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The Consumer Directed Personal Assistance Program

Robin Burner Daleo • 13 September 2024

Question:

My mother is currently applying for homecare Medicaid benefits.  We have an aid that we have grown to love and trust and are hesitant to switch to the Medicaid approved aid once my mother’s application is approved.  A friend told me that Medicaid has a new program under which Medicaid recipients and their families can choose their own caregiver, even if that caregiver is not a caregiver who has been approved by the local Medicaid agency. 


Answer: 

What you are likely referring to is the Consumer Directed Personal Assistance Program, commonly referred to is “CDPAP.”  However, CDPAP is not new, and in fact, has been operational in New York in one form or another since 1980.  CDPAP is a Medicaid funded Personal Care Program that allows self directing seniors or their families to recruit, hire, train and supervise their choice of personal care assistant under the Medicaid umbrella rather than hiring an agency to perform those same services.  Here, the consumer is the Medicaid recipient or an authorized family member or friend.  This individual is tasked with directing the care of the Medicaid recipient, the end result being that the consumer can hire almost anyone (including in some circumstances extended family members) to perform care tasks that would otherwise be provided by an agency, here the recipient or their representative must be willing and able to make informed choices regarding the care management of the care that they receive.  Under CDPAP the individual providing services does not have to be certified to provide those services because the requisite training is done by the consumer and his or her family.  An individual who would like to enroll in the CDPAP program must first apply for and be approved for Homecare Medicaid services.  Once that application has been approved, the application for CDPAP can be completed. 


One great aspect of this program is that it allows seniors who are already receiving care privately, to apply for Medicaid benefits (assuming that they are otherwise eligible) and continue receiving care from that same individual without interruption or disruption.  Oftentimes, we see clients who are in your same situation; they are ready to apply for Medicaid benefits but are hesitant to do so because they have a caregiver in place with whom they have established a relationship and a comfort level.  In some cases, the family has grown so attached to the caregiver that even though their parent no longer has the assets available to pay for the services provided, the children pay for that caregiver out of their own pocket.  Here, the person in need of care could apply for Medicaid and once approved, apply to have that same aid paid by the Medicaid CDPAP program. 


It is important to note that the care giver that you choose will have to register with your local department of social services, and the agency will oversee the financial aspects of CDPAP including processing of timesheets and issuance of paychecks. 


CDPAP is a terrific program which enables self directing seniors and their families freedom of choice and as a result and increased sense of independence and autonomy for the senior in need of services. 



By Robin Burner Daleo, Esq. 



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