Veterans Choice expands health care options, creates billing confusion

by Meg Wingerter, KHI News Service

A program designed to ease access to health care for veterans has led to millions of dollars in uncompensated care for a Topeka hospital and paperwork snarls that have jeopardized the credit records of some Kansas veterans.

Representatives of the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs heard those comments and others during a town hall meeting on the Veterans Choice program Wednesday at the Colmery-O’Neil VA Medical Center in Topeka. The Veterans Choice program was born in 2014 out of a scandal at the Phoenix VA facility, where some veterans died while waiting for care.

Baligh Yehia, deputy undersecretary for community care in the Veterans Health Administration, didn’t try to dismiss the complaints. Some can be solved by better coordination within the system, he said, while others will require Congress to change the law that allows veterans to seek care at non-VA facilities.

Veterans Choice was designed to allow veterans — primarily those living in rural areas — to receive some care from community providers if they live more than 40 miles from a VA facility or would have to wait more than 30 days for an appointment. The law will expire in August 2017 unless Congress acts to extend or reform it.

The VA estimated veterans had about 5 million appointments through the program as of mid-October, and that about 350,000 providers nationwide were participating in its network.

Yehia said the program has opened care options for veterans, who now make about one-fifth of their appointments with providers outside the VA. But the Veterans Choice mission overlaps with some other VA programs, and that has created confusion for health care providers and veterans, he said.

“We don’t need seven programs. We need one program of buying care,” he said.

Ray Lumb, a physician practice liaison with Stormont-Vail HealthCare in Topeka, said it has been difficult to get timely authorization for payment when the hospital provides emergency care to eligible veterans, and that reimbursements are slow. VA employees are doing their best, he said, but the complex program makes it difficult.

“The amount of unpaid bills has increased,” he said. “It’s in the multiple millions of dollars.”

Denise Scott, community health services coordinator with the VA Eastern Kansas Health System, said home health agencies are having particular difficulty with Veterans Choice. One has stopped accepting veteran clients, and three others have threatened to do the same thing, she said.

“They’re not getting the authorization promptly, and they’re not getting paid,” she said.

Dave McIntyre, president and CEO of TriWest Health Alliance, said the health benefits company processes about 95 percent of veterans’ claims in 30 days but sometimes gets held up when the VA is slow to react. TriWest handles the claim and pays the provider, then is reimbursed by the VA, he said.

James Bunker, executive director of the National Gulf War Resource Center in Topeka, said he has worked with some veterans in western Kansas who ran into trouble because TriWest’s boundaries aren’t the same as the VA’s. In those cases, the VA filed their cases with TriWest but should have filed it with another company, so the bill doesn’t get paid and goes to collections, he said. McIntyre promised to look into the matter.

Some problems are being solved within the current framework, Yehia said, but others will require Congress to act. For example, the Veterans Choice law requires that veterans’ insurance be billed before the VA would pay, requiring the veterans to pay co-payments and deductibles they wouldn’t have at a VA facility, he said.

Another problem is that the VA can’t pay for emergency room care under the Veterans Choice program if veterans have other insurance and are being seen for a condition that isn’t connected to their service, creating headaches for veterans and hospitals when their claims get rejected, Yehia said. Ideally, Congress will allow the VA to pay for all emergency care so veterans don’t have to worry about surprise bills — though it would cost $2 billion annually to do that, he said.

Despite the problems, Yehia said he hopes Congress decides to continue the program, though with significant reforms.

“We’ve made a lot of progress,” he said. “We don’t want to start all over again.”

About Veterans Choice

Veterans who are on a waiting list for an appointment should be contacted to schedule a community appointment. Veterans who are eligible for Veterans Choice based on distance must call the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs, (866) 606-8198, to ensure their appointment will be covered.
They can check an online directory at http://www.va.gov/opa/apps/locator/index.html to determine if their preferred physician participates in Veterans Choice.

The nonprofit KHI News Service is an editorially independent initiative of the Kansas Health Institute and a partner in the Heartland Health Monitor reporting collaboration. All stories and photos may be republished at no cost with proper attribution and a link back to KHI.org when a story is reposted online.

To see more, visit http://www.khi.org/news/article/veterans-choice-expands-health-care-options-creates-billing-confusion.

KCKCC implements ‘My Plan’ program to help students stay on track toward graduation

by Kelly Rogge, KCKCC

Kansas City Kansas Community College’s Student Success Center has implemented a new program to help students stay on track to graduate with their associate’s degree.

My Plan, which was first implemented in spring 2016, allows students to plan their courses in accordance to the degree they are seeking. Shawn Derritt, assistant dean of student services, said studies have shown that when students have a plan of action in place, they are more likely to stay in school and complete their post-secondary education.

“My Plan will make sure students are not aimlessly taking classes,” he said. “The classes they take will relate to their major.”

Derritt said when students come into the Student Success Center to meet with a Student Success Adviser, the student’s degree track will be reviewed. A personalized plan will then be created of what classes need to be taken to successfully graduate. Before the student leaves, they will be given a copy of this plan to keep with them, so it can be referred to throughout their college career. Each semester, the plan can be reviewed and updated so students can have an accurate idea of what needs to be done to complete their degree.

Currently, the Student Success Center is creating these plans manually. However, in the future, My Plan will be integrated into the new student planning system, allowing students to go online to look at their plan whenever is convenient.

“Students are 30 times more successful in college when they have a written plan,” Derritt said. “Our goal is to be here for students and help them be successful at KCKCC. Having a written plan will make them more successful.”

Derritt said by taking classes in their sequence, students will stay on track and finish their education earlier, ultimately saving them money in the long run. He said students who have gone through the My Plan process so far, have really liked it and are excited to have something to take with them that they can refer to as enrollment approaches each semester.

“Whenever we have a student that comes into the Student Success Center, we do My Plan automatically. Some programs already require this type of thing, but now we are looking to have all students complete the My Plan process,” he said. “A lot of times we have students that start taking courses, but have no idea how those classes fit into a potential major. There are so many detours, that they have no idea where they are going. This is a way to save money, save time and be more efficient.”

Non-enrollment time is a perfect time for students to create their My Plan with a student advisor. Students can visit the Student Success Center at any time in Room 3344 in Upper Jewell. For more information, call 913-288-7696.

Kelly Rogge is the public information supervisor at KCKCC.

Job fair today at KCKCC TEC Center

A job fair is scheduled from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. today, Oct. 27, at the Kansas City Kansas Community College Burke Technical Education Center, 6565 State Ave., Kansas City, Kan.

The job fair is sponsored by Rep. Kevin Yoder, R-3rd Dist.

It is open to the public.

From 9 a.m. to 10 a.m., only veterans will be able to visit booths at the job fair.

The job fair will be available to everyone at 10 a.m. through 1 p.m.

Job seekers may dress as if for a job interview and bring several copies of their resumes.

There is no registration fee required to attend.