Virginia Medicaid Behavioral Health and ARTS
By George Ruan • July 9, 2026
Last updated: July 9, 2026.
Virginia Medicaid behavioral health work spans more than ordinary outpatient therapy. Mental health services, psychiatric services, residential treatment, peer recovery supports, ARTS, service authorization, telehealth, and Cardinal Care managed care can all touch the same revenue workflow.
The practical map: Start with the provider type and service. Then check PRSS enrollment, the applicable provider manual, eligibility and plan assignment, service authorization, and the correct claim lane. Behavioral health and ARTS billing gets messy when those checks happen in the wrong order.
Sections
Mental Health vs ARTS
Mental Health Services. DMAS maintains manual chapters for mental health services, including CMHRS, case management, temporary detention order supplements, telehealth, peer recovery, and related sections.
ARTS. Addiction and Recovery Treatment Services covers substance-use treatment services and has its own manual chapters for provider participation, covered services, billing, utilization review, peer supports, OBAT/OTP, and telehealth.
Overlapping billing infrastructure. Both still depend on enrollment, eligibility, authorization, claim routing, and plan participation.
The Order That Prevents Rework
Confirm the provider record and service location in PRSS.
Confirm the provider type, specialty, taxonomy, license, and manual requirements for the service.
Verify member eligibility and Cardinal Care plan assignment.
Check whether the service needs Acentra/Atrezzo or MCO authorization.
Submit and follow the claim in the correct FFS or managed-care lane.
Provider Manuals Are Not Optional
Behavioral health billing often turns on manual details: provider type, service definition, covered setting, staff qualification, supervision, documentation, telehealth limits, authorization rules, and billing instructions. Use the current manual chapter as the source of truth instead of relying on a copied payer note from an old denial.
How Redesign Fits In
DMAS launched a behavioral health services redesign project to replace CMHRS and case management services, then announced that the planned July 1, 2026 start date would be delayed. Providers should monitor the redesign page and bulletins because service definitions, billing, authorizations, and operational timelines can change.
For the current redesign status, read Virginia Medicaid Behavioral Health Redesign.
Action Steps for Providers
Create a service-by-service matrix: manual chapter, provider type, authorization requirement, telehealth status, billing code, and claim lane.
Review PRSS data before MCO contracting or authorization work so provider identifiers line up.
Train billing staff to distinguish mental health, ARTS, FFS, and MCO workflows.
Where Bomi Fits
Bomi helps therapy practices keep Medicaid billing and credentialing workflows organized: enrollment follow-up, portal handoffs, eligibility checks, claims, denials, EOB review, revalidation tracking, payer follow-up, and revenue operations. We still separate access correctly: your practice keeps control of provider accounts, and each user gets the access needed for their role.
Operational note: This post is general operational education, not legal, compliance, or billing advice. Confirm current DMAS, MES/PRSS, Cardinal Care MCO, Acentra/Atrezzo, provider-manual, and contract requirements before submitting enrollment, claims, or service authorizations.
Sources
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