2004 Yellow Book | |||||
Backward | Forward | Cover | Overview | Agency Summaries | Agency Details |
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH (Summary) View Details |
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Adjusted Appropriation 2003-04 |
Executive Request 2004-05 |
Change |
Percent Change |
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AGENCY SUMMARY | |||||
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General Fund | 6,902,820,100 | 7,210,845,600 | 308,025,500 | 4.5% | |
Special Revenue-Other | 4,718,503,000 | 4,721,080,000 | 2,577,000 | 0.1% | |
Special Revenue-Federal | 27,666,633,000 | 27,850,970,000 | 184,337,000 | 0.7% | |
Capital Projects Fund | 76,600,000 | 97,600,000 | 21,000,000 | 27.4% | |
Enterprise | 10,000 | 10,000 | 0 | 0.0% | |
Total for Agency: | 39,364,566,100 | 39,880,505,600 | 515,939,500 | 1.3% | |
Total Contingency: | 1,230,000,000 | 1,476,000,000 | 246,000,000 | 20.0% | |
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Total for AGENCY SUMMARY: | 40,594,566,100 | 41,356,505,600 | 761,939,500 | 1.9% |
* 2000-01 through 2002-03 reflect enacted appropriations. * 2003-04 and 2004-05 reflect Executive recommended appropriations. |
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ALL FUNDS PERSONNEL BUDGETED FILL LEVELS |
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Current 2003-04 |
Requested 2004-05 |
Change |
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General Fund: | 2,084 | 2,034 | (50) |
All Other Funds: | 3,835 | 3,827 | (8) |
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TOTAL: | 5,919 | 5,861 | (58) |
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Budget Highlights |
As the designated State agency responsible for promoting and supervising public health activities, ensuring sound and cost-effective quality medical care, and reducing infectious diseases, the Department of Health (DOH) works toward its goal of ensuring the highest quality, most appropriate and cost-effective health care for all New Yorkers. Since State Fiscal Year (SFY) 1996-97, when authority for the State’s Medical Assistance (Medicaid) Program was transferred from the former Department of Social Services, the Department of Health has served as the principal State agency responsible for interacting with Federal and local governments, health care providers, and program participants on behalf of the Medicaid Program in New York. Transfer of all Medicaid functions to the Department of Health consolidated for the first time in one agency the operational and oversight responsibilities for the Medicaid Program, thereby clarifying State accountability for Medicaid policy and allowing for greater efficiencies in the administration of health care programs. |
This agency is included in the Health and Mental Hygiene appropriation bill. |
The Governor recommends All Funds appropriations for the Department of Health (DOH) totaling $41,356,505,600, an increase of $761,939,500, or 1.9 percent over State Fiscal Year (SFY) 2003-04, primarily attributable to an increase in both General Fund and Special Revenue Fund-Federal appropriations. The Governor recommends General Fund appropriations for the Agency totaling $7,210,845,600, an increase of $308,025,500, or 4.5 percent above the current fiscal year. Additionally, the Governor recommends Special Revenue Funds-Federal appropriations for the Agency totaling $27,850,970,000, an increase of $184,337,000, or 0.7 percent over SFY 2003-04. The Executive further recommends a Special Revenue Fund – Other appropriation totaling $4,721,080,000, an increase of $2,577,000, or 0.1 percent over SFY 2003-04. |
The adjusted appropriations for the Department of Health (DOH) include recommended deficiency appropriations for General Fund and Special Revenue Funds – Other in Aid to Localities totaling $40,000,000. The proposed allocation of those funds is as follows: the Indigent Care Fund in the Medical Assistance Program, $10,000,000, and the Elderly Pharmaceutical Insurance Coverage (EPIC) Program, $30,000,000. The proposed deficiency appropriations are needed to fund unexpected program growth in both EPIC and Medicaid in the current fiscal year. |
The Executive proposes to sweep $56,400,000 from the Quality of Care account to offset General Fund spending in SFY 2004-05. |
State Operations |
The Executive recommends a total All Funds appropriation for State Operations of $4,646,664,000, which reflects an increase of $96,203,400, or 2.11 percent over SFY 2003-04. This increase is primarily due to an anticipated increase in Federal funds. The Executive proposes General Fund State Operations appropriations totaling $170,066,000, an increase of $4,174,400, or 2.52 percent. The Executive also recommends Special Revenue Funds – Federal totaling $4,049,572,000, an increase of $87,852,000 or 2.22 percent. |
In the SFY 2004-05 budget, the Governor proposes a net decrease of 58 full-time equivalent (FTE) positions agency- wide. This action would result in $1,700,000 cash savings to the General Fund and $200,000 cash savings to Special Revenue Funds in SFY 2004-05. |
The Governor proposes to make permanent the authority of the Office of Professional Medical Conduct (OPMC) to fund the Physician Profiling Act (Patient Health Information and Quality Improvement Act). This action would result in State savings totaling $3,800,000 in SFY 2004-05. |
The Governor further proposes to eliminate various public health programs that were enacted during the 2001 and 2002 legislative sessions. These programs include: the Alzheimer’s Tax Check-off General Fund Match (Chapter 359 of the Laws of 2002); the Endoscopy Study (Chapter 438 of the Laws of 2002); the Reflex Sympathetic Dystrophy Syndrome Prevention and Education Program (Chapter 429 of the Laws of 2002); the Obesity Prevention Program (Chapter 538 of the Laws of 2002); the Tattooing and Body Piercing License and Regulation Program (Chapter 562 of the Laws of 2001); and the Durable Medical Equipment (DME) Regulatory Program (Chapter 618 of the Laws of 2002). The Governor purports that the elimination of these programs would save the State $1,000,000 in SFY 2004-05. |
The Governor also proposes to shift $6,245,800 in various administrative costs to the State Insurance Department, including: $3,500,000 in new costs associated with the proposed “forge proof” prescription program; $1,221,200 in fringe benefit costs from the Newborn Genetic Screening Program; and $1,524,600 in fringe benefit costs from the Center for Community Health. |
Institutional Management |
The Governor proposes to reduce the scheduled allocation amount for the Roswell Park Cancer Institute in the Health Care Reform Act (HCRA) from $83,000,000 to $78,000,000, resulting in a decrease of $5,000,000 in SFY 2004-05. |
The Department of Health currently maintains five direct care institutions: Helen Hayes Hospital in West Haverstraw and four nursing homes for the care of veterans and their dependents -- Oxford, New York City, Montrose, and Western New York. The Executive proposes new capital funding of $60,000,000 to finance the reconstruction of the Veterans Nursing Home at Oxford, a 242-bed facility located in Oxford in Chenango County. Of this amount, the State contribution would total $21,000,000, and the remaining balance of $39,000,000 would be financed with federal dollars. |
Aid To Localities |
The Executive recommends All Funds Aid to Localities appropriations totaling $35,136,241,600, an increase of $398,736,100, or 1.15 percent over SFY 2003-04. This increase is primarily attributable to an increase in Special Revenue Funds—Federal. |
The Executive proposes General Fund appropriations totaling $7,040,779,600, an increase of $303,851,100, or 4.51 percent over the SFY 2003-04 funding level. The Executive also recommends Special Revenue Fund-Federal appropriations totaling $23,801,398,000, an increase of $96,485,000 or 0.41 percent. |
For the Early Intervention (EI) Program, the Executive recommends cash spending of $277,000,000 for SFY 2004- 05, a net cash increase of $36,000,000 over SFY 2003-04, due to both enrollment growth and increased utilization of services. The Executive also proposes significant changes to the EI program in SFY 2004-05. The Executive proposes to institute a sliding-scale parental fee schedule, ranging from $300 to $2,580 annually per family, depending upon income. Families under 250 percent of the Federal Poverty Level (FPL) would not be required to pay parental fees. The Executive also proposes to improve private health insurance coverage of EI medical services and to eliminate the enhanced rate for EI home and community-based visits. In addition, the Executive proposes a provider registration fee of $275 for individual providers and $900 for licensed agencies every three years. The Governor also proposes to maximize Medicaid reimbursement for EI services, and to implement a prior approval process for frequent EI services (county prior approval if a child receives five or more services and State prior approval if a child receives seven or more services per week). The Executive also proposes to allow counties to re-evaluate children at the time of the six-month review to determine continued eligibility for EI services, as well as to allow counties to negotiate EI rates with providers. The Executive estimates that localities would save $53,100,000 in SFY 2004- 05 from the proposed initiatives. The Executive does not estimate any State savings resulting from the proposed measures until SFY 2005-06 because of the payment lag in the Early Intervention Program. When fully implemented in SFY 2006-07, the Executive estimates that the EI proposal would save both the State and local governments $75,000,000. |
The Executive proposes a $30,000,000 deficiency appropriation in the Elderly Pharmaceutical Insurance Coverage (EPIC) Program in SFY 2003-04, primarily due to increased price and utilization. For SFY 2004-05, the Executive recommends $704,500,000 for the EPIC Program, an increase of $66,500,000 in cash spending over SFY 2003- 04, reflecting an increase at a level consistent with program growth offset by proposed spending reductions of $60,000,000. Specifically, the Governor proposes to reduce the drug reimbursement rate for all pharmacies participating in the EPIC program from the Average Wholesale Price (AWP) minus 12 percent to the Average Wholesale Price minus 15 percent for brand name drugs, $22,600,000; to reduce the drug reimbursement rate for all pharmacies participating in the EPIC program from the Average Wholesale Price (AWP) minus 12 percent to the Average Wholesale Price minus 30 percent for generic drugs, $7,400,000; and to authorize the Department of Health to waive existing participant fees for low-income EPIC enrollees under 135 percent of the Federal Poverty Level (FPL) to encourage these enrollees to obtain the new Medicare Interim Discount Drug Card, $30,000,000. In addition, the Executive proposes to implement a Preferred Drug Program in EPIC in SFY 2006-07. While the Governor provides Article VII legislation to authorize such a program, the legislation itself does not specify the SFY 2006-07 implementation date; at this time it is merely Executive intent. |
The Executive recommends cash spending of $229,300,000 in SFY 2004-05 in the General Public Health Works Program (Article 6) to support local public health activities, a cash increase of $13,300,000 over SFY 2003-04. The Executive also proposes to lower State aid reimbursement to localities from 30 percent to 20 percent for “optional” services in the General Public Health Works Program. This action would result in State savings of $10,800,000 in SFY 2004-05. |
In the proposed SFY 2004-05 budget, the Governor eliminates $4,000,000 for the Adult Care Facility Quality Incentive Payment (QUIP) Program, but recommends transfer of a $75,000 suballocation from that appropriation to the Commission on Quality of Care for the Mentally Disabled. The Executive recommends a new $10,000,000 for adult home initiatives, of which $4,000,000 would be funded with General Fund dollars and $6,000,000 would be funded with Health Care Reform Act (HCRA) dollars. The proposed allocations would provide funding for case management activities, medication assistance, social and recreational services, and advocacy and legal support that the Department of Health would implement cooperatively with the Office of Mental Health (OMH), the State Office for the Aging (SOFA), and the Commission on Quality Care (CQC) for the Mentally Disabled. These proposed changes are not outlined in Article VII legislation. |
In the AIDS Institute, the Executive continues funding of $393,800 for permanency planning and $393,800 for treatment adherence and compliance programs, as added by the Legislature in SFY 2003-04. |
Other notable changes proposed by the Executive in Aid to Localities include: |
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Medical Assistance (Medicaid) Program |
The Executive recommends an All Funds Medicaid appropriation in Aid to Localities of $30,982,411,000, which is a net increase of $265,903,000, or 0.87 percent over SFY 2003-04. |
For SFY 2004-05, the Governor proposes a total General Fund Medicaid appropriation of $6,325,009,000, a net increase of $256,888,000, or 4.23 percent over the SFY 2003- 04 appropriation. This estimate is predicated on the enactment of proposed cost containment actions and new health care provider assessments. |
In the proposed budget, the Governor recommends a State share savings of approximately $776,700,000 to the Medicaid Program in SFY 2004-05. Specifically, the Governor proposes: new Medicaid provider cuts of $419,000,000; new Medicaid recipient cuts of $111,900,000; and other Medicaid actions saving $245,800,000. These cuts would generate a revenue loss to the health care industry of $1,450,900,000 in combined Federal, State, and local reimbursement. |
New Medicaid Provider Cuts and Assessments |
The Governor proposes new cuts and assessments on providers, totaling $419,000,000 in State share savings in SFY 2004-05, that affect every sector of the health care industry. |
In the pharmacy sector, the Governor proposes new cuts totaling $81,600,000 in State share savings in SFY 2004-05. Specifically, the Governor proposes: lowering pharmacy reimbursement to the Average Wholesale Price (AWP) minus 15 percent for brand name drugs -- $29,000,000 savings; lowering pharmacy reimbursement to the Average Wholesale Price (AWP) minus 30 percent for generic drugs -- $13,500,000 savings; creating a Preferred Drug Program -- $37,100,000 savings; and authorizing prior approval for drugs excluded from the nursing home rate -- $2,000,000 savings. |
In the hospital sector, the Governor recommends re- imposing the 0.7 percent assessment on hospital revenues, which would generate State share revenues of $183,300,000 in SFY 2004-05. |
In the nursing home sector, the Governor proposes new cuts totaling $127,500,000 in State share savings in SFY 2004-05. Specifically, the Governor proposes: increasing the assessment from five percent to six percent on nursing home revenues and eliminating the scheduled phase-out of the assessment -- $124,900,000 savings; and mandating that AIDS nursing homes refinance their mortgages -- $2,600,000 savings. In addition, the Governor proposes to increase the wage equalization factor (WEF) to reflect 2001 data. This action would result in a State cost of $19,200,000 in SFY 2004-05, but would be contingent upon the enactment of two to nursing home cost containment measures: elimination of the Medicaid rate add-on for the hospital-based nursing homes -- $12,200,000 savings; and implementation of a four-year phase-out of the Medicaid rate add-on for nursing homes that have 300 beds or more -- $7,000,000 savings. |
In the home care sector, the Governor proposes actions that would result in a State savings of $26,000,000 in SFY 2004-05. Specifically, the Governor proposes: re- establishing the 0.7 percent on home care revenues -- $15,000,000 savings; and increasing the home care savings target from $33,000,000 to $44,000,000 -- $11,000,000 savings to the State. |
The Governor also proposes to eliminate podiatry services from the capitated clinic rate, for a total savings of $600,000 in SFY 2004-05. |
New Medicaid Recipient Cuts |
In addition to the direct cuts to providers, the Governor also proposes a total of $111,900,000 in cuts that would indirectly impact these providers, but are targeted specifically at Medicaid recipients. |
The Governor proposes to eliminate several “optional” services from the Medicaid Program, totaling $31,700,000 in SFY 2004-05. Specifically, the Governor proposes to: eliminate private practitioner adult dental services -- $20,200,000 savings; and eliminate other practitioner services for adults -- $11,500,000 savings. |
The Governor also proposes to increase pharmacy co- payments in Medicaid, as well as to impose co-payments in both the Medicaid Managed Care and Family Health Plus (FHP) Programs, totaling $17,500,000 in SFY 2004-05. Specifically, the Governor proposes: to increase pharmacy co-payments from 50 cents to $1 for generic drugs and from $2 to $3 for brand name drugs for Medicaid recipients -- $1,600,000 savings; to impose pharmacy co-payments for Medicaid Managed Care recipients at the same proposed schedule as in the regular fee-for-service Medicaid Program -- $2,600,000 savings; and to impose co-payments on various services for individuals enrolled in the Family Health Plus (FHP) Program -- $13,300,000 savings. |
The Governor also proposes various changes to the Family Health Plus (FHP) Program. Specifically, the Governor proposes to impose an asset test similar to what is required in the Medicaid Program. The Governor also proposes to increase the waiting period from six months to one year for those individuals who previously had group health coverage, and to eliminate eligibility for individuals employed by a governmental entity or a business with more than 50 employees. The savings from these proposed changes, totaling $5,000,000 in SFY 2004-05, would offset spending in the Health Care Reform Act Program (HCRA). In addition, the Governor proposes to eliminate vision and dental services from the Family Health Plus (FHP) program benefit package. This action would produce a General Fund savings of $17,800,000 in SFY 2004-05. |
The Governor also proposes to shift low-income children (family incomes between 100 percent to 133 percent of the Federal Poverty Level) between the ages of 6 to 19 years from the Medicaid Program to the Child Health Plus (CHP) Program. The Governor estimates that this action, which would shift approximately 77,000 children, would produce General Fund savings totaling $13,800,000 in SFY 2004-05. |
In addition, the Governor proposes to: |
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Other Medicaid Actions |
The Governor further proposes various other Medicaid actions totaling $245,800,000 in State share savings in SFY 2004-05. |
The Governor proposes that the State takeover the local share of long-term care costs over a ten-year period, effective January 1, 2005. The benefit to localities would total $24,200,000 in SFY 2004-05. This proposal is contingent upon the approval of various Medicaid cuts to the long- term care system, including: re-establishing the 0.7 percent assessment on hospitals and home care agencies and increasing the assessment to six percent on nursing homes; mandating that AIDS nursing homes refinance their mortgages; increasing the home care savings target by $11,000,000; eliminating spousal refusal, imposing an asset transfer penalty on home care services, changing the start date of the asset transfer penalty period, and extending look-back provisions in relation to eligibility for long-term care services; and allowing the Medicaid program to pay the Medicare Part A premium for dually eligibles. |
Other actions proposed by the Governor that provide General Fund Medicaid savings in SFY 2004-05 include: |
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Health Care Reform Act (HCRA) |
The Executive proposes various changes to the Health Care Reform Act (HCRA) in SFY 2004-05. |
New Spending |
In SFY 2004-05, new spending initiatives proposed by the Governor include: |
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New Revenue |
The Governor proposes to maximize Federal Medicaid reimbursement for Graduate Medical Education (GME). The Governor proposes to increase the GME Medicaid rate add-on to reflect 2001 data. This action contains a “hold harmless” provision and would produce a net benefit totaling $35,000,000 to teaching hospitals in SFY 2004-05. The net benefit to HCRA would total $63,000,000 in SFY 2004-05. |
The Executive proposes legislation to allow any non-profit health plan organized under Article 43 of the Insurance Law to convert to a for-profit corporation under the same process, terms, and conditions as applied to the Empire Plan conversion, with two exceptions. First, prior to June 30, 2005, any proceeds of a conversion which are part of the 95 percent share to be distributed to the Public Asset Fund, but are in excess of $400,000,000, would require the enactment of legislation before being spent; proceeds up to $400,000,000 would be transferred to the Tobacco Control and Insurance Initiatives Pool in HCRA. After that date, legislation would be required to spend any of the proceeds earmarked for the Public Asset Fund. Second, no conversion proceeds of any future conversion which are part of the five percent share earmarked for the charitable foundation could be spent without the enactment of new legislation. The Governor estimates that this action would generate additional revenue to HCRA, totaling $400,000,000 in SFY 2005-06. |
Reductions |
In SFY 2004-05, the Governor proposes various reductions in HCRA, including: |
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Article VII |
The Governor proposes: |
Part A: |
Public Health Programs |
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Elderly Pharmaceutical Insurance Coverage (EPIC) Program |
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Early Intervention (EI) Program |
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Part D: Health Care Reform Act |
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Part G: The Medical Assistance (Medicaid) Program |
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Medicaid Managed Care |
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