SESSION OF
2001
SUPPLEMENTAL NOTE ON
HOUSE BILL NO. 2229
As Amended by House Committee on
Health and Human
Services
Brief
(1)
HB 2229, as amended, enacts the
Kansas Senior Caregiving Initiative. Within the limits of
appropriations, the bill:
- Creates a partnership between the
state and private long-term care providers to initiate a
comprehensive and sustainable program that provides: improvement in
the quality of long-term care; support and training for workers who
provide long-term care and services; and fiscally prudent funding
to prepare for the anticipated increase in the number of older
Kansans needing long-term care.
- Directs the Secretary on
Aging:
-
- to establish a grant program for
nursing facilities to implement and evaluate new models of care
that improve the quality of long-term care and services and reduce
employee turnover;
- to modify the current Medicaid
nursing facility reimbursement mechanism to permit nursing
facilities to report expenditures related to increased frontline
staff wages and benefits midway through the annual cost reporting
cycle, and to receive a midyear rate adjustment based on these
expenditures (authorized expenditures not otherwise accounted for
in the reimbursement rate of the facility, not under the control of
the facility and required by the State or Kansas or federal
mandates shall be reimbursed as a direct cost pass-through);
and
- to establish a program that
provides grants to community colleges, universities, area
vocational-technical colleges, and not-for-profit educational
organizations to provide on-site training of long-term care
employees who provide direct resident care, evaluate the
effectiveness of the training programs, and make recommendations to
the Legislature regarding the effectiveness, funding, and
continuation of the grants and training programs.
- Establishes within the Department
on Aging a prevention program designed to lend regulatory and best
care practices expertise to nursing facilities and providers of
long-term care and services, and to provide advice and direction in
regard to the provision of resident care, appropriate situational
responses, and regulatory requirements. An advisory committee
appointed by the Secretary is to oversee the program.
- Directs the Secretary of Human
Resources to evaluate the current education and training systems
and methods utilized in Kansas for workers providing long-term care
and services, and to identify and recommend any changes that will
result in improved recruitment and retention of long-term care
employees. The Secretary will report any recommendations to the
Long-term Care Services Task Force on or before November 1,
2001.
Background
HB 2229 was requested by the
Kansas Association of Homes and Services for the Aging whose
representative described the creation of the Kansas Senior
Caregiving Initiative as a comprehensive, fiscally responsible,
long-term approach to address the challenges and root problems in
long-term care.
Kansas Advocates for Better Care
and the Kansas Health Care Association also support the
bill.
The bill is amended to make its
provisions subject to appropriations.
1. *Supplemental
notes are prepared by the Legislative Research Department and do
not express legislative intent. The supplemental note and fiscal
note for this bill may be accessed on the Internet at http://www.ink.org/public/legislative/fulltext.cgi