State, feds differ on explaining why 100,000 Nevadans lost Medicaid coverage
By
The Nevada Independent
Federal and state officials are offering divergent explanations for why more than 100,000 people were removed from
The federal government has described the situation that drove the policy change as a "glitch" while state officials called it "updated guidance." In total, more than 500,000 people in 29 states — including
It comes as states are "unwinding" the pandemic-era pause that allowed beneficiaries of the government-funded health insurance program to retain their insurance without frequent eligibility checks, which often results in lost coverage.
During a call last week, officials with the federal
Medical staff at a clinic in Summerlin on
In an
"Unfortunately, the issue of which method states are using to conduct ex parte was not raised during the initial mitigation plan stage of the unwinding process, during which CMS entered agreements with states on how they would do the work," McEvoy wrote.
She added that state Medicaid member advisory boards — composed of health care providers, consumers, and government representatives — had given feedback that recommended states streamline the number of applications sent in when multiple people in the same household used the program for health insurance.
"While fixing this is a significant challenge given that eligibility management systems are complicated, challenging to pivot, and costly to revise, a number of states are already in compliance," McEvoy said. "All others are actively working with their systems vendors on this."
Officials with the
"States received a policy clarification from CMS that led to a change in the normal course of action," spokesperson
As of
"
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