medicaid in colorado 325Kto lose access to plan
Starting in April,
About 325,000 people in
That’s comparable to the 400,000 people who joined Medicaid in the first two years of its expansion to slightly higher-income groups in 2014 and 2015, she said.
It’s just one of a series of changes coming this year as the federal government’s COVID-19 public health emergency — and the expansions of social programs that came with it — comes to an end.
Other changes will affect how people pay for COVID-19 vaccines and testing, how much hospitals receive for treating some patients with the virus and whether people who were prescribed controlled substances online need to find an in-person medical home.
On Monday, the Biden administration announced the public health emergency will end
Representatives for physicians, hospitals and groups focused on patient costs all listed the end of extended Medicaid coverage as the most disruptive change as the federal government winds down its pandemic response. In most cases, members will lose eligibility because their income increased above Medicaid’s limit.
Others moved out of state, or exhausted their one year of postpartum coverage.
Late last year,
Bimestefer said anyone who is receiving Medicaid needs to make sure their contact information is up to date, so they get the paperwork to prove their eligibility. The plan is for members to receive a notice more than two months before their enrollment anniversary, which is when the department will determine if they still qualify, she said.
“We really want people to know this is coming,” she said. “We want to keep them covered on another (type of insurance) policy.”
The income limit for Medicaid coverage is
In the four years before the pandemic, an average of 65% of people who were removed from Medicaid were uninsured for at least a short time, according to a study from the
The state also is using an automated process of looking up members’ income information in databases for other social programs and one run by credit score company Equifax.
The Medicaid redetermination period starts shortly after enhanced food assistance rates end in March, which could put a strain on counties’ social services departments, Bimestefer said. People can somewhat ease the strain on counties by doing as much online as possible and only calling for help if they get stuck, she said.
Dr.
“People are going to wait longer with emergencies,” he said.
Other changes coming as the public health emergency wind down include:
Paying for testing, treatment and vaccines
The government’s stockpile of free COVID-19 tests and treatments is running low, and
Vaccines also will no longer be free to everyone. People with insurance most likely will be at least partially covered for future doses, although they could be charged a copay or other out-of-pocket costs. Medicaid and CHIP are required to offer the COVID-19 vaccines for free and will have testing covered into 2024.
“If we have potentially thousands of people losing coverage and pharmaceutical companies raising the cost of vaccines people want and need … we may see a significant increase in the number of COVID infections and deaths,” he said.
Hospitals will be paid less; waivers uncertain
Hospitals will no longer get an enhanced rate for treating COVID-19 patients. During the public health emergency, Medicare paid 20% more when a patient had the virus than it normally would for the same hospital services.
“It has been a remarkably challenging time,” she said.
The
One important waiver allowed critical access hospitals — small, rural facilities that are the only option in their area — to keep patients longer than 96 hours, Axelrod said. Normally, those hospitals need to transfer patients to a larger hospital or discharge them to their homes or a nursing facility within four days. That’s been harder to do with few beds open in nursing homes, so reinstating that rule now would create challenges, she said.
Some telehealth flexibilities remain
The omnibus spending bill that
It’s not clear, however, if patients still will be able to get controlled substances prescribed entirely through telehealth.
Before the pandemic, they had to schedule an in-person visit, which was meant to cut down on prescribing addictive substances without a legitimate medical purpose. That flexibility is supposed to end in May, although it’s possible the
Providing telemedicine across state lines also will become more complicated, Johnson said. Before the pandemic, doctors who wanted to provide telehealth services had to get a license in every state where their patients lived, and those rules will return after the emergency ends. It’s likely states eventually will work out some sort of deal to eliminate that hurdle, though, because online visits are popular, he said.
“Physicians love it. Patients love it,” he said.
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