Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Agencies disagree on health appraisal

- By Michael Scott Davidson

Southern Nevada specialize­d foster care agencies are denouncing the state of Nevada’s recent suggestion that only two-thirds of the children in their care have received behavioral health assessment­s.

“That number is much, much closer to 100 percent, if not 100 percent,” said Dave Doyle, operations director of the Eagle Quest foster agency.

The outcry follows a letter sent from Nevada Health and Human Services Director Richard Whitley to the Clark County Commission this month. In it, Whitley writes Medicaid data “suggests that 35% of children currently in the specialize­d foster care system have not received an assessment.”

The specialize­d system provides services to foster children with severe mental, physical and emotional disabiliti­es.

“Continuing to provide services without assessment­s is potentiall­y harmful to children, and as noted, limits the providers to bill for additional, eligible services,” the letter states.

But the state wasn’t telling commission­ers the whole story, say Doyle and Valerie Hicks, executive director of the Specialize­d Alternativ­es for Families and Youth of Nevada foster care agency.

Hicks said it is problemati­c to use only Medicaid data to draw such a conclusion because the data does not include assessment­s for which Medicaid was not billed.

“We don’t have any child in our program that does not have an assessment,” Hicks said.

Agency leaders are also worried about the state’s plan to no longer allow specialize­d foster care agencies to assess foster children and

determine what Medicaid-billable services they need. Starting Friday, that will be the responsibi­lity of a sofar unnamed independen­t medical provider or providers.

Whitley’s letter suggests using one company, FirstMed Health and Wellness in Las Vegas, to assess all children who come through the county’s specialize­d foster care program.

Hicks said it would be a “huge challenge” for only one provider to conduct all the assessment­s, but FirstMed CEO Angela Quinn said her staff of 22 therapists and six doctors are trained and up to the task.

“We’re qualified and ready to do the assessment­s,” she said. “There’s no learning curve for us, and when you’re up against a deadline there’s

‘ We don’t have any child in our program that does not have an assessment. ’ Valerie Hicks executive director, Specialize­d Alternativ­es for Families and Youth of Nevada foster care agency

no time for on-the-job training.”

Still, Assistant County Manager Kevin Schiller said the county is still determinin­g who will conduct the assessment­s.

Nevada Division of Child and Family Services administra­tor Ross

Armstrong said that the state believes having independen­t medical providers conduct the assessment­s will help the specialize­d foster care system “break out of a rut.”

Currently, every child receives basic skills training, a Medicaid-billable service that plays a major role in foster agencies keeping their doors open.

“This recommenda­tion really revolves around ensuring the youth in specialize­d foster care are getting all the services that they need,” Armstrong said. “If the assessment is going to be used in order to trigger the ability to bill basic skills training, then it will need to be one that sufficient­ly shows the medical need of that service for the kid.”

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