Florida 2022 2022 Regular Session

Florida House Bill H7047 Analysis / Analysis

Filed 02/06/2022

                    This docum ent does not reflect the intent or official position of the bill sponsor or House of Representatives. 
STORAGE NAME: h7047.HCA 
DATE: 2/6/2022 
 
HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES STAFF ANALYSIS  
 
BILL #: HB 7047          PCB FFS 22-01    Medicaid Managed Care 
SPONSOR(S): Finance & Facilities Subcommittee, Garrison 
TIED BILLS:   IDEN./SIM. BILLS: CS/SB 1950 
 
REFERENCE 	ACTION ANALYST STAFF DIRECTOR or 
BUDGET/POLICY CHIEF 
Orig. Comm.: Finance & Facilities Subcommittee 14 Y, 4 N Lloyd Lloyd 
1) Health Care Appropriations Subcommittee 	Nobles Clark 
2) Health & Human Services Committee   
SUMMARY ANALYSIS 
 
Medicaid is the health care safety net for low-income Floridians. Medicaid is a partnership of the federal and 
state governments established to provide coverage for health services for eligible persons. The program is 
administered by the Agency for Health Care Administration (AHCA) and financed by federal and state funds.  
 
Most Medicaid recipients receive services in a managed care model: the Statewide Medicaid Managed Care 
(SMMC) program. The SMMC program has three components: managed medical assistance (MMA) which 
provides traditional primary and acute care services; long-term care managed care (LTC), which provides 
residential and home care for people eligible for nursing home care; and dental. AHCA competitively procures 
contracts with managed care plans in each of 11 regions of the state to provide comprehensive health care 
coverage.  
 
The bill makes changes to the SMMC program in anticipation of the next procurement cycle, for plan year 
2025. The bill: 
 
 Consolidates the 11 regions into eight, and adjusting the minimum and maximum numbers of plans with 
which AHCA will contract to provide services to MMA and LTC enrollees; 
 Reintegrates dental benefits into the MMA program; 
 Requires AHCA to conduct a single statewide SMMC procurement, requires negotiation and selection 
on a regional basis, and authorizes statewide contract awards if deemed the best value; 
 Prohibits AHCA from auto-enrolling recipients in a plan having a regional market share greater than 45 
percent; 
 Allowing certain plan contributions in support of medical education to be credited against medical loss 
ratio and the Achieved Savings Rebate; 
 Expands the Healthy Behaviors Program to include focuses on smokeless tobacco and opioid abuse; 
 Requires plans to contract with Florida cancer hospitals as essential statewide health care providers, 
and provides a payment rate for services provided without a contract; 
 Allows children in the child welfare Guardian Assistance Program to enroll in the child welfare specialty 
plan, as an alternative to a non-specialty MMA plan; 
 Requires regular AHCA testing of plan network adequacy; and 
 Deletes obsolete provisions and makes conforming changes to reflect the provisions of the bill. 
 
The bill will have a significant, negative, recurring fiscal impact on AHCA; see Fiscal Analysis. There is no 
fiscal impact on local government. 
 
The bill provides an effective date of July 1, 2022.   STORAGE NAME: h7047.HCA 	PAGE: 2 
DATE: 2/6/2022 
  
FULL ANALYSIS 
I.  SUBSTANTIVE ANALYSIS 
 
A. EFFECT OF PROPOSED CHANGES: 
 
Background 
 
Florida Medicaid 
 
Medicaid is the health care safety net for low-income Floridians. Medicaid is a partnership of the federal 
and state governments established to provide coverage for health services for eligible persons. The 
program is administered by the Agency for Health Care Administration (AHCA) and financed by federal 
and state funds. AHCA delegates certain functions to other state agencies, including the Department of 
Children and Families (DCF), the Department of Health, the Agency for Persons with Disabilities, and 
the Department of Elderly Affairs (DOEA).  
 
The structure of each state’s Medicaid program varies and what states must pay for is largely 
determined by the federal government, as a condition of receiving federal funds.
1
 Federal law sets the 
amount, scope, and duration of services offered in the program, among other requirements. These 
federal requirements create an entitlement that comes with constitutional due process protections. The 
entitlement means that two parts of the Medicaid cost equation – people and utilization – are largely 
predetermined for the states. The federal government sets the minimum mandatory populations to be 
included in every state Medicaid program. The federal government also sets the minimum mandatory 
benefits to be covered in every state Medicaid program. These benefits include physician services, 
hospital services, home health services, and family planning.
2
 States can add benefits, with federal 
approval. Florida has added many optional benefits, including prescription drugs, adult dental services, 
and dialysis.
3
  
 
States have some flexibility in the provision of Medicaid services. Section 1915(b) of the Social Security 
Act provides authority for the Secretary of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) to 
waive requirements to the extent that he or she “finds it to be cost-effective and efficient and not 
inconsistent with the purposes of this title.” Section 1115 of the Social Security Act allows states to 
implement demonstrations of innovative service delivery systems that improve care, increase efficiency, 
and reduce costs. These laws allow HHS to waive federal requirements to expand populations or 
services, or to try new ways of service delivery.  
 
Florida operates under a Section 1115 waiver to use a comprehensive managed care delivery model 
for primary and acute care services, the Statewide Medicaid Managed Care (SMMC) Managed Medical 
Assistance (MMA) program.
4
 Florida also has a waiver under Sections 1915(b) and (c) of the Social 
Security Act to operate the SMMC Long-Term Care (LTC) program.
5
 
 
Florida Medicaid does not cover all low-income Floridians. Current eligibility prioritizes low-income 
children, disabled persons, and elders, and sets income eligibility by reference to the annual federal 
poverty level.  Some clinical eligibility provisions apply, as well.  
 
The Florida Medicaid program covers approximately 5 million low-income individuals, including 
approximately 2.5 million, or 58.4%, of the children in Florida.
6
 Medicaid is the second largest single 
                                                
1
 Title 42 U.S.C. §§ 1396-1396w-5; Title 42 C.F.R. Part 430-456 (§§ 430.0-456.725) (2016). 
2
 S. 409.905, F.S. 
3
 S. 409.906, F.S. 
4
 S. 409.964, F.S. 
5
 Id. 
6
 Agency for Health Care Administration, Florida Statewide Medicaid Monthly Enrollment Report, December 2021, available at 
https://ahca.myflorida.com/medicaid/Finance/data_analytics/enrollment_report/index.shtml (last visited January 18, 2022). United 
States Census Bureau, QuickFacts, Florida, https://www.census.gov/quickfacts/fact/table/FL/PST045221 (last visited January 18, 
2022).  STORAGE NAME: h7047.HCA 	PAGE: 3 
DATE: 2/6/2022 
  
program in the state, behind public education, representing approximately one-third of the total FY 
2021-2022 state budget.
7
 As of June 2021, Florida’s program is the 4th largest in the nation by 
enrollment and, for FY 2019-2020, the program is the 5th largest in terms of expenditures.
8
 
 
Statewide Medicaid Managed Care (SMMC) 
Florida delivers medical assistance to most Medicaid recipients – approximately 78% - using a 
comprehensive managed care model, the SMMC program.
9
 The SMMC program was intended to 
provide comprehensive, coordinated benefits coverage to the Medicaid population, leveraging 
economic incentives to ensure provider participation and quality performance impossible under the 
former, federally prescribed, fee-for-service delivery model. 
 
The SMMC program has three components: the integrated Managed Medical Assistance (MMA) 
program that provides primary care, acute care and behavioral health care services; Long-Term Care 
(LTC) program
10
 that provides long-term care services, including nursing facility and home and 
community-based services; and the dental component.  
 
Medicaid covers mandatory benefits prescribed by s. 409.973, F.S., for the MMA program and s. 
409.98, F.S., for the LTC program, as indicated below. Managed care plans also offer an expanded 
menu of optional benefits at no cost to the state.  
 
Mandatory Benefits - Statewide Medicaid Managed Care 
Managed Medical Assistance 	Long-Term Care 
Advanced registered nurse practitioner services Nursing facility care 
Ambulatory surgical treatment center services Services provided in an ALF 
Birthing center services 	Hospice 
Chiropractic services 	Adult day care 
Dental services 	Personal care 
Early periodic screening diagnosis & treatment 
(age<21) 
Home accessibility adaption 
Emergency services 	Behavior management 
Family planning services and supplies Home-delivered meals 
Healthy Start services (with exceptions) Case management 
Hearing services 	Therapies 
Home health agency services 	Occupational therapy 
Hospice services 	Speech therapy 
Hospital inpatient services 	Respiratory therapy 
Hospital outpatient services 	Physical therapy 
Laboratory and imaging services 	Intermittent and skilled nursing 
Medical supplies, equipment, prostheses, and 
orthoses 
Medication administration 
Mental health services 	Medication management 
Nursing care 	Nutritional assessment and risk 
reduction 
Optical services and supplies 	Caregiver training 
Optometrist services 	Respite care 
Physical, occupational, respiratory, speech 
therapies 
Personal emergency response system 
                                                
7
 Ch. 2020-111, L.O.F. See also Fiscal Analysis in Brief: 2021 Legislative Session, available at 
http://edr.state.fl.us/content/revenues/reports/fiscal-analysis-in-brief/FiscalAnalysisinBrief2021.pdf (last visited January 6, 2022). 
8
 The Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation, State Health Facts, Total Medicaid Spending FY 2020 and Total Monthly Medicaid and 
CHIP Enrollment Jun. 2021, available at http://kff.org/statedata/ (last visited January 18, 2022).  
9
 Supra, FN 6.  
10
 The LTC program provides services in two settings: nursing facilities or home and community based services (HCBS) provided in a 
recipient’s home, an assisted living facility, or an adult family care home. Enrollment in the LTC program is based on a clinical 
priority system and includes a wait list. The state is approved for 62,000 recipients in the HCBS portion of LTC.  In order to be 
eligible for the program, a recipient must be both clinically eligible under s. 409.979, F.S., and financially eligible for Medicaid under 
s. 409.904, F.S.  STORAGE NAME: h7047.HCA 	PAGE: 4 
DATE: 2/6/2022 
  
Mandatory Benefits - Statewide Medicaid Managed Care 
Managed Medical Assistance 	Long-Term Care 
Physician services, including PA 	Transportation 
Podiatric services 	Medical equipment and supplies 
Prescription drugs  
Renal dialysis services 
Respiratory equipment and supplies 
Rural health clinic services 
Substance abuse treatment services 
Transportation  
 
The chart below shows the current enrollment in MMA and LTC. 
 
Statewide Medicaid Managed Care Enrollment, 
as of December 2021 
Component Budget
11
 Enrollment
12
 
Long-Term Care Plan $5.25 billion 122,659 
Managed Medical Assistance $17.8 billion 3,982,511 
 
Services in SMMC are delivered by two types of managed care plans: traditional managed care 
organizations and provider service networks (PSNs). Traditional managed care organizations, such as 
HMOs, are reimbursed as prepaid plans – they are risk-bearing entities that are paid capitated rates 
(prospective, per-member, per-month payments) by AHCA. PSNs are managed care plans controlled 
by health care providers, such as physician groups or hospitals. Because health care practitioners and 
facilities did not previously operate managed care plans or use capitated payment arrangements, 
SMMC allowed an alternative risk-bearing arrangement for PSNs. 
 
Current law allowed PSNs to be reimbursed on a fee-for-service basis, but only for the first 2 years of 
the plan’s operation or until the contract year beginning September 1, 2014, whichever was later. Under 
that option, PSNs bear risk through a shared savings model. AHCA conducted cost reconciliations for 
the fee-for-service PSNs to determine any savings or amounts owed by the PSN. PSNs in SMMC have 
fully transitioned to risk-bearing entities, when participating. No fee-for-service PSNs remain. 
 
SMMC Plan Procurement 
 
The SMMC uses managed care plans to provide services to recipients – both health maintenance 
organizations (HMOs) and provider service networks (PSNs), which are managed care plans majority-
owned by health care providers.  
 
AHCA initially procured SMMC contracts in 2012 for the LTC program and 2013 for the MMA program, 
completing the rollout of the first SMMC contract term in 2014. These contracts were re-procured in 
2017 with implementation in 2018. In 2020, the Legislature extended the SMMC contract period from 
five to six years, resulting in contract expirations in 2024.  
 
AHCA will begin the next procurement process in 2022 for implementation in the 2025 plan year. The 
following table illustrates the procurement timeline. 
 
                                                
11
 Ch. 2020-36, L.O.F. 
https://www.myfloridahouse.gov/Sections/Documents/loaddoc.aspx?FileName=CRA_.pdf&DocumentType=A mendments&BillNum
ber=2500&Session=2021 (last visited January 6, 2022). MMA is appropriation 210, pg. 68, and LTC is appropriation 221, pg. 71. 
12
 Agency for Health Care Administration, SMMC MMA Enrollment by County by Plan (as of December 2021), available at 
https://ahca.myflorida.com/medicaid/Finance/data_analytics/enrollment_report/index.shtml (last visited January 22, 2022).  STORAGE NAME: h7047.HCA 	PAGE: 5 
DATE: 2/6/2022 
  
Procurement Timeline 
Activity 	Date 
Posting Date 	Late Fall 2022 
Q&A Posting Date 	Winter 2023 
Responses Due 	Spring 2023 
Responses Opened 	Spring 2023 
Evaluations Begin 	Late Spring 2023 
Evaluations End 	Late Summer 2023 
Negotiations Begin 	Fall 2023 
Negotiations End Fall 2023/Winter 2024 
 
Regional Procurement 
 
Current law requires AHCA to competitively procure contracts with managed care plans in 11 regions of 
the state. The following map illustrates the current SMMC regions.
13
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
Current law requires AHCA to issue a procurement in each region. To ensure recipient choice of plans 
while also ensuring enrollment levels significant enough to attract bidders, ss. 409.974 and 409.981, 
F.S., specifies the minimum and maximum number of plans AHCA must procure in each region for 
MMA and LTC, respectively. Currently, the same ranges apply for each program. The following table 
illustrates the number of plans allowed per region and the current regional enrollment for all plans, by 
program type. 
                                                
13
 Agency for Health Care Administration, https://ahca.myflorida.com/medicaid/statewide_mc/pdf/SMMC_Region_Map.pdf (last 
visited January 22, 2022).  STORAGE NAME: h7047.HCA 	PAGE: 6 
DATE: 2/6/2022 
  
 
SMMC Enrollment, by Region 
 
Min/Max  
# Plans 
MMA LTC 
Region 1 2 135,670 3,471 
Region 2 2 142,006 3,602 
Region 3 3 to 5 349,337 8,714 
Region 4 3 to 5 417,654 9,633 
Region 5 2 to 4 233,032 10,688 
Region 6 4 to 7 568,861 14,316 
Region 7 3 to 6 537,679 10,432 
Region 8 2 to 4 272,543 7,234 
Region 9 2 to 4 353,458 11,349 
Region 10 2 to 4 338,684 10,240 
Region 11 5 to 10 605,902 32,791 
 
To bid for a SMMC contract, managed care plans must negotiate with AHCA over proposed benefits, 
rates, and provider networks. To facilitate the rate negotiations, current law requires AHCA to publish a 
databook of a comprehensive set of utilization and spending data for the most recent three contract 
years, including historic fee-for-service claims and validated encounter data.
14
 AHCA must publish this 
databook at least 90 days before issuing the procurement. Plans submitting bids will use the databook 
to calculate proposed capitation rates for their bids.  
 
MMA Plans 
 
During the initial SMMC procurement, AHCA awarded contracts to 18 MMA plans, including seven 
PSNs. By the end of the first contract period, due to various mergers, acquisitions, and HMO 
conversions, only one PSN remained (South Florida Community Care Network, DBA Community Care 
Plan). During the second procurement, AHCA awarded contracts to 16 plans, including five PSNs, 
(Community Care Plan, Florida Community Care, Lighthouse, Miami Children’s, and Vivida) but only 
three of the PSNs currently remain in the program due to mergers and acquisitions with a total of 10 
health plans. 
 
The following tables show the managed care plans currently participating in the MMA program, 
including the plans that offer a comprehensive plan, and the available specialty plans.
15
 
  
                                                
14
 S. 409.966(2), F.S. 
15
 Agency for Health Care Administration, Presentation to Finance & Facilities Subcommittee, November 3, 2021, Medicaid Quality 
Updates, slide 25, 
https://www.myfloridahouse.gov/Sections/Documents/loaddoc.aspx?PublicationType=Committees&CommitteeId=3090&Session=20
22&DocumentType=Meeting+Packets&FileName=ffs+11-3-21.pdf (last visited January 23, 2022); Agency for Health Care 
Administration, Specialty Plan Management, Specialty Plan Management (myflorida.com) (last visited January 20, 2022).  STORAGE NAME: h7047.HCA 	PAGE: 7 
DATE: 2/6/2022 
  
 
MMA Standard and Comprehensive Plans, by Region 
 
SMMC PLANS 
REGION 
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 
MMA HEALTH PLANS 
AmeriHealth Caritas                 X   X 
Community Care Plan                  X   
Simply Healthcare  X X             X     
Vivida Health               X       
COMPREHENSIVE PLANS 
MMA and LTC Combined 
Aetna Better Health           X X       X 
Humana Medical Plan  X X X X X X X X X X X 
Molina Healthcare               X     X 
Simply Healthcare         X X X    X X 
Sunshine Health  X X X X X X X X X X X 
United Healthcare     X X   X         X 
 
MMA Specialty Plans, by Region 
 
SMMC PLANS 
REGION 
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 
SPECIALTY PLANS 
CMS Plan 
Children with Chronic Health Conditions 
X X X X X X X X X X X 
Clear Health Alliance  
HIV/AIDS Specialty 
X X X X X X X X X X X 
Molina SMI Specialty  
Serious Mental Illness 
      X X   X         
Sunshine SMI Specialty 
Serious Mental Illness 
X X X X X X X X X X X 
Sunshine Child Welfare 
Child Welfare 
X X X X X X X X X X X 
 
 
 
LTC Plans 
 
The LTC enrollees who are not eligible for Medicare also receive their medical services through an 
MMA plan. Some plans participate in both components in the same regions, and a recipient may elect 
the same managed care plan for both components. These plans are referred to as comprehensive 
plans. The following chart shows the managed care plans that participate in the LTC program.
16
 
 
                                                
16
 Id., slide 45.  STORAGE NAME: h7047.HCA 	PAGE: 8 
DATE: 2/6/2022 
  
LTC Plans, by Region 
 
SMMC PLANS 
REGION 
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 
LONG TERM CARE PLAN 
Florida Community Care X X X X X X X X X X X 
COMPREHENSIVE PLANS 
MMA and LTC Combined 
Aetna Better Health           X X       X 
Humana Medical Plan  X X X X X X X X X X X 
Molina Healthcare               X     X 
Simply Healthcare         X X X    X X 
Sunshine Health  X X X X X X X X X X X 
United Healthcare     X X   X         X 
 
 
Dental Plans 
 
Dental benefits have been available since the inception of the Medicaid program. From 2014 through 
2018, dental coverage was integrated into the MMA health plans as part of the comprehensive, 
integrated approach to managed care created by the SMMC program.  
 
Medicaid covers full dental services for children.  However, adult dental benefits are limited to 
emergency treatment and dentures, and do not include preventive services. The chart below indicates 
the covered dental benefits. 
 
 
Children 	Adults 
Ambulatory Surgical 
Center or Hospital-based 
Dental Services 
Orthodontics 
Dental Exams 
(emergencies and 
dentures only) 
Dental Exams Periodontics Dental X-rays (limited) 
Dental Screenings 
Prosthodontics 
(dentures) 
Prosthodontics 
(dentures) 
Dental X-rays Root Canals Extractions 
Extractions 	Sealants 	Sedation 
Fillings and Crowns Sedation 
Ambulatory Surgical 
Center or Hospital-based 
Dental Services 
Fluoride Space Maintainers 
Oral Health Instructions Teeth Cleanings 
 
 
In the initial contract term, all MMA plans incorporated full adult dental benefits as an enhanced benefit, 
at no cost to the state.  
 
In 2016, the Legislature directed AHCA to separate the dental benefit into a stand-alone managed care 
program, rather than being integrated with the MMA coverage for all other forms of health care.
17
 The 
stand-alone dental plans began operations between December 1, 2018 and February 1, 2019 in 
different regions of the state. 
                                                
17
 Ch. 2016-109, L.O.F.  STORAGE NAME: h7047.HCA 	PAGE: 9 
DATE: 2/6/2022 
  
Presently, three dental plans are contracted; all operate statewide. The dental plans provide 
comprehensive dental services to children, required adult dental benefits, and expanded benefits to 
adults. 
 
Dental Plans, by Region 
 
Dental Program Enrollment by Plan,  
as of October 1, 2021 
DentaQuest 1,773,102 Regions:     All 
Liberty 1,367,714 Regions:     All 
MCNA Dental 990,218 Regions:     All 
 
When dental benefits were integrated into the MMA program, and for some years prior, Florida 
experienced consistent increases in child dental service performance in the federally-required 
measurements. After the separation of dental benefits from other benefits, improvement stalled or 
regressed in many categories, while complaints were higher. Some decline may be attributable to a 
decline in utilization in Summer, 2020, due to the pandemic-related lockdown and supply shortage. The 
following graphics illustrate the change.
18
 
 
 
 
                                                
18
 Agency for Health Care Administration, Presentation to the Health & Human Services Committee, Medicaid Dental Updates, 
November 2, 2021, 
https://www.myfloridahouse.gov/Sections/Documents/loaddoc.aspx?PublicationType=Committees&CommitteeId=3085&Session=20
22&DocumentType=Meeting+Packets&FileName=hhs+11-2-21.pdf (last visited January 23, 2022).  STORAGE NAME: h7047.HCA 	PAGE: 10 
DATE: 2/6/2022 
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Provider Networks 
  STORAGE NAME: h7047.HCA 	PAGE: 11 
DATE: 2/6/2022 
  
Network Adequacy 
 
Current law requires AHCA to establish standards for the number, type, and regional distribution of 
health care providers in managed care plan networks to ensure access to care for recipients. Plans 
must meet these network requirements to maintain their Medicaid contracts, and must publish their 
provider network information online for recipients to access; including performance data, a recipient 
feedback function, licensure information, and location information.
19
  
 
AHCA receives a provider network report from plans weekly. The agency uses this report to facilitate its 
review of the plan’s network adequacy. The reported ratio of enrollees to providers and the enrollees’ 
time and distance necessary to visit listed providers is analyzed and failures to meet standards are 
identified and communicated. Plans may respond with feedback on the findings and AHCA provides 
technical assistance to the plans, as necessary. Monetary penalties are issued by AHCA against the 
plans when warranted for failures to meet network adequacy requirements. 
 
The plan’s provider network report is also used to develop secret shopper efforts to confirm provider 
availability to enrollees. AHCA randomly selects providers within select services or specialties and 
directs the plans to conduct secret shopper calls on a monthly basis. The plans conduct the calls, 
record the data, and reports it back to AHCA. Deficiencies found through the secret shopper activity 
results in monetary penalties against the plan.
20
 AHCA’s network adequacy confirmation process is not 
comprehensively designed to regularly confirm the adequacy of network providers across all medical 
services, and is not systematized to address all provider types within a set period of time.
21
  
 
Current law requires AHCA to systematically and continuously test the plan provider networks to 
confirm accuracy, that the providers are accepting enrollees, and that recipients have access to 
services.  However, this requirement is limited to mental health provider networks, and does not apply 
to all Medicaid plan providers.
22
  
 
Essential Providers 
 
Current law considers some health care providers “essential providers” in the Medicaid program.  
These providers offer services not available from other providers within a reasonable access distance 
within a region, or are unique or rare statewide.  
 
Regional essential providers include the following, as individually designated by AHCA:  
 
 Federally qualified health centers; 
 Statutory teaching hospitals;  
 Hospitals that are trauma centers; and 
 Hospitals located at least 25 miles from any other hospital with similar services. 
 
AHCA has not designated any provider as a regional essential provider, so there are none with which 
plans are required to contract.
23
 
 
Statewide essential providers include the following: 
 
 Faculty plans of Florida medical schools. 
 Regional perinatal intensive care centers as defined in s. 383.16(2). 
 Hospitals licensed as specialty children’s hospitals as defined in s. 395.002(28).
24
 
                                                
19
 SS. 409.967, 409.975, F.S. 
20
 Agency for Health Care Administration, 2022 Agency Legislative Bill Analysis, HB 7047, pp. 8, (February 3, 2022). 
21
 Email from Kristin Sokoloski, AHC Administrator, Agency for Health Care Administration, Re: [email not titled] (February 4, 
2022) (Email on file with the Finance & Facilities Subcommittee). 
22
 S. 409.967(2), F.S. 
23
 Supra, FN 20, p. 11. 
24
 S. 409.975(1)(b), F.S. A fourth provider type is listed in statute, but AHCA states that no provider has met the statutory 
qualifications, which follow: Accredited and integrated systems serving medically complex children which comprise separately  STORAGE NAME: h7047.HCA 	PAGE: 12 
DATE: 2/6/2022 
  
 
Plan networks must include all essential providers, by contract.
25
  
 
If plans selected through the procurement process do not already have contracts with regional essential 
providers, they must negotiate with them for one year or until an agreement is reached. The non-
participating payment rates during the negotiation process are set at 100 percent of the Medicaid rate. 
After one year, the plan may request agency approval of an alternative arrangement; but, if that 
alternative is not approved, the new payment rate is set at 110 percent of the Medicaid rate. For 
statewide essential providers, the plans must continue to negotiate in good faith, and the non-
participating payment rate is set at 100 percent of the Medicaid rate (or, in the case of children’s 
hospitals, the highest rate established in an existing Medicaid plan contract with that facility). 
 
Current law does not require AHCA to regularly assess the contract status of essential providers and 
plans, and AHCA has no ability to compel the providers and plans to contract. 
 
Medical School Faculty Plan Contract Compliance 
 
As of October 2021, four of seven medical school faculty plans lacked the required contracts with at 
least one plan from among the 15 plans, as follows:
26
 
 
 Three faculty plans were contracted with all plans. 
 One faculty plan was not in contract with one plan. 
 One faculty plan was not in contract with two plans. 
 One faculty plan was not in contract with five plans. 
 One faculty plan was not in contract with 14 plans. 
 
As of February 2022, three of the seven are still out of compliance, as follows: 
 
 Four faculty plans were contracted with all plans. 
 One faculty plan was not in contract with two plans. 
 One faculty plan was not in contract with four plans. 
 One faculty plan was not in contract with 14 plans. 
 
Children’s Hospital Contract Compliance 
 
As of October 2021, two of the four children’s hospitals lacked one or more of the required contracts 
among 14 plans
27
, as follows:
28
 
 
 Two children’s hospitals were contracted with all plans. 
 One children’s hospital was not in contract with one plan. 
 One children’s hospital was not in contract with three plans.  
 
As of February 2022, the same children’s hospitals are still out of compliance: one had added a 
contract and so was not in contract with two plans; the other still lacked a contract with one plan. 
 
All of the essential providers without contracts received supplemental Medicaid payments regardless of 
contract status. 
 
At the time of this bill analysis, AHCA is compiling the data for contracting status as of October 2020, to 
determine whether the lack of plan contracts is a consistent problem for some providers, or a consistent 
                                                
licensed, but commonly owned, health care providers delivering at least the following services: medical group home, in-home and 
outpatient nursing care and therapies, pharmacy services, durable medical equipment, and Prescribed Pediatric Extended Care. Supra, 
FN 20, p. 12. 
25
 S. 409.975(1), F.S. 
26
 Supra, FN 20, page 13.  
27
 One plan does not serve children, so a children’s hospital contract is not required. 
28
 Supra, FN 20, page 13.  STORAGE NAME: h7047.HCA 	PAGE: 13 
DATE: 2/6/2022 
  
problem in the network which varies by provider from time to time. However, the lack of change in 
recent months for some providers indicates a need for ongoing and more frequent monitoring. 
 
Recipient Enrollment 
 
Medicaid recipients have a 30-day period to choose a plan, and a 90-day period following enrollment 
during which they can change their plan for any reason. In addition, recipients are allowed to change 
plans during regularly scheduled open enrollment periods or with a state-approved “for cause” reason 
at any time following their initial choice period.
29
 For recipients who do not make a choice, AHCA must 
automatically enroll them into plans.  
 
AHCA may not enroll a recipient in a plan with deficient quality performance, and must enroll a recipient 
in a specialty plan if one is available for that recipient’s condition. For LTC recipients also in Medicare, 
AHCA must enroll the recipient in a plan that is also a Medicare plan, if one is available.
30
 
 
AHCA must consider the following factors when automatically enrolling recipients in plans:  
 
 Network capacity of available plans; 
 Whether the recipient has a prior relationship with a plan’s primary care providers (or home and 
community-based services providers, for LTC); and 
 Geographic proximity of a plan’s primary care providers (or home and community-based 
services providers, for LTC) to the recipient.
31
 
 
Other than these statutory factors, AHCA is statutorily prohibited from engaging in practices that favor 
one managed care plan over another. 
 
A recent merger of two large Medicaid managed care plans has resulted in a new level of market 
participation for the resulting company. On January 23, 2020, Centene Corporation (owner of Sunshine 
Health) completed the acquisition of WellCare/Staywell Health Plan.
32
 The result is a plan provider that 
has the most enrollees, per region, in eight of the eleven Medicaid regions and overall, statewide (by 
more than double). The following table illustrates the first and second largest plan, by total enrollees, in 
each region and statewide:
33
 
  
                                                
29
 S. 409.969, F.S. 
30
 Ss. 409.977 and 409.984, F.S. 
31
 Id. Agency for Health Care Administration, Recent Medicaid Presentations and Reports, Florida Medicaid Managed Care 
Auto-Assignment Methodology, https://ahca.myflorida.com/Medicaid/recent_presentations/2019/Auto-
Assignment_Report_100119_Final.pdf (last visited January 26, 2022). 
32
 Centene Completes Acquisition of WellCare, Centene Corp., Jan. 28, 2020, https://www.centene.com/news/centene-completes-
acquisition-of-wellcare.html (last visited January 26, 2022). 
33
 Supra, FN 20,p. 7.  STORAGE NAME: h7047.HCA 	PAGE: 14 
DATE: 2/6/2022 
  
MMA Plan (% of Mkt Share) 
Region Largest Second Largest 
Region 1 Humana (45.86%) Sunshine (25.67%) 
Region 2 Sunshine (61.2%) Humana (16.03%) 
Region 3 Sunshine (50.32%) United (24.59%) 
Region 4 Sunshine (48.06%) United (29.29%) 
Region 5 Sunshine (43.85%) Simply (33.49%) 
Region 6 Sunshine (37.44%) Simply (27.45%) 
Region 7 Sunshine (48.71%) Simply (20.73%) 
Region 8 Sunshine (51.59%) Molina (20.09%) 
Region 9 Sunshine (36.35%) Humana (25.77%) 
Region 10 Simply (27.39%) Humana (25.49% 
Region 11 Simply (23.41%) Sunshine (16.78%) 
Statewide Sunshine (38.61%) Humana (16.77%) 
 
Current law does not address plan regional market share related to automatic enrollment. 
 
Healthy Behaviors Program 
 
Each plan operating in the MMA program shall establish a program to encourage and reward healthy 
behaviors. At a minimum, each plan must establish a medically approved smoking cessation program, 
a medically directed weight loss program, and a medically approved alcohol or substance abuse 
recovery program. Each plan must identify enrollees who smoke, are morbidly obese, or are diagnosed 
with alcohol or substance abuse, in order to establish written agreements to secure the enrollees’ 
commitment to participation in these programs.
34
 
 
Financial Accountability – Workforce Expenditures 
 
Medical Loss Ratio 
 
Section 409.9122, F.S., authorizes AHCA to calculate a medical loss ratio (MLR) for the SMMC plans, 
consistent with federal requirements.  A MLR measures the percentage of premium dollars that a health 
plan spends on medical expenses. A high MLR means the plan spends a large percentage of premium 
dollars on medical expenses, which may mean the plan is not spending enough on enrollees, or may 
mean the plan is not managing care well and incurring a large amount of catastrophic care expenses.  
The inverse is true for a low MLR. 
 
Current law authorizes plans to count certain expenditures as medical expenses, for purposes of the 
MLR calculation: 
 Contributions to support indigent care 
 Funds provided to support graduate medical education to underwrite physician residency 
programs, if the residents actively provide care to Medicaid and uninsured patients. 
 
Financial support for education of other health care industry occupations does not count as medical 
expenditures for MLR calculation purposes. 
 
 
 
 
Achieved Savings Rebate 
 
                                                
34
 S. 409,973(3), F.S.  STORAGE NAME: h7047.HCA 	PAGE: 15 
DATE: 2/6/2022 
  
Current law requires AHCA to establish a uniform method for the plans to use for annually reporting, 
premium revenue, medical and administrative costs, and income or losses. Using the reporting method, 
the plans calculate whether they have achieved a savings for the reporting year and whether they must 
pay a rebate to the state, called an achieved savings rebate.  
 
This achieved savings rebate is calculated by determining pre-tax income as a percentage of revenues 
and applying the following income sharing ratios: 
 
 100% of the income up to and including 5% of the revenue will be retained by the plan, 
 50% of the income above 5% and less than 10% of the revenue will be retained by the plan with 
the other 50% refunded to the state, and 
 100% of the income above 10% will be refunded to the state. 
 
If the plan meets or exceeds quality measures defined by AHCA, then the plan may retain an additional 
1% of revenue. 
 
Rebates, bonuses, fines, and lobbying expenses are not included in the calculation. Additionally, the 
agency sets maximums for administrative expenses, reinsurance, and outstanding claims expenses. 
 
Unlike the MLR calculation, investments in graduate medical education (or other health care workforce 
development) are not included in ASR calculations as medical costs, or used an offset to rebate 
obligations. 
 
Financial Accountability – Supplemental Payment Programs 
 
Federal Medicaid managed care programs to use actuarily sound capitation rates which represent the 
entirety of the Medicaid expenditures for such services.  However, federal law or Florida waiver 
approvals authorize certain exceptions, allowing additional Medicaid payments to take place outside the 
managed care relationship for some provider types. These arrangements are called supplemental 
payment programs. 
 
Florida currently has ten supplemental payment programs to fund payments to Medicaid providers that 
are in addition to reimbursement they receive for services rendered to Medicaid enrollees. They are 
either authorized by statute or by the General Appropriations Act and are approved by the federal 
government. The payments are generally funded through non-General Revenue sources to make up 
the state share of Medicaid funds, which is used to draw down the federal matching payment. However, 
some supplemental payments are funded through General Revenue. 
 
AHCA collects local intergovernmental transfers (IGTs) to fund the state share of the Medicaid match 
funds. IGTs come from counties, local health care taxing districts, and publicly operated providers. 
Governmental sources of IGTs sign pledge letters with AHCA specifying their contribution amount. 
AHCA then uses the IGTs to draw down the federal matching funds. AHCA then distributes the 
combined local (state share) and federal funds through a legislatively approved funding model.  
 
Use of local funds to assist with funding Medicaid began in 1992 with the Disproportionate Share 
Hospital (DSH) supplemental payment. DSH provides supplemental payments to facilities that bear a 
disproportionate share of indigent care costs. In FY 1992-93, three local governments contributed IGTs. 
The Low Income Pool (LIP) was created as part of the initial Medicaid managed care waiver in 2006. 
LIP is used to provide supplemental payments to providers who provide services to Medicaid and 
uninsured patients. In FY 2017-18, 41 local government contributed IGTs to help fund DSH, LIP, and 
other supplemental payment programs. As of FY 2020-21, 97 local governments were providing IGTs.
35
 
 
                                                
35
 Agency for Health Care Administration, Presentation to the Health Care Appropriations Subcommittee, Medicaid Supplemental 
Payment Overview, February 15, 2021, 
https://ahca.myflorida.com/Medicaid/recent_presentations/2021/House_Health_Care_Appropriations_Medicaid_Presentation_Supple
mental_Payments_20210215.pdf (last visited January 24, 2022).  STORAGE NAME: h7047.HCA 	PAGE: 16 
DATE: 2/6/2022 
  
Florida’s Medicaid supplemental payment programs (along with their FY 2021-22 funding) are listed in 
the tables below. 
 
State Share Funded by IGTs 
Program 	FY 21-22 Funding 
Low Income Pool (LIP) 	$1.5 billion 
Physician Supplemental Payment (PSP) 	$404.7 million 
Multi-Visceral Transplant 	$7.4 million 
Florida Cancer Hospital Program (FCHP) 	$154.0 million 
Public Emergency Medical Transportation (PEMT) $136.1 million 
Hospital Directed Payment Program (DPP) 	$1.8 billion 
Indirect Medical Education (IME) 	$500.9 million 
 
State Share Funded by IGT and General Revenue 
Program 	FY 21-22 Funding 
Disproportionate Share Hospital (DSH) 	$338.9 million 
Medical Education (GME) 	$283.9 million 
Hospital Automatic Rate Enhancements 	$309.6 million    
 
Total funds distributed in supplemental payments for FY 2021-22 were $5.488 billion.
36
  
 
Supplemental Payments and Essential Providers 
 
Some supplemental payment recipients are also statewide essential providers, with which all Medicaid 
plans must contract to meet network adequacy requirements.  Supplemental payment program 
participation varies by provider type.  For example, medical school faculty plans receive supplemental 
payments through PSP and LIP, while children’s hospitals receive supplemental payments through LIP, 
DSH, and GME, as follows.
37
 
  
                                                
36
 Supra, FN 11. 
37
 Supra, FN 20, p. 12.  STORAGE NAME: h7047.HCA 	PAGE: 17 
DATE: 2/6/2022 
  
 
Essential Providers Supplemental Payments FY 2020-21 
Essential Provider Type PSP LIP DSH GME Total 
Medical School Faculty Plans 
FSU Medical Practice Plan $     298,545  n/a  n/a  n/a   $       298,545  
Florida International University $     316,443  n/a  n/a  n/a   $       316,443  
University of Central Florida $       61,635  n/a  n/a  n/a   $         61,635  
University of Florida Jacksonville $61,322,442   $31,630,323  n/a  n/a   $  92,952,765  
University of Florida Gainesville $90,661,648   $23,059,330  n/a  n/a   $113,720,978  
University of South Florida $52,558,502   $  6,836,716  n/a  n/a   $  59,395,218  
University of Miami  $76,585,333   $42,657,091  n/a  n/a   $119,242,424  
Children’s Hospitals 
Wolfson Baptist Medical Hospital n/a   $  3,091,956  n/a  n/a   $    3,091,956  
Johns Hopkins Children’s Hospital n/a   $  3,631,288   $7,728,543   $1,455,930   $  12,815,761  
Nemours Children’s Hospital 	n/a   $  1,865,302   $3,479,923   $   809,734   $    6,154,959  
Nicklaus Children’s Hospital 	n/a   $     124,903   $7,043,199   $2,957,066   $  10,125,168  
Total 	$281,804,548   $112,896,909   $18,251,665   $5,222,730   $418,175,852  
 
Currently, Florida cancer hospitals are not Medicaid essential providers. However, they do receive 
Medicaid funds via supplemental payments, as follows.
38
 
 
 
Cancer Hospital Supplemental Payments FY 2020-21 
Provider FCHP LIP DSH IME GME Total 
Sylvester Cancer Center $104,590,018 $ 6,007,767 $3,191,548 $   743,462 $13,798,598 $128,331,393 
Moffitt Cancer Center $ 32,457,037 $11,467,051 $2,694,650 $   312,358 $ 4,380,728 $ 51,311,824 
Total 	$137,047,055  $17,474,818 $5,886,198 $1,055,820 $18,179,326 $179,643,217 
 
To be eligible for supplemental payments the essential providers must offer to contract with all 
applicable Medicaid plans. In the event of a failure to contract, AHCA must evaluate whether the 
providers negotiated in good faith and withhold supplemental payments if the provider has negotiated in 
bad faith.
39
  In the last two years, AHCA developed a process for assessing compliance with this law 
and identified three providers acting in bad faith.  AHCA did not withhold supplemental payments from 
them, finding they were making progress in contract negotiations with plans.
40
 
 
Child Welfare Specialty Plan 
 
The Sunshine Health Child Welfare Specialty Plan serves children in Florida’s child welfare system of 
care. It is available statewide to children in the child welfare system until age 21 and children adopted 
from the child welfare system through the child’s 18
th
 birthday, if the adopted family is receiving a state 
adoption subsidy.
41
 
 
All children with an open child welfare case become eligible for the child welfare specialty plan upon 
their entry into the child welfare system. Children are automatically enrolled in the child welfare 
specialty plan unless a different MMA plan is selected. Under s. 409.977, F.S., specialty plans serving 
children in the care and custody of the DCF may serve such children as long as they remain in care, 
                                                
38
 Supra, FN 21. 
39
 S. 409.908(26), F.S. 
40
 Supra, FN 20, p. 12. 
41
 S. 409.977(5), F.S.   STORAGE NAME: h7047.HCA 	PAGE: 18 
DATE: 2/6/2022 
  
including those remaining in extended foster care or are in subsidized adoption and continue to be 
eligible for Medicaid pursuant to s. 409.903, F.S.  
 
Like an MMA plan, the child welfare specialty plan must cover the minimum benefits outlined in s. 
409.973, F.S. The following benefits are available under the child welfare specialty plan: 
 
 Medical foster care 
 Statewide Inpatient Psychiatric Program (SIPP) 
 Specialized therapeutic foster care and therapeutic group care 
 Targeted case management 
 Private duty nursing 
 Individual and family therapy 
 Behavioral Health Overlay Services 
 Comprehensive behavioral health assessments 
 Emergency transportation 
 Non-medical/non-emergency transportation with up to three round trips per month 
 Care grants of up to $150 per child per calendar year for services and supplies for social or 
physical activities, such as gym memberships, swim lessons, sports equipment, art supplies or 
application fees for post high school 
 Transition assistance up to $500 in one-time assistance for young adults transitioning out of 
foster care at age 18 or extended foster care at age 21 
 Life skills development education for children ages 12 and up with developmental disabilities to 
help them keep, learn, or improve skills and functioning for daily living 
 Over-the counter medication up to $25 per household per month 
 Home-delivered meals for 10 days after being discharged from a facility 
 Doula services 
 A 24-hour nurse advice line 
 A 24-hour behavioral health line  
 
Because children in the child welfare system have greater clinical and behavioral health needs, the 
capitated rate for the specialty plan is higher than for children in regular MMA plans. 
 
Child Welfare Guardianship Assistance Program 
 
Florida’s child welfare system, administered by the Department of Children and Families (DCF), 
identifies families whose children are in danger of suffering or have suffered abuse, abandonment, or 
neglect, and works with those families to address the problems that are endangering children, if 
possible. If the problems cannot be addressed, the child welfare system finds safe out-of-home 
placements for these children.  
 
The DCF Guardianship Assistance Program (GAP) is a federally-funded program to support relatives 
and fictive kin
42
 who are guardians of children who were removed from their homes due to abuse or 
neglect.
43
 GAP was implemented in Florida in 2019. Section s. 39.6225, F.S., sets the eligibility 
requirements to participate in Florida’s GAP. In keeping with federal requirements, for a guardian to 
qualify to receive benefits on behalf of the child, the guardian must: 
 
 Have the child’s placement approved by the court; 
 Have the court grant legal custody of the child to the guardian;  
 Be licensed as a Level I provider of foster care under s. 409.175, F.S.; and, 
 Be a guardian for the child who was eligible for federal foster care maintenance payments under 
Title IV-E for at least six consecutive months while the child resided in the home of the guardian 
and the guardian was licensed as a provider of foster care. 
                                                
42
 S. 39.01(28), F.S., defines “fictive kin” as a person who is unrelated to the child but has such a close emotional relationship with the 
child that he or she may be considered family. 
43
 Florida Department of Children and Families, Office of Children Welfare, Guardianship Assistance Program (GAP), Guardianship 
Assistance Program Community Supports - Florida Department of Children and Families (myflfamilies.com) (last visited January 20, 
2022).  STORAGE NAME: h7047.HCA 	PAGE: 19 
DATE: 2/6/2022 
  
 
DCF provides GAP participants assistance payments of $4,000 annually, or another amount specified 
in a written agreement, paid on a monthly basis.
44
 Participants are also eligible for a one-time payment 
of up to $2,000 for expenses associated with obtaining legal guardianship of a child.  
 
As of November 2021, there are 1,122 children in Florida’s GAP program.
45
  
 
Under current law, children in GAP are not eligible to continue in the child welfare specialty plan. A 
child’s dependency case is closed to permanent guardianship by the court when it grants legal custody 
to the guardian who is participating in GAP. Because current law limits specialty plan eligibility to 
children in DCF custody, permanent guardianship causes the child to lose eligibility for that plan, and 
enroll in a regular MMA plan. 
 
Effect of Proposed Changes 
 
SMMC Plan Procurement 
 
The bill requires AHCA to conduct a single, statewide procurement; rather than separate and 
simultaneous regional procurements. However, it requires AHCA to negotiate and select plans on a 
regional basis. If AHCA finds that a statewide contract award to a particular plan is the best value for 
the state and recipients, AHCA is permitted to make such an award. This preserves regional 
competition and bidding, while allowing AHCA to negotiate based on statewide effect for a plan that 
would win in all regions, and issue a single statewide contract award instead of separate regional 
contracts. It also avoids a systemic shift that could favor large, market dominant plans if procurement 
were entirely conducted based on a statewide focus, to the detriment of regional preferences or 
conditions. 
 
Under current law, at least 90 days before issuing an ITN to procure MMA and LTC plans under the 
SMMC program, AHCA compiles and publishes a databook that includes utilization and spending data 
for the program from the 3 most recent contract years and includes historic fee-for-service claims The 
bill requires AHCA to produce data for at least the most recent 24 months, eliminates the obsolete 
requirement to include fee-for-service data, and requires the data to be presented consistent with 
actuarial rate-setting practices and standards.  
 
Regional Procurement 
 
The bill proposes consolidating the eleven SMMC program regions into eight regions. According to 
AHCA, which proposed the region redesign, this configuration is based on enrollee utilization patterns 
and provider referral patterns over recent years.
46
 The chart and map below show the current regions 
and the proposed consolidated regions. 
  
                                                
44
 S. 39.6225(5)(d), F.S.  
45
 Email from John Paul Fiore, Legislative Director, Florida Department of Children and Families, Re: GAP, January 20, 2022 (on file 
with the House Finance & Facilities Subcommittee). 
46
 Supra, FN 20, pp. 16-17.  STORAGE NAME: h7047.HCA 	PAGE: 20 
DATE: 2/6/2022 
  
 
 
SMMC Proposed Regions 
Current Region 1  Escambia, Okaloosa, Santa Rosa, Walton 
REGION A 
Current Region 2  
Bay, Calhoun, Franklin, Gadsden, Gulf, Holmes, Jackson, Jefferson, 
Leon, Liberty, Madison, Taylor, Wakulla, Washington 
Current Region 3  
Alachua, Bradford, Citrus, Columbia, Dixie, Gilchrist, Hamilton, 
Hernando, Lafayette, Levy, Marion, Putnam, Sumter, Suwannee, Union REGION B 
Current Region 4  Baker, Clay, Duval, Flagler, Nassau, St. Johns, Volusia 
Current Region 5  Pasco, Pinellas 
REGION C 
Current Region 6  Hardee, Highlands, Hillsborough, Manatee, Polk 
Current Region 7  Brevard, Orange, Osceola, Seminole 	REGION D 
Current Region 8  Charlotte, Collier, DeSoto, Glades, Hendry, Lee, Sarasota 	REGION E 
Current Region 9  Indian River, Martin, Okeechobee, Palm Beach, St. Lucie 	REGION F 
Current Region 10  Broward 	REGION G 
Current Region 11  Miami-Dade, Monroe 	REGION H 
 
 
 
 
 
The bill proposes to increase the minimum or maximum number of plans with which AHCA will contract 
to provide services to MMA and LTC enrollees. The limits for the award of plans within a region is 
inclusive of any statewide plans awarded. So, a statewide award will credit as one plan award in every 
region for the purposes of regional plan award limitations. 
 
Each region will have at least three plans to provide services in the SMMC program, to ensure recipient 
choice of plans and increase AHCA’s ability to enforce contract requirements. Enforcing contract 
requirements in a region with only two plans presents difficulties. For example, an enrollment freeze 
sanction would eliminate recipients’ ability to have a choice of at least two plans, which is a federal  STORAGE NAME: h7047.HCA 	PAGE: 21 
DATE: 2/6/2022 
  
requirement. With at least three plans, AHCA will be able to impose the full range of penalties available 
against noncompliant plans, including imposing an enrollment freeze.  
 
The chart below shows the current number of plans and the proposed number of plans in each region. 
The chart also demonstrates enrollment distribution based on the proposed minimum and maximum 
number of plans per region, per program.
47
 
 
 	MMA 	LTC 
Proposed 
Regions 
Current  
Min/Max # 
Plans 
Proposed 
Min/Max# 
Plans 
Regional 
Enrollment 
Enrollment: 
Proposed 
Minimum # 
Plans 
Enrollment: 
Proposed 
Maximum 
# Plans 
Regional 
Enrollment 
Enrollment: 
Proposed 
Minimum # 
Plans 
Enrollment: 
Proposed 
Maximum 
# Plans 
Region A 
Region 1:   2 
Region 2:   2 
3 - 4 277,676 92,559 69,419 7,073 2,358 1,768 
Region B 
Region 3:   3 - 5 
Region 4:   3 - 5 
MMA 5 - 6 
LTC 3 - 6  
766,991 153,398 127,832 18,347 6,116 3,058 
Region C 
Region 5:   2 - 4 
Region 6:   4 - 7 
MMA 6 - 10 
LTC 5 - 10 
801,893 133,648 80,189 25,004 5,001 2,500 
Region D Region 7:   3 - 6 
MMA 5 - 6 
LTC 6 - 6 
537,679 107,535 89,613 10,432 3,477 1,739 
Region E Region 8:   2 - 4 3 - 4 272,543 90,848 68,136 7,234 2,411 1,809 
Region F Region 9:   2 - 4 3 - 5 353,458 117,819 70,692 11,349 3,783 2,270 
Region G Region 10:   2 - 4 3 - 5 338,684 112,895 67,737 10,240 3,413 2,048 
Region H Region 11:  5 - 10 5 - 10 605,902 121,180 60,590 32,791 6,558 3,279 
 
Dental Benefits 
 
The bill reintegrates dental benefits into the MMA program, eliminating the requirement to procure 
separate, dental-only, plans for those benefits.  
 
The bill also requires plans to establish programs to improve outcomes and increase utilization of 
preventative services, including a patient education component and a patient incentive program. AHCA 
is required to establish and regularly assess dental performance and outcome measures, which must 
be published.  
 
 Provider Service Networks 
 
The bill removes the option for new PSNs to be paid under a fee-for-service/shared savings model, for 
the first two years of operation, after which they would be capitated. PSNs will be paid on a capitated 
basis from the beginning of their contract terms. 
 
Enrollment 
 
The bill prohibits AHCA from automatically enrolling participants in a plan if the plan has more than 45 
percent of the enrollees in a region. As of November 30, 2021, six regions had a health plan with more 
than 45 percent of the enrollees.
48
 
 
Provider Networks 
 
Essential Providers 
 
                                                
47
 Note that this simple demonstration assumes equal enrollment in each plan, which is highly unlikely, but is used to demonstrate 
recipient distribution across regions based on the plan numbers. 
48
 Supra, FN 20, p. 7.   STORAGE NAME: h7047.HCA 	PAGE: 22 
DATE: 2/6/2022 
  
The bill adds Florida cancer hospitals that meet specified federal criteria to the statutory list of statewide 
essential providers, requiring all plans in the state to contract with them.  Currently, there are two such 
hospitals that meet the federal criteria: Moffitt Cancer Center (Tampa) and Sylvester Comprehensive 
Cancer Center (Miami). As with other statewide essential providers, the bill sets the payment rate in the 
event these hospitals do not enter into a network contract with a plan: the Medicaid payment rate in 
effect on the first day of the contract between AHCA and the plan. 
 
The bill requires AHCA to assess plan compliance with essential provider contracting requirements at 
least quarterly. 
 
Supplemental Payments and Essential Providers 
 
The bill requires essential providers to have a network contract with all plans in their region (or 
statewide, as applicable), rather than merely making an effort to contract, and eliminates the 
requirement that AHCA assess the good faith effort of the provider’s negotiations.  Instead, AHCA must 
determine whether network contracts exist prior to releasing supplemental payments to the provider. 
Absent such contracts, AHCA is directed to withhold the supplemental payments as of January 1 of 
each year until such contracts are in place. 
 
This will ensure that essential providers receiving Medicaid dollars are fully available to all Medicaid 
patients as plan network participants. 
 
Financial Accountability – Workforce Expenditures 
The bill expands the type of education funding that may be allowed as a medical expense for 
calculation of the medical loss ratio. Currently, plan investments in graduate medical education 
institutions for residency positions are allowed as a medical expense. The bill expands this to allow 
funds provided for positions: 
 
 Graduate student nursing education positions, 
 Undergraduate student nursing education positions, and 
 Student positions in any degree or technical program deemed critical shortage by AHCA. 
  
Further, the bill allows these investments, and plan contributions to designated state trust funds that 
support Medicaid and indigent care as a credit against the Achieved Savings Rebate. 
 
Healthy Behaviors Program 
 
The bill expands the required scope of the Healthy Behaviors program to include: 
 
 Cessation of tobacco use, rather than merely smoking cessation. This addresses the use of 
smokeless and other non-smokable tobacco products.  
 A focus on opioid abuse recovery within the medically approved alcohol and substance 
recovery program. 
 
Child Welfare Specialty Plan and Guardianship Assistance 
 
The bill authorizes a child welfare specialty care plan under contract with the MMA program to serve a 
child who continues to be eligible for Medicaid and whose parents or guardians receive GAP payments. 
This allows a child in the GAP program to choose either a child welfare specialty plan or an MMA plan.  
 
Finally, the bill deletes obsolete provisions, such as the use of fee-for-service contracts to transition 
PSNs to the risk bearing capitated contract model; removing a reference to the defunct Florida Health 
Choices Program, and repealing a managed care rate statute applicable to pre-SMMC managed care, 
which is no longer operable.  
 
The bill provides an effective date of July 1, 2022.  
  STORAGE NAME: h7047.HCA 	PAGE: 23 
DATE: 2/6/2022 
  
B. SECTION DIRECTORY: 
 
Section 1: Amends s. 409.908, F.S., relating to reimbursement of Medicaid providers. 
Section 2: Amends s. 409.912, F.S., relating to cost-effective purchasing of health care. 
Section 3: Amends s. 409.964, F.S., relating to managed care program; state plan; waivers. 
Section 4: Amends s. 409.966, F.S., relating to eligible plans; selection. 
Section 5: Amends s. 409.967, F.S., relating to managed care plan accountability. 
Section 6: Amends s. 409.968, F.S., relating to managed care plan payments. 
Section 7: Amends s. 409.973, F.S., relating to benefits. 
Section 8: Amends s. 409.974, F.S., relating to eligible plans. 
Section 9: Amends s. 409.975, F.S., relating to managed care plan accountability. 
Section 10: Amends s. 409.977, F.S., relating to enrollment. 
Section 11: Amends s. 409.981, F.S., relating to eligible long-term care plans. 
Section 12: Provides an effective date of July 1, 2022. 
II.  FISCAL ANALYSIS & ECONOMIC IMPACT STATEMENT 
 
A. FISCAL IMPACT ON STATE GOVERNMENT: 
 
1. Revenues: 
 
AHCA may receive less Achieved Savings Rebate funds due to plan donations in medical 
education that are eligible for credit against the Achieved Savings Rebate calculation. 
 
Since 2015 AHCA has received over $440 million in achieved savings rebates.  See table below. 
 
Achieved Savings Rebate 
(2015-2020) 
2015 2016 	2017-2018 	2019 2020 
$ 2,373,946 $ 30,440,542 $ 12,517,103 $ 129,298,856 $ 274,856,893 
 
Federal CMS requires the state to remit the federal share of rebates received which reduces the net 
benefit to the state.  For the 2020 year, the state added $88.5 million to the general revenue fund.  
The change to the achieved savings rebate will have an impact to general revenue collections, 
however, the impact is indeterminate.  
 
2. Expenditures: 
 
AHCA estimates that allowing the GAP children to select the child welfare specialty plan, rather 
than remaining in or selecting a non-specialty MMA plan, may result in a negative fiscal impact of 
$4.6 million, annually ($1.8 million, General Revenue).
49
 
 
B. FISCAL IMPACT ON LOCAL GOVERNMENTS: 
 
1. Revenues: 
 
None. 
 
2. Expenditures: 
 
None. 
 
C. DIRECT ECONOMIC IMPACT ON PRIVATE SECTOR: 
 
None. 
                                                
49
 Supra, FN 20, p. 21.  STORAGE NAME: h7047.HCA 	PAGE: 24 
DATE: 2/6/2022 
  
 
 
D. FISCAL COMMENTS: 
 
None. 
III.  COMMENTS 
 
A. CONSTITUTIONAL ISSUES: 
 
 1. Applicability of Municipality/County Mandates Provision: 
 
Not applicable. The bill does not appear to affect county or municipal governments. 
 
 2. Other: 
 
None. 
 
B. RULE-MAKING AUTHORITY: 
 
AHCA and DCF have sufficient rule-making authority to implement the provisions of the bill. 
 
C. DRAFTING ISSUES OR OTHER COMMENTS: 
 
None. 
IV.  AMENDMENTS/ COMMITTEE SUBSTITUTE CHANGES