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Res 0088-2022 · ResolutionAdopted · Mar 23, 2022

Resolution calling upon the United States Congress to pass and the President to sign legislation to fully repeal the Institutions for Mental Diseases Exclusion from the Social Security Act to allow states to use federal Medicaid funding to provide mental health and substance use disorder treatment services to adult Medicaid beneficiaries at Institutions for Mental Diseases.

Introduced
Reported from Committee
AdoptedPassed
Step 3 of 3 · Adopted
Althea V.  Stevens
Sponsor
Althea V. StevensDemocratDistrict 16
Cosponsors
11
Introduced
Mar 23, 2022

Text

Res. No. 88 ..Title Resolution calling upon the United States Congress to pass and the President to sign legislation to fully repeal the Institutions for Mental Diseases Exclusion from the Social Security Act to allow states to use federal Medicaid funding to provide mental health and substance use disorder treatment services to adult Medicaid beneficiaries at Institutions for Mental Diseases. ..body By Council Members Holden, Stevens, Yeger, Bottcher, Powers, Ayala, Abreu, Far�as, Louis, Dinowitz and Ariola Whereas, The Institutions for Mental Diseases (IMD) Exclusion rule has been in place since the beginning of the Medicaid program in 1965 and prohibits the use of federal Medicaid funds to finance services for adults ages 22-64 residing in institutions for severe mental illness, which include hospitals, nursing homes, or other institutions with more than 16 beds that primarily provide diagnosis, treatment, or care for persons living with severe mental illness; and Whereas, The New York State Office of Mental Health (OMH) operates inpatient mental health care at 24 state psychiatric centers that are classified by the federal government as IMDs-9 of which are known as "Forensic" facilities and serve justice-involved children and adults-and regulates roughly 100 programs operated within general hospitals, also known as "Article 28" facilities; and Whereas, According to the New York City Mayor's Office of Community Mental Health, in 2021 there were approximately 280,000 adults living with serious mental illness in New York City; and Whereas, Nationwide, the public mental healthcare system has shifted from an inpatient to an outpatient treatment model through a process referred to as "deinstitutionalization" to reduce the number of individuals in psychiatric centers; and Whereas, Under the Cuomo administration, deinstitutionalization efforts were made through the Transformation Plan, which relies on community-based mental health treatment to reduce the average daily census and total number of beds at state psychiatric centers; and Whereas, Deinstitutionalization has inadvertently placed a heavy financial burden on general hospitals, homeless shelters and NYC jails, all of which have a limited capacity to provide services to individuals living with mental illness; and Whereas, In New York state, there are more adult psychiatric-care beds located in general hospitals than in state psychiatric centers, which include 4,676 beds in general hospitals compared to only 2,336 beds in state psychiatric centers; and Whereas, NYC Health and Hospitals (H+H) is the leading provider of inpatient psychiatric care in NYC with 11 H+H facilities that provide 1,219 beds for adult inpatient psychiatric care; and Whereas, In 2018, there were a total of 28 mental health shelters in NYC and the number of New Yorkers experiencing homelessness and living with serious mental illness has been on the rise according to ThriveNYC; and Whereas, As of 2018, Rikers Island jail complex is one of the three largest providers of psychiatric care in the United States, with over 40% of the population having a mental health diagnosis and over 10% having a serious mental health diagnosis; and Whereas, The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) updated the IMD managed care rules in 2016 to allow federal reimbursement of short stays only of 15 days or fewer in IMDs in Medicaid managed care systems; and Whereas, In 2018, Congress partially repealed IMD Exclusion by passing the Substance Use-Disorder Prevention that Promotes Opioid Recovery and Treatment for Patients and Communities Act or the "SUPPORT for Patients and Communities Act," which provides federal funding for residential substance-use disorder treatment; and Whereas, A full repeal that extends to all Medicaid beneficiaries and removes inpatient-day limitations, would allow for better outcomes and provide treatment to adults living with acute and chronic serious mental illness at IMDs; now, therefore, be it Resolved, That the Council of the City of New York calls upon the United States Congress to pass and the President to sign legislation to fully repeal the Institutions for Mental Diseases Exclusion from the Social Security Act to allow states to use federal Medicaid funding to provide mental health and substance use disorder treatment services to adult Medicaid beneficiaries at Institutions for Mental Diseases. Session 12 AH LS #2547 01/27/2022 Session 11 AR LS #10658 Res. 1001-2019 3

Full text · NYC Council

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Mar 23, 2022
Res 0088-2022: Resolution calling upon the United States Congress to pass and the President to sign legislation to fully repeal the Institutions for Mental Diseases Exclusion from the Social Security Act to allow states to use federal Medicaid funding to provide mental health and substance use disorder treatment services to adult Medicaid beneficiaries at Institutions for Mental Diseases. · OpenCongress NYC