Colorado Chosen by CMS to Develop Dual Eligible Integrated Care Model

The new CMS Innovation Center, in cooperation with the Federal Coordinated Health Care Office, announced recently that it is partnering with fifteen states across the U.S. in an effort to design new approaches to better coordinate care for dual eligibile patients (i.e., those patients eligible for both Medicare and Medicaid). 

Colorado and fourteen other states were each awarded up to $1 million to develop a model describing how the state would structure a patient-centered approach to coordinate care across primary, acute, behavioral health, and long-term supports and services for dual eligible individuals.  This initiative is funded by the Affordable Care Act.

CMS has explained that the goal of this demonstration program is to identify delivery system and payment coordination models that eliminate duplication of services, expand access to care, and lower costs for dual eligibles.   After federal review of the proposals, CMS will work with states to implement the plans that hold the most promise, eventually testing them and replicating them in other states.

For more information on this new initiative, see the CMS Innovation Center's announcement or CMS's website and press release.

Colorado Begins to Implement National Health Care Reform

Colorado Governor Bill Ritter has begun implementing health care reform in Colorado.  By executive order, he has created a new task force called the Interagency Health Reform Implementing Board to oversee this process and has appointed his health care policy expert, Lorez Meinhold, to the newly created position of Director of Health Reform Implementation.  On a roll, he also has signed four bills into law that his press release states are designed to "enhance the state's nationally recognized health reform initiatives."