Regional Resource Development Center
| Introduction | Eligibility | Services |
Introduction
The Department of Health TBI Waiver program is driven by participant choice. The participant is
considered an intricate part of all aspects of service plan development. The participant has the
choice, throughout the enrollment process and beyond, to express personal goals and to
interview/chose their approved TBI Waiver service providers. The Regional Resource Development
Center (RRDC) provides quality assurance/improvement and oversight on a program wide basis, as well
as advocates for the program participants in negotiating the waiver system.
Each program participant is viewed as an individual with unique strengths as life experiences. By
participating in the TBI Waiver, it is anticipated that the individual will increase his/her
independence and self-reliance. The waiver participant is considered the center of all waiver
services, with success measured by the individual's satisfaction. The Waiver participant's dignity,
right to risk and right to fail must be respected throughout his/her involvement with the waiver.
The Service Coordinator supports and encourages the individual to increase his/her ability to
problem solve, be in control of life situations, and be as independent as possible. This is
balanced by the need to assure the Waiver participant’s health, safety, well being, and inclusion
in the community. The Service Coordinator develops, with the individual, the Initial Service Plan,
outlining all needed services, as well as required six month reviews and addendums.
Independent Living Skills Training and Development are services individually designed to improve
the ability of the individual to live as independently as possible in the community. These services
are specifically designed to instruct and re-train the participant in life-skills that may have
been lost or diminished due to their injury. Services may be provided in the individual’s residence
and/or in the community, but are always be provided in the environmental context of the goal, to
encourage learning and continuity.
Individually designed services, provided in an out-patient congregate setting, to improve or
maintain the individual’s skills and ability to live as independently as possible in the community.
These services can be provided during day hours, evening or weekends and are to encourage
individual community inclusion.
Intervention designed to decrease the individual’s challenging behaviors which, if not modified,
will interfere with the individual’s ability to remain integrated in the community. All Intensive
Behavioral Program (IBP) interventions are individually based and are always pro-active in nature,
with the purpose of teaching the participant to control and monitor his/her own actions. Natural
consequences of a participant’s behavior are always an intricate part of an IBP plan.
Individual service designed to assist the person to more effectively manage and overcome the
difficulties and stresses confronted by an individual with traumatic brain injury living in the
community. Services may be provided in the individual’s home, in the community, or in the
provider’s office, and is available to the individual’s family if they have a significant role in
supporting the individual, or any other persons who may have significant, ongoing interactions with
the individual.
Individually designed support services essential for the individual’s health and welfare, such as
assistance, training and supervision with activities of daily living, such as bathing, personal
hygiene, dressing, meal preparation, eating, household tasks, shopping, socialization, and
supervision. These services are not provided as discrete services, but as part of an overall plan
of support for the individual. The Home and Community Support Services differ from Personal Care
Services provided under State Medicaid Plan.
Provided for individuals unable to care for themselves and is a means to provide relief to primary
care providers.
State Plan Medicaid supports and all other funding sources need to be researched and exhausted
prior to these services being requested. A budgetary cap is in place, per program participant per
year, for all Environmental Modification requests.
Waiver transportation is available, on a limited basis, to assist program participant with
necessary social transport. Public transportation, para-transit, natural supports and other funding
must be exhausted prior to a transportation request being submitted. For all medical, therapeutic
and other Medicaid funded appointments, State Plan Medicaid transportation is to be utilized.