225,000 Medi-Cal enrollees lost coverage in June; here’s how that compares with prior years [The Sacramento Bee]
A three-year hiatus ended in June for more than 1 million California Medi-Cal enrollees. They once again had to prove they were eligible for free or low-cost health care coverage, and roughly eight out of 10 got their paperwork in by the
That was about the same proportion of enrollees who successfully completed monthly re-enrollment in
Beginning in June and continuing through May of next year,
Historically, during that 90-day period,
“We are very happy with our current June numbers,” Cooper said. “However, we know that we want to do more to keep people covered and to ensure that they have what they need. So we will continue to partner with our managed care plans, our PACE organizations, our navigators. We are proactively sending them lists of
While PACE organizations provide medical services and everyday living needs to elderly Americans, the state put
The Bee asked consumer advocate
In the
The other roughly 74% were sent questionnaires, and they had to return them by
But almost 200,000 people, or about 25.7% of those who were sent questionnaires, didn’t respond for some reason, Kane said. Many
A report from the
Whatever the reason, Kane said, June’s failure-to-respond rate is higher than the 18.9% that
“Based on the limited comparison to
How DHCS is stepping up outreach to
In addition to recruiting health navigators and partnering with organizations that directly serve enrollees, DHCS has invited volunteers to sign up as coverage ambassadors to spread the word that continuous
The department also is funding a communications campaign in 19 languages, and if enrollees no longer meet income eligibility requirements,
For the first time ever, Cooper said, DHCS began sending out emails, more than 7 million so far, as well as text messages, 1 million of those, to enrollees to let them know they needed to sign up.
DHCS is also rolling out other efforts soon, Cooper said, sending out toolkits to schools in the fall and working with the
Number of
While the percentage of people losing coverage could be about the same as historical figures, the sheer number of people affected by disenrollment has risen dramatically because states couldn’t drop anyone’s coverage.
In
Cooper said that DHCS has estimated that 1.8 million to 2.8 million Californians could lose their
An analysis by the
“We too often see that, when
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