Medicaid Asprovisions lapse, millions approach a coverage cliff
States are preparing to remove millions of people from Medicaid as protections put in place early in the covid-19 pandemic expire.
The upheaval, which begins in April, will put millions of low-income Americans at risk of losing health coverage, threatening their access to care and potentially exposing them to large medical bills.
It will also put pressure on the finances of hospitals, doctors, and others relying on payments from Medicaid, a state-federal program that covers lower-income people and people with disabilities.
Almost three years ago, as covid sent the economy into free fall, the federal government agreed to send billions of dollars in extra Medicaid funding to states on the condition that they stop dropping people from their rolls.
But legislation enacted in December will be phasing out that money over the next year and calls for states to resume cutting off from Medicaid people who no longer qualify.
Now, states face steep challenges: making sure they don’t disenroll people who are still entitled to Medicaid and connecting the rest to other sources of coverage.
Even before the pandemic, states struggled to stay in contact with Medicaid recipients, who in some cases lack a stable address or internet service, do not speak English, or don’t prioritize health insurance over more pressing needs.
“We have no illusion that this will be beautiful or graceful, but we will be doing everything we can not to lose anyone in the process,”
With the rate of uninsured Americans at an all-time low, 8%, the course reversal will be painful.
The Biden administration has predicted that 15 million people — 17% of enrollees — will lose coverage through Medicaid or CHIP, the closely related Children’s Health Insurance Program, as the programs return to normal operations. While many of the 15 million will fall off because they no longer qualify, nearly half will be dropped for procedural reasons, such as failing to respond to requests for updated personal information, a federal report said.
Certain states may be hit particularly hard: Nevada’s enrollment in Medicaid and CHIP has risen 47% since
Ordinarily, people move in and out of Medicaid all the time. States, which have significant flexibility in how they run their Medicaid programs, typically experience significant “churn” as people’s incomes change and they gain or lose eligibility.
The unwinding will play out over more than a year.
People who lose Medicaid coverage — in the more than 30 states covered by the federal marketplace — will have until
Even states that are taking far-reaching action to make sure people don’t end up uninsured worry the transition will be rough.
In
“We acknowledge that this is going to be a bumpy road,”
In an all-hands-on-deck effort, states are enlisting Medicaid health plans, doctors, hospitals, state insurance marketplaces, and an assortment of nonprofit groups, including schools and churches, to reach out to people at risk of losing coverage.
States will also use social media, television, radio, and billboards, as well as websites and mobile phone apps, to connect with enrollees. That’s in addition to letters and emails.
“he transient nature of Nevada’s population means that maintaining proper contact information has been difficult,” a state report said in November. At least 1 in 4 letters sent to enrollees were returned on account of a wrong address.
The law that allows states to begin disenrolling ineligible Medicaid recipients on
To further reduce disruption, the law requires states to cover children in Medicaid and CHIP for 12 months regardless of changes in circumstances, but that provision doesn’t take effect for almost a year.
States will give Medicaid recipients at least 60 days to respond to requests for information before dropping them, said
States will use government databases such as those from the
States have until February to submit their unwinding plans to the federal
But it is already clear that some states are doing much more than others to keep people insured.
“We want to make it easier to say yes to coverage,” Altman said.
But experts worry about what will become of Florida Medicaid enrollees.
Another concern for advocates is that
Florida’s unwinding plan illustrates the difficulty of reaching enrollees. The plan said that, since 2020, the state has identified 850,000 cases in which Medicaid recipients did not respond to requests for information.
Florida Medicaid officials did not return calls for comment.
While state officials struggle to manage the unwinding, health care providers are bracing for the fallout.
That could leave patients unable to pay and the nonprofit financially stretching to try to avoid children facing an interruption in treatment.
“If we had to discharge a child who is in our group home care, and they’re only halfway through it and don’t have all of the fundamentals of the care support needed, that could be tragic,” Sulser said.
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