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EXPANSION (NC)- Is Medicaid expansion in trouble? Cooper urges lawmakers to separate expansion from state budget.

MM Curator summary

The article below has been highlighted and summarized by our research team. It is provided here for member convenience as part of our Curator service.

 
 

[MM Curator Summary]: Ruh roh. The journo says the quiet part out loud. Alternative summary: Cooper sees whats happening and asks pretty please for legislators to forfeit all leverage they have in this giant deal.

 
 

 
 

Clipped from: https://journalnow.com/news/local/government-politics/is-medicaid-expansion-in-trouble-cooper-urges-lawmakers-to-separate-expansion-from-state-budget/article_ff869d32-19d2-11ee-982d-e3e9154ab02b.html

 
 

Gov. Roy Cooper urged state Republican legislative leaders to separate funding for Medicaid expansion from the 2023-24 state budget.

Allison Lee Isley, Journal

Richard Craver

Gov. Roy Cooper urged state Republican legislative leaders on Monday to separate funding for Medicaid expansion from the 2023-24 state budget, even though that funding is those leaders’ primary leverage against a budget bill veto.

Cooper signed House Bill 76 into law on March 27, surrounded by a bipartisan group of state legislators, including bill sponsor Rep. Donny Lambeth, R-Forsyth.

The signing of HB76 means that between 450,000 and 650,000 North Carolinians are a step closer to having health coverage through Medicaid.

Yet, the expansion legislation has been stuck in limbo as Republican House and Senate budget negotiations have spilled over into July.

There are no new projections of when the 2023 regular session will end.

Without a signed state budget, the legislation in HB76 would expire on July 1, 2024, meaning North Carolina won’t become the 40th Medicaid expansion state.

Cooper said Monday that “making Medicaid expansion contingent on passing the budget was and is unnecessary.”

“Now, the failure of Republican legislators to pass the budget is ripping health care away from thousands of real people and costing our state and our hospitals millions of dollars.

“Tying it to the budget is tying our hands, and the legislature should decouple the two and start Medicaid expansion now.”

Legislative analysts have expressed concerns that Republican legislative leaders may insert controversial legislation into the budget, potentially causing Cooper not to sign it.

That would set up a potential veto override vote in both chambers.

Next steps

North Carolinians who would likely be eligible under an expanded program are those between the ages of 18 and 64 who earn too much to qualify for Medicaid coverage, but not enough to purchase coverage on the private insurance marketplace.

Once there is a signed 2023-24 state budget, the N.C. Department of Health and Human Services will submit a State Plan amendment to the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services.

“After a budget is enacted, we will determine a proposed go-live date,’ DHHS said Monday. “That is why the governor is seeking to separate the budget from our ability to go live.”

DHHS said on March 27 that “CMS has up to 90 days to review and approve the State Plan Amendment, or issue a Request for Additional Information that stops the 90-day clock.”

“When N.C. Medicaid submits a response to the Request for Additional Information, the 90-day clock for review and approval restarts.”

Medicaid expansion finally moved forward in March when the House chose to agree with the prominent Senate changes to HB76 that foremost addressed easing or eliminating several certificate-of-need provider restrictions.

Cooper acknowledged during a March 27 MSNBC interview the necessity of the CON reform measures, saying providing “more competition in the health care arena was incorporated into this final agreement.”

Lambeth focused on the economic impact of expansion, particularly the additional $1.7 billion in federal incentive funding coming to the state.

“These funds can be used for much-needed reform of our mental-health system, improving access to care sites across the state that provides care to our citizens when needed rather than being in one of our emergency rooms awaiting care,” Lambeth said.

“The impact of federal funds to North Carolina’s economy is $6 billion per year.”

Lapsing coverage

An accompanying statement from the governor’s office said that by not having a 2023-24 state budget in place, “this failure could result in more work for counties, less money for hospitals and people losing care in the interim for no reason.”

“If Medicaid Expansion and HASP (Healthcare Access and Stabilization Program that reimburses hospitals) don’t go live at the same time, it will cost the hospitals as much at $60 million more than necessary.”

The statement from the governor’s office stressed that about 9,000 people will lose their Medicaid coverage during July alone who would have been able to keep it under expansion.

There are estimates that nearly 300,000 North Carolinians receiving COVID-19 pandemic-related Medicaid coverage could face being removed as a recipient over the next 12 months.

However, NCDHHS said it is working “to ensure people eligible for Medicaid do not lose coverage, and those no longer eligible are transitioned smoothly to affordable health plans or other health care options.”

“Many of these beneficiaries will be eligible for health care coverage under Medicaid expansion, which the legislature recently passed, but cannot start until after CMS approves North Carolina’s changes and a (state) budget is enacted.”

NCDHHS said its goal during unwinding “is to ensure people who remain eligible for Medicaid continue to be covered and those who are no longer eligible know their potential options, such as buying coverage, often at a reduced cost, through the federal Health Insurance Marketplace.”

State Medicaid officials have been working with county Departments of Social Services and other partners to reach as many beneficiaries as possible “to explain what they can expect and their potential options to obtain health coverage.”

Beneficiaries have the right to appeal the decision by their local DSS, and information on this process is included in their notice of termination or reduced benefits.

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FWA (RI/NY)Nursing home chain owners charged with stealing $83M in Medicaid money

MM Curator summary

The article below has been highlighted and summarized by our research team. It is provided here for member convenience as part of our Curator service.

 
 

[MM Curator Summary]: “More info on the “un-named” NH owners we also saw in a NY case last week.”

 
 

 
 

Clipped from: https://pbn.com/nursing-home-chain-owners-charged-with-stealing-83m-in-medicaid-money/

 
 

CENTERS HEALTH CARE operates 47 facilities in the Northeast, including three in Rhode Island.

PROVIDENCE – The owners of a Centers Health Care were charged on Wednesday in a massive fraud scheme that allegedly siphoned off $83 million of Medicaid money for personal gain. 

The multistate chain operates 47 facilities throughout the Northeast, with three in Rhode Island, the Bannister Center for Rehabilitation and Health Care in Providence, the Kingston Center in West Kingston and the Oak Hill Center in Pawtucket

The diversion of funds resulted in “significant resident neglect, harm, and humiliation” at three of the chain’s homes in and around New York City and another near Buffalo, said New York State’s Attorney General Letitia James in a statement. 

The chain’s Rhode Island facilities were not named in the filing. Brian Hodge, a spokesperson for R.I. Attorney General Peter F. Neronha, said his office was reviewing the allegations. Joseph Wendelken, spokesperson for the R.I. Department of Health, said “we are aware of that lawsuit in New York.”

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The complaint involving the company’s New York facilities claims the owners operated the nursing homes with insufficient staffing in order to increase their own profits. Attorney James said residents were “forced to sit for hours in their own urine and feces, suffered from severe dehydration, malnutrition, and increased risk of death, developed infections and sepsis from untreated bed sores and inconsistent wound care, sustained life-changing injuries from falls, and died.” 

Centers Health Care spokesperson, Jeff Jacomowitz, emailed PBN a statement refuting the allegations. He emphasized that the charges pertain only to New York.

“Centers Health Care prides itself on its commitment to patient care. Centers denies the New York Attorney General’s allegations wholeheartedly and attempted to resolve this matter out of court,” Jacomowitz wrote. “We will fight these spurious claims with the facts on our side. Beyond that, Centers Health Care will not comment on ongoing litigation.”

The lawsuit followed an investigation by Attorney General’s Medicaid Fraud Control Unit. The MFCU alleged that nursing home co-owners Kenneth Rozenberg and Daryl Hagler turned the four homes into “money making machines” by using an elaborate network of related companies and collusive, fraudulent transactions, to divert the $83 million from its intended use of providing sufficient staffing and required resident care.

Investigations into other nursing homes and facilities throughout New York state are ongoing.

To stop further harm and suffering, James said she would seek to prohibit the four New York nursing homes from admitting new residents until staffing meets appropriate standards.

Nursing home staffing has become an industry-wide problem across the county. Under Rhode Island state law nursing homes can be fined for not meeting minimum staffing requirements. 

The Nursing Home Staffing and Quality Care Act was signed into law by Gov. Daniel J. McKee in May 2021. RIDOH has not enforced the act due to a nationwide shortage of nurses and the homes’ inability to find qualified nurses and aides who will work for wages that are less than those at hospitals. RIDOH found that 55 nursing homes in the Ocean State would have faced a combined $11 million in fines for understaffing during the second quarter of 2022 if it had enforced the act.

(CORRECTS last name spellings of Attorney General Peter F. Neronha and Joseph Wendelken in 4th paragraph.)

Contact PBN staff writer Sam Wood at Wood@PBN.com


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FWA (MI)- Medicaid Fraud Investigation Turns Up Two in Michigan City

MM Curator summary

The article below has been highlighted and summarized by our research team. It is provided here for member convenience as part of our Curator service.

 
 

[MM Curator Summary]: Providers stealing pills paid for by Medicaid. For those that need to hear it- this is wrong.

 
 

Clipped from: https://hometownnewsnow.com/local-news/696067

 
 

(Michigan City, IN) – Two La Porte County healthcare workers are facing charges of Medicaid fraud by allegedly stealing controlled substances.

 
 

The office of State Attorney General Todd Rokita has announced a total of eight cases of medical fraud statewide involving licensed healthcare professionals. Two of them locally are being assisted by the La Porte County Prosecutor’s Office.

 
 

50-year-old Traci Lindfors of Michigan City is accused of withholding, for her own use, medications from residents at the healthcare facility where she worked. She faces 3 Level-6 Felonies.

 
 

57-year-old Victoria Lee Bell is accused of stealing medication as a nurse at Life Care in Michigan City. Records show that Bell’s nursing license was suspended in 2018 as an investigation of her suspicious activity was launched. She now faces two Level-6 Felony charges.

 
 

Both cases are in La Porte Superior Court 4. They are part of a statewide crackdown on Medicaid fraud.

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FWA (IN) – Columbus nurse charged in nationwide health care fraud investigation

MM Curator summary

The article below has been highlighted and summarized by our research team. It is provided here for member convenience as part of our Curator service.

 
 

[MM Curator Summary]: One of the 78 people caught in the national Medicaid fraud dragnet that uncovered $2.5B in fraud.

 
 

 
 

Clipped from: https://www.localnewsdigital.com/2023/06/30/attorney-generals-office-investigates-health-care-fraud/

 
 

Courtesy – DOJ.

INDIANAPOLIS – The Indiana Attorney General’s office, through its Medicaid Fraud Control Unit, joined more than a dozen states and the federal government Wednesday in a nationwide enforcement action against 78 individuals charged with $2.5 billion in Medicaid Fraud. One of those charged is a licensed practice nurse (LPN) in Columbus.

Columbus LPN Erin McMillan, 44, faces charges of obtaining a controlled substance by fraud; furnishing false or fraudulent information; and failure to make, keep, or furnish a record. Complaint filings reportedly include video footage of McMillan obtaining narcotic medications but not administering them and staff alleging that she put items into her personal bags at work, per the Attorney General’s office.

According to the U.S. Department of Justice, defendants supposedly defrauded Medicaid and Medicare programs and some used the proceeds to buy exotic automobiles, jewelry, and yachts. The Justice Department seized millions in cash, automobiles, and real estate related to the schemes.

The Indiana Attorney General’s Office investigated eight cases against licensed healthcare professionals and medical offices. Department attorneys, with the assent of local prosecutors, will pursue charges against the accused.

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FWA (TX)- Texas Attorney General’s Medicaid Fraud Control Unit Helps Take Down $6.9 Million Medicaid Fraud Scheme

MM Curator summary

The article below has been highlighted and summarized by our research team. It is provided here for member convenience as part of our Curator service.

 
 

[MM Curator Summary]: “Marketers” and the parents/caregivers of Medicaid kids took kickbacks to help facilitate this dental services scheme.

 
 

 
 

Clipped from: https://www.texasattorneygeneral.gov/news/releases/texas-attorney-generals-medicaid-fraud-control-unit-helps-take-down-69-million-medicaid-fraud-scheme

Christian Agno Aquino, 42, of Humble, was arrested for his role in a $6.9 million Medicaid fraud and kickback scheme, alongside Rene Gaviola, 67, and Ifeanyi Ndubisi Ozoh, 51, of Houston, who were previously arrested. The defendants are charged with defrauding the Medicaid program through illicit practices committed through the Floss Family Dental Care clinic in Houston. 

According to the indictment, Gaviola, the operator of Floss Family Dental Care, together with his managers Ozoh and Aquino, submitted fraudulent claims to Medicaid for pediatric dental services that were not provided or were in some cases performed by unlicensed individuals. The defendants are also accused of offering illegal kickbacks to marketers and caregivers of Medicaid-insured children, enticing them to bring the children to Floss for fraudulent dental services. 

The indictment also details how Gaviola laundered Medicaid funds, transferring them from the Floss business bank account to his personal account in transactions exceeding $100,000. From 2019 to 2021, the dental clinic fraudulently billed Medicaid approximately $6.9 million. 

The investigation was conducted by Sergeant Alfred Paige, Investigative Auditor Daryl Middleton, and Captain Alexander Chancia of the Texas Attorney General’s Medicaid Fraud Control Unit (“MFCU”), in cooperation with the FBI and the Department of Health and Human Services – Office of Inspector General. MFCU’s Assistant Attorney General Kathryn Olson, who also serves as a Special Assistant U.S. Attorney with the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of Texas, is prosecuting the case along with Assistant U.S. Attorney Grace Murphy. 

The OAG’s Medicaid Fraud Control Unit is dedicated to ensuring that those who exploit our healthcare system for personal gain are brought to justice by aggressively pursuing those who engage in healthcare fraud, working to safeguard taxpayer funds, and defending the integrity of vital healthcare programs. In the last fiscal year alone, the MFCU recovered more than $236 million in settlements and judgments for Texas taxpayers. In Texas, Medicaid costs taxpayers over $40 billion. Federal and industry authorities estimate that fraud comprises up to ten percent of the costs of the Medicaid program, making Medicaid fraud a $4 billion problem in Texas. 

The MFCU receives 75 percent of its funding from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services under a grant award totaling $20,944,200 for fiscal year (FY) 2023. The remaining 25 percent, totaling $6,981,395, is funded by the State of Texas. For every dollar of state funding, the OAG’s MFCU recovers more than 33 dollars for taxpayers. If you suspect Medicaid fraud or abuse, or patient neglect, please report it by visiting the OAG’s website.  

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FWA (NV)- Nevada Medicaid fraud case ends in probation, $110,000 in restitution ordered

MM Curator summary

The article below has been highlighted and summarized by our research team. It is provided here for member convenience as part of our Curator service.

 
 

[MM Curator Summary]: Yet another bogus MH claims fraud for $100k+. Yawn.

 
 

 
 

Clipped from: https://www.8newsnow.com/news/local-news/nevada-medicaid-fraud-case-ends-in-probation-110000-in-restitution-ordered/

 
 

LAS VEGAS (KLAS) — A Las Vegas behavioral health company was ordered to pay $110,000 in restitution in a Medicaid fraud case, according to the Nevada Attorney General’s Office.

Joy Behavioral Health and its owner, Edward Gamboa, were placed on two years probation after an investigation found the company billed Medicaid for services that were not provided to Medicaid recipients. The company was sentenced on a gross misdemeanor for intentional failure to maintain adequate records.

“The investigation revealed that Gamboa, through Joy, submitted fraudulent claims to Medicaid asserting that Rehabilitative Mental Health (RMH) services were provided to recipients when in fact they were not,” according to a Friday news release.

As part of a plea deal, Gamboa was previously sentenced to probation on a charge of acting without lawful authority. Gamboa is the sole owner of Joy Behavioral Health, which has an office at 3130 S. Rainbow Blvd.

District Court Judge Eric Johnson issued the sentence.

“Our office will continue to take action against those who abuse the privilege of receiving taxpayer funds that are supposed to help Medicaid recipients,” Nevada Attorney General Aaron D. Ford said. “My office will always endeavor to bring to justice health care providers engaged in such fraudulent billing practices.”

The Nevada Medicaid Fraud Control Unit (MFCU) receives 75% of its funding from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services under a grant award. The remaining 25% is funded by the State of Nevada MFCU. Persons convicted of Medicaid fraud may also be administratively excluded from future Medicaid and Medicare participation.

Anyone wishing to report suspicions regarding any of these concerns may contact the MFCU at 702-486-3420 or 775-684-1100.

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OP/ED- Despite Rising Costs, Big Health Insurers Should Do Just Fine

MM Curator summary

The article below has been highlighted and summarized by our research team. It is provided here for member convenience as part of our Curator service.

 
 

[MM Curator Summary]: Every little thing is gonna be allright. Don’t you worry.

 
 

Clipped from: https://www.forbes.com/sites/brucejapsen/2023/07/03/despite-rising-costs-big-health-insurers-should-do-just-fine/?sh=78428eac309a

 
 

Rising medical costs are hitting health insurer stocks lately but these diversified companies should … [+] be just fine when they report second quarter earnings over the next month.

getty

Rising medical costs are hitting health insurer stocks lately but these diversified companies should be just fine.

Heading into earnings season when companies like UnitedHealth Group, Elevance Health, Cigna, Centene, Humana and CVS Health, the parent of Aetna, report their second quarter profits, some are seeing some not so familiar headwinds: rising medical costs and the loss of customers.

Throughout the Covid-19 pandemic, many health insurers reported record profits in part because Americans weren’t using the system as much as before the 2020 lockdowns. When people don’t go to the doctor, a claim isn’t filed with the health plan so the insurance company makes more money.

What’s more, the U.S. public health emergency kept record numbers of people covered by not kicking anyone off Medicaid while Congress and the Biden administration increased and expanded subsidies so more Americans to afford individual Obamacare coverage under the Affordable Care Act.

These trends helped most health insurers achieve record profits. UnitedHealth Group, for example, earned net income of $20.6 billion in 2022 after making $17.3 billion in 2021 and $15.4 billion in 2020. Before the pandemic UnitedHealth made $13.8 billion in 2019. The company, which operates the health insurer UnitedHealthcare and the medical care provider services business Optum, is on pace to make more this year than last. UnitedHealth, which made $5.6 billion in the first quarter of this year, reports second quarter earnings on July 14.

But things are beginning to change now, which some see as a threat to health insurance company bottom lines the insurer’s have been familiar with given the end in May of the U.S. public health emergency that boosted the number of Americans covered when Medicaid redetermination temporarily ended three years ago. Medicaid redetermination, also described as Medicaid renewal or Medicaid recertification, is essentially when people are asked to show they are qualified for such coverage.

Some states are beginning the Medicaid redetermination process as part of the U.S. public health emergency ends, but the process could take several months to a year or longer. The process is expected to impact health insurers like Centene that have a significant business administering Medicaid coverage for states.

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But analysts believe health insurers have what it takes to weather the storm of higher costs from increased health system usage and the introduction of more expensive drugs.

“U.S. health insurers have adequate ratings headroom to withstand the mounting cost pressures driven by growing drug shortages, rising pharmaceutical and other input costs as well as higher utilization,” Fitch Ratings said in a report last month. “The structural advantages afforded to health insurers within the broader healthcare system, business model diversification and stable key financial metrics are key drivers supporting credit profiles.”

To be sure, CVS and UnitedHealth, in particular, have been gobbling up providers of medical care, spending billions of dollars to grow their health services and networks of doctors and outpatient care operations. This should increase revenue to these large healthcare conglomerates on the medical care provider side of the business even as expenses rise on the insurance side of the business.

Health insurers also have an advantage of higher rate increases they’ve already requested from their clients, including employers and governments. And some analysts think the federal government’s rate increase for Medicare Advantage plans is enough to help these insurers weather any increase in costs for that growing business.

 
 

“Humana is raising 2023 MLR guidance to the high-end of the range due to elevated utilization,” Mizuho Americas analyst Ann Hynes said last month about Humana’s medical-loss ratio, which measures medical costs of health insurers. “(Humana) is reiterating 2023E adjusted EPS guidance, but the MLR headwind will likely limit upside going forward. Importantly, Humana stated that the elevated utilization was contemplated in 2024 Medicare Advantage bids submitted earlier this month, which should relieve some investor fears.”

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TECH – Startups Should Stop Being Afraid of Innovating the Medicaid Space, Exec Says

MM Curator summary

The article below has been highlighted and summarized by our research team. It is provided here for member convenience as part of our Curator service.

 
 

[MM Curator Summary]: Oh look! Another Private Equity / VC money guy telling us we all need to get bullish on the last remaining untapped market they are pointing portfolio companies at. Seems legit to me!

 
 

 
 

Clipped from: https://medcitynews.com/2023/07/medicaid-startups-innovation-healthcare/

At a recent conference, Yuvo Health CEO Cesar Herrera said he is proud to bring value-based care to Medicaid populations, but he wishes there was more innovation activity dedicated to these beneficiaries. In his view, the main obstacles preventing startups from entering this space are ignorance about how the Medicaid market works and the false belief that they can’t make money in it.

 
 

Growing up in Detroit without health insurance, Cesar Herrera struggled to find access to care — his family’s only saving grace was federally qualified health centers. That’s part of the reason he founded his startup Yuvo Health, which is focused on helping FQHCs participate in value-based payment models.

Yuvo contracts directly with payers — including Medicaid, Medicare and commercial health plans for various risk arrangements. The startup then partners with FQHCs, wherein these health centers delegate the risk of their attributed patients to Yuvo. As the company’s CEO, Herrera is proud to bring value-based care to Medicaid populations, but he wishes there was more innovation activity dedicated to these beneficiaries, he said Thursday at HITLAB’s Innovators Summit in New York City.

In his view, there are two main obstacles that prevent startups from launching initiatives or partnering in the Medicaid realm. The first is ignorance. Many people in the healthcare field still lack a developed understanding of what the Medicaid population needs and how Medicaid payment structures work, Herrera declared.

Promoted

 
 

PE Investments, Acquisitions Fuel New Stages of Growth for Healthcare and Life Science Companies


In an interview, Nathan Ray, a partner with the healthcare and life practice who oversees M&A/PE related work in that industry for West Monroe, highlighted how his firm works with companies to drive due diligence for clients, and help acquired companies address issues and differentiate during holds.

Stephanie Baum

Organizations have tried doing things in Medicare and translating that into the Medicaid space. Then they say, ‘This doesn’t work in Medicaid,’ and automatically assume it’s because Medicaid is the problem or the communities that are being served by Medicare are a problem — but these are two vastly different populations. What may work in a Medicare population should not and would ever be applicable to a Medicaid population — you have to do something different,” he explained.

The other obstacle preventing innovation in Medicaid is that people assume they can’t make any money in this space due to the fact that Medicaid has much lower premiums than Medicare. 

Herrera doesn’t think this is true, but he said it’s “really hard to compare” opportunities for profit in Medicare versus Medicaid because of “the relative dearth of precedent in the Medicaid innovation space.” He noted that this lack of activity in the Medicaid market has led some healthcare stakeholders to draw the conclusion that Medicaid populations don’t want to be engaged, but he contended that this is not the truth.

Medicaid and CHIP serve about a third of the U.S. population, so there’s plenty of opportunities in every state to try new payment models and create better pathways to care access, Herrera pointed out.

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Strengthening Security: The Importance of Multi-Factor Authentication in Healthcare


Organizations across most industries, especially the technology sector, have adopted Multi-Factor Authentication (MFA) to fortify their security measures. 

Don Kleoppel – Greenway Health

While the Medicare market has a much more established presence in the value-based care world than Medicaid does, Herrera acknowledged that Medicaid innovation has made some strides in recent years.

“We’re seeing lots of states choosing to be much more innovative —whether proactively by choice or because they have no choice. This is because Medicaid is a third of their budget and they’re trying to figure out how to be financially sustainable with their taxpayer dollars. That’s creating a lot of room for different innovation, which we’re not just seeing in blue states. In many heavily red states, we’re seeing a lot of interesting innovation happening with alternative payment models in Medicaid because they have to be sustainable,” Herrera declared.

Other healthcare stakeholders share Herrera’s view that Medicaid is in dire need of innovation. In April, Justin Norden, partner at GSR Ventures, told MedCity News that companies seeking to innovate the Medicaid space face little competition.

He added that there’s also an “incredible need” for startups to focus on this space, as Medicaid beneficiaries often struggle with care access and poor health outcomes.

“There’s been almost $20 billion in startup investment towards Medicare Advantage which has a roughly $300 million annual budget. This is contrasted with Medicaid, an area that generates almost $700 billion per year in terms of spending in the U.S., and only about $1 billion dollars of startup money is invested in that space,” Norden said.

Photo: zimmytws, Getty Images

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TECH- Medicaid security breach affects over 2,600 Arizonans, agency says

MM Curator summary

The article below has been highlighted and summarized by our research team. It is provided here for member convenience as part of our Curator service.

 
 

[MM Curator Summary]: “Passw0rd”

 
 

 
 

 
 

Clipped from: https://www.azfamily.com/2023/06/30/medicaid-security-breach-affects-over-2600-arizonans-agency-says/

 
 

The Arizona Health Care Cost Containment System says 2,632 people are affected by the breach.(MGN)

PHOENIX (3TV/CBS 5) — Over 2,600 Arizona Medicaid recipients may have had their personal information stolen after a breach that happened mid-May.

The state’s Medicaid agency, the Arizona Health Care Cost Containment System (AHCCCS), said in a statement that it is “aware of a breach of personal information on May 11, 2023 affecting 2,632 individuals in Arizona who are enrolled Medicaid members.” The vulnerability would have allowed bad actors to see sensitive details, including first and last names, addresses and the last four digits of Social Security numbers through the Health-e-Arizona Plus website. Upon learning of the error, the HEAplus system toolbar was turned off.

AHCCCS assures that this type of breach would not happen again, the agency said in the statement, and that starting July 3, it will start to notify those affected by the breach. The agency will send out the notifications through the mail.

If you learn that you’re affected by the breach, you can contact one of the three credit reporting agencies to report a fraud alert, which lets the agencies know that any new requests for credit may be fraudulent. You can also ask the agencies for a security freeze that stops agencies from releasing your information without your express permission (you’ll have to do this using certified mail notifying all three agencies).

Consumers are entitled to one free credit report from each of the three agencies: Equifax, Experian and TransUnion. You can learn more at www.annualcreditreport.com or call 1-877-322-8228.

Credit Reporting Agency contact information:

Equifax, 1-888-378-4329 or www.equifax.com/personal or mail to P.O. Box 740241, Atlanta, GA 30374-0241

Experian, 1-888-EXPERIAN (397-3742) or www.experian.com or mail to P.O. Box 9532, Allen, TX, 75013

TransUnion, 1-800-916-8800 or www.transunion.com/annual-credit-report or mail to Fraud Victim Assistance Division, P.O. Box 6790, Fullerton, CA 92834-6790

Other resources:

Report any suspected identity theft to local police and inform AHCCCS of any filed police reports.

Identity Theft Resource Center | www.idtheftcenter.org

1-888-400-5530 (not a toll-free number). Information is available in English and Spanish.

Federal Trade Commission |
www.consumer.ftc.gov/features

1-877-ID-THEFT (1-877-438-4338). Information is available in English and Spanish.

Arizona Attorney General’s Office

For more, www.azag.gov/consumer provides tips on how to guard against identity theft and the misuse of personal information (select Identity Theft from Quick Links menu at top of home page). You may also call 602-542-5025 (Phoenix); 520-628-6504 (Tucson); or toll-free 1-866-742-4911 (outside Maricopa and Pima Counties).

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STATE NEWS (WA)- State to continue Medicaid waiver for five years

MM Curator summary

The article below has been highlighted and summarized by our research team. It is provided here for member convenience as part of our Curator service.

 
 

[MM Curator Summary]: Cue Bowie song.

 
 

 
 

Clipped from: https://www.nbcrightnow.com/news/state-to-continue-medicaid-waiver-for-five-years/article_e25f3f1a-178a-11ee-a494-2fea92477108.html

 
 

OLYMPIA, Wash.-
Washington state’s Medicaid demonstration waiver renewal has been approved.

The Washington State Health Care Authority (HCA) announced the renewal on June 30, it will go into effect on July 1 and run for the next five years.The Medicaid Transformation Project (MTP) is an agreement between HCA and CMS that allows Washington to implement new policies and use federal Medicaid funds to improve Apple Health, Washington’s Medicaid program.

What’s included in MTP renewal:

  • Medicaid Alternative Care (MAC) which expands  care options for older people so they can stay at home and delay or avoid more intensive services, such as moving to a nursing facility.
  • Assists unpaid family caregivers.
  • Continued Apple Health coverage for children ages 0-5.
  • Apple Health postpartum coverage expansion.
  • Re-entry coverage for individuals leaving a prison, jail, or youth correctional facility.
  • Program innovations that support older adults, including expanded eligibility and presumptive eligibility to support access and enrollment.
  • Programs that address health-related social needs (HRSN), including:
  • Community-based workforce payment through Community Hubs and the Native Hub.
  • HRSN services (e.g., nutrition, housing, medical respite, transportation).
  • Rental subsidies up to six months.