Arizona Center for Disability Law
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Contact:
Peri Jude Radecic, Director of Public Advocacy
Wednesday, February 22, 2006 (520)
327-9547, extension 23
Cell: (623) 308-5111
Children with Disabilities to have
Hearing in Federal District Court
Class Action Lawsuit Against the Arizona Health Care Cost Containment System
Moves Forward
Tucson,
February 22, 2006.....On Friday, February 24, 2006, in federal district court in Tucson, the Arizona
Center for Disability Law (Center)
will argue that children with disabilities are entitled to win their class
action lawsuit against the Arizona Health Care Cost Containment System
(AHCCCS), Arizona’s
Medicaid system, in the case of Ekloff v. Rodgers. Plaintiffs in this case are children with
disabilities who are recipients of state Medicaid services and need
incontinence briefs because of their disabilities. Currently, AHCCCS will only cover
incontinence briefs for children with disabilities when a child has experienced
skin breakdown, sores or infections, but not to prevent disease or injury.
The hearing
in the U.S. District Court will center on a motion for summary judgment filed
by the Center in November 2005. A motion
for summary judgment means that both sides agree on the facts of the case and
all that is left for the Judge to decide is whether the Plaintiffs’ (children
with disabilities) or the Defendant’s (AHCCCS) interpretation of the law should
prevail. AHCCCS will oppose the Center’s
motion and has filed its own motion for summary judgment.
The Center
will argue that incontinence briefs are medically necessary for children who
are incontinent of bowel and bladder because of their disabilities to prevent
skin breakdown, bacterial and fungal infections, and other adverse health
consequences. In addition to preventing
adverse medical conditions, incontinence briefs allow children with
disabilities to fully participate in social, community, therapeutic and
educational activities. According to
federal Medicaid law, which includes enhanced services for children under Early
and Periodic Screening, Diagnosis and Treatment (EPSDT), the state must provide
comprehensive medical services to children with disabilities under the age of
21.
“It is well
recognized by Medicaid programs across the United States that incontinence
briefs for children are medically necessary and must be provided,” said Henry
G. Watkins, Executive Director of the Center.
“We are talking about families whose incomes are stretched to the limit
trying to care for their child. Arizona’s policy to help
families only after their child has experienced skin breakdown, sores or
infections is contrary to federal law and common sense. The harsh result of the state’s policy on
these children causes them emotional trauma and seriously impedes their ability
to participate in basic activities.
Further, it costs more to address serious medical conditions after the
fact than to prevent them.”
The Center
represents:
Rachel,
Rebecca and Grace Ekloff. The Ekloffs live in Tucson, Arizona. Prior to 1997, the Ekloffs lived in New York, a state which
covered medically necessary incontinence briefs for their daughter Rachel. Rachel, age 10, has been diagnosed with
severe, low-function Down Syndrome, sensory integration disorder, and severe
eczema. Rebecca, age 5, has Down Syndrome
and is severely developmentally delayed.
Grace, age 7, has Down Syndrome and is profoundly mentally
retarded. All children are incontinent
of bowel and bladder as a result of their disabilities and all were denied
medically necessary incontinence supplies as a result of the AHCCCS
policy. The Ekloffs must spend
approximately $320 per month for incontinence supplies for their disabled
children to participate in social, therapeutic and community activities.
Richard
Harris is 8 years
old and lives with his family in Tucson,
Arizona. Richard was born at 29 weeks, weighed
approximately 1.5 pounds at birth, and has been diagnosed with developmental
delays, periventricular leukomalacia and hypospadias (an abnormal position of the
opening from which urine passes).
Richard’s surgery to correct the hypospadias failed to ameliorate the
condition. Richard is incontinent of
bowel and bladder and requires medically necessary incontinence briefs. His family has to spend approximately $100
per month for incontinence briefs as a result of the AHCCCS policy. These costs are a significant financial
hardship for the family as his father and mother receive social security
insurance/disability income as their sole source of income.
Caitlin
Hoel is 14 years
old and lives in Mesa, Arizona with her family. Caitlin has Aicardi Syndrome and requires
medically necessary incontinence briefs because she is incontinent of bowel and
bladder. Because of the AHCCCS policy,
her family must spend approximately $120 per month for Caitlin’s incontinence
briefs.
Kristina
Richards is 16
years old and lives with her family in Phoenix,
Arizona. Kristina has Spina Bifida, mental retardation
and is paralyzed from the waist down.
She is incontinent of bowel and bladder and requires medically necessary
incontinence briefs which AHCCCS will not cover. The cost to her family is approximately $100
per month.
Nicholas
Igras is 9 years
old and lives with his family in Scottsdale,
Arizona. Nicholas has profound Autism, profound mental
retardation and is non-verbal. He is
incontinent of bowel and bladder and requires medically necessary incontinence
briefs which AHCCCS will not cover. The
cost his family must spend is approximately $180 per month.
In the lawsuit,
the Center is asking the court to find in the children’s favor and issue a
permanent injunction to prohibit AHCCCS from denying them incontinence briefs
prescribed as a preventative measure.
The Center is also asking for an order to be issued to require AHCCCS to
reimburse parents for the cost of incontinence briefs purchased by them since
their requests for AHCCCS coverage of the briefs were denied.
A favorable
ruling would not make Arizona
the first state in the country to pay for incontinence briefs for children with
disabilities who are Medicaid eligible. Research conducted by Center staff
indicates as many as 36 other states supply incontinence briefs for Medicaid
recipients.
Ekloff
v. Rodgers is a
continuation of the Center’s work to ensure that people with disabilities have
the health care services they need. The
Center’s Health Care Services Team handles issues ranging from the denial of
assistive technology such as an electric wheelchair to another class action
lawsuit against AHCCCS, Ball v. Rodgers, which was filed to remedy
on-going problems with the provision of adequate in home personal care
attendant services for individuals enrolled in Arizona’s Long Term Care Program.
Robin
Murphy, Sally Hart and Jennifer L. Nye are the Center’s lead attorneys on this
case.
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The Arizona Center for Disability
Law is a not for profit public interest law firm, dedicated to protecting the
rights of individuals with a wide range of physical, mental, psychiatric,
sensory and cognitive disabilities. The
Center is authorized under various federal statutes and appointed by the
Governor of Arizona
to ensure the protection and advocacy of all individuals with disabilities in
the state. The Center does not charge
clients for its services. The Center is
funded through grants as well as the generous contributions of individuals in
the community.