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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: CMS is approving this time-limited state plan amendment (SPA) to respond to the COVID-19 national emergency. The purpose of this amendment is to pay an intermediate care facility for individuals with an intellectual disability (ICF/IID) to reserve a bed for eligible residents during temporary leaves of absence taken to reduce the risk of COVID-19 transmission.
Summary: CMS is approving this time-limited state plan amendment (SPA) to respond to the COVID-19 national emergency. The purpose of this amendment is to update the reimbursement rates related to testing, prevention, and treatment of COVID-19.
Summary: Effective October 1, 2018, this amendment adds coverage of long term residential substance use disorder services, which would allow an individual to initiate and receive services to treat substance use disorders in a less intense care setting, to the state's alternative benefit plan (ABP).
Summary: Effective June 1, 2021, this amendment updates the non-emergency medical transportation (NEMT) fee schedules and requires managed care organizations (MCOs) to provide NEMT services to their Medicaid managed care members. The Health and Human Services Commission (HHSC) will continue to provide NEMT to Medicaid recipients in fee-for-service but will no longer use a transportation broker model.