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A Medicaid and CHIP state plan is an agreement between a state and the Federal government describing how that state administers its Medicaid and CHIP programs. It gives an assurance that a state will abide by Federal rules and may claim Federal matching funds for its program activities. The state plan sets out groups of individuals to be covered, services to be provided, methodologies for providers to be reimbursed and the administrative activities that are underway in the state.
When a state is planning to make a change to its program policies or operational approach, states send state plan amendments (SPAs) to the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) for review and approval. States also submit SPAs to request permissible program changes, make corrections, or update their Medicaid or CHIP state plan with new information.
Persons with disabilities having problems accessing the SPA PDF files may call 410-786-0429 for assistance.
Summary: Effective effective October 1, 2020 until September 30, 2025, this amendment implements the time-limited mandatory medication assisted treatment benefit (MAT) per section 1006(b) of the SUPPORT Act to address opioid addiction. Section 1006(b) of the SUPPORT for Patients and Communities Act (SUPPORT Act), signed into law on October 24, 2018, amended section 1902(a)(10)(A) of the Act to require state Medicaid plans to include coverage of MAT for all eligible to enroll in the state plan or waiver of state plan. Section 1006(b) also added a new paragraph 1905(a)(29) to the Act to include the new required benefit in the definition of “medical assistance” and to specify that the new required benefit will be in effect for the period beginning October 1, 2020, and ending September 30, 2025.
Summary: Effective January 01, 2021, this amendment updates the optional state supplement program's annual income standards consistent with the federal register.
Summary: Updates the plan to expand coverage and reimbursement for vaccine administration in accordance with authorizations provided under the Public Readiness and Emergency Preparedness (PREP) Act declaration. Further, it clarifies the reimbursement methodology for medically necessary vaccines products; expands the list of practitioners able to order Home Health services; clarifies the administrative vaccine rate for children eligible under the Vaccine for Children (VFC) Program; and, incorporates reimbursement for administration of vaccinations to the adult population.
Summary: This amendment makes permanent the authority to allow various provider types to order laboratory and radiology services. In addition, the state adds coverage of heart and lung transplants for adults and all medically necessary transplants for children under 21 year of age within the inpatient hospital benefit.
Summary: corrects an error related to the reimbursement methodology for personal care services (PCS) provided through the Community First Choice (CFC) option
Summary: This time-limited state plan amendment responds to the COVID-19 national emergency. The purpose of this amendment is to allow licensed practitioners within their scope of practice to order & receive reimbursement for laboratory, radiology and home health services, allow laboratory services to be delivered outside an office, or similar facility other than a hospital outpatient department or clinic, when meeting the state’s provider qualifications.
Summary: This time-limited state plan amendment responds to the COVID-19 national emergency. The purpose of this amendment is to waive residency requirement for individuals in state temporarily, extend reasonable opportunity period for non-citizens declaring satisfactory immigration status, suspend all cost-sharing for testing services, suspend premiums for certain populations, add temporary provisions allowing Community 1st Choice in Acute Hospital setting, allow students with completed coursework to practice as unlicensed mental health professionals, amend provider qualifications to remove First Aid & CPR requirements, expand Pharmacist scope of practice definition, increases allowable day-supply limits for prescription drugs, waive requirement for the return of unused unit dose medications dispensed in LTC based on infection control, increase reimbursement of professional dispensing fees due to incurred cost of delivery, allow the pricing methodology for covered outpatient drugs dispensed by a retail-based pharmacy to be bypassed when a medication’s acquisition cost exceeds the standard “lesser of” payment methodology logic through petitioning at the point of sale, provide exceptions to state's Preferred Drug List if a shortage occurs, and modify reimbursement to reflect a per-episode rate equal to current monthly rate for Infant Learning Program (ILP) & Long Term Services & Support (LTSS).
Summary: Allows the state to comply with the Medicaid Drug Utilization Review (DUR)
provisions included in Section 1004 of the Substance Use-Disorder Prevention that promotes
Opioid Recovery and Treatment (SUPPORT) for Patients and Communities Act (P.L. 115-271).