MACPAC Releases June 2022 Report to Congress
The Medicaid and
"Integrating care for people who are dually eligible for Medicaid and Medicare, increasing access to vaccines, creating a more robust system for monitoring Medicaid beneficiaries' access to care, and advancing health equity in Medicaid will make a real difference in the lives of beneficiaries in every state," said MACPAC Chair
Chapter 1 includes recommendations to create a new and more robust system for monitoring access to care for Medicaid beneficiaries. States and the federal government are obligated to ensure that Medicaid provides access to services. However, the current approach to monitoring access does not measure key domains of access or provide actionable data, which are needed for policymakers and stakeholders to assess whether the program is meeting this obligation. The Commission approved recommendations that would direct the
Chapter 2 focuses on the oversight and transparency of managed care directed payments, which have become a large and growing share of Medicaid payments. Although information on spending under this new option is limited, state projections indicate that total spending exceeded
Chapter 3 makes recommendations to improve access to vaccines for adults enrolled in Medicaid, who generally have lower vaccination rates than those covered by private insurance. The Commission recommends a set of complementary actions to improve vaccine uptake, including making coverage of recommended vaccines a mandatory benefit for all adult Medicaid beneficiaries, promulgating regulations for vaccine payment, and encouraging the broad use of Medicaid providers in administering vaccines. The Commission also recommends that the Secretary of the
Chapter 4 looks at how Medicaid policy can be used to support adoption of health IT among behavioral health providers. Medicaid programs play a critical role in financing behavioral health services and are increasingly focused on ways to provide behavioral health in more integrated settings. The Commission recommends that CMS issue guidance to help states use Medicaid authorities and other federal resources to promote behavioral health IT adoption, and that the
Chapter 5 takes an important step forward in making integrated care a standard for the 12.2 million people who are dually eligible for Medicaid and Medicare. While integrating care for beneficiaries of these programs has the potential to improve care and reduce federal and state spending, only about 1 million full-benefit dually eligible beneficiaries were enrolled in integrated care models in 2020. The Commission recommends that
The final chapter of the June report addresses how to advance health equity in Medicaid, which has become a cross-cutting theme across all of MACPAC's work. More than half of the adults and two-thirds of children enrolled in Medicaid and CHIP are beneficiaries of color. Health disparities have long existed for Medicaid beneficiaries of color, and the chapter provides the context for understanding these racial disparities and inequities. It highlights data showing the racial and ethnic composition of the Medicaid population and the disparities affecting these beneficiaries. In addition, the chapter discusses policy levers, such as improving the collection and reporting of race and ethnicity data, that states and the federal government can use to promote equity and lays the groundwork for future MACPAC work.
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Report link: https://www.macpac.gov/publication/june-2022-report-to-congress-on-medicaid-and-chip/
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Original text here: https://www.macpac.gov/news/macpac-releases-june-2022-report-to-congress/
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