21 February 2013

Maintaining Mental Health Services for All

Maintaining Mental Health Services for All

Help Dr. April Harris-Britt and staff continue to serve children, adults, and families who will lose access to much needed mental health services in NC.

[ original post and fundraising page ]

This campaign is to raise legal funds, so that we can continue to fight for the children, adults, and families who will have limited or no access to much needed mental health services.

Short Summary

Our mental health agency has served individuals in our community for 8 years. We provide therapy for children and adults of all ages and backgrounds. A considerable portion of our work is focused on working with children in the foster care system, children who have been abused, and those with developmental disabilities. We provide psychiatric medication management, parenting classes, social groups, and psychological evaluations. We employ more than 25 people, including a Psychiatrist, Psychologists, Counselors, Social Workers, a LMFT, support staff, and even a local high school intern. We are a group of highly skilled, dedicated clinicians who remain committed to serving individuals of all backgrounds and needs, including the Medicaid population ignored by many others. We are requesting your help to continue doing so.

As you have probably heard, there has been enormous scrutiny of the NC Medicaid program and mental health services over the past few years. In a recent effort to revise and improve the system, a process was put into place that has disproportionately and adversely affected licensed independent providers such as at our Agency, and our ability to offer Medicaid services in the future

One such process involves the State requiring providers to submit all of their paperwork to a contracting agency called CCME that will then review and possibly approve payment to be made months after the client has been seen. There is no surprise that CCME has many flaws, inaccuracies, and inefficiencies in their system for monitoring providers. Even worse, they have a financial advantage to rejecting the claims – they get to extend their contracts for saving money. A CCME representative told us directly that they would be "working themselves out of a job" as they moved people off of prepayment reviews. A CCME representative told us directly that there are "tricks" that could ensure that we were taken off of prepayment.We have not tried any tricks as we naively believed that the system would work out!

Believe it or not, providers can not appeal this process. Within the past few weeks, numerous small, large, and long term providers in the area have already either gone out of business completely or stopped taking Medicaid. You will likely be hearing more and more about providers who have either gone out of business or who are no longer going to provide such Medicaid services.

These are a few links that may be helpful for you to put the story into context and to understand that laws have been broken by the DMA/DHHS (the Agency that runs Medicaid), not the providers.

http://www.wral.com/audit-mismanagement-costs-nc-medicaid-system-millions/12048026/

http://medicaidlawnc.wordpress.com/

http://www.wral.com/nc-auditor-dhhs-improperly-paid-580k-in-overtime/12108305/

http://www.wral.com/providers-getting-squeezed-out-by-medicaid-rules/12085183/

The answer to these political problems should not be to cut Medicaid or to limit the number of providers. If we do, there will be individuals in our schools, workplaces, and communities without needed mental health services. They will likely face higher frequencies of academic, legal, and negative societal outcomes.

I have filed several legal motions due to this being an unconstitutional action and the DMA/DHHS/the State not following policies and procedures to support providers and families needing these services. Our Attorney, Knicole Allen Emmanuel has worked in the State Attorney General’s Office in the past and is now fighting on behalf of providers and small business. We need your help to raise $25,000 in legal funds to fight this process. The outcome of this fight may help establish a precedent that could benefit others. Any amount raised over this amount will be used to cover services for the many families who have already lost their therapy. No amount is too small and we do appreciate your support.

Other Ways You Can Help

If you can not make a contribution, we understand. But please share our campaign with others and spread the word about how these types of actions can and will impact the children and families in our schools, neighborhoods, and communities.