After federal approval is secured, | if federal approval is required, the Department of | Healthcare and Family Services shall implement the pilot | program within 6 months after the date of federal approval. | (d) Qualifying adolescent or young adult. As used in this | Section, "qualifying adolescent or young adult" means a person | age 16 through 26 who is enrolled in the Medical Assistance | Program under Article V of the Illinois Public Aid Code and has | a diagnosis of a serious emotional disturbance as interpreted | by the federal Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services | Administration or a serious mental illness listed in the most | recent edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of |
| Mental Disorders. Because the purpose of the pilot program is | treatment in the early stages of a significant mental health | condition or emotional disturbance for purposes of preventing | progression of the illness, debilitating symptoms and | disability, a qualifying adolescent or young adult shall not be | required to demonstrate disability due to the mental health | condition, show a reduction in functioning as a result of the | condition, or have a reality impairment (psychosis) to be | eligible for services through the pilot program. A qualifying | adolescent or young adult who is determined to be eligible for | pilot program services before the age of 21 shall continue to | be eligible for such services without interruption through age | 26 as long as he or she remains enrolled in the Medical | Assistance Program. | (e) Community-based treatment model. The pilot program | shall create youth-focused community support teams for early | treatment. The community-based treatment model shall be a | multidisciplinary, team-based model specifically tailored for | adolescents and young adults and their needs for wellness, | symptom management, and recovery. The model shall take into | consideration area workforce, community uniqueness, and | cultural diversity. All services shall be evidence-based or | evidence-informed as applicable, and the services shall be | flexibly provided in-office, in-home, and in-community with an | emphasis on in-home and in-community services. The model shall | allow for and include each of the following: |
| (1) Community-based, outreach treatment, and | wrap-around services that begin in the early stages of a | serious mental illness or serious emotional disturbance | (functional impairment shall not be required for service | eligibility under the pilot program). | (2) Youth specific engagement strategies to encourage | participation and retention in services. | (3) Same-age or similar-age peer services to foster | resiliency. | (4) Family psycho-education and family involvement. | (5) Expertise or knowledge in school and university | systems, special education and work, volunteer and social | life for youth. | (6) Evidence-informed and young person-specific | psychotherapies. | (7) Care coordination for primary care. | (8) Medication management. | (9) Case management for problem solving to address | practicable problems, including criminal justice | involvement and housing challenges; and assisting the | young person or family in organizing all treatment and | goals. | (10) Supported education and employment to keep the | young person engaged in school and work to attain | self-sufficiency. | (11) Trauma-informed expertise for youth. |
| (12) Substance use treatment expertise. | (f) Pay-for-performance payment model. The Department of | Healthcare and Family Services, with meaningful input from | stakeholders, shall develop a pay-for-performance payment | model aimed at achieving high-quality mental health and overall | health and quality of life outcomes for the youth, rather than | a fee-for-service payment model. The payment model shall allow | for service flexibility to achieve such outcomes, shall cover | actual provider costs of delivering the pilot program services | to enable sustainability, and shall include all provider costs | associated with the data collection for purposes of the | analytics and outcomes reporting required under subsection | (h). The Department shall ensure that the payment model works | as intended by this Section within managed care. | (g) Rulemaking. The Department of Healthcare and Family | Services, in partnership with the Department of Human Services' | Division of Mental Health and with meaningful input from | stakeholders, shall develop rules for purposes of | implementation of the pilot program contemplated in this | Section within 6 months of federal approval of the pilot | program. If the Department determines federal approval is not | required for implementation, the Department shall develop | rules with meaningful stakeholder input no later than December | 31, 2019. | (h) Pilot program analytics and outcomes reports. The | Department of Healthcare and Family Services shall engage a |
| third party partner with expertise in program evaluation, | analysis, and research at the end of 5 years of implementation | to review the outcomes of the pilot program in stabilizing | youth with significant mental health conditions early on in | their condition to prevent debilitating symptoms and | disability and enable youth to reach their full potential. For | purposes of evaluating the outcomes of the pilot program, the | Department shall require providers of the pilot program | services to track the following annual data: | (1) days of inpatient hospital stays of service | recipients; | (2) periods of homelessness of service recipients and | periods of housing stability; | (3) periods of criminal justice involvement of service | recipients; | (4) avoidance of disability and the need for | Supplemental Security Income; | (5) rates of high school, college, or vocational school | engagement and graduation for service recipients; | (6) rates of employment annually of service | recipients; | (7) average length of stay in pilot program services; | (8) symptom management over time; and | (9) youth satisfaction with their quality of life, | pre-pilot and post-pilot program services. | (i) The Department of Healthcare and Family Services shall |
| deliver a final report to the General Assembly on the outcomes | of the pilot program within one year after 4 years of full | implementation, and after 7 years of full implementation, | compared to typical treatment available to other youth with | significant mental health conditions, as well as the cost | savings associated with the pilot program taking into account | all public systems used when an individual with a significant | mental health condition does not have access to the right | treatment and supports in the early stages of his or her | illness. | The reports to the General Assembly shall be filed with the | Clerk of the House of Representatives and the Secretary of the | Senate in electronic form only, in the manner that the Clerk | and the Secretary shall direct. | Post-pilot program discharge outcomes shall be collected | for all service recipients who exit the pilot program for up to | 3 years after exit. This includes youth who exit the program | with planned or unplanned discharges. The post-exit data | collected shall include the annual data listed in paragraphs | (1) through (9) of subsection (h). Data collection shall be | done in a manner that does not violate individual privacy laws. | Outcomes for enrollees in the pilot and post-exit outcomes | shall be included in the final report to the General Assembly | under this subsection (i) within one year of 4 full years of | implementation, and in an additional report within one year of | 7 full years of implementation in order to provide more |
| information about post-exit outcomes on a greater number of | youth who enroll in pilot program services in the final years | of the pilot program. | Section 10. Medicaid pilot program for opioid and other
| drug addictions. | (a) Legislative findings. The General Assembly finds as | follows: | (1) Illinois continues to face a serious and ongoing | opioid epidemic. | (2) Opioid-related overdose deaths rose 76% between | 2013 and 2016. | (3) Opioid and other drug addictions are life-long | diseases that require a disease management approach and not | just episodic treatment. | (4) There is an urgent need to create a treatment | approach that proactively engages and encourages | individuals with opioid and other drug addictions into | treatment to help prevent chronic use and a worsening | addiction and to significantly curb the rate of overdose | deaths. | (b) With the goal of early initial engagement of | individuals who have an opioid or other drug addiction in | addiction treatment and for keeping individuals engaged in | treatment following detoxification, a residential treatment | stay, or hospitalization to prevent chronic recurrent drug use, |
| the Department of Healthcare and Family Services, in | partnership with the Department of Human Services' Division of | Alcoholism and Substance Abuse and with meaningful input from | stakeholders, shall develop an Assertive Engagement and | Community-Based Clinical Treatment Pilot Program for early | treatment of an opioid or other drug addiction. The pilot | program shall be implemented across a broad spectrum of | geographic regions across the State. | (c) Assertive engagement and community-based clinical | treatment services. All services included in the pilot program | established under this Section shall be evidence-based or | evidence-informed as applicable and the services shall be | flexibly provided in-office, in-home, and in-community with an | emphasis on in-home and in-community services. The model shall | take into consideration area workforce, community uniqueness, | and cultural diversity. The model shall, at a minimum, allow | for and include each of the following: | (1) Assertive community outreach, engagement, and | continuing care strategies to encourage participation and | retention in addiction treatment services for both initial | engagement into addiction treatment services, and for | post-hospitalization, post-detoxification, and | post-residential treatment. | (2) Case management for purposes of linking | individuals to treatment, ongoing monitoring, problem | solving, and assisting individuals in organizing their |
| treatment and goals. Case management shall be covered for | individuals not yet engaged in treatment for purposes of | reaching such individuals early on in their addiction and | for individuals in treatment. | (3) Clinical treatment that is delivered in an | individual's natural environment, including in-home or | in-community treatment, to better equip the individual | with coping mechanisms that may trigger re-use. | (4) Coverage of provider transportation costs in | delivering in-home and in-community services in both rural | and urban settings. For rural communities, the model shall | take into account the wider geographic areas providers are | required to travel for in-home and in-community pilot | services for purposes of reimbursement. | (5) Recovery support services. | (6) For individuals who receive services through the | pilot program but disengage for a short duration (a period | of no longer than 9 months), allow seamless treatment | re-engagement in the pilot program. | (7) Supported education and employment. | (8) Working with the individual's family, school, and | other community support systems. | (9) Service flexibility to enable recovery and | positive health outcomes. | (d) Federal waiver or State Plan amendment; implementation | timeline. The Department shall follow the timeline for |
| application for federal approval and implementation outlined | in subsection (c) of Section 5. The pilot program contemplated | in this Section shall be implemented only to the extent that | federal financial participation is available. | (e) Pay-for-performance payment model. The Department of | Healthcare and Family Services, in partnership with the | Department of Human Services' Division of Alcoholism and | Substance Abuse and with meaningful input from stakeholders, | shall develop a pay-for-performance payment model aimed at | achieving high quality treatment and overall health and quality | of life outcomes, rather than a fee-for-service payment model. | The payment model shall allow for service flexibility to | achieve such outcomes, shall cover actual provider costs of | delivering the pilot program services to enable | sustainability, and shall include all provider costs | associated with the data collection for purposes of the | analytics and outcomes reporting required in subsection (g). | The Department shall ensure that the payment model works as | intended by this Section within managed care. | (f) Rulemaking. The Department of Healthcare and Family | Services, in partnership with the Department of Human Services' | Division of Alcoholism and Substance Abuse and with meaningful | input from stakeholders, shall develop rules for purposes of | implementation of the pilot program within 6 months after | federal approval of the pilot program. If the Department | determines federal approval is not required for |
| implementation, the Department shall develop rules with | meaningful stakeholder input no later than December 31, 2019. | (g) Pilot program analytics and outcomes reports. The | Department of Healthcare and Family Services shall engage a | third party partner with expertise in program evaluation, | analysis, and research at the end of 5 years of implementation | to review the outcomes of the pilot program in treating | addiction and preventing periods of symptom exacerbation and | recurrence. For purposes of evaluating the outcomes of the | pilot program, the Department shall require providers of the | pilot program services to track all of the following annual | data: | (1) Length of engagement and retention in pilot program | services. | (2) Recurrence of drug use. | (3) Symptom management (the ability or inability to | control drug use). | (4) Days of hospitalizations related to substance use | or residential treatment stays. | (5) Periods of homelessness and periods of housing | stability. | (6) Periods of criminal justice involvement. | (7) Educational and employment attainment during | following pilot program services. | (8) Enrollee satisfaction with his or her quality of | life and level of social connectedness, pre-pilot and |
| post-pilot services. | (h) The Department of Healthcare and Family Services shall | deliver a final report to the General Assembly on the outcomes | of the pilot program within one year after 4 years of full | implementation, and after 7 years of full implementation, | compared to typical treatment available to other youth with | significant mental health conditions, as well as the cost | savings associated with the pilot program taking into account | all public systems used when an individual with a significant | mental health condition does not have access to the right | treatment and supports in the early stages of his or her | illness. | The reports to the General Assembly shall be filed with the | Clerk of the House of Representatives and the Secretary of the | Senate in electronic form only, in the manner that the Clerk | and the Secretary shall direct. | Post-pilot program discharge outcomes shall be collected | for all service recipients who exit the pilot program for up to | 3 years after exit. This includes youth who exit the program | with planned or unplanned discharges. The post-exit data | collected shall include the annual data listed in paragraphs | (1) through (8) of subsection (g). Data collection shall be | done in a manner that does not violate individual privacy laws. | Outcomes for enrollees in the pilot and post-exit outcomes | shall be included in the final report to the General Assembly | under this subsection (h) within one year of 4 full years of |
| implementation, and in an additional report within one year of | 7 full years of implementation in order to provide more | information about post-exit outcomes on a greater number of | youth who enroll in pilot program services in the final years | of the pilot program.
| Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon | becoming law.
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Effective Date: 8/21/2018
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