Medicaid coverage to end for some in Va. Virginia to begin dropping people from Medicaid in May
For the past year,
On
More than 2.2 million Virginians and their children rely on the federal-state program for the elderly, disabled and people with low incomes. But now they will have to show they are still eligible for their benefits after the end of the COVID-19 public health emergency that began more than three years ago.
The same thing is happening across
"This is the largest enrollment event in the history of Medicaid," said
The nonprofit foundation is working with state and local agencies, insurance companies, free clinics and federally qualified health care centers, and other advocates to ensure that people either do not lose their health coverage or replace it with subsidized polices on the insurance marketplace.
People who lose their eligibility may be able to find affordable health coverage on the federal health insurance marketplace, which the state will soon run to provide insurance coverage with subsidies for premiums and out-of-pocket costs, based on income. The federal government also has created a special enrollment period in the marketplace for anyone who loses coverage from now until
"We have pulled out all the stops in how we work with the states," said
The state also is concerned about people losing their benefits because they did not receive letters about renewing eligibility or else did not respond to them. They may have moved and not forwarded their mail, may not have understood the letters because of language barriers or simply may have failed to follow through on the requirement that they apply to renew their eligibility for benefits.
Those lapses, called "administrative churn" because they are based on administrative causes rather than eligibility, could cost about 80,000 Virginians their coverage, or an additional 4% of program participants, and more than seven million people across the country.
"We need everyone engaged on this," Tsai said at CMS.
Normally, people in the program must undergo an annual review of their eligibility, but he said, "For many folks in Medicaid, it will have been more than three years since they were required to go through eligibility determination."
Reducing the churn
For advocates in
"It's a hard message: keep an eye on the mail for the next year," said
The federal rules require people to respond in 30 days, but they also allow a 90-day grace period for reinstating people who are still eligible but did not respond in time.
"We have started to hear from some people," Cariano said. "Folks are getting the renewal (letters) and expressing some confusion about what they are."
Oswalt's organization also has 21 employees across the state to help protect Medicaid eligibility or find new sources of health care coverage, but it has not received many calls yet from people in need of assistance.
"It's a little early," she said. "It's just starting."
The state has received about
In exchange, states could not drop those people from their Medicaid programs during the public health emergency. Last year,
State officials and advocates have been preparing for the transition since last spring even though they were uncertain when it would begin. That allowed them to improve technology for automatically determining whether people remain eligible and forgoing the need for them to apply for renewal. It also has given them time to inform people of what is coming and develop options for those who will lose their eligibility.
"I think the extra time has been helpful," Oswalt said.
The
"I think they are really coming from a good place," Oswalt said.
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