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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: This SPA describes the methodology used by the state for determining the appropriate FMAP rates, including the increased FMAP rates, available under the provisions of the Affordable Care Act applicable for the medical assistance expenditures under the Medicaid program associated with enrollees in the new adult group adopted by the state and described in 42 CFR 435.119.
Summary: This SPA adds coverage for the eligibility group for adults with income below 133% of the FPL under Section 1902(a)(10)(A)(viii) of the Social Security Act
Summary: This SPA 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.
Summary: Updates various Nebraska non-institutional rates effective July 31, 2019. In summary, Nebraska is implementing a 2% increase in provider rates, with an additional 2% increase for behavioral health providers
Summary: Includes new drug review and utilization requirements set forth in section 1902(oo) of the Act. Specifically, Maryland is updating language to identify claim review limitations on safety edits and retrospective reviews, programs to monitor antipsychotic medications to children and fraud and abuse identification requirements
Summary: Removes references to “broker” or “brokering from the description for non-emergency transportation (NEMT). NE no longer directly brokers with transportation providers for services. For beneficiaries receiving their Medicaid through Managed Care, NEMT services have been added to the MCO contracts as of July 1, 2019. NE will reimburse NEMT fee for service for all other Medicaid beneficiaries
Summary: Update Maryland State Plan to remove the transmission fee for telehealth services to align reimbursement delivered via telehealth to in-person reimbursement
Summary: Increases Inpatient Hospital service payment rates by two percent (2%) and inpatient Psychiatric payment rates by four percent 4% over levels previously in effect.