Police investigate body found in river

Kansas City, Kansas, police are investigating a body found in the Kansas River around 10 a.m. Thursday, Dec. 28.

According to a police spokesman, a Unified Government Water Pollution employee reported what appeared to be a body in the river at that time.

Police officers responded and confirmed a body was found in the river near North 3rd Street and North James Street, the spokesman stated.

The identity of the deceased will not be released until there is positive identification and family notification, according to the spokesman.

The Kansas City, Kansas, Police Department’s Criminal Investigations Division is investigating. Anyone with information is asked to call the TIPS hotline at 816-474-TIPS.

KCK woman ordered to repay $25,000 in Medicaid case

A Kansas City, Kansas, woman was ordered Dec. 27 to repay nearly $25,000 to the Kansas Medicaid program after pleading guilty to Medicaid fraud charges, Kansas Attorney General Derek Schmidt said.

Macie Annette Dodds, 49, pleaded guilty in October to charges of making a false claim to the Medicaid program, computer crimes and welfare fraud. All three charges were felonies.

Johnson County District Court Judge Sara Welch on Dec. 27 ordered Dodds to pay restitution in the amount of $24,854.60 to the Kansas Medicaid program. Dodds was also sentenced to 24 months of probation. If Dodds violates probation, she faces 12 months in the custody of the Department of Corrections.

Convictions such as this one may also result in a period during which the defendant is prohibited from being paid wages through a government health care program, according to the attorney general’s office.

Dodds had signed up to provide home-based services to a Medicaid beneficiary who qualified for assistance with activities of daily life. An investigation by special agents of the Medicaid Fraud and Abuse Division of the Kansas Attorney General’s Office found that at times when Dodds claimed she was providing those services she was working elsewhere at other private jobs.

Assistant Attorney General Ed Brancart of Schmidt’s office prosecuted the case.

Advocates push Kansas bill to suspend, not terminate, Medicaid during incarceration

by Madeline Fox, Kansas News Service

When Kansans on Medicaid are incarcerated or treated at residential mental health facilities, their Medicaid benefits are terminated. Mental health advocates hope to change that during the upcoming legislative session by pushing for a bill that would instead suspend those benefits.

After patients or inmates are dropped from Medicaid, it can take weeks or months to reinstate health coverage — a risk for people who need continuous care for mental health conditions.

While people who are incarcerated generally are not eligible for Medicaid, terminating the coverage also can cost the institutions. A lack of consistent care can worsen severe mental health conditions, making people more likely to end up back in the prison or facility they left.

“It’s an economic issue for mental health providers, and it’s in some cases a life-or-death issue for individuals who are in the Medicaid program,” said Rick Cagan, executive director of the Kansas chapter of the National Alliance on Mental Illness.

Cagan has worked with legislators, law enforcement organizations and other groups to draft a bill that would make suspending, rather than terminating, those benefits the default in Kansas. This would bring Kansas in line with many other states that suspend Medicaid during incarceration or for a set period of time.

Kyle Kessler, executive director of the Association of Community Mental Health Centers of Kansas, said merely suspending Medicaid would be beneficial for people struggling with mental illness.

“We think (the proposal) would allow them to get connected with treatment much more quickly as they’re released from jail or prison and able to connect not just with their primary care needs and health needs but their mental health as well,” he said.

A similar bill introduced during the 2017 legislative session failed to make it to a vote, which Cagan credits partially to a lack of buy-in from law enforcement. He said the new proposal shifts responsibility for ensuring benefits are suspended to the Kansas Department of Health and Environment, which oversees Medicaid in Kansas. The previous bill had placed that responsibility more heavily on law enforcement.

If the proposed bill passes, Cagan said the implementation timeline would depend on KDHE, but he would like to see it put into practice as early as July 2018.

Madeline Fox is a reporter for the Kansas News Service, a collaboration of KCUR, Kansas Public Radio, KMUW and High Plains Public Radio covering health, education and politics. You can reach her on Twitter @maddycfox. Kansas News Service stories and photos may be republished at no cost with proper attribution and a link back to kcur.org.

See more at http://kcur.org/post/advocates-push-kansas-bill-suspend-not-terminate-medicaid-during-incarceration.