State awards contract for Medicaid block grant study
The tentative contract calls for
On
"Your Medicaid Administrator,
The letter followed a meeting the governor and president had while Trump was briefly at Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson during a refueling stop.
State
Medicaid would pay insurance costs such as premiums and other out-of-pocket expenses that are typically paid by the insurance recipient.
That study, known as the Milliman report and done when state lawmakers were debating a suite of Medicaid reforms, concluded that shifting low-income adults enrolled under expanded Medicaid coverage to the individual private insurance market would cost the state an additional
"Although DHSS's administrative role and, thus, costs are reduced under this option, DHSS would be responsible for ensuring that the enrollee does not experience costs beyond the allowed Medicaid limits, paying for services not covered by the private coverage benefit plan, and paying co-payments for services paid by the insurer," the Milliman report states.
DHSS spokesman
He noted that "only those with modest health care needs (healthier population) will be eligible for placement in the private market" and the study will identify the parameters of that population.
Premiums in the individual private market are among the highest in the country at hundreds of dollars per month and
Also,
"The idea that we'd make half-baked decisions with our largest federal stream of investment, which, by the way, is life or death for 215,000 Alaskans that rely on Medicaid health insurance -- it's just crazy," Fields said.
Premera officials declined to comment for this story.
The Dunleavy administration initially proposed cutting
DHSS officials later said they could achieve approximately
Economic analyses done for provider groups found that such cuts would likely result in at least 8,000 job losses in the state. Health care -- buoyed by federal Medicaid spending -- is the one major industry that has continued to grow through
According to the Legislative Finance Division, overall spending on Medicaid in
The state savings is largely attributable to Senate Bill 74 passed in 2016, which started long-term efforts to reduce overall Medicaid costs and utilization, but also shifted as many eligible costs as legislators could find to the federal government.
Fields said the Medicaid reform found in SB 74 is an example of "prudent" policymaking.
"When there were studies in the past the administrations and the Legislature did it right and they took the time to make sure they understood the implications of different policy decisions and if the new administration wants to go in a different direction in terms of Medicaid they need to base it on actual information and legitimate studies and not just kind of create an excuse for them to do something they've predetermined to do," Fields said.
Block grants for Medicaid have long been a policy favored by many
DHSS spokesman Bennett said via email that the department would need a Section 1115 demonstration waiver from CMS to shift enrollees to private insurance and it's unclear whether
"CMS will need to provide official guidance on (block grants) before state are fully able to consider this approach to funding for state Medicaid programs," Bennett wrote.
Fields said limiting health care for Medicaid recipients -- which he sees as a likely outcome of instituting a block grants -- would simply push more people back to receiving more care through costly and inefficient emergency room visits that are generally seen as an overall cost driver in the health care system.
He also pointed to a
Legislative attorney
"I think it's critical to look at every opportunity to make the health care system more efficient and the Legislature and previous administration's have been doing that," Fields said. "My objection is actually to abandoning reform, which is what this effort represents."
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(c)2019 the Alaska Journal of Commerce (Anchorage, Alaska)
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