Finding 387673 (2023-002)

Significant Deficiency Repeat Finding
Requirement
E
Questioned Costs
-
Year
2023
Accepted
2024-03-28

AI Summary

  • Core Issue: There were 51 technical errors in Medicaid case records, with discrepancies between county documentation and NC FAST resources.
  • Impacted Requirements: Documentation must verify resource calculations and agree with NC FAST to ensure eligibility determinations are accurate.
  • Recommended Follow-Up: Conduct internal reviews and retrain staff on proper documentation practices to prevent repeat findings and ensure compliance.

Finding Text

Criteria: Medicaid for Aged, Blind and Disabled case records should contain documentation that verifications were done in preparation of the application and these items will agree to reports in the NC FAST system. In this process, documentation should be present and agree back to the records in the NC FAST system. Any items discovered in the process should be considered resources and explained within the documentation. Condition: There were fifty-one (51) technical errors discovered during our procedures that resources in the county documentation and those same resources contained in NC FAST were not the same amounts or files containing resources were not properly documented to be considered countable or non-countable. The errors were as follows: Twenty-two (22) cases had instances of failure to complete at least one compliance component, Fifteen (15) cases of inaccurate resource calculations in NC FAST, Thirteen (13) cases of inaccurate budget calculations in NC FAST, One (1) case of evidence input error. Questioned Costs: There was no affect to eligibility and there were no questioned costs. Context: We examined 120 Medicaid transactions out of 863,934 to re-determine eligibility. These findings were disclosed in a separately issued spreadsheet to the North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services and are being reported with the financial statement audit as it relates to Medicaid administrative cost compliance audit. Effect: For those certifications/re-certifications there was a chance that information was not properly documented and reconciled to NC FAST which affect countable resource and a participant could have been approved for benefits that they were not eligible. Identification of a repeat finding: This is a repeat finding from the immediate previous audit, 2022-002. Cause: Ineffective record keeping and ineffective case review process, incomplete documentation, and incorrect application of rules for purposes of determining eligibility. Recommendation: Files should be reviewed internally to ensure proper documentation is in place for eligibility. Workers should be retrained on what files should contain and the importance of complete and accurate record keeping. We recommend that all files include online verifications, documented resources of income and those amounts agree to information in NC FAST. Views of responsible officials and planned corrective actions: The County agrees with the finding. Supervisors will perform second party reviews to ensure proper documentation is contained in files to support eligibility determinations. Workers will be retrained on what information should be maintained in case files, the importance of complete and accurate record keeping, and reserve calculations. The County finance office will also participate in the review process.

Corrective Action Plan

This finding is listed as a repeat finding on Technical Errors cited finding in previous audit 2021-002. The primary root causes of these findings were due to extreme staffing shortage in each unit and having inexperienced staff. Extreme staffing shortages have been a constant battle that Lenoir County has faced. The number of workers only consisted of a maximum of two workers to complete case actions for a normal staff unit of seven. The work increase has caused a significant impact on this unit, but the staff, lead workers, and supervisors make every effort to complete case actions in a timely manner. New staff members have been added but all are in training and have only been able to provide minimum assistance until training has been completed. Several trainings, staff meetings, and conferences have been conducted to streamline these errors and ensure that workers are applying policy to case actions correctly. Lenoir County will continue to implement the strategies and plan that ultimately works, and we strive for perfection in all actions that we complete, however, these steps will continue to be contingent upon maintaining the required staff and training staff to meet the accuracy level. Maintain the required accuracy standards rate of 96.8% or higher when determining eligibility for case actions, approvals, terminations and denials. Provide staff with the knowledge of the audit information, the performance improvement plan and what staff expectations are. Staff Meetings to be held November 15, 2023 to address audit findings and to start training process for staff to obtain knowledge needed to remain in compliance with policy standards. Run log reports on case actions completed by IMC workers and randomly complete three or more 2nd party reviews per day. Complete 100% 2nd party reviews on all new workers and pull findings within month of completion. New workers should be released from 100% 2nd party review process listed above when accuracy rating meets 98% for three consecutive months. Lead Workers turn in 2nd party reviews at least once per week or twice a week to be evaluated for error trends. Error trend reports are compiled by Lead Worker Supervisor and turned in monthly to Economic Services Administrator. Meetings held with Lead Workers, Medicaid Supervisors, Staffe Development Specialist and Administrator to evaluate error trends. Monthly trainings held, as needed, to review error trend findings of 2nd part reviews completed with staff. Proposed completion date for a policy compliance will start immediately and goal completion is set for February 1, 2024. Trainings conducted to remedy policy misinterpretations, by conducting monthly meetings, one-on-one conferences, and completion of remedial testing wither through the Learning Gateway or unit created tests.

Categories

Eligibility

Other Findings in this Audit

  • 387672 2023-001
    Significant Deficiency Repeat
  • 964114 2023-001
    Significant Deficiency Repeat
  • 964115 2023-002
    Significant Deficiency Repeat

Programs in Audit

ALN Program Name Expenditures
21.027 Coronavirus State and Local Fiscal Recovery Funds $3.10M
93.778 Medical Assistance Program $1.57M
93.563 Child Support Enforcement $1.12M
10.561 State Administrative Matching Grants for the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program $722,177
10.557 Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children $479,795
93.323 Epidemiology and Laboratory Capacity for Infectious Diseases (elc) $333,075
93.268 Immunization Cooperative Agreements $289,398
20.509 Formula Grants for Rural Areas and Tribal Transit Program $222,703
93.568 Low-Income Home Energy Assistance $144,881
93.596 Child Care Mandatory and Matching Funds of the Child Care and Development Fund $120,781
93.994 Maternal and Child Health Services Block Grant to the States $118,765
20.526 Buses and Bus Facilities Formula, Competitive, and Low Or No Emissions Programs $98,824
97.039 Hazard Mitigation Grant $88,037
93.391 Activities to Support State, Tribal, Local and Territorial (stlt) Health Department Response to Public Health Or Healthcare Crises $34,675
93.069 Public Health Emergency Preparedness $33,652
93.217 Family Planning_services $31,419
93.991 Preventive Health and Health Services Block Grant $30,601
93.116 Project Grants and Cooperative Agreements for Tuberculosis Control Programs $28,728
93.674 John H. Chafee Foster Care Program for Successful Transition to Adulthood $22,579
93.354 Public Health Emergency Response: Cooperative Agreement for Emergency Response: Public Health Crisis Response $17,820
93.558 Temporary Assistance for Needy Families $14,800
93.767 Children's Health Insurance Program $13,663
93.667 Social Services Block Grant $9,527
93.898 Cancer Prevention and Control Programs for State, Territorial and Tribal Organizations $7,410
93.556 Promoting Safe and Stable Families $4,979
93.071 Medicare Enrollment Assistance Program $4,824
93.658 Foster Care_title IV-E $3,674
93.645 Stephanie Tubbs Jones Child Welfare Services Program $1,190