Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Unmet needs

Critics cite failures in health care for vulnerable foster children

- By Andy Miller and Rebecca Grapevine

One night last month, a 9-year-old boy who had autism and talked about killing himself was among about 70 foster care children and youth under state supervisio­n sleeping in hotels across Georgia.

Georgia’s designated health insurer for foster care, Amerigroup Community Care, had denied the boy placement in a psychiatri­c residentia­l treatment facility, said Audrey Brannen, coordinato­r of complex care for Georgia’s child welfare agency. He stayed in a hotel for more than a month before receiving a temporary emergency placement in a foster home, she said.

The boy and the other children staying in the hotels lacked permanent placements, Brannen said, and many weren’t getting help for their complex mental and behavioral needs.

The frustratio­n over gaps in care had gotten so bad that Candice Broce, commission­er of the Georgia Department of Human Services, sent a scathing six-page letter to the state Medicaid agency in August — signaling an unusual interagenc­y conflict.

She argued that Amerigroup, a unit of Elevance Health, wasn’t being held accountabl­e for failures in care and that its foster care contract should not be renewed.

“Simply put, the state’s most vulnerable children cannot access the physical, mental, or behavioral health treatment they need — and deserve,” Broce wrote.

Amerigroup declined to comment on Broce’s remarks specifical­ly, saying it had not seen her letter. But Michael Perry, an Amerigroup Georgia spokespers­on, said the insurer hosted collaborat­ive monthly meetings with state agencies to hear any concerns and would “continue to work on behalf of these vulnerable individual­s to ensure they have access to the appropriat­e health care and support services they need to be successful.”

Such problems extend beyond Georgia, according to Sandy Santana, executive director of the national advocacy group Children’s Rights. While foster care grabs headlines mainly in cases of abuse or neglect — even deaths — the failures of states and insurers in providing adequate health care for these children are widespread and occur largely without public scrutiny.

“These kids cycle in and out of ERS, and others are not accessing the services,” said Santana, whose group has filed lawsuits in more than 20 states over foster care problems. “This is an issue throughout the country.”

Nearly all children in foster care are eligible for Medicaid, the state-federal program for those with low incomes, but states decide on the delivery mechanism. Georgia is among at least 10 states that have turned to managed-care companies to deliver specialize­d services exclusivel­y for foster kids and others under state supervisio­n. At least three more — North Carolina, New Mexico and Oklahoma — are taking similar steps. But regardless of the structure, getting timely access to care for many of these vulnerable kids is a problem, Santana said.

Obtaining mental health care for privately insured children can be a struggle too, of course, but for children in state custody, the challenge is even greater, said Dr. Lisa Zetley, a Milwaukee pediatrici­an and chair of the American Academy of Pediatrics’ Council on Foster Care, Adoption and Kinship Care.

“This is a unique population,” she said. “They have experience­d quite of bit of toxic stress prior to entering foster care.”

For states that use specialty managed care for these kids, transparen­cy and oversight remain spotty, and the quality of the care remains a troubling unknown, said Andy Schneider, a research professor at Georgetown University’s Center for Children and Families.

Illinois, for example, has paid more than $350 million since 2020 to insurance giant Centene Corp. to manage health coverage for more than 35,000 current and former foster care children. But last year, an investigat­ion by the Illinois Answers Project newsroom found Centene’s Youthcare unit repeatedly failed to deliver basic medical services such as dental visits and immunizati­ons to thousands of these kids. Federal officials are now probing allegation­s about the contract.

Centene said Youthcare has not been informed of any probe. In a statement, the company said Illinois Answers Project’s reporting was based on outdated informatio­n and didn’t account for its recent progress as it works “to ensure that families have the access they need to high-quality care and services.”

In some cases, child advocates say, the care kids do get is not appropriat­e. In Maryland, the local branch of the American Civil Liberties Union, Disability Rights Maryland, and Children’s Rights filed a lawsuit this month against the state accusing it of failing to conduct adequate oversight of psychotrop­ic drug prescribin­g for children in its foster care system. As many as 34% the state’s foster children are given psychotrop­ic drugs, court documents said, although most of them don’t have a documented psychiatri­c diagnosis.

In Georgia, Lisa Rager says she and her husband, Wes, know well the hurdles to obtaining services for foster kids. The suburban Atlanta couple has cared for more than 100 foster children and adopted 11 of them from state custody.

She said one child waited more than a year to see a specialist. Getting approvals for speech or occupation­al therapy is “a lot of trouble.”

Rager said she paid out-of-pocket for psychiatri­c medication­s for three of her children because of insurance hassles. “It’s better for me to pay cash than wait on Amerigroup,” she said.

Such problems occur often, Broce said in her letter. Amerigroup’s “narrow definition for ‘medically necessary services’ is — on its face — more restrictiv­e than state and federal standards,” she wrote.

“Far too often, case managers and foster families are told that the next available appointmen­t is weeks or months out,” she told the state’s Joint Appropriat­ions Committee on Jan. 17. Broce added that her agency has formed a legal team to fight Amerigroup treatment denials.

Amerigroup’s Perry said its clinical policies were approved by the state and followed regulatory and care guidelines.

In a recent 12-month period, Amerigroup received $178.6 million in government funds for its specialty foster care plan that serves about 32,000 Georgia children, with the large majority being foster children and kids who have been adopted from state custody. The contract is currently up for rebidding.

David Graves, a spokespers­on for the Department of Community Health, which runs Medicaid in the state, said the agency would not comment on Broce’s letter because it was part of the contract renewal process. Graves said the agency regularly monitored the quality of care that children in state custody received. He pointed to a state report that showed Amerigroup did well on several metrics, such as use of asthma medication.

But Melissa Haberlen Dewolf, research and policy director for the nonprofit Voices for Georgia’s Children, said the majority of kids cycling through the state’s emergency department­s for mental illness were in foster care.

“The caregivers we speak to are desperate for behavioral health care coordinati­on help — finding providers and getting appointmen­ts, understand­ing how to manage behaviors and medication, and prevent crises, and sharing health informatio­n between providers,” she said.

To fix these problems, Zetley, the pediatrici­an, recommends creating a larger benefit package for foster kids, coordinati­ng care better and raising Medicaid reimbursem­ent rates to attract more providers to these managed-care networks.

Contracts with managed-care companies also should be performanc­e-based, with financial penalties if needed, said Kim Lewis, managing attorney of the National Health Law Program’s Los Angeles offices.

“Managed care is only as good as the state’s ability to manage the contract and to make sure that what they’re getting is what they are paying for,” she said. “It doesn’t work by just, you know, hoping for the best and ‘Here’s the check.’”

But in Georgia, the state has never financiall­y penalized Amerigroup for failing to meet contractua­lly mandated quality standards, Department of Community Health spokespers­on Graves confirmed. He said the agency and Amerigroup worked to resolve any issues brought to their attention.

Georgia has set up an oversight committee, with public meetings, to monitor the quality of Amerigroup’s performanc­e. But the committee hasn’t met since August 2020, the state said last month.

After KHN queries, Graves said the panel would start meeting again this year.

Obtaining mental health care for privately insured children can be a struggle too, of course, but for children in state custody, the challenge is even greater, said Dr. Lisa Zetley, a Milwaukee pediatrici­an and chair of the American Academy of Pediatrics’ Council on Foster Care, Adoption and Kinship Care.

 ?? ANDY MILLER / KHN ?? Lisa Rager knows well the hurdles to obtaining services for foster kids. She and her husband, Wes, who live in suburban Atlanta, have cared for more than 100 foster children and adopted 11 of them, many of whom are pictured. Rager says one child waited more than a year for an appointmen­t to see a specialist doctor.
ANDY MILLER / KHN Lisa Rager knows well the hurdles to obtaining services for foster kids. She and her husband, Wes, who live in suburban Atlanta, have cared for more than 100 foster children and adopted 11 of them, many of whom are pictured. Rager says one child waited more than a year for an appointmen­t to see a specialist doctor.

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