If feds end emergency, 400k+ in Ohio may lose coverage
More than 400,000 Ohioans may lose Medicaid coverage – government-paid health insurance for low-income or disabled people – this summer when the federal government's COVID-19 emergency declaration ends, according to the
Under the declaration,
But that declaration is set to end
Those who became ineligible will have to be removed from the rolls, which isn't necessarily bad. A person could have climbed the income ladder during the pandemic and is now qualified for other health plans.
But the worry is underfunded and understaffed counties are facing the task of combing through the entire Medicaid population to disenroll ineligible people – all within a 90-day deadline imposed by
The deadline could cause an overwhelmed system to remove people from Medicaid when they shouldn't be.
"I just see a collapse," said state Rep.
A push for speed
Usually, Medicaid eligibility is reviewed once every 12 months, with enrollees being checked on a rolling basis. Current federal guidance recommends the "unwinding" process occur over a little more than a year. The goal is to spread the workload and avoid a crush of everyone renewing their eligibility at once.
But state lawmakers favoring smaller government and cost cutting want it done within 60 to 90 days.
"We want people to move on with their lives and obtain insurance through other means, hopefully through employment," said Sen.
The conflicting directions are leaving county case workers unable to do much in advance. An
To help meet the quick deadline,
Following the direction of lawmakers,
But critics say the PCG contract incentivizes disenrollment, where the more ineligible people it finds, the more money it gets. And if that person is particularly expensive to cover – typically sicker and older – that's more cash.
"We're putting populations who are still, by the way, disproportionately vulnerable to the impacts of the virus, in harm's way," said
Overworked and understaffed
Potts questioned why that
Like most of the economy, county departments already face significant worker shortages for positions that require a lot of training. Around 90% of counties are "deeply concerned" with staffing, Potts said.
"We've been working overtime for a whole pandemic," said
The end of the emergency declaration is expected to significantly increase the workload and number of inquiries. Renewing Medicaid eligibility isn't simple. Contacting Medicaid participants multiple times, making sure documents are correct and dealing with a lengthy appeals process all add time.
Ohio Medicaid estimates counties across the state handle 160,000 total cases a month, but that includes people normally renewing or applying for Medicaid for the first time. The pace isn't enough within 90 days to cover the 43% who can't be renewed automatically.
In fact, Potts thinks the full unwinding process could take three to five years.
"I just don't think that is realistic," said
Will you lose your Medicaid coverage?
The workload and time crunch have advocates worried a crisis will occur and mistakes will be made. People may not be contacted properly to ensure they renew for Medicaid, or the appeals process for someone kicked off may not be followed through.
"I think your average Ohioan on Medicaid is going to either be confused or scared," said Anthes, the Medicaid policy expert.
The
Lawmakers are currently waiting on the Medicaid department for more answers on the process. Some indicated they are open to giving counties more resources.
But for his



400k+ Ohioans at risk of losing Medicaid
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