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Heineman names Medicaid director

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By NANCY HICKS / Lincoln Journal Star

Monday, Apr 30, 2007 - 05:17:09 pm CDT

Gov. Dave Heineman appointed a woman with more than 20 years experience in Medicaid and other public assistance programs to head Nebraska’s Division of Medicaid and Long-Term Care, a part of the restructured Department of Health and Human Services.

Vivianne Chaumont, 53, was director of Colorado’s Medical Assistance Office for four years from 2001 to 2005 and also served for 16 years as chief counsel for Colorado’s Medicaid program and other public assistance and health programs.

For the past two years she has been CEO of ValueOptions of AZ Inc., a company contracted to manage the delivery of services to Medicaid clients and individuals with mental illness.

Story Photo
Vivianne Chaumont answered questions after being introduced by Gov. Dave Heineman as Nebraska's director of Medicaid. (Robert Becker)

Chaumont is returning to the government sector because she enjoys public sector work, she said.

“I think that policy making is really fun and a good opportunity to contribute to people’s lives,” she said in a phone interview Monday. “It is interesting and never boring.”

Chaumont, who came to the U.S. from Cuba as a child, grew up in California and is bilingual.

During a Monday news conference Heineman described Chaumont’s wide experience with Medicaid issues, including a rewrite of Colorado’s managed care laws, development of a review process to help ensure rules and regulations were understandable to clients, and creation of a centralized data system.

The Medicaid and Long-Term Care Division will administer aging services and the Medicaid program, a federal and state health insurance program primarily for low-income seniors, disabled adults, children from low- and moderate-income families and very low-income adults with children.

Chaumont, who will be paid $115,000, will be one of the six division heads in the newly restructured Department of Health and Human Services.

The reorganization takes place officially July 1, creating a single Health and Human Services agency with a CEO and six divisions.

Heineman has named Chris Peterson as CEO and four of the six division heads: Chaumont; Dr. Joann Schaefer as chief medical officer and director of the Division of Public Health; Scot Adams as director of the Division of Behavior Health; and John Hilgert as director of the Division of Veterans’ Homes.

Still to be named are directors for the Division of Children and Family Services and the Division Developmental Disabilities.

The restructuring is “about more than stamping a new name on the agency,” the governor said “It’s about providing better service and greater accountability to the people of this state,” he said.

Chaumont earned a bachelor’s degree in 1975 and a law degree in 1978 from the University of California-Davis.

Reach Nancy Hicks at 473-7250 or nhicks@journalstar.com.  


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Must be a Republican wrote on April 30, 2007 2:37 pm:
" Way to tap the Nebraska talent GOV. "

k wrote on April 30, 2007 3:45 pm:
" Hopefully Chaumont can crack down on the abusers of the Medicaid program and allow families who are really in need of help from the State to use the program. So many families abuse the system, let the people who need help get it. "

whatever wrote on May 1, 2007 5:26 am:
" We probably do need to go outside the state to bring some new blood into the system, but I have a bad feeling about this particular appointment. We certainly don't want to have a system based on what is done in California or Colorado. "

TW wrote on May 1, 2007 9:15 am:
" Glad he woke up and did something!!! I think this Medicaid and Medicare is in the mess its in because the constant hype about checking every part of your body is way out of hand. All kinds of doctors have you regularly going to their office every 6 months for expensive tests for every thing under the sun, when your not even sick. The medical industry has people scared to death they might have something and die!! Well gee, I haven't notice any one living on this earth for ever. If I had all the money I've spent on a blue million tests or just an office call for the doctor to just ask me how I feel, I'd be rich. I have yet to spend at least 5 minutes with a doctor for $85.00 bucks. And that is pure profit, because if you even have a blood test, your charged for the stick, the analysis of the blood for every disease known to man. Honest doctors have told me, too much is for the doctor to get a timely paycheck. Thank heavens my former doctor never had me seeing me unless I was sick, and you could go anytime, even late in the day and he'd see you even it it was 10:00 P.M. And you wonder about the Calif & Colo systems??? Especially when its the govt. everybodys out to get evey buck they can from the system!!!! "