Children’s Cabinet convenes for the first time in 8 years, plans to increase child well being


Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387

Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387

For the first time since 2007, Governor Gina Raimondo convened the Children’s Cabinet to set a plan in order to promote opportunities for Rhode Island children, by establishing policies and budget plans directed towards children and their needs.

National data from KIDS COUNT, an organization that helps to mold better futures for children who are at risk of experiencing poor education, health, and socioeconomic factors, ranked Rhode Island as the 31st state in the nation for child well being. Rhode Island was also the lowest ranked among New England states, partially due to increases in the percentage of children living in poverty.

Secretary Elizabeth Roberts, photo courtesy of http://today.brown.edu/articles/2009/11/healthcare
Secretary Elizabeth Roberts, photo courtesy of http://today.brown.edu/articles/2009/11/healthcare

The Cabinet has three specific goals: to create a five-year strategic plan that will improve outcomes for children and their families; to establish policies and performance metrics for each state department; and measure progress on collaborative initiatives for children across these departments.

“All kids deserve to make it in Rhode Island,” Raimondo said. “As a parent, I am focused on giving my kids every opportunity to succeed. We must provide every Rhode Island kid with that same opportunity. When we invest in our kids, we’re investing in our future, workforce and economy. Working together, across government and with the community, we can set our families and our state on a path for a healthy, stable future.”

Raimondo appointed Health and Human Services Secretary Elizabeth Roberts as the Cabinet’s chair. As the chair, she will guide the Cabinet in their efforts to improve children’s well being across the state.

“Every child deserves an opportunity for a safe, healthy, successful, and bright future,” Roberts said. “It is our responsibility as public officials- and as caretakers of the state they will inherit- to protect that opportunity.”

During their meeting, the Cabinet spoke on several topics, such as a new agency-wide policy on human trafficking, child welfare, early childhood education, and strengthening collaboration between the Department of Children, Youth, and Families (DCYF), and the Department of Behavioral Healthcare, Developmental Disabilities and Hospitals (BHDDH).

The Cabinet was established in 1991, but saw several changes during the 2015 legislative session. The statue that created the group was amended to better integrate state services across departments and agencies, as well as adding the Secretary of Health and Human Services, the Child Advocate, and the Governor as members.

Raimondo signs executive order for state healthcare reform


Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387

Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387

After the successes of Governor Gina Raimondo’s Reinventing Medicaid task force, today, at the Kent County YMCA, she announced a new initiative to overhaul the state’s healthcare system as a whole. Titled the Working Group for Healthcare Innovation, the group, under the leadership of Elizabeth Roberts, the Secretary of Health and Human Services, seeks to improve Rhode Island’s healthcare landscape, making it more competitive with other New England states.

Gov. Raimondo and Sen. Whitehouse with YMCA campers after signing the healthcare reform executive order
Gov. Raimondo and Sen. Whitehouse with YMCA campers after signing the healthcare reform executive order

“Today we are talking about keeping a dialogue going that you so successfully started on earlier this year,” Raimondo said, referring to Reinventing Medicaid. She added that she seeks to take the work that was done there, in the public healthcare system, and move it forward.

“Today is about bringing that same level of innovation in all that we do in healthcare delivery in the state of Rhode Island,” she said.

The Governor has set forth four specific goals for the task force to achieve, under specific deadlines. They are to develop a global healthcare spending cap; plan out and implement the “80 by ’18,” goal, which would tie 80 percent of healthcare payments to quality by 2018; bring the state’s healthcare system technologically up to date; and establish a framework to achieve health and wellness goals outlined by the Centers for Disease Control.

Raimondo said that the biggest goal, which all of these are to work together to achieve, is to reduce the costs of healthcare, improve outputs, and improve the patient experience. She said that these goals are the “holy grail,” of providing healthcare, and making Rhode Island more effective overall.

“I believe it’s doable, I know it’s doable. It’s doable if we commit ourselves,” she said. “We’ve got to catch up and we’ve got to be competitive. Rhode Island has to be competitive.”

The focus of the task force will draw from suggestions made by a group of healthcare stakeholders that Governor Raimondo received back in December. Many members of this group, which was put together by United States Senator Sheldon Whitehouse and Rhode Island Foundation President Neil Steinberg, will now be serving with on the new task force.

Whitehouse also spoke in support of Raimondo’s initiative, citing that the United States spends more money per capita in relation to life expectancy than almost every other developed country. The United States’ life expectancy is also lower than many countries that pay less per capita. Whitehouse also mentioned that since 1960, health care expenditures have risen from $27.4 billion to $2.8 trillion. Healthcare spending has declined in recent years, but reducing costs remains a priority.

“It’s not a system where you can tell it what to do and it’s going to change,” Whitehouse said, speaking about how healthcare reform works. “You actually need to change the system. What you say is a whisper, how you pay is a shout.”

Secretary Roberts, who will head the group, said that even though healthcare reform is a very complex issue, the working group can find a solution because they want to get the community involved in the process. Rather than just having a conversation about what needs to be done, Roberts said, there will be collaboration on both ends of the project. By doing this, they will create a long-term plan.

“I am excited to see the Governor take a very direct interest, and give us a very direct charge, because that, to me, is absolutely crucial to a statewide approach,” Roberts said about her enthusiasm to begin working. “I am excited to see the range of people who have stepped forward to participate, and know that we will make some real progress.”

Roberts has had experience working with the Rhode Island healthcare industry in the past, as former Lieutenant Governor during the Chafee Administration. Roberts has also worked in health insurance before she was involved in government, and as a legislator, she chaired the Health Committee.

“Many of us have met before, and have worked together before,” she said. “But the charge of the Governor, to really come together, and really make some measurable differences, is going to move us forward.”

The Working Group for Healthcare Innovation will begin meeting in August, and give its first set of recommendations to Governor Raimondo in December. Members of the group come from several communities, including government, insurance, hospital workers, labor, and business. There are 36 total members.

SCOTUS marriage equality decision celebrated in RI


Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387

Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387
DSC_3625
C Kelly Smith’s last Marriage Equality sign

Rhode Island’s celebration of the Supreme Court‘s historic decision allowing same-sex couples to marry across the United States was also a history lesson about the long battle for full LGBTQ acceptance in our state. Organizer Kate Monteiro spoke eloquently and introduced a steady stream of speakers, but more importantly she paused to remember those who didn’t live long enough to see this day, those who are only spoken of “in the echoes of the wind.”

We live in a better world because of their work and sacrifice.

The celebration was held at the Roger Williams National Memorial, because, explained Monteiro, this is where “religious freedom in the United States was born” and where Belle Pelegrino and the ’76ers first met to demand the right to march in Providence with a sign saying ‘I am gay.'”

“We stand at the top of a very, very high hill,” said Monteiro, “we have carried that pack and we have wanted for water and struggled and slipped and we stand at the top of a hill. And the view is beautiful. It is absolutely splendid. And just a little bit further is the next big hill. Because we are not at the top of the mountain, never mind the other side of the mountain.”

“Tomorrow, in 29 states, someone can be fired for being gay or lesbian, let alone transgender. (That, thank you, is 32 states)… That’s wrong, we need to change it, that is the mountain.”

“Can you imagine if we could go in time and bring Roger Williams here today?” asked Rodney Davis to laughs, “but when you boil it down and get to its purest sense, Freedom, Liberty and Justice was the reason why he came here…”

DSC_3469

DSC_3473

DSC_3642
Frank Ferri & Tony Caparco

DSC_3639

DSC_3634
M Charles Bakst

DSC_3633

DSC_3618
Marti Rosenberg
DSC_3609
Edie Ajello
DSC_3605
Jenn Steinfeld
DSC_3599
Seth Magaziner
DSC_3593
Rodney Davis
DSC_3579
Jorge Elorza

DSC_3568

DSC_3562
Kate Monteiro

DSC_3557

DSC_3547

DSC_3542

DSC_3524

DSC_3517

DSC_3506

DSC_3496

DSC_3491

Patreon

Medicaid on the Move


Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387

Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387

Strengthening Rhode Island Medicaid_Final_5 8 15.020The 7th Annual Budget Policy Conference, a fundraiser for the Economic Progress Institute (EPI), had a timely theme: “Medicaid on the Move.”

Since Governor Gina Raimondo announced a Medicaid crisis in February and the creation of a working group of “27 members from across health care, business, state government and community and nonprofit organizations” to deal with the crisis, the idea of “Reinventing Medicaid” has become a central part of the state’s 2016 budget process.

Medicaid is a state and federally supported system of health care that targets the most vulnerable and least represented people in our community, i.e. children, low income adults, the elderly and those with mental or physical handicaps. So special attention must be paid to the process of “reinventing” the system and therefore an appropriate target for a progressive economic institute such as EPI to address.

Governor Raimondo gave the opening address to the breakfast crowd, mostly made up of medical policy wonks and EPI supporters. She used the opportunity to press for a $10.10 minimum wage and for an increase in the earned income tax credit from 10 to 15 percent, possibly her two most progressive ideas in her 2016 budget proposal.

Moving onto Medicaid, Raimondo insisted that her goal in pulling together the working group is “not about kicking people off Medicaid” but “getting people cared for in the lowest cost environment.”

Raimondo acknowledged that the EPI and many of those in the audience are more concerned with social justice and economic justice than they are with short term budget fixes when she said, near the end of her speech, “Your stubborn idealism is a good thing for Rhode Island, so don’t lose it.”

Linda Katz, policy director and co-founder of the EPI, spent 14 minutes introducing the audience to the basic facts about Medicaid. In the video below I’ve combined the slides from her presentation with the talk she gave.

Katz is a member of the Reinventing Medicaid working group. The first weeks of work by the working group, Katz suggested, was preliminary. Now, as the working group prepares to move ahead and plan the implementation of the ideas presented, Katz says that she’s “looking forward to part two, where we take a deeper dive into Medicaid.”

Cindy Mann, former Medicaid Director in the Obama Administration, began her talk noting that this July will mark the 50th anniversary of Medicaid. Medicaid, says Mann, “is constantly reinventing itself.”

Over the course of her talk Mann explained exactly who Medicaid serves, and why Rhode Island is in many ways both an outlier and a leader in the way we administer the program. In the video below I’ve combined the slides from her presentation with the talk she gave.

For instance, “Rhode Island has, as a population, more elderly and disabled” than many other states, said Mann. Three percent of our Medicaid enrollees account for 70 percent of our Medicaid spending.

Mann made a special point to mention the medical care of the incarcerated, surely the population our society seems least vested in. When people in our prisons require outpatient care, that is, medical services the prison hospital is unable to meet, Medicaid covers the expense. Mann maintained that the state should make sure that “no one leaves jail without being assessed for health care coverage.”

Former Lt. Governor Elizabeth Roberts, who Governor Lincoln Chafee tasked with setting up the state’s health care exchange and who Raimondo put in charge of the working group, spoke last.

Roberts said that she and the working group instead worked to reform the system. “We did not remove benefits,” said Roberts. In addition to the recommendations of the working group, Roberts feels that there needs to be a pay increase for certified nursing assistants and home health care workers, who are being squeezed economically.

Roberts also agreed with Katz about the second phase of the working group’s mission. The “next 2 months,” said Roberts, “will be more important than the last 2.” The working group issues its final report in July.

Patreon

Reinventing Medicaid working group unveils 55 initiatives


Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387

Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387
DSC_4759
Dr. Ira Wilson, working group co-chair

The Reinventing Medicaid working group unveiled 55 initiatives that are projected to result in $85.5 million in savings. Former Lt. Governor Elizabeth Roberts, tasked by Governor Gina Raimondo to head up the group, said that they are still working through over 200 suggestions, some of which may be included in the final report.

“A deadline induced series of last minute proposals,” said Roberts, “will be considered over the next week.”

This was the 3rd Reinventing Medicaid working group meeting and it was held in the fourth floor boardroom of CCRI in Warwick ahead of the working group’s April 30 report of proposed 2016 RI state budget initiatives. The working group’s final report is due in July, but working group co-chair Dennis Keefe, of Care New England, cautioned that “You can’t do reform in a year. It takes five, six, seven years…”

Today’s meeting took the form of a two and a half hour “facilitated discussion” with a PowerPoint presentation and specialized iPads that allowed working group members to type their questions, concerns and ideas onto the screen. This procedure had the benefit/drawback of anonymizing feedback from working group members, so it was hard to tell, for instance, who was worried about capping hospital executive salaries and who was worried about EBT card abuse.

The 55 initiatives were group by theme:

Payment and Delivery System Reforms: initiatives related to transforming Rhode Island Medicaid into one which pays for quality and value, rather than volume, and which promotes quality of care and patient experience.

Targeting Fraud, Waste, and Abuse: initiatives related to ensuring that Medicaid programs operate in compliance with state and federal law and regulation, and rooting out wasteful, unnecessary, or fraudulent spending and utilization.

Administrative and Operational Efficiencies: initiatives related to streamlining and improving state oversight of the Medicaid program.

A total savings of $85.5 million is projected so far:

Table
Some initiatives were discussed singularly, others were grouped, and more than half were not discussed at all. The first idea to be presented was a plan to “implement an incentive program to reduce unnecessary hospital utilization funded by a 5% decrease in hospital payment rates.” This is projected to save the state $15.7 million. According to the working group:

This initiative would eliminate the FY2016 rate increase for hospital services and reduce hospital rates by a further 5 % across both fee for service and managed care. Achievement of savings in the managed care products (Rite Care, Rhody Health Partners and Rhody Health Options) will be accomplished through modifications to the capitation rate.

The $31 million saved would be re­?invested in a hospital incentive program. Hospitals would have the opportunity to earn back a portion of the $31 million based on achieving performance goals around reduction of unnecessary utilization, reduction of avoidable re-admissions, and improved coordination of care. The incentive payments earned would be paid in September 2016.

What this means is that the 5 percent in “savings” would be placed into a “pool” which hospitals can claim the following year, based on the hospitals ability to satisfy certain metrics. Medicaid dollars would be unavailable for re-hospitalizations, hospital borne illnesses and the like. Instead, the hospitals will be able to claim these dollars only if they can show that they have attained certain patient health metrics. Such a scheme may require “fast statutory changes” from the General Assembly.

The next initiative would “implement an incentive program to reduce long stays in nursing homes, funded by a 3% decrease in nursing home payment rates.”

This initiative, which would impact both fee-­for-­service and managed care services, involves two components: a 3.0% reduction in rates and the elimination of an inflation related rate increase. Approximately half of the savings are associated with Rhody Health Options, and will be achieved through a reduction in capitation rates.

The $17.9 million saved would be re-­invested in a nursing home incentive program designed to avoid long stays. The program would measure discharges to the community and re-hospitalizations, and offer incentive payments to facilities that achieve high ratings on both scores.

This initiative can be thought of as similar to the first initiative, except that it would apply to nursing homes instead of hospitals, with a similar emphasis on positive patient outcomes. This initiative is seen as important since nursing home care is one of Medicaid’s biggest expenses. Ultimately, nursing homes would be able to claim 2016 money in 2017 for moving patients out of nursing homes.

Savings of $4 million are projected through “home stabilization initiatives for target populations.”

The purpose of the state’s Health Begins with a Home Initiative (HBHI) is to make an organized set of Medicaid-­funded health and home?stabilization services available to members of certain sub-populations. This innovative home and health stabilization program targets Medicaid beneficiaries who have complex medical or behavioral health conditions and are either homeless or at risk for homelessness or transitioning from high?cost intensive care settings back into the community.

The HBHI focuses on the following Medicaid beneficiaries:

Target Group #1: Medicaid-­eligible children and youth with behavioral health needs in the custody of the RI Department of Children, Youth, and Families (DCYF) who are at risk for or transitioning from institutionally based or residential treatment facilities, or congregate care; and the parent(s)/caretaker(s) of these children living in the community.

Target Group #2: Medicaid-­eligible adults between the ages of 19 and 64 with serious behavioral health or physical conditions who are homeless or at risk of homelessness subsequent to military service, health treatment, or incarceration.

Target Group #3: Persons with disabilities, elders, and those who are transitioning from institutionally-­based care who have a history of homelessness, would otherwise be homeless, if not for the nursing home stay or would benefit from service upon transition due to length of stay in the institution.

Medicaid will not pay for housing, but it can support programs to keep people from becoming homeless. This is one part of the plan that will require money upfront to see savings later. Keefe said that this is the kind of program where investment could be “significantly higher” for greater savings. He was very excited about this program.

The next idea was to “scale up community health teams.”

Community health teams (CHT) work as an extension of a primary care office to meet the social and behavioral needs of patients. They are a group of providers such as social workers, community health workers, nurse managers, and others who can directly address social, behavioral, and environmental factors affecting health and health behaviors. The CHT is modeled after similar highly successful programs in Vermont, Maine, North Carolina, and other states.

The RI Care Transformation Collaborative, an all-­payer Medical Home initiative, is currently piloting two community health teams: one in South County and one in Pawtucket. Each community health team works collaboratively with CTC practices in that service area and health plans to identify high-­risk patients. A number of other sites, including at least one Federally Qualified Health Center (FQHC), have developed their own Community Health Team with separate funding.

This initiative would quickly scale up the CHT and develop an organized, Medicaid-­wide approach to CHT implementation. CHTs are provided lists of high-­utilizer patients by the MCOs and collaborate with the Medical Home to address unmet needs. The result is improved utilization patterns, better health outcomes, and lower costs.

There is growing evidence, said the presenters, “that this model is effective.” Sally Finger, an adviser to the working group, said that costs are difficult to determine because the idea is so new. “This is really happening everywhere,” said Finger, “and it is not coordinated, which is why there isn’t much data on savings.”

The idea reminded me somewhat of former Rhode Island Department of Health Executive Director Michael Fine’s idea for Neighborhood Health Stations. Note also that we already service about a third of Rhode Island’s Medicaid recipients through nine community health centers represented by the Rhode Island Health Center Association. Community-based primary health care is definitely the right direction to go in.

The next two initiatives discussed were grouped together. Each would reap savings of about $1 million for the state.

Redesign CEDARR services program, transition to community health team approach

In keeping with the principles of paying for value in the Medicaid delivery system and reducing waste, this initiative will redesign the Comprehensive, Evaluation, Diagnosis, Assessment, Referral, Re-­Evaluation (CEDARR) Family Center package. This redesign will include a discontinuation of the Family Care Plan Review, reduce the amount of Health Needs Coordination services, as well as transfer Direct Service Review functions of the CEDARR Family Centers to state staff.

Move out-­of-­plan services for children with special healthcare needs into managed care

In an effort to increase efficiency of care and coverage for high-­?utilizing populations, this initiative will integrate services for children with special health care needs into the continuum of care of the Medicaid Managed Care Organizations (MCOs). Services that have been out of plan for this population and will now be integrated into the MCO scope include Home Based Therapeutic Services (HBTS), Personal Services and Supports (PASS), and Respite care. Through the integration of these and like services, this initiative will provide flexibility to the MCOs to provide more evidence-­?based, clinically appropriate, lower-­?cost services to children and adolescents.

The coordinating of these systems will, according to the working group, “optimize care” and “reduce costs.” But the question was raised, “Is the plan implementable and can the results of the plan be evaluated?” Open questions like this might call into question the estimates on savings.

The last of the big six ideas was to “coordinate care management for those with severe and persistent mental illness (SPMI).”

This initiative would create a population-­?based health home approach for persons living with a serious mental illness. The program will reduce medical, pharmacy and behavioral health expenses for the population by better coordinating their care. All members will be attributed to an accountable health home. Providers will be paid a capitated rate for care coordination, and be incentivized for outcome measures and utilization.

DSC_4768In Rhode Island, there are currently 10,450 people who would be affected by this plan. Many of the pieces of this plan are already in place. It is thought that the state will save $3 million.

The next phase of the discussion concentrated on six initiatives targeting waste, fraud and abuse. This would included Electronic Visit Verification (EVV) for home health care workers (perhaps through a smart phone app) to ensure that the state “does not pay for services which are not actually delivered.” Savings could also be found by enrolling patients into Medicare, if eligible. Predictive modeling computer systems would “examine provider reimbursement policies” as well as search for inconsistencies and errors in payments.

The working group also believes that “enhanced residency verifications” that is, making sure that Rhode Island only pays for the Medicaid of Rhode Islanders, may save some money, though it was admitted that residency is “more complicated than it seems.” The determination of residency rests on the intent of the patient, which is a difficult to dispute federal standard.

Next a suite of 13 ideas to reform long term care were quickly examined. The working group did not delve too deeply into the specifics, but it was noted that the state may be spending too much on Hospice care.

Towards the end of the presentation Jim McNulty, a mental health advocate, said that “I like a lot of what I see here,” but added that “implementation of all these ideas will be extremely difficult.”

The April 30 report will be much more comprehensive. We should expect to see more ideas put forward and for Governor Raimondo’s goal of $90 million in cuts to be made. The General Assembly then goes to work dissecting the working group’s plan as part of its arduous budget process.

Patreon

Reinventing Medicaid should be about values, not dollars


Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387

Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387
DSC_1629
Elizabeth Roberts

Near the end of the public commentary period of the Reinventing Medicaid Town Hall Meeting held in Providence, Bonnie Holder observed that, “The measure of a society is based on how we treat our most vulnerable… How did we ever get to the point where we accept it as a society where 1 percent of the population can have enormous wealth and the rest of us here are fighting?”

What the standing room only crowd of nearly 200 people gathered in the foyer of the Providence Community Health Center on Prairie Avenue were fighting for was the funds needed to provide care and sustenance for children, the elderly, the poor and the homeless. Governor Gina Raimondo is seeking to cut $90 million out of Medicaid, an item that takes up about a third of the budget. Because the federal government matches state medicaid spending, the total of lost dollars to medical services in our state could be nearly double that number.

A steady stream of commentators took the microphone to say that our medical system is already straining to meet the needs of our community. Wages are stagnant, demand is only going to grow, and the money needed to get the job done right is already too tight.

Undoubtedly there are savings to be had. Where those savings are to be found is a question of values and priorities. Are we going to force front line caregivers to work longer hours for less pay? Are we going to ask people to give up medical care and prescriptions that will enhance their quality of life? Or are we going to take a serious look at the salaries and compensation packages of some of the best paid CEOs in New England?

Kathy053
SEIU 1199 New England

The Town Hall in Providence was the second of four meetings. The first was held in Woonsocket on Monday night. The next one is scheduled for March 23 at the Peace Dale Library in Kingstown and the last one will be held on April 1 at the Portsmouth Fee Public Library in Portsmouth.

Stay tuned.

Former Congressman Ed Beard was the first speaker. Now a patient in a nursing home, Beard, now 74,  suffers from Parkinson’s and was confined to a wheelchair. At one point a nurse’s assistant came forward to steady his hand so that he could hold the microphone.  “I know cuts will be damaging,” he said, “Just be very cautious when you talk about the seniors. The seniors are a forgotten lot.”

“I am one of hundreds of CNAs in this state who provide personal, bedside care to elders in our nursing homes. My job is physically and emotionally demanding but highly gratifying… I am really concerned that the nursing homes are going to funding cuts again this year…”

“If we don’t have enough to help these people, to pay our nurses, what are we going to do? In our nursing homes, if we have 2 nurses for 6 patients now, what’s going to happen if we have a bunch of cuts?”

“It’s not pleasant to be poor. To wonder whether or not one will eat today, or have enough heat to heat one’s house or even to have a house to live in…”

 “If my wife went to a nursing home, in three years I would be broke. I would have to go on welfare…”

“The corrections department is actually the largest provider of behavioral healthcare in the state…”

“These are people dependent on others for 24 hour care. They cannot safely remain at home, they’re aged and frail, they may have lost their independence, many of those closest to them have died, they rely on us for everything…”

 “As a person living with mental illness and working in the mental health field, I want to stress the idea of peer support. Peer support is important to people living with mental illness… Medicaid should support peer supporters in the mental health system…”

“Permanent supportive housing is an inexpensive way to really effect some true Medicaid savings.”

“A ton of money is saved by being able to point them to either a health center or to a primary care doctor…”

“When we think about cutting some of the costs in Medicaid, home care only accounts for 5 percent of the money that is being spent…”

“Many executives make over six figures, and other executives make millions. Governor Raimondo has set an excellent example with taking a 5 percent pay cut to her salary. Perhaps our hospital and nursing home executives should do the same…”

“We have many patient cases where they cannot afford their medication, they stretch out their medication or split their pills or take their medication every other day. We then see that when these same patients become eligible for Medicaid, their compliance increases, and they become advocates in their own health care.”

“The nurses… throughout the state providing home healthcare, reimbursement rates have been frozen for eight years now…”

“I specifically want to talk about the significance of non emergency medical transportation…”

“Here’s what Medicaid pays for nursing home care: $6.30 an hour…”

“It’s just not what one does that matters, it’s how one does it. And how we choose to reform Medicare will have an impact for generations to come…”

“It’s established that the single greatest that reduces mortality among seniors is isolation…”

“More than 28,000 children in providence receive RICARE benefits…”

“I was distressed to hear about the Medicaid fund reductions. I know the federal government is making cuts…”

“I take care of children who, if there’s no nurse in the home, those parents don’t go to bed. And if there’s no nurse in the home for a couple of days, those parents cannot take care of that child…”

“If you have to increase what you provide in a healthcare setting and your dollars are being cut, there’s only a few places that money is going to come from. Labor and staff, food and medication. So if that’s what we’re looking at cutting, labor, food, staff and medication, shame on everybody in this state…”

DSC_1617DSC_1634DSC_1640DSC_1653DSC_1663DSC_1666DSC_1674DSC_1681DSC_1691DSC_1696DSC_1712DSC_1724DSC_1729DSC_1745DSC_1773

Patreon

Elizabeth Roberts heads to human services department


Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387

Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387
Lt. Gov Elizabeth Roberts is a big supporter of marriage equality.
Lt. Gov Elizabeth Roberts is a big supporter of marriage equality.

Lt. Governor Elizabeth Roberts, Rhode Island’s most prominent healthcare advocate, is slated to become the next director of the state Health and Human Services Department, according to a press release from Governor-elect Gina Raimondo on Sunday.

“Elizabeth Roberts is the right leader for HHS because she has the key combination of management skills and compassion for the thousands of people the agency serves. We will keep Rhode Island families healthy, while also cracking down on fraud and focusing on fiscal discipline in order to cut costs,” Raimondo said in the release. “The Lieutenant Governor’s years of experience working on various health and human services issues, coupled with her unwavering dedication to making our state stronger, makes her the best choice to lead this office.”

Roberts said in the press release: “I am honored to be joining the Raimondo administration and look forward to rolling up my sleeves to make sure Rhode Islanders of all ages have access to the quality services they deserve. Once confirmed, I will focus on how to improve our delivery systems across all agencies to make sure we are providing the best care, while reassessing our cost structures and contracts.  I look forward to serving on the team that will advance Governor-elect Raimondo’s vision for ensuring a healthy future for Rhode Islanders and a healthy economy for our state.”

The Providence Journal reports Roberts will focus on healthcare policy, about which Raimondo said Roberts is “one of the nation’s experts in this issue.” But the department has other responsibilities as well.

It’s $3 billion budget represents about 40 percent of state spending, according to the ProJo story. And Karen Ziner also reports, “the agency oversees the Department of Children, Youth and Families; the Department of Health; the Department of Human Services [including the divisions of Elderly Affairs and Veterans Affairs]; and the Department of Behavioral Healthcare, Developmental Disabilities and Hospitals.”

Roberts was instrumental in HealthSourceRI, recognized as one of the most successful state-run health care exchanges in the nation. She chaired the commission tasked with creating the exchange and making health care more affordable in Rhode Island.

And according to the Raimondo press release:

Prior to taking office in 2007, Lt. Governor Roberts spent over a decade as one of Rhode Island’s most respected advocates for quality, affordable health care for families and small businesses and earned a statewide reputation for being a tireless leader on health and medical issues.

While serving in the Senate, Roberts was an acknowledged leader on healthcare reform issues.  She is credited with creating the Office of the Health Insurance Commissioner, an important mechanism for controlling health insurance costs and expanding primary care in Rhode Island.  She championed legislation to protect the safety of residents in nursing homes.  Then-Senator Roberts also led the effort to reform the corporate board structure at Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Rhode Island, providing for more transparency and public accountability.  As Lt. Governor and most recently as chair of the state’s Healthcare Reform Commission, Roberts has led the implementation of federal health reform in Rhode Island, a nationally recognized success in reducing the number of the uninsured and lowering the cost of health insurance.

According to her bio page: “Roberts has led the fight to ensure that all Rhode Islanders have access to high quality health care at a cost they can afford.”

Watch this video of her talking about healthcare in Rhode Island and HealthSourceRI to the League of Women Voters.

RI Lt. Gov. Elizabeth Roberts, Rhode Island’s Health Care Exchange from Videos LWVRI on Vimeo.

Progressive left unified only in support of Frank Ferri for lt. gov

vote ferriThe lt. governor’s race is the only Democratic primary for statewide office this year that didn’t split the progressive left. When it comes to that race, longtime Warwick Rep. and local bowling alley owner Frank Ferri is the obvious progressive choice.

Ferri is best known for championing marriage equality. He re-married his longtime spouse Tony Caparco after leading the legislature to approve gay marriage. He’s also led on the fight to reform payday loans and and rebuilding Rhode Island’s economy from the bottom up. He’s a stalwart supporter of our healthcare exchange, and maintaining it as a model for the rest of the nation.

But don’t take my word for it. Here are some of the endorsement emails for Ferri that landed in my inbox lately.

He has the endorsement of current Lt. Governor Elizabeth Roberts:

Thank you so much for the support that you have given me over the eight years I have served as Lieutenant Governor, and before that as State Senator. As I prepare to leave office, I am pleased to share that I am supporting Frank Ferri for Lieutenant Governor.

Frank is the best candidate in this race to carry on my commitment to innovative health care reforms. I know that he will use his small business experience to support smart economic development. He is our best hope to use the power of the office to help enact serious ethics reforms. I ask you to vote for Frank in the Democratic Primary on September 9th.

Frank has worked all his life. He started when he was ten years old at Modern Ice Cream, the ice cream store owned by his grandparents on Federal Hill. Today, his family and he own and operate a Rhode Island small business that they have run for 30 years.

As a small business owner, Frank is the right person to take over as chair of the Lieutenant Governor’s Small Business Advocacy Council. As Frank says, he speaks the language of business and the language of government – and he can build bridges between them.

When Frank was first elected as State Representative, he made a commitment to focus on achieving the kinds of health care reforms that I held in preparation for Affordable Care Act preparation. Even before he was sworn in, he started attending a series of health care forums that I held in preparation for the implementation of the Affordable Care Act.

Thanks to the hard work of so many in our community, Rhode Island has created one of the best health care exchanges in the country. I trust that Frank will keep the office’s focus on ensuring that HealthSource RI continues to thrive.

Finally, we know that too often, Rhode Island sees our elected officials charged with abusing their offices. Frank shares my concern about what this does to our economic prospects — because people only want to do business where they have trust in government.

Frank has released a significant ethics plan, including a proposal to put a constitutional amendment on the ballot to give our Ethics Commission the power it needs to hold legislators accountable.

Former progressive Providence mayoral candidate Brett Smiley:

I have been busy campaigning alongside Jorge Elorza to make sure Providence can move forward, but there is also another candidate I hope you will support. I’m voting for Frank Ferri for Lieutenant Governor, and I encourage you to vote for him as well in the Democratic primary on Tuesday.

Frank is a friend and a colleague. He is a true progressive leader, endorsed by Planned Parenthood Votes! Rhode Island, RI NOW PAC, the Victory Fund, Clean Water Action, and the Sierra Club, among others. We know that Frank is 100% committed to our progressive values and that he will never waver.

Frank and his family have owned a small business for 30 years, and he brings this critical experience to his role in government. His business knowledge — not to mention his seven years in the General Assembly and his community activism for decades before that — makes him a great lawmaker and will make him a great Lieutenant Governor.

I’m voting Frank because of his top three issues:

  • Frank has a vision for going back to the basics of economic development by supporting the small businesses already here in Rhode Island with access to capital and creating an easier and more transparent state contracting system.
  • Frank is the only candidate in this race with the stated commitment to continue Lt. Governor Elizabeth Roberts’ important health care advocacy and to support new health care reforms that increase quality while holding the line on costs. He’ll make sure that HealthSource RI — one of the most successful health exchange in the country — grows and is able to negotiate even more significant changes in our healthcare system.
  • And like me, Frank is angry when the small number of unethical politicians harm Rhode Island’s standing in the country and affect our ability to attract business. Frank’s strong ethics plan will take on the insiders who won’t play by the rules. And when he says he’ll spearhead an effort to put a Constitutional Amendment on the ballot to give the Ethics Commission back its ability to hold unethical politicians accountable — without a Constitutional Convention — I know he’ll do it.

Frank and I worked closely together on Rhode Island’s successful Marriage Equality campaign. Time and again, I watched as people told us we couldn’t make it happen, and I was proud to see Frank help prove them wrong.

When Frank says he’ll do something, I know he will. So I know that he’ll stand up for small business owners, continue to tackle the high cost of insurance, take on unethical political insiders, and be a strong, progressive Lieutenant Governor.

Marti Rosenberg, founder of the famed-but-now-defunct Ocean State Action:

I’m sitting in Frank’s campaign office right now as people are making phone calls. His neighbor, Trish, is talking to voters about how she’s known him for over 9 years, and she’d never considered doing this for anyone else. She knows how important these calls are, and she’s willing to do what it takes to get Frank elected.

Besides Trish, we’ve got Terri, Joan, Ann, and Cait here too – and none of them have ever helped on a campaign either.

Trish and the rest of our team would like you to join them any day between now and Tuesday at 8:00 pm, when the polls close – to help Frank win.

As you can see, you don’t need any special experience – you just need to admire Frank and have a commitment to electing him because he’ll make the change we need in Rhode Island. We’re looking for people to make phone calls, or to be a presence for Frank at the polls on Tuesday.

Our volunteer Cait has known Frank for 20 years. She just said it best: “Frank’s a fresh new face in statewide politics, and a real hard worker. When he says he’ll do something, he’ll get it done.”

Of course Ferri has the public support of progressive legislators from Sen. Josh Miller to Rep. Art Handy. My favorite, though, was the endorsement from his niece Margaux Morrisseau, who herself is running to replace Nick Kettle in the state Senate:

Some of you know that Frank and his husband Tony are my uncles. Yes, they are technically my “uncles-in-law” but I could not choose a better family to be a part of! We are as close as can be and I am so proud of all Uncle Frank and Uncle Tony have accomplished.

But even if Uncle Frank weren’t related to me, I’d still be supporting him:

As a small business owner, Frank understands business and he understands government. We need someone with both of those insights to be able to carry out the kinds of economic development that will actually work to support the small businesses that are already here and to attract new businesses.

Frank is the only candidate in this race with the plans to carry out Lt. Governor Elizabeth Roberts’ commitment to significant health care reforms to increase quality, but hold the line on costs. He’ll make sure that the very successful HealthSource RI continues to thrive.

Frank gets angry when a few unethical politicians take the focus away from the majority who work hard for their constituents. He has released a strong ethics plan that includes reducing the influence of former elected officials on the legislative process and putting a Constitutional Amendment on the ballot to give the Ethics Commission back its ability to hold unethical politicians accountable.

I am sure you can see Uncle Frank has had a significant influence on me and my decision to run for State Senate. I would be honored to serve with him and work hand in hand to make RI a better place for all.

Please, join me this coming Tuesday to vote for Frank Ferri for Lieutenant Governor in the Democratic Primary. Feel free to email me for more information on my Uncle Frank or to find your polling place.

 

Lt. Gov, Whitehouse to Talk Obamacare To Commission


Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387

Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387

Lt. Governor Elizabeth Roberts will update the Rhode Island Health Care Exchange Commission on what a Supreme Court decision on President Obama’s universal health care plan could mean for the Ocean State. And her special guest at the meeting with be Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse.

“We’ll definitely have a brief discussion about it,” she said. “I’m sure people will ask the Senator about it.”

Roberts, who has led the effort in Rhode Island to implement Obama’s Affordable Care Act, said this state’s model Health Benefits Exchange will likely survive regardless of what the Supreme Court decides Obamacare.

“If a mandate is ruled unconstitutional we still very much have a path here in Rhode Island,” she said, adding that even if insurance reforms are struck down by the court, “those are mostly existing consumer protections under state law.”

Because Rhode Island has a guaranteed issue law on the books means no one can be denied access to the Exchange.

If the Medicaid expansion is ruled unconstitutional, on the other hand, “that means we are where we were a few years ago and we wouldn’t be able to move as quickly towards universal coverage.”

Roberts doesn’t think that will happen though.

“I’m not a constitutional lawyer,” she said. “But I’m very optimistic those will remain in place.”

So long as the Medicare subsidies remain in place, Roberts said, “we won’t have to compel people into the marketplace.” States that don’t have guaranteed health insurance, such as the case across the South and Southwest would have a harder time because insurance companies can legally deny people coverage there.

Rhode Island is leading the nation in implementation of the Affordable Care Act. It’s the first and only state to receive a second grant from the federal government, according to Governing Magazine, worth $58.5 million.

In total, Rhode Island has procured about $65 million from ACA funds, and Roberts said she believes that money is safe.

“We should be able to help people regardless of how the Supreme Court rules,” she said.

Much of it will be used to create the database and web portal for the Health Exchange, she said.

Whitehouse, will be there to discuss a report he released last week entitled, “Health Care Delivery System Reform and The Patient Protection & Affordable Care Act,” highlighting progress in this area and the potential for improving patient care and lowering costs.

The Health Insurance Exchange meets Thursday morning at 8:30 at Alger Hall, Room 110, at Rhode Island College.

RI Says Happy Birthday Affordable Care Act


Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387

Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387
Director of HHS Stephen Constantino, Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse, Lt. Gov. Elizabeth Roberts and Kathleen Otte, administrator for the US Administration on Aging celebrate the anniversary of the Affordable Care Act.

Today marks the second anniversary of the federal health care reform law, the Affordable Care Act. Here in Rhode Island elected officials, health care leaders, and Rhode Islanders who are benefiting for provisions of the law celebrated the passage in Providence.

 “Although the country is still almost evenly divided over the Affordable Care Act, here in Rhode Island we are fully committed to ensuring that Rhode Island is a national leader in implementing health reform. And for the Rhode Islanders who are already benefiting from provisions in the law in very important ways, health reform has improved their lives,” said Lt. Governor Roberts.

“The Affordable Care Act is already making a real difference for real people and real families in Rhode Island by improving access to higher-quality care, reducing health care costs, and giving Rhode Islanders new and better choices,” said Whitehouse.  “Through her work to set up the state health insurance exchange, Lieutenant Governor Roberts is helping Rhode Island lead the way in expanding access to quality care and driving down costs.”

The highlights of the event were Rhode Islanders who told their stories of how they are benefiting from the Affordable Care Act, which continues to provide thousands in the state with insurance protections, preventive benefits, and resources to improve care.

For 22-year old Brianne of Providence, being able to stay on her mother’s insurance because of a provision in the ACA “has been a relief financially and emotionally trying to make ends meet.” The recent URI graduate is working part-time as a physical therapy aide and suffers from several allergies. Her mother’s coverage has ensured that Brianne can get the frequent medical attention her condition requires. As of June of last year, Brianne was one of over 7,500 young adults in Rhode Island who gained health coverage as a result of the reform law.

For frame shop owner Geoff, providing health coverage “is just the right thing to do.” Geoff was relieved to qualify for the Small Business Healthcare Tax Credit, a provision of the law made available in 2010 to make it more affordable for small businesses to offer health coverage to their employees. As a small business eligible for the credit, Geoff was able to claim up to 35% of premiums paid for his employees’ coverage and put that savings back into the business. The Congressional Budget Office estimates that the tax credit will save U.S. small businesses $40 billion by 2019.

Jane, a senior citizen in affordable housing, had to pay out of her own pocket for expensive, life-saving drugs when she reached the coverage gap, known as the “donut hole.”  Jane was one of almost 15,800 Rhode Islanders on Medicare who received a $250 rebate to help cover the cost of their prescription drugs last year. Additionally, when over 14,800 Medicare beneficiaries in Rhode Island hit the donut hole in 2011, they received a 50 percent discount on their covered brand-name prescription drugs. That discount yielded an average savings of over $500 for each senior for a total savings of over $8.2 million to older Rhode Islanders.”

Participating in the event were

Lt. Governor Elizabeth H. Roberts, Chair of the RI Healthcare Reform Commission, along with Senator Sheldon Whitehouse, Tri-Regional Administrator Kathleen Otte from U.S. Administration on Aging, and community partners RI Health Coverage Project and Ocean State Action,
The event included state officials, community partners and RI Healthcare Reform Commission members. Also featured was an exhibit of student artwork on display from RISD instructor Lindsay Kinkade’s visual and graphic design class, “Making It (Healthcare Reform)Understandable.