Skip Repetitive Navigation Links
California State Auditor Logo COMMITMENT • INTEGRITY • LEADERSHIP

Department of Health Care Services
Millions of Children in Medi-Cal Are Not Receiving Preventive Health Services

Report Number: 2018-111

Use the links below to skip to the chapter you wish to view:



Chapter 1

MILLIONS OF CHILDREN ARE NOT RECEIVING AND HAVE LIMITED ACCESS TO PREVENTIVE HEALTH SERVICES THEY ARE ENTITLED TO THROUGH MEDI-CAL

Chapter Summary

Millions of children in Medi-Cal each year are not receiving the preventive services to which they are entitled. California ranks 40th among all states in providing preventive services to children through Medicaid. This is partly due to children not having adequate access to health care providers who accept Medi-Cal. Many managed care plans that contract with DHCS to provide Medi-Cal services struggle to meet the time and distance standards established by state law which became effective in 2018. California’s Medi-Cal payment rates for both fee-for-service and managed care are among the lowest Medicaid rates in the country. However, increased funding could be used to expand the number of doctors willing to serve children in Medi-Cal, and to allow DHCS to tie financial compensation to plans’ performance in providing preventive health care to children in Medi-Cal.

California Has Been Unsuccessful at Ensuring That Children in Medi-Cal Receive Preventive Care

DHCS is not sufficiently ensuring that children in Medi-Cal receive the preventive services it has committed to providing them. An average of 2.4 million children in Medi-Cal per year did not receive all required preventive services during fiscal years 2013–14 through 2017–18. Preventive services provide early detection and care to either avert health problems or diagnose and treat them as early as possible. As we described in the Introduction, federal law requires DHCS to provide preventive services to children under 21 years of age in accordance with a schedule. To comply with this requirement, DHCS adopted the Bright Futures schedule, which includes various services such as examinations, immunizations, and developmental screenings. Most of these services are provided at well-child visits. DHCS has committed to ensuring that all children in Medi-Cal receive all Bright Futures services. However, DHCS has not been able to make demonstrable progress in the use of these preventive services over the last several years.

According to our analysis of DHCS’ data, the utilization rate for preventive services for children enrolled in Medi-Cal has been below 50 percent for the past five fiscal years, as shown in Table 2. Additionally, utilization rates are lower among certain age groups and geographical areas. Specifically, as further discussed in Chapter 2, utilization rates drop from nearly 70 percent for children in their first year of life to 42 percent for 1-year-olds and then drop again to 25 percent for 2-year-olds, as Figure 2 shows. Figure 3 shows that most of the lowest utilization rates are in 15 rural counties in the eastern part of California, with the lowest usage in Alpine, Plumas, Mariposa, and Sierra counties.

Table 2
Utilization Rates for Children in Medi-Cal Have Remained Below 50 Percent
FISCAL YEAR UTILIZATION RATE
2013–14 49.5%
2014–15 47.0
2015–16 45.9
2016–17 47.8
2017–18* 45.2

Source: Analysis of DHCS’ Management Information System/Decision Support System data.

* Fiscal year 2017–18 data may be incomplete because of a delay in DHCS receiving the data.

Figure 2
Utilization Rates Were Low for Some of the Youngest Children in Medi-Cal
Fiscal Years 2013–14 Through 2017–18

A color-coded vertical bar graph showing utilization rates for Medi-Cal beneficiaries age 0 to 20 for the period from fiscal years 2013-14 through 2017-18.

Source: Analysis of DHCS' Management Information System/Decision Support System data.

Note: Fiscal year 2017–18 data may be incomplete because of a delay in DHCS receiving data.

* In addition to the methodology we used to calculate the utilization rates outlined in the Scope and Methodology section of our report, DHCS states that increased parental attention to newborn health and pre-scheduling check-ups could be possible reasons for the higher utilization rates for children under age 1 year, but it has not conducted an analysis to verify this.

Figure 3
Utilization Rates Were Typically Lower in the Eastern Half of the State
Fiscal Years 2013–14 Through 2017–18

A color-coded map of California showing all counties and their utilization rates from fiscal years 2013-14 through 2017-18.

Source: Analysis of DHCS’ Management Information System/Decision Support System data.

Note: Fiscal year 2017–18 data may be incomplete because of a delay in DHCS receiving data.

California also performs poorly in providing preventive care for children in Medicaid when compared to the rest of the country. As shown in Figure 4, CMS data indicate that California’s 49 percent utilization rate for preventive services for children in Medi-Cal is ranked 40th for all states. In fact, California’s utilization rate has remained generally stagnant over the past five years. DHCS has been focusing on childhood immunization rates in Medi-Cal for the past five years but has not yet met its vaccination goal of 80 percent, with rates ranging instead from a high of 75 percent in 2013 to a low of 70 percent in 2017. California’s low national ranking, and the fact that it has not met its goal, indicate that DHCS should do more to ensure the health of California’s children.

Figure 4
California’s Utilization Rate for Children’s Preventive Services Ranked 40th in the Country
Federal Fiscal Year 2017

A color-coded horizontal bar graph ranking the 50 states in the country in the order of highest to lowest utilization rates for children’s preventive services during federal fiscal year 2017.

Source: CMS annual EPSDT data for all states, federal fiscal year 2017.

* CMS calculated the utilization rate by dividing the total number of eligible children receiving at least one initial or periodic screening by the total number of eligible children who should receive at least one initial or periodic screening.

Many Families Do Not Have Adequate Access to Health Care Providers Who Serve Children in Medi-Cal

Our analysis of children’s access to preventive care shows notable deficiencies with respect to both the number and location of providers who offer children’s preventive services. California has had regulations in place intended to ensure that enrollees have access to needed health care services for many years; however, CMS’s 2016 Managed Care Final Rule (final rule) required the State to develop and enforce new time and distance standards for access to providers. These standards limit how long, or how far, beneficiaries should have to travel to have access to primary care providers and specialists. State law effective January 1, 2018, established new time and distance standards based on each county’s population density for managed care provider networks in each county as well as timely access standards that limit the number of days patients must wait to see a primary or specialist care provider. Another key component of the new standards requires the State to develop separate standards for adult and pediatric primary care and specialist providers.

DHCS’ implementation of these new state and federal network adequacy requirements shows that children in many parts of the State have limited access to care. State law permits plans to request alternative access standards—exceptions to the network adequacy requirements—if the plans are unable to meet the new time and distance standards. According to state law, DHCS may allow alternative access standards for time and distance if the requesting plan has exhausted all other reasonable options to obtain providers to meet the applicable standard. After these laws became effective in 2018, plans submitted nearly 80,000 alternative access standards requests for exceptions to the State’s time and distance standards—many times the number DHCS anticipated.2 Of the almost 10,000 requests that DHCS approved, nearly 70 percent, or 6,800, were for providers who see children in specific zip codes. We show in Figure 5 a map of the State that depicts where there are the most notable problems with access to providers, based on the alternative access standards that DHCS approved during 2018.

Figure 5
Many Areas Struggled to Meet Access Standards in 2018, Especially in the Eastern Parts of the State

A color-coded map of California showing all counties and the number of access exceptions DHCS approved as of January, 2019.

Source: Analysis of alternative access standards DHCS approved as of January 2019.

Health care plans have varying reasons for failing to meet access-to-care standards. Over the course of our audit, we conducted a focused review of three plans. Partnership HealthPlan of California (Partnership HealthPlan), one of the plans we reviewed, submitted alternative access requests for 10 of the 14 counties in which it operates. According to its senior director of provider relations, Partnership HealthPlan is willing to contract with any available provider, but it had to submit alternative access standards requests for areas where there are no available providers or where the only available providers were unwilling to serve Partnership HealthPlan’s members. In another example, DHCS approved 151 alternative access requests for Alameda Alliance for Health (Alameda Alliance), another plan we reviewed. Alameda Alliance indicated that it found challenges meeting the standards for specialists who see children. DHCS also approved 140 alternative access standards for the third plan we reviewed, L.A. Care Health Plan (LA Care) in Los Angeles County. According to LA Care, it was unable to meet the new, more stringent time and distance standards because of a scarcity of providers in some areas and a decreasing number of providers willing to participate in its network. LA Care indicated that the challenges it identified also existed under the previous, less stringent standards, but they have become more acute because of the new standards.

Poor usage of children’s preventive services is linked to poor access to care. As we show in Table 3, DHCS approved the most alternative access standards for plans with lower utilization rates for children’s preventive services. Of the 10,000 alternative access standards that DHCS approved, 8,400 or 85 percent were from plans with utilization rates for children’s preventive services below 50 percent. For the five plans with the lowest utilization rates, DHCS approved an average of more than 500 alternative access standards, whereas for the five plans with the best utilization rates DHCS approved an average of fewer than 20 alternative access standards.

Table 3
DHCS Approved More Alternative Access Standards for Plans With Lower Utilization Rates for Children’s Preventive Services
FISCAL YEAR UTILIZATION RATE APPROVED ALTERNATIVE ACCESS STANDARDS NUMBER OF COUNTIES
California Health & Wellness Plan 39.90% 960 22
Care1st Partner Plan 41.1 411 1
Inland Empire Health Plan 41.4 438 2
Community Health Group Partnership Plan 42.4 262 1
Central California Alliance for Health 42.6 536 3
Molina Healthcare of California Premier Plan, Inc. 42.7 327 4
Gold Coast Health Plan 43.3
Anthem Blue Cross Partnership Plan 46.2 239 20
Health Plan of San Joaquin 47.3 3 1
Health Net Community Solutions, Inc. 47.4 4,671 7
Kern Family Health Care 47.5 95 1
Partnership HealthPlan of California 48.1 337 10
L.A. Care Health Plan 48.7 140 1
Contra Costa Health Plan 49.3
Kaiser SoCal 50.4
Alameda Alliance for Health 51.5 151 2
CalViva Health 51.9 110 3
Kaiser NorCal 52.5
Health Plan of San Mateo 53.7 1 1
Santa Clara Family Health Plan 55 25 1
CenCal Health 56.6 67 2
CalOptima 60.7
San Francisco Health Plan 64.2

Source: Analysis of DHCS’ Management Information System/Decision Support System data and alternative access standards DHCS approved as of January 2019.

* DHCS also approved 1,142 alternative access standards for two plans that did not serve Medi-Cal beneficiaries during our entire audit period.

Utilization rate is for fiscal years 2013–14 through 2017–18. However, fiscal year 2017–18 data may be incomplete because of a delay in DHCS receiving data.

We list Kaiser NorCal and Kaiser SoCal separately because they report separate data to DHCS.

DHCS’ analysis shows there is a lack of pediatricians in both rural and urban counties within the time and distance standards. As an example of the impact of these alternative access standards, some families in Mono County may have to travel almost nine hours, or 365 miles, to see a pediatric dermatologist instead of the 90 minutes and 60 miles permitted under the original access standards. In San Joaquin County, some families may have to travel up to six hours, or 245 miles, to see a pediatric ophthalmologist instead of the 60 minutes and 30 miles permitted under the original access standards. In San Bernardino County, some families may have to travel nearly two hours, or 70 miles, to see a pediatric primary care physician instead of the 30 minutes and 10 miles permitted under the original access standards. We show some of the most extreme alternative access standards DHCS approved in Table 4.

Table 4
DHCS Approved More Alternative Access Standards for Plans With Lower Utilization Rates for Children’s Preventive Services
PROVIDER TYPE MAXIMUM APPROVED DRIVING TIME (IN MINUTES) MAXIMUM APPROVED DISTANCE
(IN MILES)
COUNTIES
AFFECTED
NUMBER OF CHILDREN AFFECTED
Specialists
Dermatology 520 365 Mono 34
Ophthalmology 375 245 San Joaquin 4,055
Nephrology 325 230 Inyo 0
Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation 315 327 Inyo 7
Hematology 270 200 Lassen, Modoc, Mono, Siskiyou 2,978
Neurology 260 300 Inyo 103
HIV/AIDS Specialists/Infectious Disease 235 324 Inyo, Kern 544
Oncology 230 299 Inyo, Kern 544
ENT/Otolaryngology 225 343 Inyo 9
Pulmonology 215 327 Inyo, Tulare 7
Endocrinology 205 313 Imperial, Inyo 297
Orthopedic Surgery 189 150 Inyo, Monterey 525
Psychiatry 180 327 Inyo 7
General Surgery 175 140 Kern, Tulare 552
Cardiology/Interventional Cardiology 175 239 Inyo, San Luis Obispo 222
Gastroenterology 165 150 Inyo 129
OB/GYN Specialty Care* 153 164 Inyo 12
Mental Health (nonpsychiatry) Outpatient Services* 150 83 Inyo 13
Primary Care
OB/GYN Primary Care 250 230 Inyo 1
Primary Care Physician 115 85 Inyo, San Bernardino 8
Other Provider Types
Hospital 140 120 Inyo, San Diego 241
Pharmacy 96 90 Inyo 7

Source: Analysis of alternative access standards DHCS approved as of January 2019, and DHCS’ Management Information System/Decision Support System data.

Note: The counties we list and the children we total are those affected by the maximum time or distance standards for each provider type shown in the table.

* We include OB/GYN Specialty Care and Mental Health (nonpsychiatry) Outpatient Services with other specialists because they have the same time and distance standards.

DHCS’ procedure for reviewing alternative access standards requests includes determining whether the proposed alternative standard is reasonable. According to the monitoring chief, state law required DHCS to approve these alternative access standards for the plans that requested them because those plans had exhausted all other reasonable options to obtain providers to meet the applicable standard. However, state law says only that DHCS may allow the exceptions, not that it must allow them. Further, the monitoring chief added that in some of these cases, plans might enter into temporary agreements with out-of-network providers rather than require beneficiaries to use the network providers covered by the alternative access standards. We question whether some of the approved alternative standards were reasonable. Instead of approving such extreme standards, DHCS could require plans to provide out-of-network access in such situations.

The large number of exceptions to the access standards that DHCS granted highlights some of the deficiencies in Medi-Cal’s managed care networks. In many cases, DHCS has approved alternative access time and distance standards for a plan in an area where Medi-Cal providers are present but not part of that plan’s network. DHCS did so because it believed the plan’s efforts to obtain additional providers were reasonable. In some cases, however, DHCS required plans to allow beneficiaries to obtain care from out-of-network providers. Even so, in these instances DHCS did not require the plans to inform their beneficiaries that they are eligible to obtain care in this fashion or to inform them of the process for obtaining out-of-network authorizations. As a result, many children may not be receiving necessary care because their families are unaware that they may be able to see a provider closer to where they live rather than only the providers their plan offers. In July 2018, members of a stakeholder advisory committee suggested that DHCS inform beneficiaries when they have the option to request an out-of-network provider; however, DHCS did not do so because it believed this information would be confusing to beneficiaries.

Although the State only recently adopted the time and distance standards required as a result of the final rule, DHCS needs to take additional steps to understand the scale and scope of the access problem in the State. Federal law requires that the State’s network adequacy standards consider the number of providers not accepting new Medi-Cal patients as well as the ability of providers to communicate with beneficiaries in their preferred language. However, DHCS’ procedure for reviewing alternative access standards requests does not require plans to identify in their requests which providers are, or are not, accepting Medi-Cal patients and what languages the providers speak.3

According to its monitoring chief, DHCS approves the alternative access standards requests based on the criteria specified in state law. Therefore, DHCS does not require plans to disclose whether their providers are accepting new Medi-Cal patients when the plans submit requests for alternative access standards. DHCS has not yet conducted an in-depth analysis of the alternative access standards requests to determine the areas of the State that are lacking doctors who are able to see children in Medi-Cal and to communicate with them in their preferred language because it has only just completed processing the requests for the first time. Furthermore, DHCS received additional data on Medi-Cal providers in late January 2019 when its EQRO provided it the final draft of a timely access study that DHCS commissioned in 2016. However, even with these data, the State will still have much work to do to understand its access problems before it can begin to target its improvement strategies.

Additional Funding Is Necessary to Improve California’s Medi-Cal Provider Networks

Increasing the number of doctors who will provide preventive services to children in Medi-Cal will likely require additional funding. Our analysis shows that there are not enough doctors in California willing to treat children in Medi-Cal. This is, at least in part, because California’s reimbursement rates are low compared to other states. In February 2019, the California Future Health Workforce Commission4 issued a report describing problems caused by California’s health provider shortages, including low usage of preventive services, geographic access issues, and limited cultural and language matches between providers and populations. Although the report covered more than just children in Medi-Cal, its findings match many of those described in this report. In fact, the report stated that Medi-Cal rates are not always sufficient to allow for the delivery of high-quality, timely services to health plan members. DHCS is working to attract more medical providers for children through recruitment incentives and by providing additional payments for certain services, but these methods are not targeted to specific areas of the State. A recent federal study found that the most effective way to increase provider participation is through increasing reimbursement rates.

Our analysis of the alternative access standards that DHCS approved shows that there are not enough providers accepting Medi-Cal patients in many parts of the State. Moreover, as we noted previously, DHCS’ approval of alternative access standards shows that there is a lack of doctors who see children in both rural and urban areas throughout the State. California may need to increase its provider reimbursement rates to increase the number of providers willing to provide preventive care to children in Medi-Cal. California’s Medi-Cal payment rates for both fee-for-service and managed care are among the lowest Medicaid rates in the country. A 2017 study of states’ Medicaid fee-for-service rates by the Kaiser Family Foundation found that California’s rates were only 76 percent of the national average, and that only two states—New Jersey and Rhode Island—had lower rates. Our analysis of data from a separate Kaiser Family Foundation report on states’ 2016 Medicaid managed care spending per beneficiary shows that although its cost of living is high, California’s spending per beneficiary is among the lowest—20th out of 29 states for which data are available. For example, in 2016, Florida spent about $4,500 per Medicaid managed care beneficiary, Texas spent an average of about $5,000, and New York spent $6,600. By comparison, California spent just $3,800 per managed care beneficiary in 2016.

To address the lack of providers, DHCS is implementing a recruitment incentive program which aims to recruit more new providers to Medi-Cal by paying for up to $300,000 of their medical school costs. Two of the three plans we reviewed also operate provider recruitment programs, but only LA Care’s provider recruitment program targets underserved areas. As a result, it is uncertain whether the efforts these plans are taking will increase the number of providers who can provide preventive care for children in the areas of the State that need it the most.

To supplement California’s Medi-Cal reimbursement rates, in 2018 DHCS began using money from the California Healthcare, Research and Prevention Tobacco Tax Act of 2016 (Proposition 56) to pay providers additional money for specific services, including well-child visits. However, these supplemental payments are tied to annual funding allocations that are dependent on the level of tobacco tax revenue, which can vary from year to year, and on DHCS’ decisions on how best to apply these funds. As a result, the Proposition 56 funds may not represent a stable or consistent source of funds that DHCS can use to attract and retain doctors who participate in Medi-Cal. Furthermore, according to DHCS and the plans we spoke with, different regions in California have different physician needs. For example, in some regions with limited access, there are providers but they do not accept Medi-Cal patients, whereas in other regions there are no providers at all. Therefore, any program to increase Medi-Cal provider reimbursement rates should be flexible enough to accommodate the differing needs of California’s different regions. For example, in higher-cost areas where there are currently established providers, the State could choose to focus directly on increasing provider payment rates to attract more providers to Medi-Cal. In other areas, the State could focus on incentives, such as paying for provider education and relocation costs, and start-up subsidies to attract new providers to those regions. Regardless of the number and specifics of the incentives, without a steady, long-term source of funding to increase or augment California’s Medi-Cal provider reimbursement rates, California will not be able to solve its health care access problem.

According to a January 2019 study released by the Medicaid and CHIP Payment and Access Commission5, the federal legislative agency that makes recommendations to Congress and the states on Medicaid access issues, the only policy tool associated with an increase in providers accepting Medicaid beneficiaries is Medicaid payment rates.6 Specifically, the study identified that in states with the lowest Medicaid rates, such as California, only 65 percent of physicians accepting new patients were willing to accept new Medicaid patients, compared to 81 percent of physicians willing to accept new Medicaid patients in states with higher Medicaid rates. Further, the study indicated that as state Medicaid rates increased, the percentage of physicians accepting Medicaid patients increased. The study also found that the use of managed care, the population in Medicaid, and physician demographics were not factors in these results, and that payment rates were the only significant factor that had an impact on provider willingness to accept new Medicaid patients.

DHCS Could Improve Access and Usage by Imposing Financial Sanctions, if Necessary, and by Paying Plans Based on Their Performance

Although DHCS’ policies allow it to impose financial sanctions or penalties when plans do not meet established performance levels, these actions can take so long that plans rarely face such penalties. DHCS’ policies allow it to impose financial sanctions on a plan if it fails to meet minimum performance levels after implementing a corrective action plan, but in many cases, DHCS does not require plans to implement a corrective action plan until it has failed to meet the same minimum performance levels for three consecutive years.7 Because most quality-related corrective action plans run for five years, a plan’s performance could improve but still remain below the minimum performance levels for eight consecutive years before DHCS would impose a financial sanction. As a result, plans have seldom faced financial repercussions if they fail to meet minimum performance levels. According to the monitoring chief, DHCS never financially sanctioned any plan for uncorrected deficiencies related to access and utilization during our audit period, and it only recently imposed such sanctions in late 2018 after our audit began.

The Legislature could direct DHCS to develop a pay-for-performance program to hold plans financially accountable for providing the children’s preventive services the State requires. A pay-for-performance program would require that plans meet specified performance targets in order to receive portions of their Medi-Cal funding. Several states have implemented pay-for-performance programs, including Connecticut and Tennessee, which have utilization rates higher than California by 19 and 8 percentage points, respectively. According to CMS, its focus on improving the quality of health care delivery includes using incentives to improve care and tying payment to value through new payment models. The Governor’s January 2019 budget proposal includes funding for some pay-for-performance measures for Medi-Cal, but the proposal does not specify whether the measures pertain to children’s preventive services.

According to DHCS, a pay-for-performance program would likely be feasible and effective. The monitoring chief said a pay-for-performance program for children’s preventive care would lead the plans to focus more efforts on providing those services and would likely improve their performance, although it could lead to declining performance on other services offered through Medi-Cal. Therefore, DHCS would prefer to develop a broader scope pay-for-performance program that looks at more services in Medi-Cal. However, given the combination of low utilization rates for children’s preventive services that we observed, strong evidence that preventive services lead to future cost savings, and the fact that children make up nearly half of the Medi-Cal managed care population, any pay-for-performance program in Medi-Cal should have a strong focus on children’s preventive services.

DHCS currently pays plans rates that it annually calculates, based on the plans’ costs and other factors, and that CMS approves. As part of the rates development process, DHCS submits to CMS a range of appropriate rates that meet federal requirements that it could pay plans. However, because of the State’s budget limitations and historical practice, California typically pays plans the lowest base rates. As a result of this practice, and because federal law limits under what conditions states can withhold funding from plans, DHCS’ ability to hold underperforming plans financially accountable for providing all the children’s preventive services the State requires is restricted.

Therefore, implementing a pay-per-performance program—through either financial incentives or penalties—will first require the State to raise the amount it pays plans above the minimum rates allowed by CMS. Furthermore, a pay-for-performance program will be subject to federal approval; and, as a result, the Legislature will need to consider federal Medicaid policy when it assesses whether to authorize a pay-for-performance program. However, preventive care is vital to the health and well-being of millions of California’s children, and providing that care is cost-effective in the long term.

Recommendations

Legislature

To improve children’s access to preventive health services, the Legislature should amend state law to do the following:

To improve the health of California’s children, the Legislature should direct DHCS to implement financial incentives, such as a pay-for-performance program, designed to help ensure that plans are more consistently providing preventive services to children in Medi-Cal. To the extent DHCS can demonstrate that additional funding is necessary to operate such a program, the Legislature should increase funding specifically for that purpose.

DHCS

To increase access to preventive health services for children in areas where they are needed most, DHCS should identify by September 2019 where more providers who see children are needed and propose to the Legislature funding increases to recruit more providers in these areas.


Back to top





Chapter 2

DHCS DELEGATES MUCH OF ITS RESPONSIBILITIES FOR SERVING CHILDREN IN MEDI-CAL TO MANAGED CARE PLANS, BUT IT DOES NOT PROVIDE EFFECTIVE GUIDANCE AND OVERSIGHT

Chapter Summary

DHCS has not provided sufficient oversight of the plans to which it has delegated much of the responsibility of ensuring children in Medi-Cal receive preventive services and has not met its obligations to inform plans, providers, and beneficiaries about the preventive services it expects children to receive. For instance, it delegates to the plans its responsibility to reach out to the families of children who are not using preventive services, but it does not ensure that plans actually do so. Further, DHCS holds plans accountable for only a portion of the preventive services it requires them to provide children, and utilization rates are higher for those services. Finally, DHCS does not use its utilization management and annual audit processes effectively, nor does it proactively address cultural disparities that exist in the usage of preventive health services.

DHCS Does Not Provide Adequate Information to Plans, Providers, and Beneficiaries About the Services It Expects Children to Receive

DHCS has not made it clear to plans and providers that they are required to adhere to the Bright Futures schedule. California’s Medicaid State Plan, which describes the nature and scope of its Medicaid program, requires the State to provide preventive health services to children according to Bright Futures. However, DHCS’ contracts with plans do not make this requirement clear and frequently reference outdated requirements that are not in line with Bright Futures. For example, the contracts still direct plans to provide health assessments and ensure that children have received the preventive services in the Child Health and Disability Prevention program, which are former requirements, in addition to the health assessments and more frequent screenings that Bright Futures requires. This unclear and inconsistent contract language has led to confusion about the preventive health services the State expects plans to provide to children. One of the plans we reviewed, Alameda Alliance, even stated that it believes that DHCS only recommends—rather than requires— that plans follow the Bright Futures schedule. According to DHCS’ deputy director of Health Care Delivery Systems, DHCS does require plans to follow the Bright Futures schedule and it intends to revise the contracts to eliminate the unclear language.

Moreover, DHCS’ communications of updates related to EPSDT services do not rectify the contract’s wording problems. DHCS uses letters sent jointly to all plans (all-plan letters) to clarify the contractual obligations and to provide instructions for how to implement changes in state or federal requirements. However, these letters are not always clear or direct. For example, DHCS sent an all-plan letter stating that federal requirements mandate the use of Bright Futures and that children’s EPSDT services are broader than the Medi-Cal services that plans must provide to adults. However, the letter did not make it clear what services are required by Bright Futures or that plans must cover health services necessary to maintain or improve a child’s health. In addition, other states, including New York, include Bright Futures in their provider handbooks but DHCS does not. Without such notification, many providers may be unaware of the requirements to provide all children in Medi-Cal with preventive services according to Bright Futures. When DHCS provides confusing and unclear instructions to plans, it increases the likelihood that providers will not deliver the appropriate level of preventive services.

Furthermore, DHCS provides limited and unclear information to the families of children in Medi-Cal about the services they can and should receive. To ensure that all eligible children and their families know how to access and use these services, federal law requires DHCS to inform the children and their families both verbally and in writing about services and benefits specific to preventive health care. This includes notice of the screening and diagnostic services available under the EPSDT program, that these services are free of charge to eligible individuals, and that transportation and scheduling assistance are also available. Further, federal law requires DHCS to provide EPSDT screenings upon request and without prior authorization. However, the written materials DHCS provides to Medi-Cal beneficiaries include confusing, inaccurate, or incomplete information about these services. Of particular concern is the fact that DHCS’ beneficiary handbook does not discuss the benefits of preventive health care and does not make it clear that these services are free to eligible individuals and are available upon request. The handbook also fails to explain the comprehensive nature of the EPSDT benefits, does not communicate that children in Medi-Cal qualify for additional care such as vision and dental services, and does not include check-ups or immunizations in describing available preventive services. In July 2018, DHCS provided us a draft version of an updated beneficiary handbook; however, it did not address the issues we identified and, as of February 2019, has not been finalized.

DHCS contends that plans are responsible for informing their beneficiaries of the preventive services available to them but does little to hold plans accountable for sufficiently informing their members. Our review of the three plans indicated that plans need to improve their communication with members. For example, nearly half of Alameda Alliance’s members stated in a 2016 survey that the plan did not provide them with adequate information about taking care of children’s health concerns, and one-third said the plan did not provide them with adequate information about vaccines and child development. Additionally, only 29 percent of its members stated that it was very easy to understand the letters and information the plan sent them. Yet the staff we spoke to at the three plans indicated that it would be up to providers to distribute this type of health information to parents.

This pattern of delegation specifically affects children who are not receiving preventive services. Federal law requires DHCS to perform annual outreach to children and their families who have not used EPSDT preventive services to inform them of the benefits of preventive health care and how to obtain services under the EPSDT program. DHCS states that it relies on the plans to perform any additional outreach and to follow up with families of children who have not used EPSDT services. None of the plans we visited, however, perform this annual outreach and DHCS does not follow up to ensure that plans conduct this outreach.

Utilization Rates Are Higher for Children When DHCS Has Performance Measures for Services

For the services for which DHCS has established performance measures and reporting requirements, utilization rates are higher. Some of the highest utilization rates occur within the 3- to 6-year-old group, as we show in Figure 6. DHCS requires plans to meet minimum performance levels each calendar year for children in those age groups, which the plans have exceeded since at least 2014. It also requires health plans to report their performance annually in meeting those goals.

Figure 6
Utilization Rates Were Higher for Ages for Which DHCS Has Established Performance Measures
Fiscal Years 2013–14 Through 2017–18

A color-coded vertical bar graph showing utilization rates for Medi-Cal beneficiaries age 0 to 20 for the period from fiscal years 2013-14 through 2017-18.

Source: Analysis of DHCS' Management Information System/Decision Support System data.

Note: Fiscal year 2017–18 data may be incomplete because of a delay in DHCS receiving data.

* In addition to the methodology we used to calculate the utilization rates outlined in the Scope and Methodology section of our report, DHCS states that increased parental attention to newborn health and pre-scheduling check-ups could be possible reasons for the higher utilization rates for children under age 1 year, but it has not conducted an analysis to verify this.

In contrast, utilization rates are much lower for 1- and 2-year-olds—ages for which DHCS has not set performance measures or reporting requirements for children’s preventive care. It is critically important that young children receive preventive services to ensure their healthy development. Specifically, Bright Futures indicates that 1- and 2-year olds should receive at least three well-child exams in each year and vaccinations that include polio, measles, and hepatitis B. Of the 26 states currently monitoring use of services for this age group, 22 are demonstrating higher utilization rates than California. As an example, Connecticut demonstrated immediate improvements in the number of developmental screenings for children up to age 3 years once it began to track and monitor the provision of these services.

DHCS also has performance measures for access to primary care visits for age 12 months to 19 years. However, the measures do not monitor whether a beneficiary receives Bright Futures preventive services during that visit; instead, they only monitor whether the child had a visit with a primary care practitioner once during the measurement year. According to DHCS’ monitoring chief, DHCS adopted these measures nonetheless because they provide some information about children’s access to primary care and DHCS cannot adopt performance measures to encompass all well-child visits for all ages because of resource constraints. However, as indicated in Figure 6, ages 2 and 18 through 20 have the lowest utilization rates compared to all other ages, and DHCS does not have well-child performance measures for well-child visits for these ages.

According to DHCS, plans may be more aggressive about assisting providers with increasing utilization rates for certain age groups when it sets performance standards that the plans are required to meet. Currently, it only requires plans to report on the few children’s preventive services through HEDIS measures that we indicate in Table 5. According to DHCS, it uses HEDIS measures because they provide national benchmarks for comparison and are easier for the plans to report on. However, we believe DHCS should expand its performance measure set to include age groups with significantly lower utilization rates. For instance, adding the HEDIS measure for adolescent well-care visits would allow DHCS to monitor use of preventive care for adolescents and young adults from ages 12 to 20, likely fostering improved health outcomes. Further, according to a Pew-MacArthur8 2018 study, benchmarks can be a motivator for improved performance by establishing clear expectations and goals. Moreover, the plans we visited depend on the performance measures they report to DHCS to monitor and improve performance and also as one of the methods they use to identify and detect potential underutilization issues. Thus, if DHCS were to set performance measurements and reporting requirements for all well-child visits for age zero through 20 years, utilization rates would likely improve.

Table 5
DHCS' Performance Measures Capture Only a Few of the Bright Futures Services
BRIGHT FUTURES SERVICES* 0–5 MONTHS 6–11 MONTHS 12–24 MONTHS 25–35 MONTHS   3–6 YEARS 7–10 YEARS 11–13 YEARS 14–17 YEARS 14–17 YEARS
History X X X X   X X X X
Measurements X X X X X X X X
Body mass index X X
Sensory screening X X X X X X X X
Developmental/
behavioral health
X X X X X X X X
Physical exam X X X X X X X X
Procedures X X X X X X X X
Immunization X X X X
Oral health X X X X X X
Anticipatory guidance X X X X X X X X

Source: Analysis of Bright Futures and the EQRO’s definition of HEDIS measurements.

= DHCS monitors usage of this preventive service through HEDIS measures.

X = DHCS does not monitor usage of this preventive service as Bright Futures recommends.

* Most of the above services include an array of preventive health care. For example, sensory screening includes vision and hearing screening.

DHCS’ performance metrics for children age 3–6 does not necessarily ensure that these children receive every service during each well-child visit.

This service category is not recommended for this specific age range.

DHCS Does Not Use Its Utilization Management or Annual Audit Processes Related to Children’s Preventive Services Effectively

DHCS has not performed sufficient oversight over plans’ utilization management processes. DHCS requires all plans to maintain a utilization management program that includes a mechanism to detect both over- and underutilization of health care services. Despite this requirement, one of the plans we reviewed, Alameda Alliance, has not identified and addressed underutilization of children’s preventive services in their utilization management programs. Although DHCS conducts annual medical audits to review whether plans have a utilization management program, it does not review the plans’ actions to ensure that they specifically address underutilization of children’s preventive services. DHCS’ Audits and Investigations Branch stated that DHCS’ contract with the plans was not specific enough to hold plans accountable for underutilization of pediatric services. However, the contract specifically requires plans to have mechanisms to detect over- and underutilization of health care services, which would include children’s preventive services. By failing to determine whether plans are addressing underutilization of children’s preventive services, DHCS is missing an opportunity to increase the provision of these services.

DHCS’ annual medical audits provide only an intermittent and limited review of a plan’s process for ensuring the effective delivery of children’s preventive services. DHCS conducts an annual medical audit of each plan in which it evaluates plans’ processes related to utilization management, access to care, and quality management. However, according to the acting chief of the Medical Review Branch, in an effort to reduce the burden on plans, DHCS only includes reviews of preventive services within these audits once every three years unless it becomes aware of a deficiency. In the most recent audit review period, only 3 percent of DHCS audit findings were related to the delivery of preventive services and none of these findings were specific to children’s preventive services. We would expect this small number of findings to be indicative of high performance, but instead, utilization rates for children’s preventive services averaged less than 50 percent for each year during our audit period.

In addition, DHCS had not been conducting any audit procedures specific to EPSDT services for children until fall 2018. In practice, these new EPSDT audit procedures only include a review of some preventive services for a small number of children, and DHCS—based on its auditors’ evaluation of risk—applies discretion in whether to conduct these reviews at all. By only reviewing a plan’s process for overseeing a small number of children and conducting that review inconsistently, DHCS is not adequately holding plans accountable for resolving underutilization of children’s preventive services. Thus, the steps DHCS has taken in its audits regarding children’s preventive services have not contributed to demonstrable improvements to utilization rates.

Finally, DHCS’ annual medical audits are also too limited to ensure that plans provide timely access to beneficiaries.9 State law requires that all Medi-Cal beneficiaries have timely access to care within 10 days of a request for a nonurgent appointment with a primary care provider and within 15 days for a specialist. DHCS conducts telephone surveys of selected providers to confirm appointment wait times as part of its annual medical audits, but it does not follow a schedule to conduct the surveys, conducts them at its discretion, and contacts only 15 of the hundreds—and sometimes thousands—of providers participating in Medi-Cal plans. According to the acting chief of the Medical Review Branch, DHCS expects the plans to have policies to ensure timely access and only uses its audit procedures to validate a plan’s process for overseeing wait-time standards. However, by conducting audit procedures on a discretionary basis and using a very small sample size, DHCS is limiting its ability to make an accurate determination of the effectiveness of a plan’s policies.

DHCS Reduces the Effectiveness of Its Oversight by Not Ensuring That Plans Accurately Report the Services They Provide

While DHCS has taken steps to improve the accuracy of the plans’ reports on the services they provide, it must expand these efforts or it risks the loss of some federal Medicaid funding. According to the U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO), reliable encounter data—data on the services provided to beneficiaries—are central for CMS and the states to effectively oversee the Medicaid managed care program. For example, CMS and the states can use encounter data to help ensure that beneficiaries have access to covered services, that payment rates are set appropriately, and to identify inappropriate billing. Providers enter encounter data into a database to indicate what services they provided to beneficiaries. As we show in Figure 7, plans collect these data from providers, subcontractors, and other subcontracted plans and submit them to DHCS. Federal regulations require states to verify the accuracy of the encounter data that plans submit and forward these data to CMS. If states do not provide CMS with data that meet CMS standards, federal law requires CMS to withhold a portion of the federal share of Medicaid funding.

Figure 7
Encounter Data Reported From Providers to CMS Are Transferred and Modified Multiple Times, Potentially Creating Inaccuracies With the Data

A flow chart showing how encounter data is reported through multiple channels from providers to plans to DHCS to CMS.

Source: State law and Medicaid Managed Care Government Accountability Office October 2018 report.

DHCS contracts with its EQRO to conduct periodic data validation studies to match the plans’ self-reported encounter data to medical records, and these studies have shown that plans continue to struggle to report encounter data accurately and completely. Before a draft validation study completed in 2018, the EQRO issued its most recent report in 2015 and based it on encounter data from 2012. That report found pervasive data quality and completeness deficiencies, and it made several recommendations to improve data quality, which DHCS made some efforts to adopt. For example, DHCS transitioned to a new encounter data claims system and established an encounter data quality unit to address technical problems that affect accuracy. However, it did not implement all of the EQRO’s recommendations from 2015, such as requiring plans to develop encounter data training programs and conduct audits of their providers.

In 2018 the EQRO began reviewing encounter data from 2016 and provided DHCS with a draft of its report in December 2018, which DHCS expects the EQRO will finalize in early 2019. While the draft report found that DHCS’ encounter data from 2016 were more complete and accurate than the data from 2012, it also found that there were still considerable gaps in the data quality and that encounter data quality also varied widely by plan. For example, according to the draft report, most plans’ encounter data for medical diagnosis codes and provider names still did not meet DHCS’ completeness standards, while the accuracy rate of each plan’s encounter data for all elements ranged from a low of 6 percent to a high of 54 percent. Notably, the EQRO repeated its recommendation that DHCS require plans to develop an encounter data education program and conduct audits of their providers. Each of the three plans we spoke with commented on the difficulty of ensuring that encounter data are accurate and highlighted their own struggles with ensuring the accuracy of data that providers submit. For example, LA Care indicated that before it recently started including encounter data submissions as part of its pay-for-performance program, its managed care providers had little incentive to report encounter data accurately since the services they provide are not tied to the capitation payments they receive.

As part of its recent changes to Medicaid rules, CMS placed a greater emphasis on accurate and complete reporting of encounter data. CMS also highlighted the importance of high-quality encounter data in an August 2018 letter to state health officials and reaffirmed this position—including its ability to withhold state Medicaid funding—in its October 2018 response to a GAO audit, which found that CMS needs to take additional action to help ensure encounter data reliability. Unless DHCS continues to improve the quality of its encounter data, the State risks losing federal funding if it is unable to meet CMS’s criteria for the accuracy and completeness of managed care encounter data.

DHCS Relies on Provider Information That Could Be Inaccurate, Which Could Hinder Access to Care

DHCS’ new process for validating the status and locations of plan providers also has flaws that could limit DHCS’ ability to identify and target areas of low usage or reduced access to preventive care, and which could hinder beneficiaries’ access to care. To verify that the provider data that plans submit are accurate, two separate divisions at DHCS use processes developed after our June 2015 report, California Department of Health Care Services: Improved Monitoring of Medi-Cal Managed Care Health Plans Is Necessary to Better Ensure Access to Care, Report 2014-134. In that audit, we found that DHCS used inconsistent and not statistically valid methods when reviewing the provider data that plans were submitting for their provider directories. We also found that DHCS could not demonstrate that it performed all of its reviews of plans’ provider directories because it did not retain the necessary documentation. Provider directories are one of the primary means by which beneficiaries can find health care providers. DHCS generally agreed with our findings from that audit and took steps to implement our recommendations. However, in spite of these steps, we found that problems remain, limiting the reliability of the information DHCS uses when it annually reviews provider networks and that beneficiaries receive about available providers.

DHCS’ method for reviewing provider information does not provide sufficient assurance of the accuracy of the provider data that are made available to beneficiaries. DHCS uses a statistical survey tool to calculate how many providers from each plan it needs to verify when reviewing plans’ provider directories for accuracy. This tool allows DHCS staff to select a margin of error, such as 5 percent or 10 percent, and a confidence level from 80 percent to 99 percent although guidance included with the tool recommends not using a confidence level below 90 percent. However, to limit the amount of staff time devoted to the provider information review process, DHCS selected a 10 percent margin of error and an 80 percent confidence level—the lowest setting the tool allows. In contrast, CMS uses a confidence level of 95 percent in its consumer surveys, and a 90 percent confidence level for some activities related to payments. Because DHCS has chosen a lower confidence level, its sample size is much smaller, and it is likely that errors may go undetected in a significant portion of the provider directory reviews it conducts.

Further, the provider information itself can often be inaccurate. In our 2015 audit, which included our review of listings in the provider directories of three plans, we found that inaccurate listings for the providers we checked in those directories ranged from a low of 3 percent for one plan to as high as 23 percent for another plan. In spite of these concerns, DHCS continues to approve a plan’s provider directory if it determines that information for 80 percent of the plan’s providers that DHCS reviews is accurate. This means that although information for a significant portion of the providers in the directories may be inaccurate, DHCS would still approve them. For example, during its February 2018 review of Alameda Alliance’s provider directory, DHCS found inaccurate or incomplete information for six of 39 providers sampled, or 15 percent, but still approved the directory as submitted. According to DHCS, some Medi-Cal beneficiaries rely exclusively on the provider directory to select their plan and provider. When the provider directory is inaccurate, families may have trouble finding a provider.

DHCS is also unable to show that it reviewed all the provider information it claims it reviewed. In response to our 2015 audit, DHCS adopted policies and procedures to retain all documentation related to its provider directory reviews for a minimum of three years. However, DHCS was not able to provide the review documentation we requested for this audit for two of four plans it said it reviewed because the contract manager for those plans was not able to locate the documents. Instead, DHCS provided the approval forms for those plans’ provider directories, which a supervisor signs once DHCS has completed its review. However, the portion of the form listing review findings for one of the plans was blank, and the portion listing findings for the other plan said only “Approved.” According to the chief of its Managed Care Internal Operations Branch, DHCS is revising its processes to ensure that the review tools are maintained for future reference. When DHCS staff do not maintain the supporting documentation from their directory reviews, DHCS is unable to demonstrate that it actually performed the necessary reviews to ensure that provider information in the directories is accurate.

DHCS Is Not Proactively Addressing Cultural Disparities That Exist in the Usage of Preventive Health Services

Cultural factors—ethnicity and language in particular—appear to impact utilization rates. As indicated in Figure 8, utilization rates for children’s preventive services in fiscal year 2016–17 ranged from nearly 66 percent for Cantonese speakers to just under 35 percent for Russian speakers. In addition, Figure 9 indicates that utilization rates by ethnicity during the same year were highest among Vietnamese populations at nearly 60 percent, while utilization rates for Guamanian and Samoan child beneficiaries were lowest at about 37 percent. Federal law requires each state to have a plan to identify, evaluate, and reduce—to the extent practicable—health disparities based on various characteristics including race, ethnicity, and primary language. According to the 2019 Health Workforce Commission Report, patients make greater use of preventive services and have higher levels of trust and satisfaction with providers of similar racial, linguistic, and social backgrounds. Although DHCS and the three plans we reviewed agreed that cultural factors impact utilization and access rates for children’s preventive services, DHCS has not effectively mitigated the impact of cultural factors on utilization and access rates nor has it ensured that plans consistently mitigate those disparities on their own.

Figure 8
Utilization Rates Were Not Necessarily Higher for More Common Languages
Fiscal Year 2016–17

A color-coded horizontal bar chart showing utilization rates of children’s preventive services by primary language group.

Source: Analysis of DHCS’ Management Information System/Decision Support System data.

Figure 9
Utilization Rates Were Not Necessarily Higher for More Common Ethnicities
Fiscal Year 2016–17

A color-coded horizontal bar chart showing utilization rates of children’s preventive services by ethnicity.

Source: Analysis of DHCS’ Management Information System/Decision Support System data.

DHCS requires plans to produce a report once every five years to identify the cultural and linguistic needs of their beneficiaries; however, it has not ensured that plans have taken action to address the relevant disparity, access, or usage findings cited in those reports. DHCS’ contracts with plans specify that these reports—called group needs assessments—must include a demographic profile of members and must assess related health risks and cultural factors of these populations. However, DHCS has not consistently followed up on plans’ group needs assessment findings to ensure that each plan has made efforts to mitigate disparities identified in the report. For instance, Alameda Alliance has not yet established a health education program for its population of Hispanic children to combat high obesity, asthma, and hypertension rates even though it had explicitly outlined this as a goal in its 2016 group needs assessment report. DHCS could not provide evidence that it had followed up with Alameda Alliance on this particular disparity.

In fact, DHCS could not provide evidence that it has taken action to mitigate cultural health disparities for children’s preventive services statewide. Specifically, DHCS’ EQRO published a health disparities study in July 2018 that reported some performance measures—including some for children’s preventive services categorized by race, ethnicity, and primary language—to identify disparities among those groups. The report noted that immunization rates were lowest for African American/black children, that childhood and adolescent access to primary care was lowest for certain European language speakers, and that the utilization rate for well-child visits for 3- through 6-year-olds was lowest for Caucasian/white children. However, DHCS stated that the methodology of the report did not allow it to specifically identify demographic disparities at the county or reporting unit level or to use the report for targeted interventions. Nevertheless, DHCS indicated that in future years it will incorporate a more expansive analysis within its EQRO’s health disparity study, and it will include measures that enable it to better make demographic comparisons within the child Medi-Cal population. DHCS did not provide a conclusive timeline for this analysis, however.

DHCS also does not take a proactive role in ensuring that children have access to health care in the language of both the child and the family. Although DHCS monitors utilization rates by language, it does not take steps to increase the availability of providers based on language needs. Instead, it relies on parents to request interpreters and on providers to provide the language services that families request. However, plans’ surveys of their members reveal that some members are unaware that interpreters are available or they reported that their providers asked them to bring family members to act as an interpreter. The most recent group needs assessment surveys at the three plans we visited showed that 30 percent of Spanish-speaking beneficiaries at Partnership HealthPlan relied on friends or family members to interpret for them, 33 percent of Spanish-speaking beneficiaries at Alameda Alliance were not aware that medical interpreters were available, and fewer than one-third of LA Care members were able to get a professional interpreter when needed. Although DHCS verifies that plans provide interpreters through its audits, it does not actively monitor group needs assessment survey findings or require plans to take action on these survey findings. Thus, DHCS is failing to ensure that children have access to health care in the language of both the child and the family.

Some plans have taken steps to conduct targeted outreach in order to address disparities in utilization rates without direction from DHCS. For example, Health Net identified a low immunization rate among the Russian community in Sacramento and then took steps to improve that rate through school interventions, outreach, and training for providers on Russian culture. Health Net noted a 10 percent improvement in its immunization rates over a three-year period as a result of its efforts. Although Health Net identified and addressed a child health disparity without assistance from DHCS, our analysis indicates that ethnic and linguistic child health disparities exist across all plans. Without taking a more active role in addressing these child health disparities, DHCS is missing an opportunity to improve access and utilization rates for millions of California children.

Recommendations

To ensure that children in Medi-Cal have access to all of the preventive services for which they are eligible, DHCS should modify by May 2019 its contracts to make it clear to plans and providers that they are required to provide services according to Bright Futures.

To ensure that eligible children and their families know about all the preventive services they are entitled to through Medi-Cal, DHCS should include by May 2019 clearer and more comprehensive information about those services in its written materials and by September 2019 ensure annual follow-up with any children and their families who have not used those services.

To improve access and utilization rates, DHCS should establish by March 2020 performance measures that cover Bright Futures services through well-child visits for all age groups, and require plans to track and report the utilization rates on those measures.

To ensure that health plans and providers are adequately delivering children’s preventive services, DHCS should implement by September 2019 audit procedures through its annual medical audits that address the delivery of EPSDT services to all eligible children for all plans annually.

To ensure that plans address underutilization of children’s preventive services, DHCS should require plans by September 2019 to use their utilization management programs to identify barriers to usage specifically for these services and hold the plans accountable to address the barriers they identify.

To better ensure the accuracy of its data and ensure that California receives all available federal Medicaid funding, DHCS should require its EQRO to perform its encounter data validation studies annually using the most recent set of data available, and it should implement recommendations from its EQRO studies.

To ensure that plan provider directories are accurate, by September 2019 DHCS should begin using a 95 percent confidence level and not more than a 10 percent margin of error on its statistical sampling tool and should require at least 95 percent accuracy before approving a plan’s provider directory. In addition, DHCS should ensure that its staff adhere to its policy to retain all documentation related to its review of provider directories for at least three years.

To mitigate health disparities for children of differing ethnic backgrounds and language needs, DHCS should revise by September 2019 the methodology for its EQRO’s health disparity study to enable it to better make demographic comparisons, and it should use the findings to drive targeted interventions within plan service areas. It should publish this study annually.

To ensure that plans are effectively mitigating child health disparities in their service area, DHCS should implement by September 2019 a policy to require the plans to take action on the most significant findings cited in their group needs assessment reports, and to regularly follow up with the plans to ensure they have addressed the findings.


Back to top





Chapter 3

DHCS IS MISSING OPPORTUNITIES TO HELP CALIFORNIA’S CHILDREN RECEIVE PREVENTIVE HEALTH SERVICES

Chapter Summary

DHCS could take several specific actions to help improve access and increase the usage of children’s preventive services through Medi-Cal. For instance, DHCS could implement more effective incentive programs and other best practices to help increase access to—and usage of—preventive services for children. DHCS could also establish a formal process to share the results of its and its plans’ strategies that have succeeded in increasing utilization rates for these services. Finally, although DHCS regularly commissions external studies related to children’s preventive health services, it needs a better process to make sure it actually implements recommendations from these studies.

DHCS Can Do More to Operate Effective Incentive Programs and Implement Other Best Practices to Increase Access to—and Usage of—Preventive Services for Children

DHCS has begun implementing incentive programs, but it can do more to ensure that they are effective. Since 2005 DHCS has had a nonfinancial incentive program that rewards plans with a greater percentage of enrollments when they perform statistically better than other plans or do better than their own previous year’s performances. This program focuses on eight performance measures, two of which relate to children’s preventive services, including childhood immunization rates and well-child visits in the third through sixth years of life. DHCS scores plans based on how well they perform for each performance measure and then proportionally allocates the Medi-Cal beneficiaries who did not choose their own health plan into those plans based on the plans’ performance scores—the higher the score, the more beneficiaries a plan is allocated.10 However, since DHCS has not evaluated the impact of the program on usage of children’s preventive services, it cannot demonstrate that this auto-assignment program leads to improved performance on the included performance measures. As we reference in Appendix C, DHCS has also initiated a program to incentivize preventive dental services in the Medi-Cal Dental program, which we audited in 2014.

Some health plans operate their own incentive programs to supplement low reimbursement rates and to improve performance related to children’s preventive care. All three of the health plans we visited operate such incentive programs and demonstrated moderate increases in their utilization rates for children over the period we reviewed. For instance, Alameda Alliance rewards its providers per performance measure based on the percentage increase from the prior year’s rate. Since the plan implemented its provider incentive program in 2015, utilization rates increased from 49 percent in fiscal year 2014–15 to 54 percent in fiscal year 2016–17. Partnership HealthPlan awards providers based on how well they perform on each selected measure compared to the national Medicaid performance measure rates as well as their relative improvement from previous years. Partnership HealthPlan’s utilization rates increased from 48 percent in fiscal year 2013–14 to 50 percent in fiscal year 2016–17. Similarly, LA Care, which had an increase in utilization rates from fiscal years 2015–16 to 2016–17, awards its providers based on how well they perform compared to providers within the plan as well as on their relative improvement from the prior year in well-child visits and childhood and adolescent immunization rates. In fact, in 2017, LA Care began rewarding providers for high utilization rates in children’s access to primary practitioners—a measure monitoring the percentage of children 12 to 19 years of age who had a visit with a primary care physician during the year—which can be an effective best practice for other plans’ programs.

As we show in Table 6, we identified practices in other states that California could consider adopting, including incentive programs, which could serve to supplement the State’s reimbursement rates and improve performance. For example, Tennessee, which has a 57 percent utilization rate for children’s preventive care, currently operates a statewide financial incentive program. It allows plans to select their own performance measures for improvement tied to incentives and requires plans to show a 5 percent improvement each year to be eligible for an incentive payment. Similarly, Connecticut, with utilization rates nearly 20 percent higher than in California, currently operates a statewide incentive program that awards providers who improve on utilization rates for developmental screening in the first three years of life. According to the Child Health and Development Institute of Connecticut, the number of children who received developmental screenings as a result of the program dramatically increased from nearly 15,000 in 2010 to 65,000 in 2017.

Table 6
California May Be Able to Benefit by Adopting Best Practices From Higher-Performing States
STATE UTILIZATION RATE* BEST PRACTICE
Iowa 82% Incorporates well-care visits into sports physicals
Hawaii 81
Wisconsin 79 Operates a statewide pay-for-performance program
New York 75 Includes Bright Futures schedule in its provider handbook
Connecticut 68 Monitors developmental screenings in the first three years of life
Texas 68 Provides diapers for check-ups
Rhode Island 60 Provides gifts for check-ups
North Carolina 58 Provides certification credit for quality improvement webinars
Utah 57
Tennessee 57 Operates a statewide pay-for-performance program and incorporates well-care visits into sports physicals

Source: Analysis of various online publications and CMS annual EPSDT data for all states, federal fiscal year 2018.

* Utilization rate = total eligible children receiving at least one initial or periodic screening divided by total eligible children who should receive at least one initial or periodic screening.

DHCS has not tracked the results of its own incentive program, nor has it tracked the results of programs that plans have developed independently. Thus, it cannot determine which programs are most effective or have the most potential to be expanded statewide. Further, as discussed in the next section, DHCS does not facilitate plans’ sharing of their programs’ successes. As a result, DHCS is missing opportunities to increase access to and usage of critical children’s preventive care services.

DHCS Has Not Taken Sufficient Action to Meet its Immunization Goal, and It Does Not Share the Results of Successful Strategies Across All Plans

DHCS is not doing enough to improve the immunization rates for children in Medi-Cal. Federal law requires that DHCS develop and implement a quality strategy for assessing and improving services provided by its plans. Even though DHCS has been focusing on childhood immunization rates as part of its quality strategy for the past five years, it has not been able to meet its target of an 80 percent usage goal. In fact, because it has not taken sufficient action to address the causes of its low immunization rates, these rates decreased from calendar years 2014 through 2017. According to DHCS, two of the major reasons it has not been able to meet its target immunization rate of 80 percent are that not all providers have registered to use the California Immunization Registry, which supports patient reminders, and that providers do not always have the vaccines in stock. However, we found that DHCS has not worked directly with providers to address these two issues. Instead, it stated that plans can work with the California Department of Public Health to increase provider usage of the California Immunization Registry and to monitor vaccine inventories, and DHCS expects the plans to educate providers about the importance and expectations of childhood immunizations.

Furthermore, DHCS is not maximizing the opportunities for improvement that its current processes provide. Specifically, if a plan performs below an established minimum performance level, DHCS requires the plan to conduct a PDSA cycle. A PDSA cycle is a performance improvement process in which a plan implements strategies to improve services at a particular provider and reports progress to DHCS quarterly. DHCS also expects a plan to adopt successful strategies as a best practice at its other provider sites wherever possible. In addition, DHCS conducts quarterly improvement calls open to all plans and invites plans to volunteer to share their successful strategies. According to DHCS’ medical consultant, DHCS currently does not provide enough call time for all plans to share their successful strategies, and often plans are not available to present on potential best practices during these calls. Despite these and other informal efforts, we found that even if a PDSA cycle’s results are successful, DHCS does not have policies and procedures in place to share this type of success with other plans. For instance, DHCS placed Partnership HealthPlan under a PDSA cycle from October 2016 to May 2017. As part of the PDSA cycle, Partnership HealthPlan conducted a workflow modification intervention based on its knowledge that providers generally spend only half of a well-child visit directly with the child. By replacing the provider with a nurse for the first half of every visit, providers performed more well-child visits and childhood immunization rates improved by 33 percent. DHCS considered Partnership HealthPlan’s PDSA cycle to be successful but did not ensure that all other plans knew of the results.

DHCS also did not ensure that Partnership HealthPlan shared its successful strategy with its own providers across counties in the northeast and northwest portions of its service area even though Partnership HealthPlan had committed to doing so as part of its approved PDSA cycle. These counties may have benefited from the strategy because they had experienced continuously declining immunization rates. DHCS explained that it expects but does not require a plan to adopt successful strategies at all of the plan’s providers because it considers the PDSA process an individualized improvement process and does not require plans to share promising practices with other plans. However, a DHCS’ medical branch consultant agreed that it would make sense for DHCS to be responsible for ensuring that plans share successful practices. By not encouraging plans to adopt known best practices or proactively sharing successful results itself, DHCS is limiting the usefulness of its PDSA process.

DHCS Has Not Implemented Some Recommendations From Its External Quality Review Organization for Improving Access and Quality of Care

DHCS did not implement many of its EQRO’s recommendations related to children’s preventive services. Federal law requires DHCS to ensure that an EQRO produces a technical report that summarizes findings on access and quality of care and includes recommendations for improving the quality, timeliness, and access to health care services. In 2017 the EQRO recommended that DHCS consider implementing strategies to improve well-child visits in the third through sixth years of life. The recommendation stemmed from the fact that plans’ performance related to well-child visits in those age groups significantly declined from 2015 to 2016. DHCS chose not to implement the recommendation and explained that it may consider the EQRO’s recommendation in 2019 since childhood immunization, rather than well-child visits, was the focus area at the time.

DHCS also failed to fully address a recommendation related to communicating the importance of preventive services. The EQRO’s technical report included a focused study related to monitoring the plans’ provision of developmental screening in the first three years of life. Although the EQRO report noted there was a consistent lack of education regarding the importance of children receiving developmental screenings—similar to the issues we identified earlier in this report—DHCS did not adopt it as a performance measure. DHCS explained that it commissions numerous studies annually to consider potential next steps, but it is not required to respond to such recommendations. However, our data indicate that average utilization rates for children aged 1 to 2 years are below the average utilization rates for all children and have remained below the fiscal year 2013–14 rates. By not adequately addressing the EQRO’s annual recommendations relating to children’s preventive services, DHCS is not maximizing its ability to ensure that children are receiving recommended preventive health services.

Furthermore, federal law requires the State to ensure that the EQRO’s annual report includes an assessment of the extent to which each plan has effectively addressed the EQRO’s prior-year quality improvement recommendations. According to DHCS’ monitoring chief, to assess plans’ implementation of prior-year recommendations, the EQRO reviews each plan’s self-reported actions and if the EQRO does not issue plan-specific recommendations related to these areas, DHCS considers the prior-year recommendations implemented. However, this practice does not result in any definitive, written conclusions regarding whether plans have implemented prior-year recommendations. Thus, DHCS may not be meeting its obligation under federal law to have its EQRO include the assessment and is not maximizing its opportunities to increase plans’ performance.

Recommendations

To help increase utilization rates, DHCS should begin by September 2019 to monitor and identify effective incentive programs at the plan level and share the results with all plans.

To improve the usefulness of its PDSA process, DHCS should implement by September 2019 a process to share the results of successful strategies with all plans and require plans to share these results with providers who could benefit from them.

To improve its ability to ensure that children are receiving recommended preventive health services, DHCS should create by September 2019 an action plan to annually address the EQRO’s recommendations relating to children’s preventive services, including recommendations left unaddressed from the previous two years’ reports.

To maximize the benefits of the studies it commissions from its EQRO, DHCS should ensure that by September 2019 the EQRO’s annual reports include an assessment of the actions plans have taken to address the EQRO’s prior-year recommendations.




We conducted this audit under the authority vested in the California State Auditor by Government Code 8543 et seq. and according to generally accepted government auditing standards. Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain sufficient, appropriate evidence to provide a reasonable basis for our findings and conclusions based on our audit objectives specified in the Scope and Methodology section of the report. We believe that the evidence obtained provides a reasonable basis for our findings and conclusions based on our audit objectives.


Respectfully submitted,

ELAINE M. HOWLE, CPA
California State Auditor

March 14, 2019




Footnotes

2 According to DHCS, there were a total of 182,000 possible requests that plans could have submitted, and some of the 80,000 requests plans actually submitted were duplicates. Go back to text

3 DHCS does obtain this information from plans’ provider files during its annual review of plan provider networks, but it does not consider it when approving alternative access standards. Go back to text

4 The California Future Health Workforce Commission is composed of a statewide group of senior leaders across multiple sectors, including California’s public university systems, health care organizations, advocacy groups, and state legislators. Go back to text

5 The Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP) provides low-cost health coverage to children in families that earn too much money to qualify for Medicaid. Go back to text

6 The study looked at Medicaid fee-for-service rates and did not distinguish between base rates and supplemental payments or incentives such as those described earlier. Go back to text

7 DHCS’ policies also allow it to impose a corrective action plan if a plan underperforms on more than half of the performance measures in one year or if DHCS identifies a serious quality trend or issue the plan needs to correct. Go back to text

8 The Pew-MacArthur Results First Initiative works with states to implement an innovative evidence-based policymaking approach that helps them invest in policies and programs that are proven to work. Go back to text

9 In addition to medical audits, DHCS commissioned its EQRO in 2016 to conduct a timely access study to monitor beneficiaries’ access to care. The EQRO provided a final draft to DHCS in January 2019; however, the results of this study and DHCS’ plans regarding implementation of its recommendations were not available in time for our review. Go back to text

10 DHCS may also reduce the percentage of enrollments assigned to a plan because of inaccurate encounter data or an inadequate number of safety net providers—providers that treat patients regardless of their ability to pay. Go back to text



Back to top