Providers, recipients and other interested individuals will have
the opportunity to provide input on the Alabama Medicaid Agency Section 1115
Institutions for Mental Disease Waiver for Serious Mental Illness (SMI) 1115(a)
Demonstration program during November public forums in Daphne, Alabama and in
Montgomery, Alabama.
Written comments concerning the 1115 Institutions for Mental
Disease Waiver for SMI will be accepted starting November 7, 2025, and are due
December 7, 2025. Email comments to PublicComment@Medicaid.Alabama.gov or mail hard copy to Administrative Secretary, Alabama Medicaid
Agency, 501 Dexter Avenue, P.O. Box 5624, Montgomery, Alabama 36103-5624. All
written comments will be available for review by the public during normal
business hours at the above address. The scheduled public forum(s) will be
held:
 
The annual forums are a requirement by the
Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) for the 1115 Demonstration
Waiver under which the SMI program operates. The waiver was originally approved
on May 20, 2022. The
goal of the SMI Demonstration is to maintain and enhance
access to mental health services and continue delivery system improvements for
these services to provide more coordinated and comprehensive treatment of
Medicaid recipients with SMI. This demonstration will provide the state with
the authority to provide high-quality, clinically appropriate treatment to
recipients with SMI while they are short-term residents in residential and
inpatient treatment settings that qualify as an Institute for Mental Diseases
(IMD) in Baldwin and Mobile counties. Alabama Medicaid recipients who are
eligible for inpatient behavioral health services will be able to access
services via the IMDs participating in the demonstration, regardless of their
county of residence. It will also support state efforts to enhance provider
capacity and improve access to a continuum of treatments for SMI. During the
demonstration period, the state seeks to achieve the following goals which
align with the SMI SMDL #18-011:
 
 - Reduced
     utilization and lengths of stay in emergency departments (EDs) among
     Medicaid recipients with SMI or Serious Emotional Disturbance (SED) while
     awaiting mental health treatment in specialized settings;
- Reduced
     preventable readmissions to acute care hospitals and residential settings;
- Improved
     availability of crisis stabilization services, including services made
     available through call centers and mobile crisis units, intensive
     outpatient services, as well as services provided during acute short-term
     stays in residential crisis stabilization programs, psychiatric hospitals
     and residential treatment settings throughout the state;
- Improved
     access to community-based services to address the chronic mental health
     care needs of recipients with SMI or SED, including through increased
     integration of primary and behavioral health care; and
- Improved care coordination,
     especially continuity of care in the community following episodes of acute
     care in hospitals and residential treatment facilities.
 
 
CMS
expects the state to achieve the goals on a statewide basis despite authorizing
expenditure authority on less-than-a statewide basis since the state will
concurrently implement initiatives that improve community-based mental health
care.