Thank you guys for responding.
I just now realized that I did not explain why I was asking about SSD and I should have for it all to make sense.
My daughter is in a wonderful facility since February 1st. There were a few glitches that needed to be worked out in the beginning but everything is as it should be now. This is her 6th hospitalization, second long term.
We recently had a scare with her medicaid. I was surprised to learn a lot about the cuts that have impacted mental health services. Apparently, NC just had another round of cuts, the first occurred on the first of this year. This recent one was directly targeting psychiatric treatment residential facilities. The cuts will affect the amount of time a patient is allowed to remain in the facility, even if they do not meet eligibility requirements for discharge.
I was seeking info about SSD and Medicare just to see if that would be the better route to go, or if there was even any benefit at all.
My d is not doing well. In fact, they are having a special staffing meeting tomorrow to try and tweek her treatment and ensure that they are utilizing every possible resource available to help support her treatment goals. If she continues to regress at this point we will be in a very difficult dilemma. They are projecting a discharge date of August 1st, which would be typical since that is exactly 6 months from her date of admittance. With the new changes (that even the medicaid workers are not familiar with nor have had any extensive training or explanation of allowance changes) they do not have to approve an extension because they can terminate payment on the date listed on the paperwork that is filled out and submitted on the day of admittance.
I figured that maybe SSD/Medicare may be more accommodating since the people who receive those particular benefits are disabled and have medical/psychological needs.
I am continuing to try to find out how these changes will affect her stay, and also find out what would happen if she was a risk to herself or others... . would they deny her and refer her to community based support services since multiple hospitalizations have not helped her? I'm not understanding what their point is and how the changes could potentially put her and many other kids and adults that are in need of residential programs. If my daughter wasn't in a residential facility during these last few months and was at home with the intensive in home services we had prior to this hospitalization, she absolutely would have either ended up in a juvenile detention center, or God forbid, succeed with her intention to exit this world.
Unless they are hoping for the juvenile justice system to pick up the slack, which has happened in the past already (deinstitutionalization), than from the information that I was given these cuts are completely against the ADA Act.
Well, now I know why I did not go into detail in my original post,
. It makes me angry.
It's mindfulness time.
Googie