Medicaid coverage back after computer glitch
Half-million people were affected, including thousands in Conn.
The computer issues affected people in 29 states and the
All states are undertaking a massive review of their Medicaid rolls after a three-year, pandemic- era prohibition on ending coverage expired this spring.
While the freeze was in effect, Medicaid enrollment swelled by nearly one-third, from 71 million people in
States often use computer programs as a first step in determining whether people should be automatically re-enrolled in Medicaid. If their eligibility is unclear, states then attempt to contact people by mail, phone, text or email seeking additional information. If that doesn't work, people are dropped from the rolls in what CMS describes as a "procedural termination."
In late August, CMS warned that some state computer systems were flagging entire households for further information - and dropping all family members
See Medicaid, A5
From A1
when no one responded - instead of reviewing each individual separately and automatically renewing children who remain eligible.
It sent letters to all states asking them to verify their compliance with federal rules.
For states in violation, federal officials required them to retroactively restore Medicaid coverage to those affected and to halt procedural terminations until their systems are fixed.
Some state Medicaid directors said Thursday that they were unaware they had been doing things incorrectly.
"It was never clear that this was against the rule or against the regulation, because if it was, we would have been doing it differently a long time ago," said
Fewer than 5,500 children were affected by the problem in
The impact was larger in
He said state workers will manually review eligibility for individuals within households until contractors can create a permanent fix early next year.
Officials in
"I would have loved to have learned about this a year ago," Levine said.
"But in either case, we're learning now and moving forward. It will just be another enhancement to our
process." Automated eligibility systems vary by state and can be technically challenging and costly to change, said
Some states expect to complete system improvement before the end of September while others expect it to take several months, said
More than 7 million people have been dropped from Medicaid since the pandemic- era protections ended, according to the nonprofit health policy organization KFF. Some states have been more aggressive than others in halting coverage for those who don't respond to renewal notices.
"There are states that are approaching Medicaid rolls with the idea being 'the rules are the rules, and consumers need to bear the burden of playing by the rules,'" said



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