Missouri expected to have 190K new Medicaid recipients by now. It has less than a third [The Kansas City Star]
Jan. 25—JEFFERSON CITY — As soon as the
The 29-year-old southwest
Leach, who has three children, was eager to get coverage for the corticosteroids used to treat her asthma. She could only afford refills during the months she qualified for Medicaid while pregnant. When she showed up at an urgent care center with COVID last July, struggling to breathe, she refused to be hospitalized for lack of insurance.
She ended up waiting nearly four months for Medicaid.
"I couldn't even tell you how many hours I spent on the phone" checking the status of her application, she said. The state lost her proof of income twice during that time.
But four months into the program's official start, long waits like the one Leach faced are increasingly common.
Last month it took the
The department says it faces staff shortages as applications pile up. The division that processes applications saw a 20% turnover last year and a more than 70% decline in job candidates, DSS spokeswoman
This month, officials told the
The delays are the latest hurdle in what advocates have criticized as a slow and rocky launch of the expansion.
"Is it going at the appropriate pace? The answer is emphatically no," said
Voters approved the expansion in a constitutional amendment in
Since October,
That's well short of signups in
It's also short of
'Real outreach'
Lack of awareness is one factor hampering full enrollment of the roughly 275,000 low-income Missourians the state expected to gain coverage under the expansion, according to health advocates.
The delay and subsequent court case likely confused people who may be eligible, they say, making local, grassroots outreach efforts particularly crucial.
DSS said the department has updated its website, social media platforms and email newsletters with information about the expansion. But advocates say the agency has failed to reach much of the low-income population that could qualify.
"There hasn't been any real outreach to speak for from the state," said
Instead, much of that work is dependent on low-income clinics or other organizations that serve the poor.
Rates of enrollment appear to vary across the state, according to DSS data from the first three months of expansion that
In some counties, as many as six or seven percent of the low-income adult population that could qualify have been enrolled. The two counties with the state's highest rates of uninsured adults are lagging behind.
"My hunch is the variation's reflective of how well people on the ground are doing in enrolling people," McBride said.
At
"We don't have the horses to pull the cart when it comes to just medical care," said CEO
'Huge barrier'
Advocates say there are ways the state could more easily enroll large numbers of people who are now eligible for health care: by finding Missourians who already receive other social services.
Leach, for example, is no stranger to DSS, which checks her and husband's income regularly because their three children have always qualified for Medicaid.
States like
In
The state is automatically moving some health care recipients from other programs to the expanded Medicaid. It has a financial incentive to do so. The state pays only 10% of the costs for recipients in the expanded program, compared with about 35% for other Medicaid beneficiaries.
Of those currently enrolled, Family Support Division director
The recent delays in application processing have created a dilemma for advocates who are trying to get more people enrolled, Weisgrau said.
"Ideally, you want to be out there waving the flag for this and beating the drum and letting people know what's available," Weisgrau said. "But when all you're doing is putting people into a queue that takes more than two months for them to find out if they're eligible, it creates a real problem and a lot of those people get frustrated."
Applicants who haven't heard back might give up on an application, or apply more than once, adding to the backlogs, Weisgrau said.
In October, a slip and fall landed Leach in the hospital with a broken calf bone and crushed ankle. By the time the bill arrived about a month later, she was finally approved for coverage. But the cost of her ER visit and surgery still caused a brief panic. Without Medicaid, she would have owed the equivalent of 18 months of mortgage payments.
She works in homeless outreach at a
Even with use of the church's computers, the application process and wait times can be challenging for people living in poverty who don't have reliable Internet, phone service or even a permanent address, she said.
If they get locked out of the state's online application they have to mail or fax their proof of income. If there is a question about their application they can't always be reached.
"When I was trying to get through, the shortest wait time I had (on the phone) was three and a half hours," Leach said.
"You don't have the time to do that if you're buying (cell phone plans) by the minute. And they can't get hold of you about stuff when you never know if your phone is going to be on or if you're going to have cell service. So that has been a very huge barrier for a lot of our folks."
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