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Missouri Senate panel votes down Medicaid expansion funding

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Missouri committee vote to fund expansion ended in a tie.

 
 

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.

 
 

JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (AP) — A Missouri Senate budget committee on Wednesday voted against funding Medicaid expansion.

The Senate Appropriations Committee voted 7-7 on a Republican-sponsored proposal that would have set money aside to pay for the program. The tied vote meant the proposal failed.

Missouri voters last year amended the state Constitution to extend access to government health care to thousands more low-income adults, but now the Republican-led Legislature is arguing over whether to fund it.

Many Republican lawmakers have for years resisted expanding access to Medicaid, citing the expense of expanding it and waste within the current program.

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But some GOP senators on Wednesday said the Legislature will be sued if they don’t fund the voter-approved measure, and that could mean a judge forces them to pay for it. They argued the Legislature should provide the money now so lawmakers have some control over the spending.

 
 

Clipped from: https://www.myjournalcourier.com/news/article/Missouri-Senate-panel-votes-down-Medicaid-16119615.php

 
 

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Reality sets in: Dems doubtful that FL Legislature will expand Medicaid for the vulnerable

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Florida legislature is likely to end session without consideration of Medicaid expansion.

 
 

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.

 
 

The Florida Capitol. Credit: Michael Moline

Democratic lawmakers in Florida are renewing calls for Medicaid expansion but the reality is doubtful, with GOP leaders against expanding the health care program for the state’s most vulnerable population.

With less than two weeks left in the 2021 legislative session, Democrats in a virtual news conference Tuesday evening acknowledged that Florida’s Medicaid program will not likely see an expansion and even faces cuts.

As previously reported by the Florida Phoenix, state lawmakers working on the 2021-22 state budget are proposing some major cuts in Medicaid services. Florida is among a dozen or so states that haven’t expanded Medicaid, with Gov. Ron DeSantis against the expansion.

U.S. Rep. Charlie Crist, a former Florida governor, believes that the state will eventually expand Medicaid in the future.

Crist was joined by state lawmakers and health care advocates in Tuesday’s Zoom news conference and said it’s “beyond comprehension” that Florida hasn’t expanded Medicaid yet.

“I’m an optimist…We are going to get Medicaid expansion. It’s going to come,” said Crist, whose name has come up as a potential candidate for governor against DeSantis.

During the news conference, a caregiver in Florida shared her story about grappling with caring for her son living with a disability, without having access to health coverage for herself.

Allison Holmes said her son J.J. has health care through Medicaid but she does not qualify for the program. Holmes added that she needs health care services to be able to continue to take care of her son.

“It’s so much lifting involved. He can’t walk, he can’t support himself to stand up,” she said. “It’s pushing me into a position where I’m not going to be able to take care of him. ”

At the same time, “This my life and my life that is responsible for another life. I would do anything to make sure that I can take care of my health to take care of him (her son),” Holmes said.

State Rep. Anna Eskamani, an Orlando Democrat, encouraged residents to share their stories with lawmakers in their respective districts.

“Talk to those lawmakers after the session is over; get them to commit to cosponsoring a bill. Share your stories,” Eskamani said in the virtual news conference hosted by Florida Voices for Health – a health care advocacy group.

According to Florida Voices for Health, expanding Medicaid in the state would give “caregivers the security” of health coverage as they provide care for vulnerable Floridians.

 
 

Clipped from: https://www.floridaphoenix.com/2021/04/21/reality-sets-in-dems-doubtful-that-fl-legislature-will-expand-medicaid-for-the-vulnerable/

 
 

 
 

 
 

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On the cusp of expanding Medicaid, Oklahoma opens enrollment June 1

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Oklahoma Medicaid expansion begins in less than 90 days.

 
 

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.

 
 

Oklahoma will open enrollment on June 1 for more low-income residents to qualify for Medicaid.

Newly eligible Oklahomans can apply for health care coverage starting a month prior to when the state expands Medicaid on July 1. 

Following the passage of State Question 802, Oklahoma will expand Medicaid to Oklahomans ages 19-64 whose income is at or below 138% of the federal poverty level, which is roughly $17,796 for an individual or $36,588 for a family of four.

Roughly 200,000 Oklahomans are expected to sign up for Medicaid coverage under the expansion, said Oklahoma Health Care Authority CEO Kevin Corbett. The agency that oversees the state’s Medicaid program, SoonerCare, already administers Medicaid coverage to nearly one million Oklahomans. 

More:Oklahoma lawmaker introduces bill to rival Gov. Kevin Stitt’s Medicaid overhaul

 
 

Health benefits for newly eligible residents will be the same as current Medicaid recipients. 

Oklahoma legislators are still determining how to cover the $164 million annual price tag for the state’s share of Medicaid expansion. Overall, the expansion will cost roughly $1.3 billion, with the federal government covering 90% of the costs. 

The Health Care Authority, under the direction of Gov. Kevin Stitt, plans to shift on Oct. 1 to a managed care model, in which four major insurance companies will oversee care for most Medicaid recipients. 

A key state lawmaker is fighting the Stitt administration’s push toward managed care, and a lawsuit regarding the change is waiting to be heard before the Oklahoma Supreme Court

To apply for Medicaid coverage, visit mysoonercare.org

Clipped from: https://www.oklahoman.com/story/news/2021/04/15/oklahoma-medicaid-open-enrollment-begins-june/7223807002/

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Texas Medicaid expansion picks up bipartisan support, but hurdles remain

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Efforts to expand Medicaid in Texas may get a floor vote this week.

 
 

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.

 
 

Expanding the Medicaid rolls to include more than a million Texans could get a floor vote during House budget hearings on Thursday.

 
 

When a neighbor’s dog nipped her hand near the fingernail last winter, Trish W. put off going to the doctor because it didn’t seem worth the dent it would put in her already tight budget.

It wasn’t until her hand swelled to the point where her finger nearly burst that she finally gave in.

The doctor told Trish, a 33-year-old from Canyon Lake who has a genetic blood disorder that hinders her ability to fight bacteria, that she’d narrowly escaped deadly sepsis and that she could have lost her hand. The hospital kept her overnight to be sure. She later received a $2,000 bill that she couldn’t afford.

“Of course as a single mother, you’re thinking, ‘Oh, my God, I might not leave this hospital,'” said Trish, who asked that her last name not be used in order to protect her family’s privacy. “‘This could be the last time I see my kid.’ And that’s terrifying.”

It’s a scenario she might have avoided with a Medicaid card, but her pay as a certified nursing assistant, which she said can reach $1,700 “on a good month,” means she makes too much to qualify under Texas eligibility rules — but not enough to buy her own insurance.

“I fall right in that gap,” said Trish, who lives in an RV with her 12-year-old son.

Texas lawmakers have been presented with billions of dollars in federal incentives this year to join 38 other states in expanding the state-run Medicaid program to adults like Trish who earn up to 138% of the federal poverty level.

That’s about $1,500 per month for an individual, or $3,000 a month for a family of four. Currently the threshold in Texas is about $200 per month for a family of two, or about $300 per month for a family of four.

Among several bills filed in the conservative Texas Legislature is a Medicaid expansion plan with bipartisan support that is similar to those adopted in some Republican-led states.

Nine House Republicans and all 67 House Democrats have publicly signed on to House Bill 3871, which would give it enough votes to pass the 150-member chamber. Although none of the proposals have gotten a hearing this session, Medicaid expansion is expected to be introduced in some form as a floor amendment Thursday when the House debates the state budget.

First introduced as part of President Barack Obama’s Affordable Care Act in 2010, the requirement to expand eligibility for Medicaid was fiercely resisted by Republican-led states, including Texas, on the argument that it was fiscally unsustainable and, equally importantly, expanded an entitlement program when the goal should be to make people less dependent on the government.

Since then, however, all but 12 states have expanded their Medicaid programs.

Texas, meanwhile, has relied on a federal funding agreement, known as the 1115 waiver, that was first approved in 2011 as a means to help hospitals care for uninsured people until the states expanded their Medicaid programs under the ACA. Then the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that states couldn’t be required to expand Medicaid.

In the years after, Texas leaders fought to keep the waiver — which doesn’t provide comprehensive health care coverage, drug coverage or other services covered by Medicaid — while resisting expanding Medicaid.

The new federal incentives, combined with news last week that Texas may lose its 1115 funding after October 2022, bring a new pitch to the decadelong debate over adding more than a million people to the Medicaid rolls in Texas.

“The time to do this is now,” said state Rep. Julie Johnson, D-Carrollton, the author of House Bill 3871. “The deal on the table that the [federal] government offered to us is, in my opinion, irresponsible not to accept.”

Conservative lawmakers are weighing their historic opposition to Medicaid expansion against the potential of billions in federal incentives coming to Texas during a tight budget cycle.

“There is a bipartisan desire to see the cost of health care decrease. The unsustainable increase in prices, whether at the hospital, the doctor, or in health insurance premiums hits all Texans,” GOP state Rep. James Frank, chair of the House Human Services Committee, said in emailed comments to the Tribune. “But there is also concern that when Medicaid expands, that adds pressure to the private insurance market to make up the difference in reimbursements. Hence, expansion is a hidden tax on those who have private insurance, driving up the cost of care for everyone.”

Medicaid expansion in Texas

Some 4.2 million people are on Medicaid in Texas — including more than 3 million children. The rest of the recipients are people with disabilities, pregnant women and parents living below 14% of the federal poverty level. Adults with no disabilities or dependent children don’t qualify for Medicaid, and the vast majority of children on Medicaid have parents who do not qualify.

Texas has the highest rate of uninsured residents in the nation.

If Texas expanded Medicaid, the federal government would bump its reimbursement to the state from 62% of Medicaid expenditures to 67% — and it would pay 90% of the costs for the estimated 1.4 million adults who would become newly eligible for the program.

A recent report by Texas A&M University and sponsored by the Episcopal Health Foundation showed that an estimated 954,000 newly eligible adults would likely enroll, bringing $5.41 billion in federal matching dollars to pay for them each year. The Kaiser Family Foundation, a health care research organization, estimates that about 75% of the newly eligible would be people of color.

Economists predict that expansion in Texas would be an economic driver, increasing health-related spending, decreasing uncompensated care spending by local governments and raising productivity with a healthier workforce.

“It’s really critical at this point that Texas be looking at solutions for our worst-in-the-country insurance rates,” said Anne Dunkelberg, who oversees health care policy for Every Texan, a public policy group.

But state leaders and many Texas conservative groups have so far chosen to decline the expansion.

Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick‘s and Gov. Greg Abbott‘s offices did not respond to requests for comment, but both have opposed expanding Medicaid in the past. In January, House Speaker Dade Phelan expressed doubt that Medicaid expansion would happen this session.

Among other arguments, opponents say it would crowd out current Medicaid patients who are already getting a low quality of care due to the limited number of physicians who accept Medicaid patients because of low reimbursements.

“I think it’s unfortunate to put a price on the heads of those that are most vulnerable,” said David Balat, director of the Right on Healthcare initiative at the conservative Texas Public Policy Foundation. “We’re talking about people that are not getting the greatest of care, stand to get worse care and we’re saying we should probably just take the money anyway. That’s unconscionable.”

“We exist, and we matter”

The Medicaid legislation getting the most attention in the Legislature this session are companion bills filed by Johnson in the House and state Sen. Nathan Johnson, D-Dallas, modeled after programs in conservative states like Ohio and Indiana.

The identical bills offer incentives for recipients to achieve self-sufficiency and independence through health savings accounts, employment assistance and healthy behavior rewards, rather than cultivating an attitude of state dependency, said Nathan Johnson, whose Senate Bill 117 is awaiting a committee hearing. The legislation would also increase provider reimbursements to encourage physicians to accept more Medicaid patients.

Medicaid expansion would also potentially generate hundreds of thousands of jobs and bring in billions in additional tax revenue to the state and to local governments, according to a recent analysis by The Perryman Group, an economic research firm in Waco.

“I’ve got to ask my colleagues, ‘How much are you willing to reject, in order to not provide health care to people for free? In order to not have people healthy enough to go to work?” Nathan Johnson said. “There’s a narrative that says, ‘We created the Medicaid program to help the truly vulnerable, the elderly, the disabled, the children. We’ve taken care of everything. Everybody else, you’re on your own.’ And that just refuses to look at reality.”

Better reimbursements for doctors and the personal responsibility incentives are the two biggest reasons why House Republican Rep. Steve Allison, a San Antonio freshman and co-author of House Bill 3871, said he signed on to the legislation after years of skepticism.

“In the past, we just talked about expanding coverage and didn’t talk about care. I’ve always been stuck on care,” he said. “The incentives, too, are so important. … I think that’s what’s starting to move some of the Republicans, because that’s been a legitimate concern in the past. That we’re just further promoting welfare.”

But first it needs to reach the House floor. Frank, a Wichita Falls Republican, said he has not decided whether to allow a hearing on the House bill.

“I remain convinced that there are better ways for Texas to improve access and affordability of health care for all Texans than Medicaid expansion,” Frank said, adding that he worries Medicaid expansion could drain the state budget over time and lead to fewer private employers offering health benefits to workers.

Earlier this month, Phelan, Frank and other House members from both parties championed a set of bills called “Healthy Families, Healthy Texas” that Frank said would improve quality of care and health care access “for all 29 million people in the state.”

They include measures to reduce the cost of some prescription drugs for uninsured people, make it easier for children on Medicaid to continue coverage during income verification processes, require transparency in medical billing, expand availability of telehealth and broadband services, and increase insurance plan options through small businesses, agricultural nonprofits and associations, among others.

They also supported a bill expanding Medicaid coverage for new mothers to 12 months after the birth of a child, up from the current two months.

In Canyon Lake, what the politicians do at the Capitol could have a big impact on Trish, whose son inherited the same blood disorder and does have Medicaid coverage. If they expand Medicaid, she could stop having to make the difficult choice between paying for her own health care or putting food on the table and keeping the lights on.

“It’s not like we’re going to go see a doctor every chance we get,” she said. “It’s just to have that card in your back pocket to go get a physical or see a doctor if there’s an emergency. It means a lot to people like us. We exist, and we matter, and we don’t deserve to be treated like trash on the bottom of someone’s feet.”

Disclosure: Texas A&M University, Episcopal Health Foundation, Every Texan and the Texas Public Policy Foundation have been financial supporters of The Texas Tribune, a nonprofit, nonpartisan news organization that is funded in part by donations from members, foundations and corporate sponsors. Financial supporters play no role in the Tribune’s journalism. Find a complete list of them here.

 
 

Clipped from: https://www.texastribune.org/2021/04/21/texas-medicaid-expansion/

 
 

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CMS pulls major Texas Medicaid waiver over concerns Trump admin hastily approved it

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CMS un-approved $100B in funding for TX Medicaid, claiming it was approved too fast and without public comment under the Trump administration.

 
 

 
 

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.

 
 

 
 

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott blasted a decision by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services to pull a Medicaid program waiver approved in the waning days of the Trump administration. (miroslav_1/Getty)

The Biden administration has withdrawn a waiver that enabled several major changes to Texas’ Medicaid program, including a cap on charity care costs incurred by providers.

The decision, outlined in a letter (PDF) released Friday, is based on what the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) called a flawed process that did not include time for comments from the public. The Trump administration approved the waiver Jan. 15, a few days before President Joe Biden was inaugurated.

CMS said in a letter to Texas that the state did not adequately explain why the normal public comment process was bypassed for the waiver extension, which was extended through 2030.

The waiver applies to Texas’ Healthcare Transformation and Quality Improvement Program, which expires Sept. 30, 2022, and provides benefits to Medicaid enrollees through the state’s managed care program.

Texas held a public comment period on its waiver request back in November 2020.

However, Texas modified the waiver application to include several major changes the public did not get a chance to comment on, CMS’ Friday letter said.

RELATED: CMS gives states more flexibility in setting Medicaid managed care capitation rates

Chief among the changes was to change the expiration date of the waiver from September 2027 to September 2030.

Another major change was to create an uncompensated care pool that would provide $1 billion to providers in the states for charity care payments for two years.

“Stakeholders, including beneficiaries and providers, were denied the opportunity to learn about how this new uncompensated care pool for certain providers would affect their interests,” CMS’ letter said.

The Trump administration granted Texas a fast-track approval process and cleared the new waiver application Jan. 15.

However, the Biden administration argues Texas’ waiver application did not meet the criteria for such fast-track status.

“There was adequate time at the time of application to conduct the state-level public notice process and submit a complete extension application to CMS, and for us to conduct the federal-level public notice process,” the letter said.

Texas argued the COVID-19 pandemic necessitated the need for the quick approval of the waiver. But the state did not establish that the request to extend the demonstration already authorized through next fall “was substantially related to the public health emergency for COVID-19,” the Biden administration said.

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott blasted the decision, saying it would harm Texans and providers.

“The state of Texas spent months negotiating this agreement with the federal government to ensure vital funds for hospitals, nursing homes and mental health resources for Texans who are uninsured,” Abbott said in a statement Friday.

The Texas Hospital Association said in a statement that it was “extremely disappointed” in the decision. ”

“This action undermines the safety net and hospitals’ ability to protect people,” said Ted Shaw, the president and CEO of the association. “It puts the state’s health at serious risk and creates unprecedented levels of uncertainty for an industry that is charged with saving lives.”

But advocates who criticized the quick approval were happy with the decision.

“CMS notes correctly that the Trump approval was procedurally flawed as no federal public comment was taken,” tweeted Joan Alker, executive director of the Georgetown University Center for Children and Families.

The center had joined more than 20 groups who sent a letter to the Department of Health and Human Services on Jan. 11 asking for the waiver request to be struck down.

CMS’ letter comes roughly a month after the American Rescue Plan Act was signed into law, which gives states that have not expanded Medicaid under the Affordable Care Act more money to do so. Texas is one of the states that has yet to expand under the law. 

CMS told Fierce Healthcare that it “remains committed to working with states—as it always has—on solutions that can meet the public’s expectations for transparency while strengthening Medicaid’s aims.”

The Biden administration’s decision is the latest to pull back on waivers approved by its predecessors. CMS back in February alerted states that got approval to set up Medicaid work requirements that it is beginning the process of withdrawing such waivers.

The agency has already sent letters to Wisconsin, Michigan, New Hampshire and Arkansas withdrawing those waivers.

Clipped from: https://www.fiercehealthcare.com/payer/cms-pulls-major-texas-medicaid-waiver-over-concerns-trump-admin-hastily-approved-it

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Mississippi investigating Medicaid drug services provider Centene

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Mississippi suspects Centene of improper activities similar to the allegations made about Centene in Ohio.

 
 

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.

 
 

The state auditor and Mississippi attorney general are investigating whether Centene Corp., as a provider of Medicaid drug services, failed to disclose discounts on pharmacy services, inflated dispensing fees and received reimbursements for amounts already paid.

Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost made similar allegations in a lawsuit. “Corporate greed has led Centene and its wholly owned subsidiaries to fleece taxpayers out of millions,” he said. “Centene has broken trust with the state of Ohio, and I intend to hold this company accountable for its deceptive practices.”

 
 

Asked about these allegations in Mississippi, a Centene spokesman told MCIR, “These claims are unfounded, and Envolve (a wholly obtained subsidiary) will aggressively defend the integrity of the pharmacy services it has provided. Envolve Pharmacy Services saved millions of dollars for taxpayers when compared to market-based pharmaceutical pricing. … Our company is committed to the highest levels of quality and transparency.”

Between 2016 and 2020, the Mississippi Medicaid program paid Centene more than $1.1 billion for pharmacy services.

State Sen. Becky Currie, R-Brookhaven, said if Centene is “cheating in the pharmacy area, what else are they doing? We don’t know because we’ve never bothered to look.”

Medicaid patients are covered under MississippiCAN, a plan that lets patients pick from three for-profit managed care companies: Molina Healthcare (a new entry), UnitedHealthcare Community Plan and Magnolia Health, a subsidiary of Centene, which in 2020 took in more than $111 billion, nearly double its total revenue from two years earlier.

These companies promise to reduce medical costs by promoting better health care among patients.

So, what do the numbers show?

In 2015-2016, Magnolia received overall scores of 1.5 in prevention and 2 in treatment (on a scale of 1 to 5), according to the Health Insurance Plan Ratings issued by the National Committee for Quality Assurance, a nonprofit that uses surveys and data to measure health care quality.

Four years later, prevention inched up to 2, while treatment stayed the same at 2. Scores of 2 and lower are considered “lower performance.”

Magnolia did improve in consumer satisfaction from 3 to 4.5. The scores of 4 and higher are considered “higher performance.”

Broken down by categories, the company received a score of 5 for dental visits and avoiding opioids at high dosage and a 4 for eye exams and asthma control. But the score was 1 for childhood and adolescent immunizations as well as heart disease, a 1.5 for children and adolescent well care and a 2 for diabetes treatment.

In 2015-2016, UnitedHealthcare received a 1.5 each in prevention and treatment. Four years later, those scores improved slightly to 2.5 in prevention and 2 in treatment. During that same time, consumer satisfaction fell slightly from 3.5 to 3.

UnitedHealthcare scored a 5 for dental visits and asthma control, and a 4 for prenatal checkups, for continued follow-up after diagnosis for attention deficit disorder and “getting care quickly.”

The company received a host of 1s that included childhood immunizations, blood pressure control, glucose control, statin therapy for diabetes, statin therapy for cardiovascular disease and getting patients to adhere to depression medication.

There are no scores so far for Molina, according to the website.

Asked about these low scores, UnitedHealthcare spokeswoman Sara Belfry responded, “We are working to ensure our members receive the care we expect, and 85% of our primary care physicians are in value-based contracting agreements that reward those who achieve improved quality-of-care results. We also provide clinical guidance and collaborate with providers to develop innovative programs to close member/patient gaps in care and help providers improve quality measures.”

Belfry said the quality scores for UnitedHealthcare had actually improved 60% since 2012. That’s when the company’s scores were even lower.

A Magnolia Health spokesperson said the company “is committed to ensuring our members have access to high-quality health care, and we partner with providers to offer comprehensive health care services with a focus on positive outcomes for our members. Magnolia continues to develop new and innovative programs to treat the whole person and focus on each individual’s unique needs.

“Routine well-child care and vaccinations have declined dramatically during the COVID-19 pandemic, as parents avoid medical services to mitigate the transmission of the coronavirus. While Magnolia Health recognizes the health concerns of the community, it encourages parents to continue to schedule checkup appointments and get early vaccinations for young children to protect against preventable diseases.”

‘It’s a monster to understand’

Taxpayers should be concerned about how their millions are being spent by these companies, said Richard Roberson, general counsel for the Mississippi Hospital Association, which has competed for a managed care contract. “If public school test scores were that low, legislators would have a fit about high administrative costs for poor classroom performance.”

Mississippi Medicaid spokesman Matt Westerfield said agency officials look at these health insurance plan ratings “the way we look at Hospital Quality Star Ratings – they are instructive but not the complete picture. While we see room for improvement, we are encouraged that (these) ratings have improved over time, and that one plan’s consumer satisfaction score is among the highest in the country.”

He said, since Drew Snyder took over as executive director in 2018, the department has “focused more on quality rather than quantity.”

A year later, the department introduced two initiatives to improve quality, the first of which could impose financial penalties, Westerfield said. Magnolia avoided a financial penalty; UnitedHealthcare and Molina did not.

The second initiative, the Quality Incentive Payment Program, uses supplemental funds to improve the quality of care and health of those covered by Medicaid, he said. “Payments are linked to potentially preventable hospital readmission rates.”

The Division of Medicaid, he said, is also working with stakeholders to improve its Managed Care Quality Strategy, last updated in 2018.

Mississippi insurance commissioner:What Medicaid expansion would mean for the state

Currie wonders how much managed care is taking place.

Currie, a member of the House Medicaid Committee, called for a full audit of the companies. “We are giving them full rein of Mississippi taxpayers’ money without checks and balances,” she said. “Are legislators finally going to look at this and realize that we can do better?”

New legislation requires more stringent reviews or audits of these companies but stops short of specifics.

Currie warned an audit would mean nothing if experts in Medicaid aren’t involved. “It’s a monster to understand,” she said.

In 2016, the Legislature authorized examination of the performance of the managed care companies. The report concluded that in 54 out of 68 categories, Magnolia and United failed to meet or only partially met requirements.

That report by Navigant Consulting cited widely varying numbers, questioning the validity of some Medicaid data. In May 2016, Magnolia reported that 22% of patients had follow-up visits within 30 days of hospitalization, but in June that figure was 62%. In July 2016, UnitedHealthcare reported 0.8% of patients and a month later reported 1.98%.

The report recommended lawmakers order an in-depth study to evaluate the cost of the MississippiCAN program.

In its 120-page response, Mississippi’s Medicaid officials disputed many of Navigant’s findings, saying they had already provided such an evaluation to the Legislature. A report for the agency by Myers and Stauffer concluded MississippiCAN had saved the state $286 million between 2011 and 2017.

During that same time, the auditor’s office determined more than $616,000 in “improper payments” had been made to these companies, and Mississippi’s Medicaid officials agreed.

 
 

In 2015, Mississippi Hospital Association offered to provide a nonprofit competitor, Mississippi True, to the for-profit managed care companies. The governor signed a law enabling such provider-sponsored health plans to operate, but Mississippi True failed to score high enough to make the cut, Medicaid officials said.

Three years later, the House voted for language to allow a limited pilot for Mississippi True, but that part of the bill died in the Senate. 

Currie wondered why leaders never gave Mississippi True a chance, saying she believed it was “cheaper and better, and I’m all for cheaper and better.”

The pandemic has devastated many businesses, but the revenue for Magnolia’s parent, Centene, skyrocketed past $111 billion in 2020. In its second quarter report, the company acknowledged it had profited “from lower medical utilization as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic.”

The St. Louis-based company ranks among the nation’s 10 biggest health care corporations.

Centene is filling campaign coffers

Centene, which ranks 42 on the Fortune 500, is also one of Gov. Tate Reeves’ big donors. He has received more than $200,000 from the corporation, plus another $5,000 from Centene’s top brass, including CEO Michael Neidorff, who brags his company serves 1 in every 15 Americans, “maintaining our leadership in government-sponsored healthcare.”

Centene also gave $43,000 to 10 Mississippi lawmakers through its political action committee, $20,000 to the Republican Party of Mississippi and $10,000 to the Democratic Party of Mississippi, according to OpenSecrets.org.

Centene Management Co.’s LLC gave then-Lt. Gov. Reeves one large $50,000 donation, making the company the largest donor in 2017. It also gave $25,000 to House Speaker Philip Gunn and $10,000 to Secretary of State Delbert Hosemann.

Centene has given more than $12 million in contributions to politicians across the U.S. over the past 21 years, according to FollowTheMoney.org. Nearly $7.3 million has gone to Republican candidates, nearly $3.5 million has gone to Democratic candidates, and another $1.5 million has gone to candidates whose parties weren’t designated.

2021 Legislature:Mississippi governor signs bill limiting transgender athletes

No Medicaid expansion in Mississippi:Will voters decide?

Centene drew scrutiny in Ohio, other states

Mississippi and other states began taking a closer look at Centene after The Columbus Dispatch in Ohio reported in 2018 that that state’s taxpayers might be paying twice for the same Medicaid drug services.

HealthPlan Data Solutions determined the pharmacy middlemen in Ohio were raking off up to $186 million a year above the industry’s standard profit margin. Ohio taxpayers were paying three to six times as much to process prescription drugs for the poor and disabled as the industry standard, according to its report.

In 2019, Arkansas told Centene officials they had to refund more than $12 million after collecting too much in premiums. According to the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, Centene collected $983 million in premiums from 2016-18, but spent just $756 million of that on medical care and other health-related expenses.

In Mississippi, the state auditor’s office began digging into the pharmacy allegations against Centene in the summer of 2019, according to a letter obtained by MCIR. Asked about this, the auditor’s office confirmed it was investigating the matter on behalf of taxpayers.

Mississippi Attorney General Lynn Fitch’s office is also investigating. “We are still early in our investigation,” said Colby Jordan, director of communications, “so we cannot release details yet, but it is similar to the Ohio case.”

The Ridgeland law firm of Liston & Deas, which is working with the Ohio attorney general’s office and representing Mississippi in the matter, declined to comment.

“It’s never been about what’s good for Mississippi,” Currie said. “Our hospitals are struggling. If nothing changes, our health care system is going to break.”

Jerry Mitchell is an investigative reporter for the Mississippi Center for Investigative Reporting, Jerry.Mitchell@MississippiCIR.org.

Researcher Vilas Annavarapu contributed to this report.

This report was produced in partnership with the Community Foundation for Mississippi’s local news collaborative, which is independently funded in part by Microsoft Corp. The collaborative includes the Clarion Ledger, the Jackson Advocate, Jackson State University, Mississippi Center for Investigative Reporting, Mississippi Public Broadcasting and Mississippi Today.

 
 

Clipped from: https://www.clarionledger.com/story/news/politics/2021/04/19/centene-medicaid-pharmacy-provider-investigation-mississippi-attorney-general-auditor/7203951002/

 
 

 
 

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Governor names former Medicaid director to lead agency again

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Robert Kerr will re-take the helm of SC Medicaid.

 
 

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.

 
 

 

COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) — South Carolina Gov. Henry McMaster said Wednesday that he will nominate a former state Medicaid director to return as the agency’s leader.

Robert Kerr, who headed the Department of Health and Human Services between 2003 and 2007, must still be confirmed by the Senate.

Kerr, 62, had previously spent 22 years with the agency beginning in 1985. Former Gov. Mark Sanford first appointed Kerr to the top role in 2003. Kerr departed in 2007 to form a private health care consulting firm.

The consulting firm is shutting down and will terminate all client contracts once Kerr is confirmed by the Senate, according to the governor’s office.

The state’s Medicaid agency has been without a permanent director since January, when former director Joshua Baker resigned.

 
 

Clipped from: https://yorknewstimes.com/news/national/govt-and-politics/governor-names-former-medicaid-director-to-lead-agency-again/article_bc6ab550-3c86-567d-9c78-69afd4f93841.html

 
 

 
 

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CareSource wins procurement award to keep doing business with Ohio Medicaid

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OH has picked winners for the next round of MCO contracts: CareSource, UnitedHealthcare, Humana, Molina Healthcare, AmeriHealth Caritas, and Anthem Blue Cross and Blue Shield.

 
 

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.

 
 

Credit: DaytonDailyNews

Here are five facts about CareSource.

Credit: DaytonDailyNews

The state chose CareSource and five other insurance companies for a massive contract to manage benefits for the $20 billion Ohio Medicaid program.

These contracts announced Friday are the largest the state has ever issued, and the rules for how the money is spent is one of the most influential policy tools the state has. The contracts are the main business line for Dayton-based CareSource, one of the largest area employers.

The new system is intended to overhaul clunky bureaucracy and make the health insurance program more user friendly for the 1 in 4 Ohioans covered.

“This is a bold, new vision for Ohio’s Medicaid program — one that focuses on people and not just the business of managed care,” Ohio Medicaid Director Maureen Corcoran said.

Ohio Medicaid aims to launch the new system in early 2022. Any company that wants to protest the decision will need to file a protest by April 23.

CareSource and the other insurance companies working with Ohio Medicaid were asked to refer requests for comment back to the state.

The contracts announced Friday are preliminary because they are not signed yet.

It’s not clear yet how the new system will impact CareSource’s core business — managing 1.3 million Ohioans’ Medicaid benefits — compared to the old system or whether CareSource will lose market share.

Ohio Medicaid covers 3.2 million people with low incomes or certain disabilities, including more than 412,000 people in the local nine-county region. About 90% of Ohioans who are covered by Medicaid don’t have their benefits managed directly by the state government. Instead, people get an insurance plan managed by insurance companies like CareSource.

Nearly half of Ohio children, half of Ohio births and the majority of nursing home care is covered by Medicaid. By rebidding the contracts and resetting the conditions for how the money gets spent, the DeWine administration is trying to engineer better outcomes for the different Ohioans with Medicaid.

Some examples of these changes include that providers will be able to work out one Medicaid contract, instead of having to broker deals with all the different Medicaid plans. Claims billing and prior authorizations will be processed through a single system instead of with each plan individually.

Loren Anthes, who researches Ohio Medicaid for Cleveland-based Center for Community Solutions, said providers can get bogged down in all the paperwork and redundancy that can come with Medicaid payments.

“By simplifying things, streamlining them administratively, means doctors and nurses and other folks who are serving the Medicaid population can focus more on delivering care, rather than appropriately managing the red tape,” Anthes said.

In addition, some of the changes include:

  • A new separate program will help kids with lots of behavioral health needs and help their families navigate the different systems their child gets services from. Aetna will manage this new separate program.
  • Insurance plans like CareSource must contribute 3% of annual profits to community reinvestment, and that number eventually increases to 5%.
  • Ohio’s Medicaid plans will work with a single company that will transparently manage pharmacy benefits.
  • There will also be provider advisory councils so that providers can be heard by the insurance companies.

Jim Tassie, Ohio Medicaid deputy director, said the department wants insurers in the new system to work together, “not competing against each other by offering certain bonuses or trinkets,” but instead working for a holistic, collective impact on the Medicaid population.

Along with working more with each other, Tassie said the insurance plans will work more with community organizations.

“One of the things that we learned from many of our members is they turn to their community organizations, whether it’s their community action agency or a federally qualified health center or even their primary care provider. Those are the folks to whom they look to get guidance on their health care,” Tassie said, adding that this is part of the reason why the insurers have to give some of their profits back to the community.

The new program will be carved up among six insurance companies with the possibility of a seventh.

Along with CareSource, others selected were UnitedHealthcare, Humana, Molina Healthcare, AmeriHealth Caritas, and Anthem Blue Cross and Blue Shield.

Centene’s subsidiary Buckeye Community Health Plan could potentially be added to the program as a seventh but the department wrote that it is “deferring for additional consideration” on that decision. Centene is currently contesting a lawsuit filed by Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost.

When the state was deciding who to award these contracts to, they gave each of the bidding insurance companies a score and CareSource scored the lowest. UnitedHealthcare scored the highest.

Some people in the Dayton-area with Medicaid are covered by one of the insurance plans that lost their bid.

Members will continue to receive services with their current managed care plans until the transition in early 2022 and will not lose coverage. Members will have the opportunity to select a new plan during the 2021 open enrollment period later this summer. If members do not select a plan, one will be automatically assigned to them.

 
 

Clipped from: https://www.daytondailynews.com/local/ohio-medicaid-announces-caresource-wins-bid-keep-managing-billions-in-state-benefits/FWVAFBQNAFBE5KRACHYYUISRJY/

 
 

 
 

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Open enrollment underway for NC’s new Medicaid system

 
 

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The long-awaited move to managed care in NC is now under way.

 
 

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.

 
 

 
 

RALEIGH — A massive overhaul of North Carolina’s Medicaid system, passed in 2015, is finally going into effect, and open enrollment is currently underway. The sign-up process, which started March 15 and ends May 14, enrolls new beneficiaries to a managed care system, as the old “fee-for-service” system will be replaced this summer. 

Medicaid Transformation, after several delays, appears to be on track for implementation on July 1,” N.C. Senate Health Appropriations Committee Co-Chair Joyce Krawiec (R-Forsyth) told NSJ in an email on April 5. “We expect results to be better health outcomes, greater access to care and lower costs.” 

In 2015, the North Carolina General Assembly passed H.B. 372, Medicaid Transformation and Reorganization, now known as Session Law 2015-245. The purpose of the bill, according to its “intent and goals” sections, is to “provide budget predictability for the taxpayers of this State while ensuring quality care to those in need.”

The changes were set to go into effect earlier, but a 2019 budget stalemate between the Republican legislature and Democratic Gov. Roy Cooper delayed the transition. 

State budget writers had been complaining for years about the unpredictability of N.C.’s fee-for-service model of Medicaid. There were frequent budget overruns by the program because the costs were not known until providers and Medicaid administrators negotiated the fees for each service provided to each beneficiary. 

Other states had success in moving to a “managed care” model in which Medicaid would pay a flat rate to companies, called Managed Care Organizations (MCOs), per beneficiary for managing the care of those patients. The companies are responsible for overruns past what they are paid to manage the care of that patient, incentivizing them to prevent waste and to focus on the overall health of the beneficiaries through preventative care. Due to the success of this approach, the majority of states now use managed care rather than the fee-for-service model. 

“Beneficiaries will also have a Care team. I believe this will result in much better health outcomes,” Krawiec said. “Beneficiaries will have choices in the providers they have access to. During the sign up period, they are able to choose the providers they wish to have. This has not been possible in the past.”

Six MCOs were selected by the N.C. Department of Health and Human Services (NCDHHS) in a competitive bidding process and together will receive $6 billion to manage the care of around 2 million North Carolina Medicaid beneficiaries. Four of the MCOs will offer plans statewide —  AmeriHealth Caritas of North Carolina, Blue Cross and Blue Shield of North Carolina, UnitedHealthcare of North Carolina and WellCare of North Carolina. Another, Carolina Complete Health, Inc., will offer care only in three designated regions. 

The final MCO is Cherokee Indian Hospital Authority, which will be offering the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians (EBCI) Tribal Option for their recognized members only. Unlike the other five, who are offering prepaid health plans, the ECBI Tribal Option will be limited to case management. 

Because of the large amount of money on the line, the bidding process to be one of these MCOs became very competitive and controversial. Aetna narrowly lost in the scoring system to rival Blue Cross Blue Shield and filed a lawsuit to get the NCDHHS’s decision reversed. 

The lawsuit alleged there were conflicts of interest between NCDHHS and BCBS which led to the scores being adjusted in BCBS’s favor, costing Aetna the contract. 

“The Department unilaterally manipulated the scoring to ensure that its favored Offeror, [BCBS], would receive an award,” the suit stated. “Aetna was denied the award of a statewide contract by a mere razor-thin margin of 2.06 points, just 0.2 percent of the total possible points by a conflicted Evaluation Committee.”

Aetna’s case, in which two smaller bidders joined as well, was dismissed by state Superior Court.

The new system will officially launch July 1, 2021. Medicaid beneficiaries who do not select a plan by May 14 will have a plan selected for them on May 15.

 
 

Clipped from: https://nsjonline.com/article/2021/04/open-enrollment-underway-for-ncs-new-medicaid-system/

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Medicaid expansion ballot initiative groundwork underway in Mississippi

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Hospitals are working to get more Medicaid payments in MS by funding the effort to get Medicaid expansion on the 2022 ballot under “Initiative 76.”

 
 

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.

 
 

 
 

JACKSON, Miss. (WLBT) – Many Mississippi politicians continue to push back on the idea of Medicaid expansion. But efforts are ramping up to put it to a vote by the people.

President and CEO of the Mississippi Hospital Association, Tim Moore, along with Hattiesburg pediatrician Dr. John Gaudet and advocate Dr. Nakeitra Burse formed the non-profit Healthcare for Mississippi.

They’ve now filed the paperwork for Initiative 76.

Friday morning, the Mississippi Hospital Association’s board of governors voted to partner with the non-profit on the effort. Signature collection should start next month with a goal of getting the ballot initiative on the 2022 ballot.

The exact language for Initiative 76 is still being ironed out. It’s goal, though, is to expand Medicaid to those who fall in the “coverage gap” of making too much to be eligible for Medicaid but not enough to afford private insurance.

“Since the legislature has not taken action in all this time then really, why do it now? Let the people decide,” said Mississippi Hospital Association President/CEO Tim Moore. “If it has been too hot of a topic politically to touch then let’s let Mississippi decide and move forward with it.”

“I really hope this does not become a political issue,” noted Dr. John Gaudet. “When I’m talking about healthcare, I’m not talking to Democrats, Republicans or Independents. I’m talking to Mississippians.”

The Millsaps College/Chism Strategies State of the State Survey from January 2020 asked if people would support Medicaid expansion. The answers reveal 60 percent of those polled support expansion.

We asked Governor Tate Reeves about the ballot initiative this week.

“Governing through the initiative process has some advantages… people get to be heard,” he said. “But it also has some significant disadvantages. I can assure you that however they write the question for the ballot, should they are able to get it on there, they’re going to leave out that minor part about it costing hundreds of millions of dollars more per year if we were to expand Medicaid.”

The framework for expansion is the federal government paying 90 percent of the cost, the state covering 10 percent. And states that haven’t expanded are being offered additional incentives now.

“It’s undeniably confusing as to why we would not take advantage of it,” added Moore. “We’ve seen study after study, even if the state paid the full match… it pays for itself over time.”

Although the Hospital Association has previously presented the Mississippi Cares plan that would have hospitals and plan members covering the state’s 10 percent share, that will not be referenced in the ballot initiative language.

 
 

Clipped from: https://www.wmcactionnews5.com/2021/04/11/medicaid-expansion-ballot-initiative-groundwork-underway-mississippi/