State blames five-month bungling of Medicaid case on ‘computer glitch’

Last month, 82-year-old Viola Weir received a letter from the state that rejected her request for Medicaid benefits to pay for nursing home care. The letter from the New Mexico Human Services Department (HSD) said she had not provided the state agency with “the mandatory documents we need to decide if you can get benefits.” […]

State blames five-month bungling of Medicaid case on ‘computer glitch’

Last month, 82-year-old Viola Weir received a letter from the state that rejected her request for Medicaid benefits to pay for nursing home care.

The letter from the New Mexico Human Services Department (HSD) said she had not provided the state agency with “the mandatory documents we need to decide if you can get benefits.” As a result, the department denied Viola Weir her Medicaid benefits.

The very same letter also said her income levels and assets met the qualifications to receive such care.

That’s according to documentation that Tom Kovach, Weir’s son-in-law, sent to NM Political Report from HSD, the state department which processes federal benefits.

To Kovach, the letter didn’t make sense.

“In the same letter it says she’s qualified but it didn’t get [her] documents,” he said. “It just completely contradicts itself.”

A spokesman with HSD did not return emails or phone calls from NM Political Report seeking comment on this story.

By documents, Kovach is referring to Viola Weir’s financial statements that he and his husband, Will Weir, sent to the HSD as part of her Medicaid application on Dec. 5. Both Kovach and Will Weir, the son of Viola, say the case should have been a no-brainer. Viola had previously been on Medicaid for years while she worked at a restaurant.

Then, last November, her medical conditions made living in a nursing home a necessity. Kovach and Will Weir helped her apply for Institutional Long Term Care Medicaid, a type of federal benefit that pays for the elderly poor to receive care in nursing homes.

Will Weir said that on Dec. 15, an HSD caseworker told him his mother’s previous history with Medicaid would make processing her application “the easiest case ever.” One week later, HSD sent a letter acknowledging receipt of Viola Weir’s financial documentation—the same documentation that four months later it said it didn’t have and rejected her case.

Months went by with no update from the state on the status of the Medicaid application. Meanwhile, Viola Weir’s unpaid bills at the Raton Nursing and Rehabilitation Center continued to pile up. The costs added to more than $20,000, according to the Kovach and Will Weir. The Raton nursing home did not comment on the matter for this story.

Federal laws prevent nursing homes from kicking out residents who are unable to pay for their care after they’re admitted. That means nursing homes can go unpaid for months at a time.

Finally, on April 5, HSD delivered the contradictory letter rejecting Viola Weir’s Medicaid benefits.

The four-month waiting period was much longer than the 45-day federal requirement for states to process Medicaid applications.

In the end, it turned out that HSD was in error in rejecting Viola Weir’s Medicaid application. They later attributed the mistake to a computer glitch, according to Kovach and Will Weir, and last week finally accepted Viola Weir’s Medicaid application.

“What should have been an easy case took five months,” Kovach said.

Not an isolated case

This isn’t the only time HSD has botched a patient’s Institutional Medicaid application, according to health care advocates and long-term care organization officials interviewed for this story.

“It seems to be a very pervasive problem,” said Collin Baillio, a spokesman for Health Action New Mexico, a nonprofit healthcare advocacy group. “In some of these cases these are the folks that need care the most, and it puts them in tough spots.”

Linda Sechovec, executive director of the New Mexico Health Care Association, which represents long-term care providers, said the long processing times “got a lot more difficult over the last year or so.”

“The big issue, of course, is any business would struggle with delivering services and then waiting for payments,” she said.

But Sechovec emphasized that both her organization and the state have been “working together to speed up hold times.”

She called cases that take four to five months to process—cases like Viola Weir’s—”extraordinary.” Sechovec said HSD has been willing to review such cases.

“For a family member this has to be exasperating, when they’re caught between eligibility and the facility not being paid,” she said.

Reasons for the long application processing times can differ. Sometimes the applicant is at fault. Or the complexity of the process for getting Institutional Medicaid can be daunting.

“Sometimes getting bank statements and information on assets takes longer than, for example, a young person bringing in their pay stubs or notices of when they lost their job,” Sechovec said. “If the family [applying] has everything, it moves a lot more quickly than if the family has to go on a treasure hunt.”

Overloaded HSD caseworkers and high turnover at the agency are problems, too, she said. As of early April, there were 431 vacancies at the agency, which fully staffed, should employ 2,084 people.

Senior Citizens Law Office Executive Director Ellen Leitzer said that clients applying for Institutional Medicaid often have to submit their financial documents to the state multiple times.

“That’s something we see, is documents being lost that we submitted, as in a lot of bureaucracies,” Leitzer said.

In Viola Weir’s case, Kovach and Will Weir made calls to HSD and the governor’s office before her situation was resolved. Eventually, Will Weir said, an Income Support Division staff manager explained the “computer glitch.”

“The way they explained it to me is if [the case] comes to five or six months, the computer automatically denies it,” he said.

If that’s true, both he and Kovach said the state’s wrongful rejections of people’s applications to Institutional Medicaid may be a frequent occurrence.

“From what they told us on the phone, there’s a lot of these cases and they have a committee reviewing them,” Kovach said. “For us, here’s a case that should have never been denied and yet was automatically denied.”

We're ad free

That means that we rely on support from readers like you. Help us keep reporting on the most important New Mexico Stories by donating today.

Related

Politics Newsletter: Special Session recap

Politics Newsletter: Special Session recap

Hello fellow political junkies! Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham called a special session on July 18 to tackle public safety issues ranging from criminal competency…
Legislators pass disaster assistance funding, end special session quickly

Legislators pass disaster assistance funding, end special session quickly

The two issues passed were only a fraction of what Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham had on her special session agenda.
House votes to pass bill for fire relief, behavioral health treatments

House votes to pass bill for fire relief, behavioral health treatments

The House voted overwhelmingly to pass HB 1, the appropriations bill that provides funding for the special session, fire relief and behavioral health court…
PRC approves NM Gas Co. rate increase agreement

PRC approves NM Gas Co. rate increase agreement

The New Mexico Public Regulation Commission approved a stipulated agreement which is expected to result in a rate increase for customers.  The stipulated agreement…
12 tribes and pueblos in New Mexico could benefit from pending water rights settlements

12 tribes and pueblos in New Mexico could benefit from pending water rights settlements

For generations, the Zuni people were able to grow food in the New Mexico desert through what Pueblo of Zuni Gov. Arden Kucate described…

Climate change is bringing more deadly heat to New Mexico

Heat-related deaths and illnesses are increasing in New Mexico, as the state has experienced greater increases in temperature than many other parts of the…
Early childhood summit convened to discuss future of program

Early childhood summit convened to discuss future of program

About 200 people from tribal governors to legislators to advocates and teachers gathered at Bishop’s Lodge to discuss Early Childhood Education’s future in New…
Stansbury outlines funding secured for early childhood and youth services programs

Stansbury outlines funding secured for early childhood and youth services programs

U.S. Rep. Melanie Stansbury secured $8.3 million for childhood development and youth services in the 1st congressional district through federal community project funding. Stansbury,…
Amid new graduation requirements, what do high schoolers want to learn?

Amid new graduation requirements, what do high schoolers want to learn?

By Margaret O’Hara, The Santa Fe New Mexican The main things that bring Brayan Chavez to school every day: Seeing, talking to and engaging with…
Some mental health issues on the rise in New Mexico

Some mental health issues on the rise in New Mexico

A recent report by KFF, a foundation that provides health policy analysis, found mental health issues on the rise and disparities in mental health…
Heinrich questions FDA leadership on baby formula safety, mifepristone

Heinrich questions FDA leadership on baby formula safety, mifepristone

U.S. Food and Drug Administration Commissioner Dr. Robert Califf answered questions about the safety of human milk formula and mifepristone on Wednesday. Sen. Martin…
Health workers fear it’s profits before protection as CDC revisits airborne transmission

Health workers fear it’s profits before protection as CDC revisits airborne transmission

Amy Maxmen, KFF Health News Four years after hospitals in New York City overflowed with covid-19 patients, emergency physician Sonya Stokes remains shaken by…
Harris could excite Democratic voters on reproductive health

Harris could excite Democratic voters on reproductive health

Data indicates Vice President Kamala Harris could excite the Democratic base around the issue of abortion in a way that President Joe Biden struggled…
Reproductive rights groups endorse Vice President Kamala Harris for president

Reproductive rights groups endorse Vice President Kamala Harris for president

Vice President Kamala Harris, who announced on Sunday her intention to replace President Joe Biden as the presidential Democratic nominee, received immediate support from…
Heinrich files amendment to protect reproductive rights for the military

Heinrich files amendment to protect reproductive rights for the military

U.S. Sen. Martin Heinrich filed an amendment on Tuesday to codify a rule protecting veteran access to abortion in the case of rape, incest…
Supreme Court upends environmental and reproductive rights protections

Supreme Court upends environmental and reproductive rights protections

Two years after the U.S. Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade, the high court overturned another long-standing precedent on Friday that could undue both…
Supreme Court dismisses abortion case, advocates say it keeps legal questions open

Supreme Court dismisses abortion case, advocates say it keeps legal questions open

The Supreme Court punted on Thursday on a second abortion decision it heard this term, leaving open the question of whether a federal law…
Biden will protect reproductive access, Health Secretary says during a multi-state reproductive access tour 

Biden will protect reproductive access, Health Secretary says during a multi-state reproductive access tour 

U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Xavier Becerra said at a Planned Parenthood space for LGBTQ youth in Albuquerque that if President Joe Biden…
Harris could excite Democratic voters on reproductive health

Harris could excite Democratic voters on reproductive health

Data indicates Vice President Kamala Harris could excite the Democratic base around the issue of abortion in a way that President Joe Biden struggled…
Reproductive rights groups endorse Vice President Kamala Harris for president

Reproductive rights groups endorse Vice President Kamala Harris for president

Vice President Kamala Harris, who announced on Sunday her intention to replace President Joe Biden as the presidential Democratic nominee, received immediate support from…
Talking to NM Democratic delegates after Biden leaves race, endorses Harris

Talking to NM Democratic delegates after Biden leaves race, endorses Harris

President Joe Biden ended his re-election campaign on Sunday leaving questions about what happens to the ballot now. Rules were already in place for…
MLG public safety town hall draws crowd

MLG public safety town hall draws crowd

Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham held the first of three planned public safety town hall meetings in Las Cruces on Thursday to promote her special…
Harris could excite Democratic voters on reproductive health

Harris could excite Democratic voters on reproductive health

Data indicates Vice President Kamala Harris could excite the Democratic base around the issue of abortion in a way that President Joe Biden struggled…
Reproductive rights groups endorse Vice President Kamala Harris for president

Reproductive rights groups endorse Vice President Kamala Harris for president

Vice President Kamala Harris, who announced on Sunday her intention to replace President Joe Biden as the presidential Democratic nominee, received immediate support from…

GET INVOLVED

© 2023 New Mexico Political Report