Impending changes could leave thousands uninsured
SPRINGFIELD – As many as 700,000 Illinoisans may lose Medicaid coverage in the months following
Medicaid is a health insurance program for poor and disabled people that is jointly funded by the federal government and the states.
A spending bill that
Under the program that will expire on
Because that law separated the Medicaid rules from other emergency actions, the program will end sooner than the
The change means many who have been receiving continuous Medicaid coverage throughout the pandemic will have to reapply for benefits, potentially leading to loss of coverage if the individual would no longer qualify for benefits or if they fail to complete a reapplication.
Nationwide, the federal government estimates that 15 million people, or 17.4 percent of Medicaid and
The department also noted that those individuals will be subject to redetermination over a staggered timeline over the next 12 months, not all at once when the program ends.
"At the state level, we estimate a total of roughly 384,000 will lose coverage because we believe in doing everything we can to help eligible Medicaid customers keep their benefits," DHFS spokesperson
committed to ensuring everyone who is eligible maintains their coverage, and that those who are not are given information about alternative coverage."
To avoid losing coverage, DHFS strongly urges Medicaid enrollees to fill out their renewal forms as soon as possible. The agency will resume regular verifications starting in late April, and people with a June renewal date will be the first ones to go through the restarted process. Those people will need to submit their renewal forms before
Munks said
"The state has and continues to increase customer service staff and enhance our systems," she said.
Munks said customers can complete their renewal by phone, although online is the preferred method.
The agency will try to reach affected individuals by mail, email, text messaging, phone calls and paid advertising, she said. It will also work with partner providers, advocacy organizations, nonprofits and other government entities, she added.
Munks said people who are found to be ineligible may still have other options for low-cost insurance, including individual plans sold through the Affordable Care Act marketplace, which operates in
Who is most affected?
DHFS says that
The
But another 7.9 percent, or 6.8 million people, will lose coverage despite still being eligible for Medicaid because they don't complete their applications properly or the state is somehow unable to process the application – a process called "administrative churning."
Children and young adults, ages 18-34, make up the largest categories of people expected to lose coverage. The change is also expected to disproportionately affect the Latino community, which makes up one quarter of those predicted to be ineligible and one-third of those expected to experience churning.
Black individuals make up 14 percent of those expected to lose Medicaid eligibility and 15 percent of those expected to experience churning.
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