TRUMP ADMINISTRATION DROPS MEDICAID VACCINE REPORTING REQUIREMENTS
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In a letter to state health officials last month, the
The "Core Sets" are a set of quality measures designed to measure and improve health care quality and access. The Core Set of Children's Health Care Quality Measures for Medicaid and CHIP, or the "Child Core Set", includes quality measures that capture various aspects of children's health such as behavior health care, preventive care, maternal health, acute and chronic conditions, oral health care, and experience of care as well as vaccination status. The Child Core Set was developed in 2009, voluntary annual state reporting began in 2010, and reporting became mandatory in 2024. There is also a separate set of quality measures for adult enrollees, the "Adult Core Set". The Adult Core Set was developed in 2012, voluntary annual state reporting began in 2014, and the behavioral health measures became mandatory for states to report in 2024. To enforce compliance with mandatory measures, CMS has the authority to withhold federal Medicaid payments, though states can request a one-year exemption if they are unable to report for a specific population and measure. The Core Set data are made publicly available and are designed to measure health care access and quality for Medicaid/CHIP enrollees, allowing states to monitor health care quality, identify improvement opportunities, and address health disparities.
The Trump administration recently removed four immunization measures from the Core Sets, making them voluntary for states to report. CMS's
The recent Core Set changes did not follow the typical process for updates. To advance and improve the quality measures, CMS is required by federal law to update the Core Sets, ensuring the measures "reflect the testing, validation, and consensus process for the development of pediatric quality measures". As finalized in federal regulation under the
While seemingly a small, technical change, the removal of vaccine reporting in Medicaid and CHIP may make it more difficult to monitor and understand vaccination trends for a large share of children in the
It remains unclear how many states will continue to report the voluntary immunization measures and what will happen to these measures in future years. Prior to mandatory reporting, the number of states reporting the Child Core Set measures increased over time, with voluntary responses to CIS-CH and IMA-CH (show in Figure 1) reaching 46 to 48 responding states by 2023 depending on the vaccine. Given the infrastructure is already in place to report, states may continue to voluntarily report the immunization measures. However, CMS has indicated they will be considering options for new immunization measures to replace the now voluntary measures. They plan to engage stakeholders, including states, quality measure experts, providers as well as vaccine registry managers and electronic health record vendors, to develop measures that capture "whether parents and families were informed about vaccine choices, vaccine safety and side effects, and alternative vaccine schedules" and to explore whether data can account for "person and family preferences related to vaccines" and religious exemptions for vaccinations. Without the Child Core Set immunization measures, at this time it may still be possible to monitor Medicaid/CHIP children's vaccination trends through other data sources, such as the
Dropping vaccine reporting requirements could also make it more challenging to monitor recent declines in childhood vaccinations rates and the impact of vaccine policy changes. Children's routine and seasonal vaccination rates have declined in recent years, due in part to rising vaccine hesitancy fueled by vaccine misinformation, increasinglypartisanviews on vaccine requirements, andadecline in trustof health authorities. In addition, the Administration recently announced significant changes to the children's vaccination schedule, reducing the number of diseases targeted from 17 to 11 and the number of routine vaccines from 13 to 7. Changes to the vaccine schedule at the federal level (and confusion about the changes) coupled with otherpublic health policy actions under the Trump administration could further drive down vaccination rates among children and increase incidence of vaccine preventable diseases. Limited vaccination status data means reduced visibility into vaccination trends and what impact recent policy changes may have.



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