WASHINGTON – Today, Sens. Chuck Grassley
(R-Iowa) and Michael Bennet (D-Colo.) sent a
letter
to the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) asking for an update
on the implementation of the
Advancing
Care for Exceptional (ACE) Kids Act. The
ACE Kids Act, which
Grassley and Bennet ushered through Congress in
2019,
allows children with medically complex conditions to choose to enroll in a
health home – if a state Medicaid program permits – in an effort to improve
care coordination and health outcomes.
Specifically, this law helps CMS and
state Medicaid programs align rules and reimbursements to reduce unnecessary
hospitalizations and provide better care coordination for children with complex
medical needs. CMS is required to fully implement the law by October 1, 2022.
“Our most vulnerable kids and their
families deserve a health care system that coordinates care and produces
healthier outcomes. Kids with complex medical conditions face myriad challenges
including an uncoordinated and burdensome health care system. On average, these
kids see five to six specialists and up to as many as 20 to 30 allied health
professionals. Parents are often overwhelmed at the scope of that care. Helping
these families navigate the bureaucracy and cut red tape makes sense. This is
why we passed the ACE Kids Act in
2019 that allows kids with medically complex conditions to choose to enroll in
a health home, if a state Medicaid program permits,” the senators wrote.
“We appreciate
your attention to implementing the ACE
Kids Act and the promise it will provide for kids and families across the
country. With the hard work of CMS and state Medicaid programs across the
country, we expect the ACE Kids Act
will be ready for implementation by October 1, 2022,” the senators concluded.
Read the full
letter by clicking
HERE.
In 2021, Grassley
and Bennet also introduced the bipartisan
Accelerating
Kids’ Access to Care Act
to provide states the ability to streamline the screening and enrollment
process for out-of-state pediatric care providers. This allows those providers
to enroll in another state’s Medicaid program while also maintaining important
safeguards.
Grassley has been
a longtime leader in improving the lives of children with disabilities and
their families by advocating for more choices and flexibility. Beginning in the
1980s, he worked on
Katie Beckett waivers that expanded treatment at home for children with disabilities while
still allowing them to be covered by Medicaid.
In the early
2000s, Grassley worked with Sen. Ted Kennedy (D-Mass.) to pass the bipartisan
Family
Opportunity Act. The law
encourages parents to work and get ahead without sacrificing health coverage
for their children with special needs. It also allows parents to buy Medicaid
coverage without impoverishing their families, and it established
Family-to-Family Health Information Centers (F2F) that provide first-hand
knowledge for families with children who have complex medical conditions.
Grassley worked with Sen. Robert Menendez (D-N.J.) to reauthorize the
F2F Program in 2019. As Finance Committee chairman, Grassley helped
reauthorize the Money Follows the Person (MFP) program in Medicaid, which helps
states provide transition services to people moving from nursing facilities to
home or community-based settings. Grassley has also conducted extensive
oversight of CMS to ensure seniors and people with disabilities on Medicaid are
receiving improved access to high-quality services.
Iowa families of children and young adults with special health care
needs and disabilities can obtain support and information through Iowa’s F2F,
called ASK Resource Center, located in Johnston, Iowa at askresource.org or by calling
1-800-450-8667.
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