The Model Waiver, a program
started in Maryland in 1985, allows medically fragile individuals who would otherwise be
hospitalized and are certified as needing either hospital or nursing facility level of
care to receive medically necessary and appropriate services in the community. As a
result, the Model Waiver clients can continue to live at home with their
families. The maximum number of individuals who may be enrolled in the Model
Waiver is 200.
| To be eligible
for the Model Waiver several conditions must be met. These conditions are: |
Admission must be completed before the individual becomes 22 years old.
The individual must meet the definition of a
disabled child at the time application for Model Waiver services is made. The term
disabled child means a chronically ill or severely impaired child,
younger than 22 years old, whose illness or disability may not require 24-hour inpatient
care, but which, in the absence of home care services, may precipitate admission to or
prolong stay in a hospital, nursing facility, or other long-term facility
(COMAR 10.09.27).
The individual must be certified as in need
of a hospital or nursing facility level of care.
This level of care is determined by
a state contracted reviewer using information supplied by the
referring physician.
The individuals medically necessary
and appropriate community based medical services must be cost neutral. That is, the cost
of the community-based services must not exceed the cost of institutional care.
Under the Model Waiver, the parents
income and assets are waived during the financial eligibility process. This means
that the child is considered an eligibility unit of one even though he or she will live in
the community with the parent(s)
To obtain further information, please call the
Coordinating Center for Home and Community Care (CCHCC) at 410-987-1048 (Baltimore) or
301-621-7830 (Washington). The staff at CCHCC is available to answer questions
concerning the Model Waivers referral and enrollment process.
|