Medicaid denials reversed 891%' following privatization: state auditor
Denied services for Medicaid members increased dramatically following the 2016 switch to managed care, according to the Iowa State Auditor.
A report released by the Iowa State Auditor's Office Wednesday shows the number of instances in which an independent judge overturned the decision by the insurer to deny or reduce a service for a Medicaid member increased 891 percent.
At the same time, the number of times a judge upheld the insurer's decision dropped 72 percent.
To Iowa State Auditor
"Long story short, Iowans are not getting what they paid for," said Auditor
The
"While the
The report's findings
In 2016, the state switched its Medicaid program from a government-managed fee-for-service model to a managed-care system. Under the managed care model, private insurance companies - called managed-care organizations - are contracted through the state to provide services to the thousands of disabled or poor Iowans who qualify for Medicaid.
Medicaid benefits in
Under federal regulation, Medicaid members have the opportunity to have their case reviewed during a State
The report, published on the state auditor's website, covered the period between
The report analyzed 5,074 appeal cases in that time period.
Following privatization, the number of instances a court overturned a decision by a managed-care organization to reduce or deny services to a Medicaid member increased 891 percent. That's an increase from 11 overturned cases before the switch to managed care to 109 overturned cases following privatization - or an increase of 98 overturned cases.
At the same time, the number of instances a judge agreed with the reduction or denial of services decreased 72 percent. That's a decrease from 417 upheld denials to 116 upheld denials, or a difference of 301 cases.
"The combination of these two measurements shows privatized Medicaid in
Sand said the report studied Medicaid members who received services from a managed-care organization during the pre-privatization period and continued to receive services under a managed-care organization following privatization.
The total number of appeals dropped 45 percent following the switch to managed care in 2016, the report states. It further says that 891 percent figure calculated by the State Auditor's Office shows privatization "substantially increased the number of illegal denials of care in
The state's response
DHS officials said the attempt to compare appeals processes between the old fee-for-service and the managed-care models was an "apples-to-oranges comparison."
"The process is not the same, so making a comparison without factoring in the improvements we built into the MCO appeals process prior to ever seeing an administrative law judge is just wrong," Iowa Medicaid Director
DHS officials also had questioned the report's methodology in a letter to the State Auditor's Office. They said because managed-care organizations conduct their own review before an appeal hearing is granted, it "inherently creates skewed results" in the comparison groups.
"In short, we believe that much more information would be needed to substantiate that a higher number of 'reversed' administrative law judge State
In its statement Wednesday, DHS officials also noted clinical staff with the Medicaid program review each appeals cases to resolve any identified issues.
"Over the past couple of years, my team and I have made many good faith efforts to demonstrate transparency and integrity with the Auditor of State, which is why this is so disappointing," DHS Director
"I'm proud of the work
OTHER FINDINGS
Throughout the analysis of these appeals outcomes, Sand said his office discovered a number of instances in which a member's appeal was misclassified by the managed-care organization as a grievance - meaning the decision was not able to go through the State
"Our review raised concerns that issues that should be treated as appeals are regularly, if not systematically, misclassified as grievances or first level reviews," the report states. "This means that the member never reaches an independent judge that can review the issue and determine the legal and appropriate resolution."
But Sand said the report did not measure the size of the misclassification problem, "so we can't tell you if that happens rarely or if that happens frequently."
Sand pointed to possible issues within the managed-care organizations' administrative processes as a potential reason for this trend in appeals outcomes reported by his office. The report, however, did not draw any specific conclusions.
"The cause of that issue, whether it's expertise or poor training or whatever, doesn't really change the bottom line," Sand said.
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