A Renegade NYS Agency

There are, as you might guess,  state and private agencies who put great effort  into convincing the public at large that they truly care about the people they serve and are working very very hard to meet their needs. Peel back a  few layers of public-relations spin and you will oftentimes find nothing could be further than the truth. Too often the motive is to look rather than do good, and raise a little money while you’re at it.

A few people I work closely with are beginning to look deeper into the activities of a non-profit agency. As those of you who read this blog already know, the NYS Department of Health is a problem in nearly every sense of the word when it comes to the lives of brain injury survivors in the state. However, in fairness to the DOH, it does not fall into the category of an agency who tries to look good. It makes little to look good at all because it is hard to determine who is actually holding them accountable. They are an arrogant renegade state agency if their ever was one. The way they treated the TBISCC (Traumatic Brain Injury Services Coordinating Council) earlier this month reeks of arrogance.

The TBISCC, to its credit, has asked the DOH to speak on the problems with Medicaid Fair Hearings being faced by brain injury survivors on the state’s TBIU Waiver because the DOH last year gave a verbal directive blocking their case managers from advocating for them at the hearings. The day before the TBISCC’s meeting on April 14, the DOH notified TBISCC Chair Michael Kaplen that no one would be available to discuss the matter.

Now, this writer and others wrote to the DOH’s  Cheryl Veith asking her to put us on a several years old email-list that tells the public when the TBISCC is having its public meetings and sends out agendas and minutes when they become available. Apparently the DOH has decided the mailing list was too friendly. Ms. Veith responded with “We have recently implemented a process whereby announcement of scheduled TBICC meetings, minutes of the last meeting, and a draft agenda for the next scheduled meeting will be posted for the public to view on the Department of Health website at: www.nyhealth.gov/events/meetings/index.htm.”

Some who live with brain injuries live with memory deficits, processing challenges, and more. Wading through a website can be tantamount to climbing Mt. Everest without oxygen.  This fact has been shared with Ms. Veith and other DOH officials like Deputy Commissioner Mark Kissinger, Mary Ann Anglin, Lydia Kosinski and Carla Williams, all of whom will do their level best to convince anyone who crosses their path that they really really really care about brain injury survivors. So far, a large number of survivors and their families and healthcare professionals who work hard to help us think that’s bunk.

Reinstating the email list is, to use a phrase right out of the ADA, a reasonable accommodation for those of us who live with brain injuries. I doubt they will reinstate it   because for some time now there are two words no one links to the NYS DOH: reasonable and accommodating.

Actions Speak Louder than… (you know the rest)

Last year I had a face to face meeting with three officials from the New York State Department of Health: Mark Kissinger, deputy commissioner, Mary Ann Anglin, Division Director, and Carla Williams,  a deputy director and tough-guy wannabe.

Our conversation at the time, one the three officials insisted not be recorded, probably because Williams knew she was going to launch into what can best be described as laughable attempt to be intimidating, revolved around the state’s decision to sign a contract that would allow Timothy J. Feeney back into the state’s TBI waiver knowing full well he misrepresents his credentials. The contract was signed with STIC (Southern Tier Independence Center) in Binghamton. “STIC’s the one that’s on the hook” said Williams, mustering up a dramatically poor imitation of a snarling delivery. “If they don’t live up to the contract it’s on them.”

I left the meeting thinking there may have been at least some sincerity in their claim that survivors would be treated well and with respect and my oh my how all three said they cared so much. I was wrong, though, even now, I think Anglin might. I say I was wrong because Feeney while operating under the contract and being paid by your tax dollars continues to misrepresent his credentials and even though a complaint was filed with the DOH, they have not responded.  Why? They simply don’t care.

Don’t believe me? Ask them. Write to Kissinger at mlk15@health.state.ny.us or Anglin at Maa05@health.state.ny.us or Williams at Crw03@health.state.ny.us

If you want some real fun, write to the DOH’s Beth Gnozzio who issued a directive in a phone conference that TBI Waiver staff are not allowed to appear in support of their clients in Medicaid Fair Hearings. As her why she and the DOH refuse to put this directive in writing? Gnozzio can be reached at mjg07@health.state.ny.us

And copy me if you’d like. peterkahrmann@gmail.com

NY State DOH Communicates but…

If material presented by the New York State Department of Health  is to be believed, no DOH employee has ever mentioned Medicaid Fair Hearings in writing and the DOH has absolutely no policies and procedures when it comes to Medicaid Fair Hearings, not even one.

It is hard to imagine that the absence of any Medicaid Fair Hearing policies and procedures and the absence of any mention of them in writing by anyone in the DOH is anything but a willful act on the part of the DOH.

Some background. In December of last year this writer filed a FOIL (Freedom of Information Law)  request with the DOH seeking, and I quote:

Any and all policies and procedures and any and all emails or other forms of written or recorded communications that are related to Medicaid Fair Hearings.

– Any and all policies and procedures and any and all emails or other forms of written or recorded communications that are related to the state’s traumatic brain injury waiver, the RRDCs ( Regional Resource Development Centers) and RRDSs (Regional resource Development Specialists) and assistant RRDSs and their role in Medicaid Fair Hearings

– Any and all policies and procedures and any and all emails or other forms of written or recorded communication that are related to directives from DOH (and or contract employees of DOH) that relate to TBI Waiver providers and their role in Medicaid Fair Hearings

– Any and all information that relates to DOH Policies and Procedures that apply to Medicaid Fair Hearings

In response to this request I received only a training binder for fair hearing officers, that’s it.

A case in point: DOH employee Maribeth Gnozzio has a seemingly well-earned reputation for, with rare exception, not returning phone calls or emails. Nevertheless, she communicates rather frequently with the the Traumatic Brain Injury Waiver’s RRDCs  she is charged with overseeing across the state. The RRDCs oversee waiver providers and participants in different regions.

However, it seems that despite sending in the neighborhood of 3,658 emails to RRDCs in 2010, she too never mentions Medicaid Fair Hearings once. A remarkable feat indeed since several sources say it was Gnozzio who told RRDCs during a phone conferences last year that waiver providers are not to appear in support of waiver participants in Medicaid Fair Hearings, a nasty Machiavellian directive to say the least and a directive that can only be designed to undercut a waiver participant’s chances in a fair hearing. The results have no doubt  been brutal for more than one person living with a brain injury since it no coincidence that this rather sadistic DOH directive was issued at a time when there seems to be a wide-ranging effort to discharge people from the waiver or notify them their services are being cut. To send some of us who live with brain injuries into a Medicaid Fair Hearing without our waiver case managers can be like asking someone to climb Mount Everest without oxygen, and the DOH knows it.

Here is a regional breakdown of the approximate number of emails sent by Gnozzio to RRDCs in 2010:

Capital District – 226

Buffalo – 236

Long Island – 886

Lower Hudson Valley – 506

New York City – 704

Adirondacks – 244

Rochester – 140

Binghamton – 260

Syracuse – 130

Sent to all RRDCs – 326

A Dangerous Combination

What is becoming increasingly clear is the absence of regulations, the absence of clear cut policies and procedures, leadsto chaos and chaos leads to suffering. I am talking here about New York State’s Traumatic Brain Injury Waiver which is overseen by the state’s department of health. While recent posts have detailed the kind of callous treatment I’ve been enduring at the hands of the state’s DOH, I am not alone. Many are going through the same kind of experience throughout the state.

To date there are more than 50,000 readers of this blog and from time to time some of them take me to task, sometimes harshly. But, to their credit, their opinions are driven by the search for truth, a justifiable desire to hold me accountable, and, at times, a straight-up  difference of opinion. In other words, they hold my feet to the fire and sometimes when they take me to task, they are right. I’d be a fool to be anything but grateful to them, and I am. Very.

What is markedly absence from my readers when they take me to task is lip service. They say what they mean and mean what they say. The substance of their honesty is refreshing. They are a lesson in the absence of lip service, a lesson that ought to be learned by some in the department of health and even some in the advocacy community who say all the right things but do nothing. After all, we are talking about people’s lives, the quality of their lives and, in some cases, their ability to keep their lives.

A Dangerous Combination

The absence of regulations coupled with a penchant for lip service is a dangerous combination.

Some weeks ago I met with three DOH officials: Deputy Commissioner Mark Kissinger, Director of  Division of Home & Community Based Care Services Mary Ann Anglin,  and Deputy Director of the Office of Long Term Care Carla Williams. Truth be told, I genuinely like all three of them. Mr. Kissinger certainly seems to be a good and decent man whose heart is in the right place. Ms. Williams is an extremely sharp refreshingly no-nonsense individual and Ms. Anglin is an extraordinary thinker and communicator.

There are, however, two things (among others) that an advocate has to be careful about. One, as an advocate you can’t allow the fact you dislike someone or that someone dislikes you to drive your decisions. Conversely, you can’t allow the fact you like someone or that someone likes you to stop you from holding them accountable. Advocacy is not pain-free.

During this meeting Carla Williams said the state’s TBI Waiver is the best of its kind in the country. Well, a couple of things. Certainly having a waiver is far better than not having a waiver. No argument there. But, if New York’s waiver is the best in the country, that doesn’t say much for the waivers in other states, because New York’s waiver, which is absent any clear regulations, is, sadly, a minefield of dysfunction.

The Providers Alliance, a group of about 40 companies that provide waiver services has clearly documented that no clear-cut billing policy for waiver providers around the state exist and this has proven highly problematic and costly, both for the providers and survivors.

There have been instances, for example, when a doctor will issue a written order directing that a survivor needs staff to be with him or her throughout the day. The provider is compelled to, wants to and does provide the staff right away. The problem is there are times the DOH has not signed off on the service and may not do so for weeks, which means the provider may not get reimbursed for the service they’re providing.

To its absolute credit, the Providers Alliance has provided the DOH with a carefully thought-out series of recommendations to improve the unwieldy TBI Waiver manual (I’ve seen their work, it is superb), yet there has been no real response to their efforts. Curiously, the TBI Waiver manual lists six indexes, none of which are present in the manual!

Moreover, the DOH is informing quite a few survivors of brain injury around the state that there services will be cut and, in some cases, discontinued all together. The problem here is these decisions are being made by people who have utterly no understanding of brain injury, much less any real working knowledge of the human brain.

 

Actions Speak Louder than Words

Once when I was a boy I complained to my father about the fact some phrase was a cliché. My father, the greatest gift life has ever given me by the way, smiled and said, “Well, Pete, there’s a reason they become clichés.”  He was right.

Which brings me to the cliché, actions speak louder than words.

So, let’s compare Words versus Actions:

Words: The TBI Waiver manual provides a list of participants rights on Page 6, one of which reads says participants must “Be treated as an individual with consideration and respect”.

Actions: Waiver participants, including this writer, are having their services cut, reduced or delayed by the DOH without warning and, in my case and certainly others, without explanation. Moreover, requests for explanations are largely ignored. Consideration and respect?

Words: Participants must  “Be treated as an individual with consideration and respect”.

Actions: Capitol Region RRDS Natalie Marabello implies this writer is feigning the need for a life alert and white noise machines and further implies that he is wasting her time. Result? Ms. Marabello is promoted to Lead RRDS. Consideration and respect?

Words: DOH officials insist they will decide whether to approve requests for things like life alerts and white noise machines along with other forms of assistive technology and, in some cases, mediations, on the merits, and, in this effort ask for documentation from doctors supporting the request.

Actions: This writer and others across the state have requests in from assistive technology with the required letters from both a doctor and psychotherapist, the RRDC has signed off on the request and the DOH still does not sign off on it. What form of measurements, specifically, does the DOH use to determine the merits?

Words: One section of the participants rights in the TBI Waiver manual reads, “Have your complaints responded to and be informed of the resolution.”

Actions: The waiver complaint line protocol between the Brain Injury Association of NY State and the DOH not only fails to set forth any time lines within which a complainant must get a response, it fails to mandate that a complainant get a response at all.

The point is, all parties need to get together to resolve this, the DOH it seems has a penchant for behaving in a rather insular fashion, and this serves no one’s interest, unless of course we are talking about  Social Darwinism and all that drives the DOH is a desire to be the big kid on the block.

My hope is that all will come together and resolve all this, because in the mean time, survivors, families, and providers are suffering.

 

 

 

NY State Department of Health Blocks Medical Treatment

Whether you are intentionally blocking medical treatment or you are doing so because you are incompetent, it is cruel and inhuman treatment, particularly when the treatment is prescribed by the doctor and wanted by the patient.   When it’s the New York State Department of Health blocking the treatment,  heads ought to roll.

As I mentioned in an earlier blog post, “Those close to me are beginning to think, with some justification it seems, that the New York State Department of Health is not only purposely dragging it’s feet signing off on a life alert and some assistive technology its own RRDC has approved for me, but is, in fact, preparing to boot me off the state’s traumatic brain injury waiver.”  I went on to say that the jury was still out for me but after a careful review of emails ranging from February 2010 to October 23, 2010,  it is clear the concerns of those close to me are on target. The DOH behavior is either intentional or it is incompetence.

If it is the latter, as many think, it means there are people with brain injuries in this state who are enduring the same kind of neglect I am.

A Review, an Anecdote, and the Timeline

Review

My brain injury was sustained in 1984 when I was held up and shot in the head at point blank range. The bullet remains lodged in the frontal lobe of my brain with bone spray throughout the left frontal and temporal lobes. One of the things I’ve learned over the years both from living with the damage and from working in the field of brain injury for more than 15 years is this; the role the injury plays in one’s life changes over time. For the past six years or more I am unable to work a full time schedule of any kind, fatigue has become that much of a factor. Moreover, my sound sensitivity has become very pronounced over the years, so much so that I will often use a fan or an old white noise machine so I can sleep, read, write, at times concentrate on a conversation.

In addition to this, my health has changed. I have a heart condition called a blocked left bundle branch. The left and right bundle branches are your heart’s pacemaker. When one becomes blocked, it is not always clear why, it never becomes unblocked. Research says a blocked left bundle branch is potentially the more problematic of the two. In addition, I deal with asthma, PTSD, and an on again off again fight with depression.

At any rate, all of the previous realities, along with the fact I live alone in a rural area, led me, along with my case manager, doctor, therapist and loved ones to conclude I would be wise to bring two forms of assistive technology into my life: three white noise machines so they can be kept in various areas of the house so my quality of life and ability to comfortably function would improve and, of critical importance, a life alert, so in the event of a medical emergency I can get assistance with the mere push of a button.

Anecdote

Several years ago I was meeting with a group of brain injury survivors, there was about 20 of us. One of those in the group, a friend of mine I’ll call Terrence, had, like me, sustained his injury from a gunshot wound to the head. Terrence and I were facing each other, each sitting at one end of two adjoining tables. Someone raised the question of what we would do if anyone ever pulled a gun on us again, threatened our lives again. Terrence was and is a cheerful animated human being with a beautiful heart and soul, but now his face darkened. So did mine. Terrence said, “Next time someone threatens my life they better not miss  ‘cause I’m gonna try’n kill’m. I’m sick of it.”  We were heart and soul joined in this. Our eyes were joined as I said, “Me too.” In both of us, and those like us, there is a bone chilling electrified intimacy when someone tries to kill you, threatens your life.

There is a heartless cruelty found in the minds of those who knowingly put the lives of others at risk. And, I can tell you, some of what joined me and Terrence in that moment churns through my veins now as I experience a Department of Health that is knowingly putting me – and no doubt others – at risk.

The Timeline

See Information Key Below for Further information

  • Discussion of sound machines/life alert surfaces in emails, in Feb. 2010
  • Feb. 26 email referencing voice mail from Sue Williams, from CFDS saying they will help me get sound machines.
  • April 9 email to Jessica Pakatar from William Buse (my therapist) documenting need for sound machines and life alert.
  • April 12 email documenting first unpleasant conversation with Natalie Marabello in which she said Jessica Pakatar should reach out to Rob Korotich to make sure therapist email enough. Note: Marabello does not inform us a letter from an MD will be needed for life alert and white noise machines.
  • May 21 email documents conversation that day with Sue Williams in which she said Jessica Pakatar could work with someone in CFDS business office to order to obtain sound machines.
  • Circa late May we are told by RRDC office that all necessary documentation was in for white noise machines and life alert approval.
  • Two months later on August 12 email documents phone call with Rob Korotich who says Jeanette Biggs of DOH now says MD letter is needed for sound machines and life alert. This is Four months after April 12 conversation with Marabello.
  • August 12: approx date I filed a complaint with DOH via BIANYS complaint line re: Marabello’s earlier behavior on the phone and poor handling of assistive technology request.
  • August 12 email from me filing complaint directly to DOH complaining about handling of Assist. Tech request sent to: Mark Kissinger, Mary Ann Anglin, Cavallo, Jessica Pakatar – No response from DOH
  • August 18: Marabello calls to investigate assist. tech. complaint, announces she is aware I have active complaint against her but says she cannot investigate that complaint. I hang up on her when she appears to imply I am feigning need for white noise machines and life alert. I send out an email same day to: Mark Kissinger, Mary Ann Anglin, Maribeth J Gnozzio, Bill Combes, Sim Goldman, Marie Cavallo, Beth Cassidy, Jessica Pakatar, Maria Relyea, KAC Leadership Team notifying them of her behavior. – no response from DOH
  • Circa August 19 file separate complaint with Sunnyview Hospital, Marabello’s employers re: her behavior.
  • August 26, extensive telephone Interview with DOH’s Jan Koenig  re: Marabello complaint and assist tech. complaint.
  • Letter sent same day as above via email to Jan Koenig at her request documenting complaint interview
  • Sept. 7 letter from my Primary Physician documenting need for life alert & white noise machines sent to SC & DOH (RRDC)
  • Sept. 14, Jessica and I meet w/Marie Relyea and Wendy Tracy re: Marabello complaint filed with Sunnyview.
  • Sept. 28 email sent to Jan Koenig expressing concern that I have heard nothing about Marabello complaint – no response from DOH
  • Sept. 28 send letter to NE Health CEO Dr. James Reed seeking status of complaint filed against Marabello via Sunnyview
  • Sept. 29 letter mailed to NE Health CEO Dr. James Reed re: Marabello
  • Oct 4 RRDC signs off on assist tech and life alert and forwards to DOH for signature
  • Oct 6 email to Gnozzio asking about HEAP and food stamp contacts in county I am moving to – no response from DOH.
  • Receive Oct. 6 letter from Sunnyview CEO Edward J. Eisenman presenting their complaint findings. Send thank you letter the following day.
  • Oct. 6 email sent to Beth Gnozzio copying Mary Ann Anglin, Lydia Kosinski and Jessica Pakatar again inquiring about hold-up on sign off on assist tech – no response from DOH
  • October 7 email to Jan Koenig copying Mary Ann Anglin and Mark Kissinger inquiring about complaint status – no response from DOH
  • October 12 email to Beth Gnozzio copying Lydia Kosinski and Mary Ann Anglin again seeking status of assist tech request – no response from DOH
  • Oct 13 email from Beth Gnozzio saying she has made recommendations and under internal review; does not address assist tech.
  • Oct 13 email to Beth Gnozzio asking when  assist. tech will be signed off on – no response from DOH
  • Oct 14 email to Beth Gnozzio inquiring about sign off – no response from DOH
  • Oct 17 email to Beth Gnozzio inquiring about sign off – no response from DOH
  • Oct 19 Mary Ann Anglin resends Beth Gnozzio’s Oct 13 email referenced above
  • Oct. 21 email to Beth Gnozzio copying Mary Ann Anglin and KAC Leadership Team inquiring about sign off for assist. tech. et al – no response from DOH
  • Oct 22 email to Beth Gnozzio copying Mark Kissinger, Mary Ann Anglin, Lydia Kosinski, Carla Williams, Bill Combes, Sim Goldman, Marie Cavallo and KAC Leadership Team – letting them know another complaint now filed via BIANYS – no response from DOH

Information Key:

BIANYS: Brain Injury Association of NY State

CFDS: Center for Disability Services, Albany, NY

RRDC: Regional Resource Development Center: Agency under contract with DOH to oversee waiver providers and services in a region of the state

Mary Ann Anglin: DOH Director, Division of Home & Community Based Care Services

William Buse, LCSW, PhD: Therapist

Jeanette Biggs: DOH employee.

Marie Cavallo: President of BIANYS

Bill Combes: NY State Commission on Quality of Care

Edward J. Eisenman: CEO of Sunnyview Rehabilitation Hospital

Sim Goldman: Senior Attorney for Disability Rights Advocates, Albany NY.

Lydia Kosinski: DOH Assistant Director, Divison of Home & Community Based Services

Natalie Marabello: RRDS (Regional Development Specialist) working for Capitol Region’s RRDC

KAC Leadership Team: Leadership committee for Kahrmann Advocacy Coalition

Mark Kissinger: Deputy Commissioner, NY State DOH

Jan Koenig: Member of the DOH employee assigned to investigate assistive tech. complaint and complaint against Ms. Marabello

Rob Korotich: RRDS in the Capitol Region

Jessica Pakatar: My case manager/service coordinator through Catholic Charities Disabilities Services, Albany, NY

Dr. James Reed: CEO of Northeast Health

Marie Relyea: RRDS Capitol Region

Wendy Tracy: RRDS Capitol Region

Carla Williams: DOH Deputy Director Office of Long Term Care

Sue Williams: Director of Service Coordination for CFDS

Endnote

The Key’s content clearly documents the number of people aware of the DOH’s behavior. Nevertheless, the DOH does not sign off on my assistive technology request which has been deemed a medical necessity by my doctor and therapist and approved by their own RRDC. As a result, no white noise machines and no life alert which, in short, damages the quality of my life and puts me at risk. What is even more unsettling is this; if their treatment of me is not aimed at me personally, that means there are many men and women around the state absorbing the same neglect and thus being placed at risk.