NYS TBI Waiver complaints: the fix is in

If you are on the NYS Traumatic Brain Injury Waiver and you file a complaint with the NYS Department of Health you will never be told the outcome. The DOH has it fixed so they don’t have to tell you. Their complaint line agreement  with the Brain Injury Association of NYS does not require them too to tell you. More moral and ethical corruption from the state’s leading renegade agency which makes a laughing stock of the new governor and the new DOH commissioner.

If you are one of the nearly 3,000 New York adults on the waiver you are told to call the waiver complaint line  fielded by the Brain Injury Association of NYS. BIANYS staff will always treat you with respect and compassion. However, that might be the end of your respect and compassion experience unless of course someone from the RRDC’s (Regional Resource Development Center’s) office calls you to ask about your complaint and there too, you might, though not always, get treated with compassion. RRDCs across the state are contracted with DOH to oversee waiver providers and participants in their respective regions.

After your talk with someone from the RRDC’s office (there are many instances where you don’t even get that much attention), all compassion and respect stops. You will never learn the outcome of your complaint.  Several sources around the state have told this writer that the DOH makes it clear they want the complaints minimized if not ignored and abandoned altogether.

This is ethical corruption pure and simple and it needs to stop. Groups like the TBISCC, BIANYS and DOH need to address this as soon as possible.

The following is the actual complaint line protocol:

TBI Complaint Line Protocol – Updated 1/2010

1. BIANYS conducts complaint intake and completes the BIANYS portion of the complaint form.
2. BIANYS emails complaint to DOH TBI Waiver Program.
3. DOH staff emails the complaint intake form to RRDCs. (If determined a Serious Reportable Incident, DOH staff contacts RRDS immediately by phone and check the  appropriate SRI box on the form. DOH staff will follow up by emailing the complaint intake form to RRDS.) In those instances where the complaint is directed at the RRDC, DOH assumes responsibility to investigate.
4. RRDC confirms receipt of the complaint with DOH.
5. RRDC staff contacts the participant within two business days that the complaint has been received and investigation is in process.
6. RRDS investigates the complaint and completes the RRDS portion of the complaint form.
7. RRDS returns the completed form back to DOH within 30 days.
8. BIANYS will be notified when the complaint is closed via email.
9. BIANYS will provide DOH a monthly report of complaints.
10. DOH waiver staff meets monthly to review open complaints & discuss outstanding issues.

Essential Elements of RRDC Investigation

a) Provide a brief description/summary of the complaint.
b) Provide pertinent demographic information of the participant and any other people related to the complaint.
c) Provide a summary of all completed interviews or statements of fact.
d) Provide a summary of documents and any evidence reviewed.
e) Provide a description of your findings and analysis of the event.
f) Describe all corrective actions taken.
g) Describe the current status of the complaint and/or participant and any conclusions indicated by the investigation. The Complaint Form must indicate the final status and disposition of the complaint e.g. allegation/complaint confirmed/substantiated, allegation disconfirmed
h) Complaints are to be maintained in a regional and DOH database and reviewed on an annual basis to establish trends, patterns and systemic issues.

 

NYS DOH Threatens Advocate’s Home

In what can best be described as an astonishing but not-surprising act of callousness, the NYS Department of Health has decided to take away a housing subsidy it already approved for a brain injury advocate. They say they are doing this because of paperwork mistakes – paperwork mistakes they made.

It will come as no surprise that I am the advocate in question and it will certainly come as no surprise that Maribeth Gnozzio aka Maribeth Janiszewski of New Jersey corruption fame played a role in the decision.

Here’s the background. I am on the state’s Traumatic Brain Injury Waiver. Earlier this year with the help of my case manager, they are called service coordinators in TBI Waiver parlance, I applied for a housing subsidy. The application made its way through the process and the DOH approved it. However, the DOH  approved the housing subsidy under the states’ Nursing Home Transition Waiver, or the NHTD Waiver as it is commonly called. Now, because of their mistake (Was it a mistake? Or was it a set-up as some are already asking) they’ve decided I’ll pay for their mistake and lose the subsidy.

I’ve been told my subsidy will end as of July 31st and, well, that’s just too bad as far as DOH is concerned. When my case manager had a phone conference with them, who was on the call, making sure no flexibility was allowed? Gnozzio.

When the idea of my transitioning from the TBI Waiver to the NHTD Waiver was proposed, the answer was sure, he can transition, but he still loses the subsidy, too bad if he loses his home.

They should stop calling themselves the Department of Health because health is the last thing they’re concerned with. Maybe they should just call themselves, the Department.

It seems likely I will be approved for a Section 8 subsidy in the next few months, unless, of course, the DOH can find a way to sabotage that too. Bridging the gap between subsidies is the dangerous part of the equation.

If you are wondering if the DOH’s behavior  is going to make me back off on my advocacy, not a chance. After all, I’ve been shot in the head at point blank range. I’m not about to be intimidated by a renegade state agency nor some pitiful corruption story from New Jersey.

Notes on NYS’s TBI Council

You simply can’t make it up.

The Traumatic Brain Injury Services Coordinating Council meeting Monday was chaired by Michael Kaplen who flashed some anger during the meeting which would have been laughable were it not so disrespectful of council members and, frankly, brain injury survivors. It earned Kaplen the crown for the meeting’s most despicable moments. On top of that, the NYS Department of Health’s report on the status of the state’s TBI Waiver is something you would have missed if you made the mistake of blinking.

Kaplen’s inexcusably despicable moments came in the wake of an attempt by a brain injury survivor in the audience to ask a question. Kaplen interrupted the survivor telling him there was a protocol which required members of the public to wait until all council members had asked their questions. Kaplen, who is forever proclaiming himself  an expert in brain injury, seems to have forgotten that some who live with brain injuries have memory challenges and may not remember  their questions. When council member Bill Combes of the state’s Commission on the Quality of Care offered to cede his question time to the survivor, Kaplen became visibly angry with Combes. Kaplen was equally angry with council member Barry Dain who pointed out that survivors of brain injury are often faced with cognitive challenges that include memory deficits.

Kaplen’s finger-wagging anger is childish in the best light, bully-like in the worst, and clearly not the kind of behavior one wants in a council member much less the council’s chair.  As for the protocol he referenced, neither the council’s bylaws nor Robert’s Rules of Order – something council bylaws require the council follow – preclude the  council from allowing members of the public to ask questions during the meeting. Kaplen apparently does not feel he is beholden to Robert’s Rules which require that remarks by council members “be courteous in language and deportment.”

When the DOH’s Charlotte Mason reported on the status of the TBI Waiver she said all things were pretty much the same as they were at the time of the last council meeting, entirely omitting the fact the DOH ended the statewide neurobehavioral project with no discernible transition plan in place, leaving everyone with no concrete reason to believe plans have been made to continue those badly needed services in any shape, manner or form. Moreover, Mason did not mention the DOH’s continued assault on services being received by waiver participants nor what some consider a willful effort to discharge as many people from the waiver as possible. Other than council vice-chair Judith Avner asking about the end of the neurobehavioral contract and Combes asking if the DOH had any information about service coordinators being prevented from siding with their clients at Medicaid Fair Hearings, council members asked not a single question about the TBI Waiver.

The DOH’s Mary Ann Anglin answered Combes’ question by indicating a document was being prepared addressing the fair hearings matter which was indeed the very same thing the DOH said months ago.

Is it any wonder members of the real advocacy community and some members of the council itself are clearly frustrated with a council that seems to do just about everything but follow its mandate which, according to its own bylaws, includes “recommending to the (NYS) Department (of Health) long range objectives, goals and priorities. It shall also provide advice on the planning, coordination and development of services needed to meet the needs of persons with traumatic brain injury and their families” and a council that seeks to anything but hold the DOH accountable for its actions?

While both Bill Kraus, acting director of the NYS Division of Veteran’s Affairs, and Tim Donovan of the SUNY Youth Sports Institute, offered impressive presentations about how their respective groups were addressing the challenge of brain injury, Kaplen questioned both men choosing to focus on what they weren’t doing rather than giving them well-deserved credit for the good work they are doing.

During the public comment session at meetings end this writer asked two things of the the council on behalf of the Kahrmann Advocacy Coalition:

  1. To review the current TBI Waiver complaint agreement  between the DOH and the Brain Injury Association of NY State. The current protocol does not require the DOH to inform complainants of the outcome of their complaints. To my knowledge, complainants are never informed. The current complaint line protocol  is absent all presence of justice and is morally and ethically corrupt.
  2. To hold public hearings and invite survivors of brain injury, their family and friends, as well as providers of TBI Waiver services, to report to the council on what they are experiencing with the TBI Waiver.

This writer has filed a FOIL request for all council minutes. It will be interesting to learn how much recommending the council has actually done under Kaplen’s watch and under the watch of his predecessor, Charles Wolf. How many proposals has the council actually presented to the DOH and what has been their fate? Those of us who live with brain injuries as well as our loved ones and the providers across the state who try to help us have a right to know.

It was, I am sure, no coincidence that no copies of meeting minutes were made available for the public at Monday’s meeting. You can request copies of the TBISCC minutes by emailing Cheryl Veith at the DOH: cld02@health.state.ny.us You can also ask that you be put on the mailing list to receive notice of upcoming meeting and copies of the agendas as the become available. The next TBISCC meeting is September 12.

 

NYS DOH ends contract with Feeney

It seems the efforts of this pen, the Kahrmann Advocacy Coalition, and others have finally paid off. Sources say the NYS Department of Health has cancelled its contract with Timothy J. Feeney et al effective the end of this month.

This writer revealed in 2008 that Mr. Feeney  misrepresents his educational credentials. He claims to have a valid masters degree and PhD when he has neither. Over the past three years this writer along with other real advocates – not the lip-service advocates in the state who seek headlines based on words not actions – have worked hard to have Mr. Feeney removed from his post in the Statewide Neurobehavioral Project, a group that was affiliated with the state’s Traumatic Brain Injury Waiver. Sources say the DOH has terminated the contract in its entirety.

Those who know me well, I mean really know me well, know I take no pleasure in Mr. Feeney’s demise nor in the demise of the other staff that worked in the project. However, like all of us, they are accountable for their choices. I am, however, very glad that survivors of brain injuries on the TBI Waiver, their families, and the many truly good providers of waiver services will no longer have to deal with Mr. Feeney. Life with brain damage is tough enough, dealing with dishonest people at the same time you are trying to learn how to manage life makes it all the tougher.

I have little doubt Mr. Feeney will continue to misrepresent himself in any venue he can. Hopefully others will be pick up where the DOH  left off and require he be honest or remove him from the field.

The NYS DOH has very little to be proud of when it comes to its oversight of the TBI Waiver; however, it can be proud of the decision to end the contract.

TBISCC Agenda for Monday, June 20, 2011

Note to blog readers: This is a public meeting. If you want to comment during public comment time at end of meeting, be sure to put your name on the public comment sheet when you arrive so you get your chance.

TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY SERVICES COORDINATING COUNCIL

NYS Department of Health

Empire State Plaza, NYS Museum Meeting Rooms A & B

(Concourse level of NYS Museum)

Monday, June 20, 2011

10:30 AM – 3:30 PM

AGENDA

10:30am – 10:45am Welcome, Introduction of New Member,  Review and Approval of Minutes from December 6, 2010 and April 14, 2011 Meetings

10:45am – 12:00pm Training for Volunteer Coaches: Sports Concussion Awareness – Timothy Donovan, SUNY Youth Sports Institute

12:00pm – 12:45pm LUNCH (members on their own)

12:45pm – 1:10pm Subcommittee reports

· Healthcare Reform/Non-Waiver Service Needs

· Public Awareness/ Injury Prevention and Information Dissemination

1:10pm –1:40pm NYS Veterans’ Update on Brain Injury – Bill Kraus, Acting Director, New York State Division of Veterans’ Affairs

1:40pm – 1:45pm TBI Waiver Update-NYSDOH

1:45pm – 1:55pm TBI SCC – Vacancies/Expired Appointments – Cheryl Veith, NYSDOH

1:55pm – 2:05pm HRSA Grant Five Year Plan Update – Helen Hines, NYSDOH

2:05pm – 2:50pm Overview of Uniform Assessment System (UAS) – K. John Russell, Project Director – University at Albany, School of Public Health

2:50pm – 3:05pm Carry Over Issues from Last Meeting

3:05pm – 3:20pm Public Comment/Summary/Next Steps/Adjournment

3:20pm – 3:30pm Meeting Wrap-Up/Date for Next Meeting