HHS has limited options as millions lose Medicaid
But the unique structure of the jointly run federal and state program means there's little the Biden administration can do to prevent poor people from losing health care.
As of
Across all states, 73 percent of those disenrollments are procedural terminations, meaning patients in question still qualify for Medicaid based on their income or disability status, but they may have missed a phone call from a state health official, could not verify income with a previous employer or dealt with some other procedural misstep that thwarted the process of reenrolling.
The disenrollments are happening in the context of the end of a continuous coverage requirement brought on by the COVID-19 public health emergency. That requirement barred states from removing anyone from their Medicaid rosters during the emergency. The end of the requirement in March means that Medicaid recipients must verify their eligibility or risk being cut from the program, and many red states see this as an opportunity to quickly cut costs and trim their Medicaid rolls.
The
"It is hard to underestimate or underscore enough the historical, traumatic events that we are experiencing in the Medicaid base right now," said
"The [coverage] grounds that we have made since the passage of the [2010 health care law] are quite frankly about to erode because we are not taking this problem seriously enough," she said.
In
But the
In
Power of the purse
Biden administration officials and
HHS offered states some new flexibilities earlier this month in an effort to stem the disenrollments.
This includes allowing managed care firms to complete Medicaid renewal forms on an enrollee's behalf, allowing states to delay administrative termination for one month while the state conducts additional targeted outreach, and allowing pharmacies and community-based organizations to facilitate reinstatement of coverage for those who were disenrolled.
But the new flexibilities stop short of the agency's ultimate power move: cutting off funding to individual state Medicaid programs. While CMS controls the power of the purse, it rarely uses it.
During a call with reporters on
"If we find any violation of federal rules, we will use every lever
But
While the federal government oversees and funds Medicaid, each state designs and operates its own Medicaid program within federal guidelines.
When federal bureaucrats see something amiss in state programs, its first course of action is typically a corrective action plan, and the last resort is withholding federal funds. But such drastic steps rarely occur, and corrective action plans take a long time to produce results, explained
A sense of urgency
The agency has yet to take these steps, though, and
Top
Senate Finance Chair
"We urge you to move swiftly to use these tools to prevent more coverage losses among eligible children and adults in
Pallone on Friday said that Republican states aren't doing enough to ensure their citizens don't lose coverage. He called on CMS to "be more assertive in laying out their plans for enforcement action."
But taking a heavy hand with state Medicaid programs is not usually the agency's style, Shields said. Since Medicaid is a state-federal program, it has to walk a careful line.
Once kicked off Medicaid, an individual has 30 or 90 days, depending on their coverage, to appeal the decision and provide the necessary information to have their coverage reinstated without any gap. But many are not aware of that option. And that's where local health groups and outreach programs come in, Shields said.
"We can sit and yell at the front building of CMS forever, but the truth is, all of us need to mobilize. … This is not just a federal or state problem. It is a community issue," Shields said.



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