Utah Admin. Code R414-305-9 - Transfer of Resources for Institutional Medicaid and Home and Community-Based Services Waivers
(1) The eligibility
agency shall apply 42 U.S.C.
1396p(c) and (e) to
determine if a penalty period applies for a transfer of assets for less than
fair market value.
(2) The transfer
requirements of 42 U.S.C.
1396p(c) and (e) apply if an
individual or the individual's spouse transfers the home, life estate, assets
disregarded for eligibility purposes pursuant to Subsection
R414-305-3(28),
or any other asset on or after the look-back date based on an application for
long-term care Medicaid services.
(3) If an individual or the individual's
spouse transfers assets in more than one month after February 7, 2006, the
uncompensated value of all transfers including fractional transfers are
combined to determine the penalty period. The eligibility agency shall apply
partial month penalty periods for transferred amounts that are less than the
monthly average private -pay rate for nursing home services.
(4) In accordance with
42 U.S.C.
1396p(c), the penalty period
for a transfer of assets that occurs after February 7, 2006, begins the first
day of the month during or after which assets are transferred, or the date on
which the individual is eligible for Medicaid coverage and would otherwise
receive institutional level care based on an approved application for Medicaid,
but for the application of the penalty period, whichever is later.
(a) If a previous penalty period is in effect
on the date the new penalty period begins, the new penalty period begins
immediately after the previous one ends.
(b) The eligibility agency shall apply
penalty periods consecutively so they do not overlap.
(5) If assets are transferred during any
penalty period, the penalty period for those transfers does not begin until the
previous penalty period expires.
(6) If a transfer occurs, or the eligibility
agency discovers an unreported transfer after the agency approves an individual
for Medicaid for nursing home or home and community-based services, the penalty
period shall begin on the first day of the month after the month that the
individual transfers the asset.
(7)
In determining the statewide average private-pay rate for nursing home care
that the eligibility agency uses to calculate the penalty period for transfers,
the Department uses the audited and finalized facility cost profile report from
the previous state fiscal year, which it finalizes in May of the current fiscal
year. The Department then calculates the statewide average private-pay rate
using the total facilities private revenue divided by the total private days to
get the revenue for each day, which is multiplied by 365 and then divided by
12. The current amount is found in Table II-A at this address:
https://bepmanuals.health.utah.gov/Medicaidpolicy/DOHMedicaid.htm.
(8) To determine if a resource is transferred
for the sole benefit of a spouse, disabled or blind child, or disabled
individual, a binding written agreement must be in place which establishes that
the resource transferred may only be used to benefit the spouse, disabled
child, or disabled individual, and must be actuarially sound. The written
agreement must specify the payment amounts and schedule. Any provisions in the
agreement that benefit another person at any time nullify the sole benefit
provision. An excluded trust established under
42 U.S.C.
1396p(d)(4) that meets the
criteria in Section R414-305-7 does not have to meet
the actuarially sound test.
(9)
The eligibility agency may not impose a penalty period if the total value of a
whole life insurance policy is:
(a)
irrevocably assigned to the state;
(b) the recipient is the owner of and the
insured in the policy; and
(c) no
further premium payments are necessary for the policy to remain in
effect.
(10) When the
individual dies, the state shall distribute the benefits of the policy as
follows.
(a) The state may distribute up to
$7,000 to cover burial and funeral expenses. The total value of this
distribution plus the value of any irrevocable burial trusts and the burial and
funeral funds for the individual cannot exceed $7,000.
(b) The state may distribute an amount that
does not exceed the total amount of previously unreimbursed medical assistance
correctly paid on behalf of the individual.
(c) The state may distribute to a remainder
beneficiary, named by the individual, any amount that remains after payments
are made as defined in Subsection (10)(a)(b).
(11) If the eligibility agency determines
that a penalty period applies for an otherwise eligible institutionalized
person, the agency shall notify the individual that the Department may not pay
the costs for nursing home or other long-term care services during the penalty
period. The notice shall include when the penalty period begins and ends.
(a) The individual may request a waiver of
the penalty period based on undue hardship.
(b) The individual must send a written
request for a waiver of the penalty period due to undue hardship to the
eligibility agency within 30 days of the date printed on the penalty period
notice.
(c) The request must
include an explanation of why the individual believes undue hardship
exists.
(d) The eligibility agency
shall decide on the undue hardship request within 30 days of receipt
.
(12) An individual who
claims an undue hardship as a result of a penalty period for a transfer of
resources must meet both of the following conditions.
(a) The individual or the person who
transferred the resources may not access the asset immediately; however, the
eligibility agency shall require the individual to exhaust all reasonable means
including legal remedies to regain possession of the transferred
resource.
(b) The agency may
determine it is unreasonable to require the individual to act if a
knowledgeable source confirms the individual's efforts cannot
succeed.
(c) The agency may
determine that it is unreasonable to require the individual to take action
based on evidence that the individual's action is more costly than the value of
the resource.
(d) Application of
the penalty period for a transfer of resources deprives the individual of
medical care, endangers the individual's life or health, or deprives the
individual of food, clothing, shelter, or other necessities of life.
(13) If the eligibility agency
waives the penalty period based on undue hardship, the agency shall notify the
individual. The Department shall provide Medicaid coverage on the condition
that the individual takes all reasonable steps to regain the transferred
assets. The eligibility agency shall notify the individual of the date that the
individual must provide verifications of the steps taken. The individual must,
within the time frames set by the agency, verify to the agency all reasonable
actions. The agency shall review the undue hardship waiver and the actions of
the individual to try to regain the transferred assets. The time period for the
review may not exceed six months. Upon review, the agency shall decide whether:
(a) the individual must take additional steps
and whether undue hardship still exists, in which case the agency shall notify
the individual of the continuation of undue hardship and the need to take
additional steps to recover the assets;
(b) the individual has taken all reasonable
steps without success, in which case the agency shall notify the individual
that it requires no further action. If the individual continues to meet
eligibility criteria, the eligibility agency may not apply the penalty period;
or
(c) the individual has not taken
all reasonable steps, in which case the eligibility agency shall discontinue
the undue hardship waiver. The eligibility agency shall then apply the penalty
period and the individual is responsible to repay Medicaid for services and
benefits the individual received during the months in which the undue hardship
waiver was in place.
(14) Based on a review of the facts about
what happened to the assets, whether the individual has taken reasonable steps
to recover or regain the assets, the results of those steps, and the likelihood
that additional steps will prove unsuccessful or too costly, the eligibility
agency may determine that the individual cannot recover or regain the
transferred resource. If the agency decides the assets cannot be recovered and
that applying the penalty period may result in undue hardship, the agency may
not apply a penalty period or shall end a penalty period that has already
begun.
(15) The eligibility agency
shall base its decision that undue hardship exists upon the medical condition
and the financial situation of the individual. The agency shall compare the
income and resources of the individual, individual's spouse, and parents of an
unemancipated individual to the cost of providing medical care and daily living
expenses to decide whether the financial situation creates an undue hardship.
The agency shall send written notice of its decision on the undue hardship
request. The individual has 90 days from the date printed on the notice of
decision to file a request for a fair hearing.
(16) The eligibility agency shall consider
the portion of an irrevocable burial trust that exceeds $7,000 a transfer of
resources. The agency shall deduct the value of any fully paid burial plot from
the burial trust first before determining the transferred amount.
Notes
State regulations are updated quarterly; we currently have two versions available. Below is a comparison between our most recent version and the prior quarterly release. More comparison features will be added as we have more versions to compare.
No prior version found.