Title: Medicaid and Special Education Psychological Services
1Medicaid and Special Education Psychological
Services
2Presentation Objectives
- Recognize eligibility requirements
- Recognize those persons who can provide billable
Psychological Services in the schools. - Identify the already utilized Psychological
Services that can be billed within the schools.
3Presentation Objectives
- Understand the relationship between the schools
Special Education process and Virginia Department
of Medical Assistance Services (DMAS). - Learn how to easily incorporate current
documentation into appropriate necessary
DMAS-compliant documentation.
4Eligibility
- Children eligible for and enrolled in FAMIS Plus
(childrens Medicaid) or FAMIS and - Receiving special education services, or
- For determination of eligibility for special
education services.
5Psychological Services
- School providers do not require prior
authorization. - Services do not require a referral by a
physician, but shall be medically prescribed by
qualified practitioner of healing arts.
6Psychological Services
- School-based providers of psychological
psychiatric services are to follow the guidelines
listed in the DMAS School Division Provider
Manual. - Chapter II - Provider Requirements
- Chapter IV - Covered Services
- Chapter V - Billing
- Chapter VI - Utilization Review
7DMAS Provider Requirements
- Must be contracted by the school division AND be
one of the following - Licensed psychiatrist
- Licensed clinical psychologist
- Licensed school psychologist
8Provider Requirements (cont.)
- School Psychologist-Limited
- The Board of Psychology shall license, as
school psychologists-limited, persons licensed by
the Board of Education with an endorsement in
psychology and a masters degree in psychology.
The Board of Psychology shall issue licenses to
such persons without examination and shall
practice solely in public school divisions
9Provider Requirements (cont.)
- License Clinical Social Worker
- Licensed Professional Counselors
- School Social Worker
- Minimum of a masters level degree and endorsed
by Department of Education
10Provider Requirements (cont.)
- Licensed Marriage and Family Therapist
- Licensed by DHP and Board of Counseling
- Psychiatric Clinical Nurse Specialist
- Licensed by the Board of Nursing and certified by
the American Nurses Credentialing Center
11However
- Not every provider can provide the same services!
- Based on your training, the duties and
responsibilities of your role within the school
division, and the standards of professional
practice and ethics, and - Within guidelines of Special Education
(8VAC20-80-10), Medicaid regulations
(12VAC30-50-140 and 12VAC30-50-150) and School
Division requirements.
12State Regulations
- Medicaid State Regulations (12VAC30-50-140 and
12VAC30-50-150) - Psychological Evaluations/Assessments and
counseling as a related service may be provided
by - Licensed by the Board of Psychology as a clinical
psychologist, licensed school psychologist or a
school psychologist-limited - Psychologists (as above)
- LCSWs
- School Social Workers
- Licensed Professional Counselors
- Licensed Marriage and Family Therapists
- Psychiatric Clinical Nurse Specialist (CNS)
- Must practice within the scope of license and
education
13State Regulations cont.
- Department of Education (8VAC20-81 Special
Education Regulations) - Social work services
- Preparing a social or developmental history
- Group and individual counseling
- Working in partnership with parents and others on
those problems in a childs living situation - Mobilizing school and community resources
- Assisting in developing positive behavioral
intervention strategies - Update October 2008
- A local educational agency, in its discretion,
may expand the role of a school social worker or
visiting teacher beyond those services identified
in this definition, as long as the expansion is
consistent with other state laws and regulations,
including licensure.
14Thinking Privately
- Requires a paradigm shift
- Translate terms and processes from a medical
model to a special education model - Not always easy or comfortable
15The Process
IDEA Special Ed
Medicaid
Screening
Assessment
Eligibility
Diagnostic Clinical Interview Initial
comprehensive exam Mental Status/GAF/DSM-IV
TR 90801-90802
Psychological Testing 96101-96103
16Screening
- Reason for referral or presenting problems
- Background information
- School/educational history
- Medical history
- Family history
- Previous psychological treatment
- Information fits on Diagnostic Clinical Interview
form (MED 16)
17Assessment
- Conduct a personal interview
- Continue completion of Diagnostic Clinical
Interview Form - Relevant Family/Medical information
- Include behavioral observations
- Conduct a diagnostic clinical interview
18Billable Psychological Services
- Initial evaluations (90801-02)
- Re-evaluations (90801-02)
- Individual and group counseling/therapy
(90804-90857) - Psychological Testing (96101-03)
- Neurobehavioral status exam (96116)
- Neuropsychological testing (96118-20)
19Using the Forms
- Diagnostic Clinical Interview (MED 16)
- Initial evaluations and re-evaluations
- Therapy Progress Note (MED 18)
- Individual and group counseling/therapy
- Psychological Testing Services (MED 17)
- Psychological Testing
- Neurobehavioral status exam
- Neuropsychological testing
- Psychological Services Log (MED 19)
20Diagnostic Clinical Interview (MED 16)
- Mental Status Exam
- Similar to behavioral observations and interview
- Done all the time during an assessment, but may
not call it this
- Appearance
- Attitude
- Eye contact
- Mood, affect
- Speech, vocabulary
- Responsiveness
- Thought process
- Judgment
- Insight
- Suicidal/homicidal
21Diagnostic Clinical Interview (MED 16)
- For DSM-IV-TR Multiaxial System
- Axis I Clinical Disorder
- Axis II Personality Disorder/Mental Retardation
- Axis III General Medical Conditions
- Axis IV Psychosocial Environmental Problems
- Axis V Global Assessment of Functioning (GAF)
- Must have Axis I and/or II diagnosis and Axis V
22Diagnostic Clinical Interview (MED 16)
- Include treatment plan or recommendations
- Must be performed prior to start of psychological
services or as part of Special Education
determination. - Does not need to be performed annually thereafter
unless there is a need.
23Using Diagnosis Codes in the Schools
- For documentation purposes
- Use common diagnostic classification system -
DSM-IV-TR - For billing on CMS -1500 claim form
- Enter the appropriate ICD-9-CM diagnosis code
24Using Diagnosis Codes in the Schools
- Determine appropriate and current ICD-9-CM
diagnosis code which describes the nature of the
illness or injury for which the service was
rendered - Determine if 4th or 5th digit is required
25Using Diagnosis Codes in the Schools
- Get comfortable translating educational terms
into psychological terms that are required for
Medicaid billing - Used in schools only for Medicaid documentation
- Does not have to be used in any school reporting
26Translating to" Medicaid-Friendly Terms
- Specific Learning Disabilities Learning
Disorders - In Reading Reading Disorder (315.00)
- In Math Mathematics Disorder (315.1)
27Translating to" Medicaid-Friendly Terms
- Mental Retardation Mental Retardation
- Educable
- Mild Mental Retardation (317)
- Trainable
- Moderate Mental Retardation (318.0)
- Severe Profound
- Severe (318.1)
- Profound (318.2)
28GAF Scale
- Psychologists judgment of students overall
level of functioning - Rated in respect to psychological, social and
school functioning from 0 to 100 - 10 ranges of functioning (0-10, 11-20, etc.)
- Two components
- severity of symptoms
- functioning level
29GAF Scale School Examples
- 30 below hospitalized, residential treatment,
specialized programs - 30 -40 violent, acting out
- 40 - 60 self-contained class, non-violent
acting out, social problems - 60 - 70 resource/itinerant services
- 70 adjustment issues, probably not special
education guidance counseling
30Psychological Testing Form (MED 17)
- Behavioral observations
- Tests administered
- Medication at time of testing
- Plan of treatment or interventions recommended
31Psychological Counseling (MED 18)
- Service is related to IEP
- Follows related service procedures for adding to
IEP - Medicaid process
- Diagnostic Clinical Interview (MED 16)
- GAF
- Treatment Plan
- Therapy Progress Note
32DMAS Documentation Requirements
- Medicaid file NOT part of student record in
school - Practitioner maintains forms in files in their
office - Current IEP which documents need for medically
necessary psych services
33DMAS Documentation Requirements
- Name of child on each page
- History including school/educational, medical,
family and previous psychological treatment - Functional limitations
- Evidence of medical evaluation, as applicable
34DMAS Documentation Requirements
- Intervention / Treatment Plan
- Diagnosis to be addressed by service
- Type, amount, frequency and estimated duration of
service - Short-term and long-term goals
- Client-specific goals related to symptoms and
behaviors
35DMAS Documentation Requirements
- Indicate treatment modality and reason chosen
- Signature, title and date of licensed
practitioner of healing arts completing the POC
36DMAS Documentation Requirements
- Reviewed every 90 days by qualified licensed
practitioner of healing arts - Relapse?
- Significant change in environment?
- At-risk for moving to higher level of care?
- Positive/negative changes relative to symptoms.
37DMAS Documentation Requirements
- Treatment plan available on the following forms
- Diagnostic Clinical Interview (MED 16)
- Psychological Evaluation (MED 17)
- Therapy Note (MED 18)
38DMAS Documentation Requirements
- IEP may serve as POC and auth of services as long
as - Approved licensed practitioner of healing arts
initiates the services - IEP identified the services and estimated
timeframe that the services will be medically
necessary
39DMAS Documentation Requirements
- Results of diagnostic evaluation within past year
- Record must contain diagnosis and examination
upon which the diagnosis is based - Licensed provider of healing arts must perform
initial evaluation
40DMAS Documentation Requirements
- Depending on school district policy, teachers may
conduct annual review of students IEP to
determine if any changes need to be made in the
annual goals and objectives as well as
appropriateness of the placement. Psychologists
are typically not part of this process.
41DMAS Documentation Requirements
- Global Assessment of Functioning
- Progress notes for ongoing services
- Evidence of the childs or parents involvement
and understanding of diagnosis and treatment - Entries signed and dated by responsible provider
of services. Care rendered by personnel under
supervision of an approved licensed professional
must be signed by this professional every 30
calendar days
42DMAS Documentation Requirements
- All services must be entered in the record,
including Treatment Plan - Indicate progress made, change in diagnosis,
response to treatment - Discharge summary
- Annual summary report of therapy/counseling
sessions - Example Practitioner summarizes the therapy for
IEP Team, then the documentation may be captured
as part of the IEP renewal.
43Service Limits
- No more than a grand total of three of any in
this list in a seven-day period - Individual psychotherapy
- Once per day (medical/record evaluation
management is included in the psychotherapy code
and should NOT be billed separately)
44Service Limits (contd)
- Group psychotherapy
- Once per day
- 10 (max) per group
- No sensory stimulation, recreational activities,
art classes, excursions, eating together counted - Family psychotherapy
- Once per day
45Service Limits (contd)
- EXCLUSIONS
- Multiple-family group psychotherapy
- Hypnotherapy
- Environmental intervention
- Interpretation of examinations, procedures data
- Preparations of reports
46Non-Covered Services
- Broken appointments
- Remedial education
- Day care
- Teaching grooming skills, monitoring activities
of daily living, bibliotherapy, reminiscence
therapy, or social interaction
47Non-Covered Services (cont.)
- Telephone consultations
- Mail order prescriptions
- Substance abuse services (May be accessed through
a private provider)
48Non-Covered Services (cont.)
- Interpretation of examinations, procedures, and
data - The preparation of reports
- Record reviews billed separately from therapy
session (90885 - no longer covered as of January
1, 2007)
49Differential Reimbursement Fees
- For the stated reimbursement amount
- 100 - Psychiatrists
- 90 - Clinical Psychologists
- 75 of the 90
- School Psychologists or School Psychologist-Limite
d - LCSWs or School Social Workers
- LPCs
- MFTs
- CNSs
50Differential Reimbursement Fees
- School district (the provider) gets the federal
share of the reimbursed fee - Currently
- 50 for Medicaid
- 65 for FAMIS and Medicaid expansion
- July 1, 2006 Cost-based reimbursement and
interim rates
51For Example
- A School Psychologist-Limited provider conducts a
psychological evaluation - 90801 Maximum interim rate 110.48
- Receives 75 of the 90 (or 67.5)
- (Clinical Psychologists full fee) 74.57
- School district would receive the federal share
of the stated reimbursement amount 50 37.29
or 65 48.47
52Conclusion
- DMAS required documentation readily fits into the
current Special Education process we now follow. - Forms can easily be adapted to be used to take
notes during screening and during the assessment. - Record keeping is kept to a minimum and within
DMAS requirements. - Forms can be hand-written or typed and
information briefly stated. - Additional training may be needed.
53Contact Info
- Clifford V. Hatt, Ed.D., ABPP (School), NCSP
- Coordinator, Psychological Audiological
Services - Director of APA-Accredited Internship Training
- Licensed Clinical Psychologist
- Â Virginia Beach City Public Schools
- Ashley Barton, LCSW
- Maternal and Child Health Coordinator
- Department of Medical Assistance Services
- Ashley.Barton_at_dmas.virginia.gov
- www.dmas.virginia.gov