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Acupuncture
Adaptive Therapeutic Recreational Equipment and Fees
Adaptive Therapeutic Recreational Equipment and Fees services help a child have recreation in his or her community. Recreational equipment is adapted specifically to the child's disability. It does not include items a typical-age child would commonly need as a recreation item.
Recreational equipment examples include adaptive bicycles, adaptive strollers, adaptive toys, floatation collars for swimming, and balls with internal auditory devices. Services include admission fees for recreation centers only when the pass is needed to access professional services or to achieve or maintain a specific therapy goal as recommended and supervised by a doctor or therapist. Water safety trainings that are distinct from swimming lessons may be covered.
Waiver(s) which include this service:
Adult Day Services
Adult Day Services help you live independently in the community. Services are given in an Adult Day Center. Services include basic social and health services such as:
- Social and recreational services
- Help with daily activities like eating, dressing, and bathing
- Emergency services
- Nutrition services
- Health monitoring services
- Medication supervision
- Special services for more complex needs
Alternative Care Facility (ACF)
- 24-hour oversight
- Medication Administration
- Personal Care
- Homemaker Services
You pay the full cost of room and board and may have to share the cost of the services.
Assistive Technology
Assistive technology includes services, supports, or devices that help to increase, maintain or improve your ability to perform daily tasks. Services may include:
- Evaluating needs
- Choosing, buying, and using a device
- Designing, fitting, customizing, adapting, applying, maintaining, repairing, and replacing devices
- Training and technical assistance
For the Children's Extensive Support (CES) and Supported Living Services (SLS) waivers, there is a combined $10,000 maximum over the 5-year waiver period for the Assistive Technology, Home Accessibility Adaptations, and Vehicle Modifications benefits. This amount may be exceeded with prior approval.
Behavioral Management and Education
Behavioral Therapies
- Intensive developmental behavioral therapies developed specific to the member's needs including conditioning, biofeedback, or reinforcement techniques.
- Treatment goals that are consistent with building elementary verbal skills, teaching imitation, establishing appropriate toy play or interactive play with other children, teaching appropriate expression of emotions and behaviors, and where necessary, reducing self-stimulation and aggressive behaviors.
- One-on-one behavior therapy is conducted with the member and Line Staff, following a specific protocol established by the Lead Therapist.
- Directed towards instruction on therapies and use of equipment specified in the Care Plan.
- Carried out in the presence of and for the direct benefit of the member.
- Conducted by the Line Staff.
Benefits Planning
Bereavement Counseling
Case Management
Case management is assistance provided by a case management agency on behalf of an eligible member, which includes referral of needed Health First Colorado (Colorado's Medicaid Program) services and supports that enable you to remain in your community-based setting.
A case manager is responsible for:
- Assessing your long-term care needs,
- Developing and implementing your care plan,
- Coordinating and monitoring the delivery services and providers,
- Evaluating the effectiveness of the services, and
- Periodically re-assessing your needs.
Child and Youth Mentorship
Chiropractic
HCBS Waiver for Complementary and Integrative Health
Community Connector Services
These services provide assistance to the child to enable them to integrate into their residential community and access naturally occurring resources. Community connector services:
- Supports the abilities and skills necessary to enable the child to access typical activities and functions of community life.
- Utilizes the community as a learning environment to assist the child to build relationships and natural supports in the child's residential community.
- Are provided to a single child in a variety of settings in which children interact with individuals without disabilities.
Consumer Directed Attendant Support Services (CDASS)
- Personal Care services are available when they are not Health First Colorado benefits. Personal care services help you with daily tasks that you typically do for yourself but are unable to. Services may include skin, nail, hair, and mouth care, bathing, shaving, dressing, eating, walking, exercise, transferring, positioning, toileting, and respiratory care.
Services may also include the attendant going grocery shopping with you, going with you to an appointment to help with Personal Care services, and Protective Oversight for certain supervision needs.
- Homemaker services include help with general household activities that maintain a healthy and safe living environment. Activities may include housekeeping, preparing meals, doing laundry, light house cleaning, bed making, and shopping.
- Health Maintenance Services may include helping you with health care tasks related to care for the skin, nails, or mouth, dressing, feeding, toileting, exercise, transferring, medical management, or respiratory care.
Services must be pre-approved by your SEP/CCB Case Manager.
Day Habilitation Services
- Specialized Habilitation Services help you reach your highest skill level so you can be more self-sufficient. Services include help with self-feeding, toileting, self-care, sensory stimulation, and integration, self-sufficiency, maintenance skills, and supervision.
Specialized Habilitation Services may be coordinated with physical, occupational, or speech therapy.
- Supported Community Connections Services support the abilities and skills needed for you to access typical activities of community life. These include community education or training, and retirement and volunteer activities.
These services give opportunities to create and build relationships and natural supports in the community.
Day Treatment
Expressive Therapy
HCBS Waiver for Children with Life-Limiting Illness
Family Caregiver
Family Caregiver is a term used to refer to a person who provides residential support. 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, to a member of their family who receives Medicaid waiver services under the Home and Community-Based Services Developmental Disabilities (HCBS-DD) waiver. A Family Caregiver provides emotional and physical support with activities of daily living such as bathing, dressing, eating, money management, etc. Family Caregivers are employed or contracted through a Provider Agency to be paid providers and must reside within the same home as the member receiving services for at least 75% of the time. Family Caregivers are responsible for adhering to the same regulations as a Host Home provider.
Habilitation
Habilitation services are a twenty-four (24) hour residential program within the Children's Habilitation Residential Program waiver. It is distinct from the Residential Habilitation services in the adult waivers. Habilitation services can be provided to children and youth who require additional support to remain safely in their homes and community. Habilitation services include independent living training, self-advocacy training, cognitive services, emergency assistance, community access support, support for behavioral and therapeutic interventions, and medical supports.
Waiver(s) which include this service:
Health Maintenance
Routine and repetitive health-related tasks furnished to you in the community or in your home, which are necessary for health and normal bodily functioning that a person with a disability is unable to physically carry out. This service may include helping you with health care tasks related to care for the skin, nails, or mouth, dressing, feeding, toileting, exercise, transferring, medical management, or respiratory care.
This service is included in:
Consumer Directed Attendant Support Services (CDASS)
In-Home Support Services (IHSS)
Hippotherapy
Hippotherapy uses the movement of the horse to assist in the development or enhancement of skills including gross motor, sensory integration, attention, cognitive, social, behavior, and communication.
Home Accessibility Modifications and Adaptations
- Installing or building ramps
- Installing grab-bars and other Durable Medical Equipment (DME) as part of a larger Home Modification project
- Widening doorways
- Modifying bathrooms
- Modifying kitchen facilities
- Installing specialized electric and plumbing systems that are necessary to accommodate medically necessary equipment and supplies.
Regular homeowner maintenance and modifications that are not a direct benefit to you are not covered under the Home Accessibility and Modifications Adaptations benefit.
Home Delivered Meals
Home Delivered Meals benefit includes nutritional counseling, planning, preparation, and delivery of meals. You must have a demonstrated need documented in your service plan for nutritional counseling, meal planning, meal preparation, dietary restrictions or specific nutritional needs, inability to prepare your own meals, limited assistance, and/or, inability to access and prepare nutritious meals.
To be eligible for Home Delivered Meals you must be:
- Transitioning from an institutional setting to a home and community-based setting,
- Transitioning from a more restrictive community setting to a less restrictive community setting, or
- Experiencing a change in life circumstance.
Home Delivered Meals may be used for up to 365 days following the first day the service is provided.
Homemaker Services
- Routine light housecleaning, such as dusting, vacuuming, mopping, and cleaning bathroom and kitchen areas
- Meal preparation
- Dishwashing
- Bed making
- Laundry
- Shopping
- Teaching the skills listed above to you if you are capable of learning to do such tasks for yourself. Teaching shall result in a decrease in weekly units required within ninety days. If such savings in service units is not realized, teaching shall be deleted from the care plan.
- Personal care services
- Services you can perform independently
- Services provided by family members
- Homemakers Services provided in uncertified congregate facilities are not a benefit
Hospital Back-Up
- Be hospitalized in an acute hospital and deemed clinically stable and ready for discharge,
- Have no option for discharge home or in a class I. nursing facility due to level of care needs,
- Meet long-term care eligibility as determined by the Single Entry Point (SEP) pursuant to 10 CCR 2505-10, Section 8.110.30.A,
- Meet clinical criteria as outlined in 10 CCR 2505-10, Section 8.470 as determined by the State Utilization Review Contractor (SURC),
- Be accepted by an HBU-certified skilled nursing facility
Independent Living Skills Training (ILST)
Independent Living Skills Training helps you stay in the community by helping you learn how to take care of yourself more independently. Training services may be given in the home or community.
Services may include:
- Assessment, training, supervision, and help for self-care
- Benefits Coordination
- Communication skills
- Household management
- Interpersonal skills
- Medication supervision and reminders
- Money management
- Recreation
- Resource coordination
- Safety awareness
- Sensory/motor
- Task completion
- Time management
Waiver(s) or programs which include this service:
In-Home Support Services allow you to choose your own agency-based attendants and direct your own care. You can hire, schedule, manage, supervise, train, and fire your attendant. Services include Personal Care, Homemaker Services, and Health Maintenance Services.
- Personal Care services are available when they are not Health First Colorado benefits. Personal Care services help you with daily tasks that you typically do for yourself but are unable to. Services may include skin, nail, hair, and mouth care, bathing, shaving, dressing, eating, walking, exercise, transferring, positioning, toileting, and respiratory care.
Services may also include the attendant going grocery shopping with you, going with you to an appointment to help with Personal Care services, and Protective Oversight for certain supervision needs.
- Homemaker Services include help with general household activities that maintain a healthy and safe living environment. Activities may include housekeeping, preparing meals, doing laundry, light housecleaning, bed making, and shopping.
- Health Maintenance Services may include helping you with health care tasks related to care for the skin, nails, or mouth, dressing, feeding, toileting, exercise, transferring, medical management, or respiratory care.
Life Skills Training
Life Skills Training services are individualized training, provided in your residence, the community, or group living situation, that is designed and directed with you to develop and maintain your ability to independently sustain yourself in the community.
To be eligible for Life Skills Training you must be:
- Transitioning from an institutional setting to a home and community-based setting,
- Transitioning from a more restrictive community setting to a less restrictive community setting, or
- Experiencing a change in life circumstance.
Life Skills Training may be used for up to 365 days following the first day the service is provided.
Long-Term Home Health
Home Health Services are provided in a member's place of residence to prevent institutionalization and hospitalization. The services must be medically necessary, provided for treatment of illness, for disability, services must be reasonable in amount, duration, and frequency.
More Information about Long-Term Home Health
Massage Therapy
Services are limited based on your assessed need for services, physician's orders, and prior authorization by case managers up to the cost containment parameters.
Medication Reminder
Mental Health Counseling (Individual, Family or Group)
Mental Health Counseling services help you and your support system better manage and overcome the difficulties and stresses faced by people with a brain injury. These services are in addition to the counseling services available through Health First Colorado basic services and do not replace those services. Services may be in the home, community, or provider's office.
Services include individual and group mental health counseling. They include services to family members who have a major role in supporting you or who live with or care for you. Services need pre-approval after 30 visits in individual, family, or group settings combined.
Mental Health Transitional Living Homes
Mental Health Transitional Living Home (MHTL) services are available to members who are determined functionally eligible and enrolled in the HCBS Community Mental Health Supports (CMHS) waiver. The MHTL service addresses the need for a residential behavioral health setting for Medicaid members who need step-down, transitional living in the community post-institutionalization at the State’s Mental Health Institutes. Staff is specifically trained to support members with severe and persistent mental illness who may experience mental health episodes.
Services include:
- 24-hour protective oversight
- Recreational and social opportunities
- Assistance with accessing the community
- Supervision of ADLs
- Medication management
- Life skills training
The member pays the full cost of room and board and may have to share the cost of the services.
Waiver(s) that include this service:
Mentorship
Mentorship services help promote self-advocacy. Methods include instructing, giving experiences, modeling, and advising. This service helps you interview potential providers, understand complicated health and safety issues, and serve on private and public boards, advisory groups, and commissions.
This service may also include training in child and infant care for parents who have an intellectual or developmental disability.
Movement Therapy
Movement therapy includes music and dance therapy for the habilitation, rehabilitation, and maintenance of behavioral, developmental, physical, social, communication, or gross motor skills. It also helps with pain management and cognition.
HCBS Children's Extensive Support Waiver
HCBS Children's Habilitation Residential Program Waiver
Palliative and Supportive Care
Palliative and Supportive Care services help lessen the child's symptoms, pain, and stress. They improve the child's quality of life. Services can be provided at the same time as curative treatment. Services include:
- Care coordination: A care plan is developed. There are regular home visits to monitor the child's health and safety. Services are coordinated.
- Pain and symptom management: A registered nurse manages the child's symptoms and pain in the home. This includes pain and symptom assessments and in-home visits.
Primary Caregiver Education
Peer Mentorship
Services provided by peers to promote self-advocacy and encourage community living by instructing and advising on issues and topics related to community living, describing real-world experiences as examples, and modeling successful community living and problem-solving.
To be eligible for Peer Mentorship you must be:
- Transitioning from an institutional setting to a home and community-based setting,
- Transitioning from a more restrictive community setting to a less restrictive community setting, or
- Experiencing a change in life circumstance.
Peer Mentorship Services may be used for up to 365 days following the first day the service is provided.
Waiver(s) or programs which include this service:
Personal Care Services
Services may also include the attendant going grocery shopping with you and going with you to an appointment to help with Personal Care services, and Protective Oversight for certain supervision needs.
Services may include Homemaker Services if given along with Personal Care services.
Personal Emergency Response System
Personal Emergency Response System (PERS) allows you to live safely in your home and call for help in an emergency. You may get a PERS if you live alone for most or all of the day, or your companion is too impaired to help in an emergency. You may get a portable "help" button to wear so you can move around.
Pre-Vocational Services
Pre-Vocational Services help you learn good work habits and skills to help you get paid work or unpaid community work within 5 years. Examples of good work habits and skills include following directions, good attendance, completing tasks, solving problems, and being safe.
Prevocational services encompass the following types of work-related activities:
- teaching you such concepts as following directions, attending to tasks, task completion, communication, decision-making, and problem-solving,
- training in the areas of safety, self-advocacy, and mobility,
- intervention and training needed to benefit from Prevocational services which would allow common barriers to participation to be avoided, and,
- travel training services may include providing, arranging, transporting, or accompanying you to Pre-vocational services and supports identified in the plan of care.
Remote Supports
Remote Supports provides live 2-way communication for personal care and/or homemaker from an off-site location to help you complete on-demand daily tasks in your home that do not need hands-on assistance.
Remote Supports can be used for personal care or homemaker tasks you and your care team decide would support safety, health, and independence. Services may include prompts for dressing, cooking support, overnight support, and fall detection.
Remote Supports Technology purchase and installation are available.
More information about Remote Supports
Residential Habilitation Services and Supports
Residential Habilitation Services and Supports help you stay safe and healthy and teach skills needed to live in the community. Services include assessment and evaluation, training materials, transportation, fees, and supplies. You can live in:
- Individual Residential Services and Supports (IRSS) has up to 3 people living together
- Group Residential Services and Supports (GRSS) has 4 to 8 people living together in a Residential Care Facility or Residential Community Home
- A qualified family home
Services in both IRSS and GRSS may include training in self-advocacy, independent living, money management, decision-making, and emergency assistance. Services may include counseling, behavioral therapy, and other therapeutic interventions. They may also include medical and health care services to meet your daily needs. These include giving medications, community access services, travel services, and supervision to help you stay safe.
Waiver(s) which include this service:
HCBS Waiver for Persons with Developmental Disabilities
Respite
Specialized Medical Equipment and Supplies
- Kitchen equipment required for the preparation of special diets if this results in cost savings over prepared foods,
- Specially designed clothing if the cost is over and above the costs generally incurred for regular clothing,
- Maintenance and upkeep of specialized medical equipment purchased through the waivers.
Substance Use Counseling
Substance Use Counseling services help you and your support system better manage and overcome substance use issues often faced by people with brain injuries. These services are in addition to counseling services available through Health First Colorado basic services. They are not intended to replace those services. Services may be in the home, community, or provider's office.
Services include individual and group mental health Substance Use counseling. They include services to family members who have a major role in supporting you or who live with you or care for you. Services need pre-approval after 30 visits in individual, family, or group settings combined.
HCBS Waiver for Persons with Developmental Disabilities
HCBS Supported Living Services Waiver
Supported Living Program (SLP)
The Supported Living Program (SLP) is a specialized assisted living service for people with brain injuries. Residences are certified. Services include 24-hour oversight, assessment, training, and supervision of self-care, medication management, behavioral management, and cognitive supports. They also include interpersonal and social skills development.
You pay the full cost of room and board and may have to share the cost of the services.
Transition Coordination
Transition Coordination is a Health First Colorado (Colorado's Medicaid Program) State Plan benefit under Targeted Case Management and is provided to members 18 years and older.
Transition Coordination involves activities essential to move a member from a nursing facility, Intermediate Care Facility for Individuals with Intellectual Disabilities (ICF/IID), or Regional Center and establish a community-based residence. Services are provided by a Transition Coordination Agency (TCA).
These case management services facilitate a process to complete a community needs assessment for Health First Colorado State Plan services and non-Health First Colorado supports and services to support the members' return to the community from placement in a qualified facility and to aid the member in attaining their transition and independent living goals.
Waiver(s) or programs which include this service:
Available through Targeted Case Management Services, a State Plan benefit, for members 18 years or older.
Transition Set-up Services are the coordination and coverage of a one-time, non-recurring expense to establish a basic household upon transition from a nursing facility, Intermediate Care Facility for Individuals with Intellectual Disabilities (ICF/IID), or Regional Center to a community living setting.
To be eligible for Transitions Setup you must be transitioning from an institutional setting to a home and community-based setting.
Setup Services are not available when transitioning into a provider-owned setting, such as an Alternative Care Facility, Host Home, Group Home, or Supportive Living Program. Setup services are not available in a community-to-community transition.
Transitional Living Program (TLP)
The Transitional Living Program (TLP) offers you intensive services in an assisted living setting if you were recently injured for people with recent brain injuries. Services are to help you transition back home. The services are given only within 18 months of a first brain injury or 3 months of a second brain injury with a hospital stay. Services are generally limited to 6 months.
Services may include assessment, training, and supervision of self-care, medication management, communication skills, interpersonal skills, socialization, sensory/motor skills, money management, household management, physical therapy, occupational therapy, or speech therapy.
You pay the full cost of room and board and may have to share the cost of the services.
Therapeutic Life-Limiting Illness Support
Vehicle Modifications
Vehicle Modifications are adaptations or alterations to a car, truck, or van that is your primary vehicle to accommodate your special needs. These changes must be needed to enable you to integrate more fully into the community, and to ensure your health and safety. Services include changes to the vehicle, and upkeep and maintenance of the changes made to the vehicle. All modifications must be the most cost-effective means of meeting the need.
Services do not include regular vehicle upkeep and maintenance, vehicle purchase or lease, or modifications that are not a direct benefit to the member. There is a combined $10,000 maximum over the 5-year waiver period for the Assistive Technology, Home Accessibility Adaptations, and Vehicle Modifications benefits for the Children's Extensive Support (CES) and Supported Living Services (SLS) waivers. This amount may be exceeded with prior approval.
Vision Services
Eye exams, diagnosis, glasses, contacts, and other services must be medically necessary.
Lasik and similar procedures must be medically appropriate and pre-approved by your CCB.
- Eye exams and diagnosis
- Glasses, except after surgery
- Contacts
- Other medically necessary methods used to improve specific dysfunctions of the vision systems.
- Lasik and other similar types of procedures are only prior approved and allowable when the procedure is necessary due to documented specific behavioral complexities (i.e. constant destruction of eyeglasses) that make other more traditional remedies impractical.
Wraparound Services
- Wraparound Planning addresses steps to implement support strategies and prevent and or manage a future crisis. The wraparound plan should incorporate all relevant strategies and other treatment plans into one comprehensive stabilization plan.
- Prevention and Monitoring services include ongoing evaluations to ensure that crisis triggers have been addressed to maintain stabilization and prevent a future crisis.