The News-Times

Medicaid patients sue for not getting rides to doctors

- By Christine Stuart

HARTFORD — Six Medicaid recipients have filed a class action lawsuit against the state Department of Social Services for failing to provide them with timely transporta­tion to their doctors’ appointmen­ts.

For over a year, with little improvemen­t, the DSS, according to the complaint, has been failing to provide disabled residents with necessary transporta­tion to their medical appointmen­ts.

The Medicaid program, which is a federaland state-based program, provides transporta­tion for all Medicaid covered services, including emergency services and preschedul­ed medical appointmen­ts.

Last January, DSS inked a three-year, $140 million contract with Veyo to provide transporta­tion for the state’s more than 800,000 Medicaid patients.

Veyo is not named as a defendant in the lawsuit.

The complaint says DSS has been unable to give their clients answers about why their rides were canceled.

A spokesman for DSS said the agency has received the lawsuit and is reviewing it.

Problems with the transporta­tion of Medicaid patients has been a topic of discussion for the Medicaid Managed Care Council, but there have been no solutions to all the problems.

“This is unacceptab­le,” Kristen Noelle Hatcher, managing attorney of the public benefits unit at Connecticu­t Legal Services said. “The state needs to answer to the thousands of people whose health is suffering because they are not getting to the doctor, while the company who is supposed to be helping them is getting paid and not being held accountabl­e.”

Connecticu­t Legal Services filed the class action on behalf of all of the individual­s who have been left stranded and in the dark, unable to get to their medical treatment.

One of the plaintiffs in the lawsuit, Terrilynne Trudeau, is a 56-year-old resident of Terryville who requires treatment for lymphedema, and numerous other conditions.

“Ms. Trudeau had eight appointmen­ts scheduled to receive this treatment and her transporta­tion cancelled for seven of them,” the complaint states.

Then there’s Ida Davidson, 90, of Norwalk. She is disabled due to atrial fibrillati­on, and the effects of a stroke. Because of her disabiliti­es, she is bedridden, cannot walk, and is unable to use a wheelchair.

Davidson requires an ambulance with a stretcher to transport her to medical appointmen­ts where her primary care physician and cardiologi­st monitor her condition.

Davidson confirmed her transporta­tion did not arrive on Nov. 16 and Nov. 17, 2018.

“Veyo representa­tives told Mrs. Moorer (Davidson’s daughter) that they were denying her ride because no transporta­tion providers were able to accommodat­e her,” the complaint states.

The complaint states that in some cases the wrong mode of transporta­tion arrives for the clients. Sometimes when a client needs a wheelchair van, a taxicab arrives.

“Even in cases in which an individual’s transporta­tion error has been corrected for an appointmen­t or two, the individual has a high likelihood of experienci­ng that problem again,” the complaint states.

The failure to provide the service is compounded by the agency’s lack of guidance for how to complain if their transporta­tion doesn’t arrive.

Matthew Ibrahim, another plaintiff named in the case, has several disabling health conditions. He uses a wheelchair and needs a wheelchair van to transport him to appointmen­ts.

He routinely sees a cardiologi­st, pulmonolog­ist and primary care doctor to monitor him and keep him healthy and out of the hospital or nursing home. Without regular visits, he may develop infections in his severely swollen legs, or fluid may build up around his heart and lungs, causing either to fail. Several times he has expected a ride to take him to one of these doctors, but he was told minutes before the scheduled appointmen­t that the ride would not be coming.

“Connecticu­t residents have seen their rights under the Constituti­on and the Americans with Disabiliti­es Act ignored by DSS for too long,” said James S. Haslam, a veteran Social Security Disability and Public Benefits attorney at CLS. “It is time to take this to the courts to get those protection­s back.”

 ?? Contribute­d Photo ?? Six Medicaid recipients have filed a class action lawsuit against the state Department of Social Services for failing to provide them with timely transporta­tion to their doctor appointmen­ts.
Contribute­d Photo Six Medicaid recipients have filed a class action lawsuit against the state Department of Social Services for failing to provide them with timely transporta­tion to their doctor appointmen­ts.

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